19 Inches Of Venom

2023Innuendo joke / viral tweet reactiondead

Also known as: 19 Inches · Treat Yourself to 19 Inches of Venom

19 Inches of Venom is a 2023 meme born from a PlayStation UK tweet promoting Spider-Man 2's Collector's Edition, driven by sexual jokes about Venom's anatomy.

19 Inches of Venom is a meme born from a September 2023 tweet by PlayStation UK promoting the Marvel's Spider-Man 2 Collector's Edition, which included the phrase "Treat yourself to 19-inches of Venom"1. The obvious innuendo sparked an immediate wave of jokes, reaction images, and quote-tweets across Twitter, with users interpreting the phrasing as a reference to Venom's anatomy rather than a collectible statue3.

TL;DR

19 Inches of Venom is a meme born from a September 2023 tweet by PlayStation UK promoting the Marvel's Spider-Man 2 Collector's Edition, which included the phrase "Treat yourself to 19-inches of Venom".

Overview

The meme centers on a single promotional tweet from the official @PlayStationUK Twitter account advertising a 19-inch Venom figurine bundled with the Marvel's Spider-Man 2 Collector's Edition. The statue depicted Venom in battle with Peter Parker and Miles Morales2. But nobody cared about the statue's artistic details. The phrasing "Treat yourself to 19-inches of Venom" read like a sexual innuendo, and Twitter did exactly what Twitter does with unintentional innuendo: ran with it at full speed.

The joke is simple and doesn't require explanation, which is exactly why it spread so fast. Every reply and quote-tweet riffed on the same gag: that "19 inches of Venom" referred to the Marvel character's genitalia rather than a collectible figurine3.

On September 4, 2023, the @PlayStationUK Twitter account posted: "Treat yourself to 19-inches of Venom and more with the Marvel's Spider-Man 2 Collector's Edition"1. The tweet was a straightforward product promotion for the game's pre-order, which included a large Venom statue among other collectible items2. Whether the social media manager knew exactly what they were doing is still debated, but the result was immediate and overwhelming.

Within hours, the tweet exploded. Users flooded the replies and quote-tweets with jokes implying the phrase was a reference to Venom's penis3. The original post pulled in over 7,000 retweets, 63,000 likes, and a staggering 18,000 quote-tweets, most of which were jokes about the phrasing3.

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitter (PlayStation UK account)
Creator
PlayStation UK social media team
Date
2023
Year
2023

On September 4, 2023, the @PlayStationUK Twitter account posted: "Treat yourself to 19-inches of Venom and more with the Marvel's Spider-Man 2 Collector's Edition". The tweet was a straightforward product promotion for the game's pre-order, which included a large Venom statue among other collectible items. Whether the social media manager knew exactly what they were doing is still debated, but the result was immediate and overwhelming.

Within hours, the tweet exploded. Users flooded the replies and quote-tweets with jokes implying the phrase was a reference to Venom's penis. The original post pulled in over 7,000 retweets, 63,000 likes, and a staggering 18,000 quote-tweets, most of which were jokes about the phrasing.

How It Spread

The meme spread almost entirely through Twitter quote-tweets and reaction images on September 4-5, 2023. Several affiliated terms began trending on the platform, including the phrase "19 INCHES OF WHAT".

Gamespot managing editor Tamoor Hussain (@tamoorh) posted a meme imagining Disney's PR team frantically trying to stop PlayStation's social media manager, earning over 10,000 retweets and 60,000 likes in a single day. User @RedLightning420 posted a "Tom Holland getting backshots" edit featuring Venom, which pulled 2,100 retweets and 25,000 likes. Multiple users shared clips of Tobey Maguire's infamous emo dance scene from Spider-Man 3 as a reaction.

Official gaming accounts joined in. IGN quote-retweeted the original post with a video of Tobey Maguire's dance and the caption "Me on my way to get those 19 inches," picking up 6,800 retweets and 64,000 likes. @Wario64 posted a pre-order link for a 17-inch Gengar statue from Pokémon, describing it as "17-inches of Gengar" in an obvious callback. Other responses referenced Venom actor Tom Hardy, with users posting images of Hardy looking overwhelmed.

Within 24 hours, the original tweet had reached 81.5 million views, 69.6K likes, 19.2K quotes, 7,776 reposts, and 8,829 bookmarks. Film Stories described the innuendo as the kind of "Carry On-level euphemism that would make even Kenneth Williams gasp".

How to Use This Meme

The meme format is loose and mostly involves reacting to the original tweet's phrasing. Common approaches include:

- Quote-tweeting with a reaction image or video expressing shock, excitement, or exaggerated interest - Posting "my face when I get 19 inches of Venom" with an appropriate reaction clip - Applying the "X inches of Y" formula to other products or characters as a parody (e.g., "17-inches of Gengar") - Using clips from Spider-Man films, particularly Tobey Maguire's emo dance or Tom Holland scenes, as reactions

The humor relies entirely on the double entendre, so the best uses lean into the innuendo without over-explaining it.

Cultural Impact

The tweet gave PlayStation UK and Marvel's Spider-Man 2 a massive analytics boost right before the game's October 2023 launch. The 81.5 million views dwarfed what a standard promotional tweet would achieve. Multiple gaming news outlets covered the incident, including Looper, Film Stories, and IGN, all treating it as a good-natured marketing accident (or genius).

The incident also reignited the recurring internet conversation about whether corporate social media managers deliberately craft suggestive posts for engagement. As one user put it, "Social media manager is a menace". Several others argued the phrasing had to be intentional given how obviously it read.

Fun Facts

The tweet's 18,000 quote-tweets massively outnumbered its 7,000 regular retweets, showing people wanted to add their own jokes rather than just share the original.

Film Stories compared the innuendo to Britain's "Carry On" comedy film series, a franchise built entirely on sexual double entendres.

Despite (or because of) the viral moment, the Spider-Man 2 Collector's Edition likely saw a sales boost from people who suddenly became very aware it existed.

The tweet was posted just weeks before Twitter's official rebrand to X, making it one of the last great "Twitter moments" before the name change.

Derivatives & Variations

"17-inches of Gengar"

— @Wario64's parody post applying the same innuendo formula to a Pokémon statue pre-order[1]

Tom Holland backshots edit

— User @RedLightning420 created a Venom-themed edit using the "getting backshots" meme format[3]

Emo Peter Parker reaction

— IGN's quote-tweet using the Tobey Maguire Spider-Man 3 dance scene became its own widely shared post[1]

Soccer player crawling edit

— User @buckfastbadlad posted a video of a soccer player crawling on the ground in pain as a reaction to the tweet[3]

Frequently Asked Questions

19 Inches Of Venom

2023Innuendo joke / viral tweet reactiondead

Also known as: 19 Inches · Treat Yourself to 19 Inches of Venom

19 Inches of Venom is a 2023 meme born from a PlayStation UK tweet promoting Spider-Man 2's Collector's Edition, driven by sexual jokes about Venom's anatomy.

19 Inches of Venom is a meme born from a September 2023 tweet by PlayStation UK promoting the Marvel's Spider-Man 2 Collector's Edition, which included the phrase "Treat yourself to 19-inches of Venom". The obvious innuendo sparked an immediate wave of jokes, reaction images, and quote-tweets across Twitter, with users interpreting the phrasing as a reference to Venom's anatomy rather than a collectible statue.

TL;DR

19 Inches of Venom is a meme born from a September 2023 tweet by PlayStation UK promoting the Marvel's Spider-Man 2 Collector's Edition, which included the phrase "Treat yourself to 19-inches of Venom".

Overview

The meme centers on a single promotional tweet from the official @PlayStationUK Twitter account advertising a 19-inch Venom figurine bundled with the Marvel's Spider-Man 2 Collector's Edition. The statue depicted Venom in battle with Peter Parker and Miles Morales. But nobody cared about the statue's artistic details. The phrasing "Treat yourself to 19-inches of Venom" read like a sexual innuendo, and Twitter did exactly what Twitter does with unintentional innuendo: ran with it at full speed.

The joke is simple and doesn't require explanation, which is exactly why it spread so fast. Every reply and quote-tweet riffed on the same gag: that "19 inches of Venom" referred to the Marvel character's genitalia rather than a collectible figurine.

On September 4, 2023, the @PlayStationUK Twitter account posted: "Treat yourself to 19-inches of Venom and more with the Marvel's Spider-Man 2 Collector's Edition". The tweet was a straightforward product promotion for the game's pre-order, which included a large Venom statue among other collectible items. Whether the social media manager knew exactly what they were doing is still debated, but the result was immediate and overwhelming.

Within hours, the tweet exploded. Users flooded the replies and quote-tweets with jokes implying the phrase was a reference to Venom's penis. The original post pulled in over 7,000 retweets, 63,000 likes, and a staggering 18,000 quote-tweets, most of which were jokes about the phrasing.

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitter (PlayStation UK account)
Creator
PlayStation UK social media team
Date
2023
Year
2023

On September 4, 2023, the @PlayStationUK Twitter account posted: "Treat yourself to 19-inches of Venom and more with the Marvel's Spider-Man 2 Collector's Edition". The tweet was a straightforward product promotion for the game's pre-order, which included a large Venom statue among other collectible items. Whether the social media manager knew exactly what they were doing is still debated, but the result was immediate and overwhelming.

Within hours, the tweet exploded. Users flooded the replies and quote-tweets with jokes implying the phrase was a reference to Venom's penis. The original post pulled in over 7,000 retweets, 63,000 likes, and a staggering 18,000 quote-tweets, most of which were jokes about the phrasing.

How It Spread

The meme spread almost entirely through Twitter quote-tweets and reaction images on September 4-5, 2023. Several affiliated terms began trending on the platform, including the phrase "19 INCHES OF WHAT".

Gamespot managing editor Tamoor Hussain (@tamoorh) posted a meme imagining Disney's PR team frantically trying to stop PlayStation's social media manager, earning over 10,000 retweets and 60,000 likes in a single day. User @RedLightning420 posted a "Tom Holland getting backshots" edit featuring Venom, which pulled 2,100 retweets and 25,000 likes. Multiple users shared clips of Tobey Maguire's infamous emo dance scene from Spider-Man 3 as a reaction.

Official gaming accounts joined in. IGN quote-retweeted the original post with a video of Tobey Maguire's dance and the caption "Me on my way to get those 19 inches," picking up 6,800 retweets and 64,000 likes. @Wario64 posted a pre-order link for a 17-inch Gengar statue from Pokémon, describing it as "17-inches of Gengar" in an obvious callback. Other responses referenced Venom actor Tom Hardy, with users posting images of Hardy looking overwhelmed.

Within 24 hours, the original tweet had reached 81.5 million views, 69.6K likes, 19.2K quotes, 7,776 reposts, and 8,829 bookmarks. Film Stories described the innuendo as the kind of "Carry On-level euphemism that would make even Kenneth Williams gasp".

How to Use This Meme

The meme format is loose and mostly involves reacting to the original tweet's phrasing. Common approaches include:

- Quote-tweeting with a reaction image or video expressing shock, excitement, or exaggerated interest - Posting "my face when I get 19 inches of Venom" with an appropriate reaction clip - Applying the "X inches of Y" formula to other products or characters as a parody (e.g., "17-inches of Gengar") - Using clips from Spider-Man films, particularly Tobey Maguire's emo dance or Tom Holland scenes, as reactions

The humor relies entirely on the double entendre, so the best uses lean into the innuendo without over-explaining it.

Cultural Impact

The tweet gave PlayStation UK and Marvel's Spider-Man 2 a massive analytics boost right before the game's October 2023 launch. The 81.5 million views dwarfed what a standard promotional tweet would achieve. Multiple gaming news outlets covered the incident, including Looper, Film Stories, and IGN, all treating it as a good-natured marketing accident (or genius).

The incident also reignited the recurring internet conversation about whether corporate social media managers deliberately craft suggestive posts for engagement. As one user put it, "Social media manager is a menace". Several others argued the phrasing had to be intentional given how obviously it read.

Fun Facts

The tweet's 18,000 quote-tweets massively outnumbered its 7,000 regular retweets, showing people wanted to add their own jokes rather than just share the original.

Film Stories compared the innuendo to Britain's "Carry On" comedy film series, a franchise built entirely on sexual double entendres.

Despite (or because of) the viral moment, the Spider-Man 2 Collector's Edition likely saw a sales boost from people who suddenly became very aware it existed.

The tweet was posted just weeks before Twitter's official rebrand to X, making it one of the last great "Twitter moments" before the name change.

Derivatives & Variations

"17-inches of Gengar"

— @Wario64's parody post applying the same innuendo formula to a Pokémon statue pre-order[1]

Tom Holland backshots edit

— User @RedLightning420 created a Venom-themed edit using the "getting backshots" meme format[3]

Emo Peter Parker reaction

— IGN's quote-tweet using the Tobey Maguire Spider-Man 3 dance scene became its own widely shared post[1]

Soccer player crawling edit

— User @buckfastbadlad posted a video of a soccer player crawling on the ground in pain as a reaction to the tweet[3]

Frequently Asked Questions