When Celebs Start Copying the Memes We Made 🤯
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One of the wildest plot twists in meme culture? The moment celebs stop just being in the memes—and actually start doing them back. A few years ago, fans were the ones turning celebrity faces into GIFs and captions. Now? Celebs are like, “Yep, that’s me. Let me join in real quick.” Welcome to 2025.
Doja Cat – Just… “Meow.”
At the 2023 Met Gala, Doja Cat answered every single interview question with one word: “Meow.” That was it. Fans instantly clipped it, remixed it, and the internet went feral. Instead of brushing it off, Doja leaned all the way in—dropping posts and jokes that played on the same gag. She didn’t just become a meme; she became her own meme. Iconic.
Adele – The Side-Eye Heard Around the World 👀
During the 2022 NBA All-Star Game, Adele was caught giving a very “are you seriously filming me?” look. Within hours, that tiny glance was everywhere—reaction memes, TikTok stitches, you name it. And when she later joked about it herself, the meme basically doubled in power. Fans loved it because it felt like she was laughing with us, not being laughed at.
So why does this hit so hard?
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The wall between fans and celebs disappears. They’re not just the subject—they’re co-creators.
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It’s relatable but extra. We all make those faces, but when a superstar does it, it’s instantly funnier.
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It’s a cycle now. Fans make the meme → celebs join in → fans remix it again. The loop just keeps spinning.
That’s Internet Culture in 2025
Forget the polished promo interviews. Sometimes it’s a single word (“Meow”) or a single look (👀) that sticks forever. The second a celeb embraces the joke, it’s game over. The meme isn’t just viral—it becomes part of the culture.
- Mia