It works great with the literal caption, “Imagination,” but also works just as well if you slap, well, truly anything on top of it.
Anything you put on top of a picture of a sponge wearing a tie and holding a rainbow is funny.
SPONGEBOB ARE YOU GAY MEME GENERATOR
IMAGINATION." #PokemonUltraSunMoon #spongebob #reference /96Iks4sp1g- Sτατ November 4, 2017Īs for the origin of “Imagination” as meme, the real growth came via Meme Generator and its ilk - the plethora of sites that lets users create classic Impact-font memes popular back in the old days. The plot mostly doesn’t matter - the bit that sticks, as far as memes go, is that singular image of a wide-eyed SpongeBob holding a rainbow in his hands. What he believes to be the sounds of a race car that he dreamed up in his head are actually the noises of a garbage truck picking up the box from the curb to bring it to the dump (with Squidward still inside). When Squidward attempts to re-create said fun for himself inside the box, he fails.
The rest of the episode involves Squidward getting angrier and angrier at SpongeBob and Patrick for all of the imaginary fun they have inside the box. On that last word, SpongeBob brings his hands together, raises them over his head and arcs them out as a rainbow appears following the path of his hands. Why throw out a perfectly good television? “We don’t need television, as long as we have our … imagination,” SpongeBob tells Squidward. SpongeBob’s neighbor, Squidward, is baffled by the move. When it arrives, the pair throws out the device and keep only the box it came in. In this episode from season three, SpongeBob and his best friend Patrick Star have ordered a new television. SquarePants repeatedly ripping his pants as a joke until he annoys all of his friends and has to win them back by performing a Beach Boys–inspired number to a crowd of roaring fans). Nowhere in the show are you asked to suspend your disbelief more than in “Idiot Box” (not even the episode devoted to Mr. Pineapples don’t grow in the ocean! You just have to go with it. In other words, it’s a show that asks you, the viewer, to lean heavily on your imagination. “Who lives in a pineapple under the sea,” a pirate asks a chorus of kids who reply, in unison, “SpongeBob SquarePants.” “Absorbent and yellow and porous is he.” (Just imagine the kids shouting after every one of these.) “Who’s nautical nonsense be something you wish.” “Then drop on the deck and flop like a fish.” Translated out of pirate speak, the show is about an anthropomorphic cartoon sponge, who built his home inside a piece of fruit, and the undersea antics he gets into with his pals. In case you’ve been living under a rock and don’t already know, you can learn pretty much everything you need to about the premise of SpongeBob SquarePants by listening to the theme song. This week, we’re examining some of our favorites. Beloved Nickelodeon cartoon series SpongeBob SquarePants might be the internet’s most fertile soil for memes.