eranicle \/ Shutterstock.com<\/span><\/figcaption><\/figure>\nHave you ever seen a random block of text online that made absolutely no sense? It may have been a copypasta: a unique type of internet meme. Let’s take a look at where this tasty-sounding term originates and an example of what one looks like.<\/p>\n
A Text-Based Meme<\/h2>\n
When most people think of memes, they think of images, GIFs, or short videos. Memes are instantly recognizable online, with pictures and voice clips that creep into mainstream pop culture. However, aside from images and videos, memes can also take the form of text blocks, which are known as “copypastas.”<\/p>\n
Copypastas are named after the act of copying and pasting text. People on the internet share these text-based memes by copying and pasting them all over the web, unlike images and videos, which must be uploaded separately. Similar to memes, copypastas are funny, contain a specific reference to something on the internet, and you can edit them to fit various scenarios.<\/p>\n
Like image and video memes, copypastas can take on a variety of forms<\/p>\n
\n- Single-line sentences, roughly the length of a tweet<\/li>\n
- Extremely long chunks of disruptive, potentially spammy text<\/li>\n
- Long fictional stories with surprise endings<\/li>\n
- ASCII art, a graphical format that uses text characters to create images<\/li>\n
- Funny tweets and social media posts taken out of their original context<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n
Individual copypastas can come from nearly anywhere. Some of the biggest copypastas are Greentexts: short, personal stories from the image forum 4Chan. While copypastas originate from a specific community, such as a Twitter fandom, 4Chan, or a subreddit, they tend to spread far beyond the reaches of that group.<\/p>\n
RELATED:<\/strong> What Is a GIF, and How Do You Use Them?<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\nCopypastas and Snowclones<\/h2>\n
One of the most significant subsets of copypastas are \u201csnowclones,\u201d also called phrasal templates. These are essentially the modern internet version of mad-libs, with names, places, and objects that are easy to replace based on the context.<\/p>\n
The biggest factor behind the \u201cmemeability\u201d of a copypasta is how easy it is to edit based on the context, similar to image meme templates. A copypasta is even easier to adapt than image macros in many ways. Instead of going into an image editor and adding captions or editing faces, all you have to do to edit a copypasta is change some words around.<\/p>\n
Reddit is especially popular for snowclones because most discussion is centered around text posts. These make the platform ripe for derivations of the same phrases.<\/p>\n
He Boomed Me: A Case Study<\/h2>\n
The NBA subreddit r \/ nba is one of the biggest producers of snowclones, such as the \u201cHe boomed me\u201d meme. This particular copypasta comes from a tweet by NBA reporter Ben Rohrbach<\/a> after a 2018 Conference Finals game between the Cleveland Cavaliers and Boston Celtics. He says he overheard Lebron James rant about Celtics forward Jayson Tatum, saying that Tatum \u201cboomed him\u201d – referring to a play where Tatum dunked over James.<\/p>\n