![]() ![]() “ Steamed Hams” is one of the best absurd Simpsons memes to come out of the show. In case you wanna a check out all the original chalkboard gags, you can do that on a site called Bart’s Blackboard, which has an image of every line the little deviant was ever forced to write. Over the years, people have created some great ones, although since The Simpsons writers are basically doing the exact same thing, it can be hard to tell what’s fan created and what actually came from the show. It’s a great meme to remind yourself, or others, to refrain from obnoxious behavior. This led to a few other Bart Simpson chalkboard sites, some of which are still available today. ![]() That site allowed users to easily customize their own chalkboard image with a message of their choosing. In fact, in August of 2007, someone created a “Bart Simpson Chalkboard Sign Generator” on the now-defunct site called. It lent itself perfectly to the meme format, offering a blank canvas for anyone to apply whatever message they wanted. In the opening sequence, Bart is seen writing “I will not waste chalk” repeatedly on a chalkboard. The best Simpsons memes 1) The Chalkboard Gagīart Simpson writing sentences on a chalkboard started in Season 1, Episode 2: “Bart the Genius”. It’d be almost impossible to list them all, but here are few of the best, most enduring, or interesting examples. With over 600 episodes, The Simpsons has spawned enough memes to fill a novel. Memes were like The Simpsons’ younger brother, always following it around and trying to get it to play. The Simpsons, on the other hand, first appeared on The Tracey Ullman show in 1987, and were given their own series in ‘89. Or, for you sticklers out there, four years earlier with Baby Cha-Cha, at the time simply known as “Dancing Baby” because we had no idea that the internet would wind up being so full of dancing babies videos that we’d need to be very specific about which one we were referring to. To be fair, the word “ meme” itself was first coined by English biologist, author, and well-known God hater Richard Dawkins in his 1976 book The Selfish Gene, which sounds like a kids’ story about DNA but totally isn’t.īut the internet meme as we know it today didn’t really get cooking until around the year 2000, with a little thing called “ All Your Base Are Belong to Us”. But to this day, Simpsons memes are universally relevant on the internet, even after 29 seasons. The two Tumblr posts have since inspired a slew of additional parodies, which can be found under the search query "Krumping Marge" on Tumblr.Depending on when you’re counting from, The Simpsons predates meme culture by seven to thirteen years. On February 2nd, Tumblr user Pickleplayer uploaded a photoshopped GIF of Marge doing the Shoryuken move in a Street Fighter battle, where it gained over 16,000 notes. On January 30th, a Facebook page dedicated to the curation of the meme was launched under the name " Marge-Core." On January 31st, a photoshopped instance of The Top Ten Anime List parody that depicts Marge Krump battling Vegeta, a recurring character from Dragon Ball, was uploaded to Tumblr, where it accumulated over 50,000 notes in just over 72 hours. The post garnered 1,800 likes and 1,000 shares within the first week. The earliest known use of the exploitable can be found in a two-panel image of Marge trying to krump after looking at a digital clock that displays "420", a time popularized in stoner culture as the time of day to smoke marijuana, which was posted on January 26th, 2016, to The Simpsons Shitposting page on Facebook (shown below, right). The image stems from Episode 6, Season 19 of The Simpsons titled "Little Orphan Millie" in a scene where Marge tries to cheer up Bart by attempting to krump, albeit unsuccessfully. ![]()
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