21 Savage Supervillain

2017Image macroclassic

Also known as: 21 Savage Batman · 21 Savage Gotham Villain

21 Savage Supervillain is a 2017 image-macro meme featuring Atlanta rapper 21 Savage's March 2017 ESPN appearance, where his distinctive wild hair, hand gestures, and urban backdrop evoked a comic book villain.

21 Savage Supervillain is an image macro meme based on a screenshot of Atlanta rapper 21 Savage during a March 2017 appearance on ESPN's *Highly Questionable*, where his wild hair, hand gestures, and the cityscape backdrop made him look like a comic book villain interrupting a TV broadcast. The screenshot spread rapidly on Twitter, picked up a co-sign from Justin Bieber, and directly inspired an animated series where 21 Savage voiced himself as a world-controlling supervillain.

TL;DR

21 Savage Supervillain is an image macro meme based on a screenshot of Atlanta rapper 21 Savage during a March 2017 appearance on ESPN's *Highly Questionable*, where his wild hair, hand gestures, and the cityscape backdrop made him look like a comic book villain interrupting a TV broadcast.

Overview

The meme centers on a single screenshot from 21 Savage's satellite appearance on ESPN's *Highly Questionable*. In the image, the rapper sits in front of a green-screened cityscape with disheveled hair and a sly grin, one hand raised in a gesture that looks like he's about to deliver an ultimatum to an entire city. People added captions written as villain monologues, usually demanding Batman surrender or threatening to destroy Gotham, playing off 21 Savage's deadpan persona and the broadcast-interruption framing of the original screenshot1.

On March 1, 2017, 21 Savage appeared via satellite on ESPN's *Highly Questionable* sporting a new hairstyle4. The segment briefly made headlines on its own when ESPN cut the rapper off mid-sentence, reportedly because he was rapping one of his songs while self-censoring explicit lyrics with coughs4. But the real story started a week later.

On March 8, Twitter user @Trashvis posted a screenshot from the interview with the caption: "why this pic look like 21 Savage is a supervillain interrupting a broadcast to reveal his evil plan to the world"2. The combination of the cityscape background, 21 Savage's unkempt hair, and his hand positioning made the comparison impossible to unsee. The tweet pulled in more than 113,000 retweets and 215,000 likes within three months4.

This wasn't 21 Savage's first brush with meme fame. He had already become an unlikely internet joke in 2016 after telling DJ Vlad that his forehead tattoo was "issa knife," a phrase that took on a life of its own2.

Origin & Background

Platform
ESPN's *Highly Questionable* (source image), Twitter (viral meme format)
Key People
@Trashvis, 21 Savage
Date
2017
Year
2017

On March 1, 2017, 21 Savage appeared via satellite on ESPN's *Highly Questionable* sporting a new hairstyle. The segment briefly made headlines on its own when ESPN cut the rapper off mid-sentence, reportedly because he was rapping one of his songs while self-censoring explicit lyrics with coughs. But the real story started a week later.

On March 8, Twitter user @Trashvis posted a screenshot from the interview with the caption: "why this pic look like 21 Savage is a supervillain interrupting a broadcast to reveal his evil plan to the world". The combination of the cityscape background, 21 Savage's unkempt hair, and his hand positioning made the comparison impossible to unsee. The tweet pulled in more than 113,000 retweets and 215,000 likes within three months.

This wasn't 21 Savage's first brush with meme fame. He had already become an unlikely internet joke in 2016 after telling DJ Vlad that his forehead tattoo was "issa knife," a phrase that took on a life of its own.

How It Spread

The meme blew up within hours of @Trashvis's tweet. That same day, singer Justin Bieber reposted the screenshot to his official Instagram account with the caption "hilarious," where it collected over 1 million likes in three months.

Twitter users ran with the supervillain framing, writing elaborate villain speeches in 21 Savage's voice. One popular variation from @TheGeeksCore read: "Hello people of Gotham, Issa savage here, I'm giving you 21 hours to turn in The Batman… or issa chaos in these streetz… 21 hours". Another from @RUINER went: "In 21 days, I 21 savage shall reveal 21 plans to destroy 21 cities w 21 missiles. 21 humans have 21 days to give me 21 million dollars". The jokes leaned into Batman villain tropes, Phineas and Ferb's Dr. Doofenshmirtz ("bouta take over the Tri-State area"), Power Rangers villains, and Edward Scissorhands comparisons.

Several outlets picked up the story in the following days, including The FADER, BET, and Gossip On This. BET noted that 21 Savage had "a natural tendency for becoming a bit of an unlikely but still hilarious meme".

How to Use This Meme

The format typically follows a broadcast-interruption setup:

1

Use the original screenshot of 21 Savage in front of the cityscape

2

Write a caption as if a supervillain has hijacked the airwaves, usually in quotes

3

Include a demand (turn in Batman, pay a ransom, surrender the city) and a deadline

4

Work in 21 Savage references for bonus points: "issa" phrasing, the number 21, Slaughter Gang, or Atlanta references

Cultural Impact

The meme's biggest real-world impact came when 21 Savage leaned into the joke. On June 28, 2017, he announced he would voice himself as a supervillain in *The Year 2100*, an animated series produced by WeBuyGold. In the show, 21 Savage plays an emperor who controls the world through his music, assisted by an evil Alexa-like device named Tootie. The series was illustrated by animator Somehoodlum (whose previous work featured Drake, Migos, and Kendrick Lamar), written by Richie Carl and Ian McLees, and creatively directed by DJ Khaled. The first of six one-minute episodes premiered on WeBuyGold's Instagram, pulling 189,000 views and 1,500 comments in its first 24 hours. Billboard, The Source, and other outlets covered the premiere.

"I'm excited to bring this cartoon villain to life and for my fans to see a new side of me," 21 Savage said in a statement announcing the series.

Years later, the meme got a second wind. In January 2024, Donald Glover recreated the 21 Savage supervillain pose as part of promotional material for *American Dream: The 21 Savage Story*. Fans spotted the reference in the film's trailer, uploaded to YouTube on January 8, 2024, which earned 950,000 views in under two days. X user @DiscussingFilm posted the side-by-side comparison, racking up 42,000 likes in two days.

Fun Facts

ESPN cut 21 Savage off during the original *Highly Questionable* appearance, reportedly for rapping his own lyrics with cough-censored profanity, which only added to the meme's notoriety.

Justin Bieber's Instagram repost of the meme hit 1 million likes, making him one of the biggest celebrity amplifiers of the joke.

The "issa knife" meme from 2016 set the stage for 21 Savage's supervillain moment, making "issa" a natural part of the villain speech captions.

DJ Khaled served as creative director for WeBuyGold, the platform that produced 21 Savage's animated villain series.

United Talent Agency brokered the deal between 21 Savage and WeBuyGold for *The Year 2100*, turning a meme into a formal entertainment property.

Derivatives & Variations

*The Year 2100* animated series

— A six-episode animated series where 21 Savage voices himself as an emperor supervillain who maintains power through his music, directly inspired by the meme[3].

Donald Glover recreation

— Actor Donald Glover recreated the exact supervillain pose for the *American Dream: The 21 Savage Story* trailer in January 2024[4].

Power Rangers edits

— Users photoshopped 21 Savage into Power Rangers villain screenshots, casting him as a new antagonist[1].

Edward Scissorhands comparisons

— Some variations compared 21 Savage's wild hair and hand gestures to Johnny Depp's Edward Scissorhands[1].

Phineas and Ferb crossovers

— Jokes about 21 Savage taking over the "Tri-State area" in the style of Dr. Doofenshmirtz[2].

Frequently Asked Questions

21 Savage Supervillain

2017Image macroclassic

Also known as: 21 Savage Batman · 21 Savage Gotham Villain

21 Savage Supervillain is a 2017 image-macro meme featuring Atlanta rapper 21 Savage's March 2017 ESPN appearance, where his distinctive wild hair, hand gestures, and urban backdrop evoked a comic book villain.

21 Savage Supervillain is an image macro meme based on a screenshot of Atlanta rapper 21 Savage during a March 2017 appearance on ESPN's *Highly Questionable*, where his wild hair, hand gestures, and the cityscape backdrop made him look like a comic book villain interrupting a TV broadcast. The screenshot spread rapidly on Twitter, picked up a co-sign from Justin Bieber, and directly inspired an animated series where 21 Savage voiced himself as a world-controlling supervillain.

TL;DR

21 Savage Supervillain is an image macro meme based on a screenshot of Atlanta rapper 21 Savage during a March 2017 appearance on ESPN's *Highly Questionable*, where his wild hair, hand gestures, and the cityscape backdrop made him look like a comic book villain interrupting a TV broadcast.

Overview

The meme centers on a single screenshot from 21 Savage's satellite appearance on ESPN's *Highly Questionable*. In the image, the rapper sits in front of a green-screened cityscape with disheveled hair and a sly grin, one hand raised in a gesture that looks like he's about to deliver an ultimatum to an entire city. People added captions written as villain monologues, usually demanding Batman surrender or threatening to destroy Gotham, playing off 21 Savage's deadpan persona and the broadcast-interruption framing of the original screenshot.

On March 1, 2017, 21 Savage appeared via satellite on ESPN's *Highly Questionable* sporting a new hairstyle. The segment briefly made headlines on its own when ESPN cut the rapper off mid-sentence, reportedly because he was rapping one of his songs while self-censoring explicit lyrics with coughs. But the real story started a week later.

On March 8, Twitter user @Trashvis posted a screenshot from the interview with the caption: "why this pic look like 21 Savage is a supervillain interrupting a broadcast to reveal his evil plan to the world". The combination of the cityscape background, 21 Savage's unkempt hair, and his hand positioning made the comparison impossible to unsee. The tweet pulled in more than 113,000 retweets and 215,000 likes within three months.

This wasn't 21 Savage's first brush with meme fame. He had already become an unlikely internet joke in 2016 after telling DJ Vlad that his forehead tattoo was "issa knife," a phrase that took on a life of its own.

Origin & Background

Platform
ESPN's *Highly Questionable* (source image), Twitter (viral meme format)
Key People
@Trashvis, 21 Savage
Date
2017
Year
2017

On March 1, 2017, 21 Savage appeared via satellite on ESPN's *Highly Questionable* sporting a new hairstyle. The segment briefly made headlines on its own when ESPN cut the rapper off mid-sentence, reportedly because he was rapping one of his songs while self-censoring explicit lyrics with coughs. But the real story started a week later.

On March 8, Twitter user @Trashvis posted a screenshot from the interview with the caption: "why this pic look like 21 Savage is a supervillain interrupting a broadcast to reveal his evil plan to the world". The combination of the cityscape background, 21 Savage's unkempt hair, and his hand positioning made the comparison impossible to unsee. The tweet pulled in more than 113,000 retweets and 215,000 likes within three months.

This wasn't 21 Savage's first brush with meme fame. He had already become an unlikely internet joke in 2016 after telling DJ Vlad that his forehead tattoo was "issa knife," a phrase that took on a life of its own.

How It Spread

The meme blew up within hours of @Trashvis's tweet. That same day, singer Justin Bieber reposted the screenshot to his official Instagram account with the caption "hilarious," where it collected over 1 million likes in three months.

Twitter users ran with the supervillain framing, writing elaborate villain speeches in 21 Savage's voice. One popular variation from @TheGeeksCore read: "Hello people of Gotham, Issa savage here, I'm giving you 21 hours to turn in The Batman… or issa chaos in these streetz… 21 hours". Another from @RUINER went: "In 21 days, I 21 savage shall reveal 21 plans to destroy 21 cities w 21 missiles. 21 humans have 21 days to give me 21 million dollars". The jokes leaned into Batman villain tropes, Phineas and Ferb's Dr. Doofenshmirtz ("bouta take over the Tri-State area"), Power Rangers villains, and Edward Scissorhands comparisons.

Several outlets picked up the story in the following days, including The FADER, BET, and Gossip On This. BET noted that 21 Savage had "a natural tendency for becoming a bit of an unlikely but still hilarious meme".

How to Use This Meme

The format typically follows a broadcast-interruption setup:

1

Use the original screenshot of 21 Savage in front of the cityscape

2

Write a caption as if a supervillain has hijacked the airwaves, usually in quotes

3

Include a demand (turn in Batman, pay a ransom, surrender the city) and a deadline

4

Work in 21 Savage references for bonus points: "issa" phrasing, the number 21, Slaughter Gang, or Atlanta references

Cultural Impact

The meme's biggest real-world impact came when 21 Savage leaned into the joke. On June 28, 2017, he announced he would voice himself as a supervillain in *The Year 2100*, an animated series produced by WeBuyGold. In the show, 21 Savage plays an emperor who controls the world through his music, assisted by an evil Alexa-like device named Tootie. The series was illustrated by animator Somehoodlum (whose previous work featured Drake, Migos, and Kendrick Lamar), written by Richie Carl and Ian McLees, and creatively directed by DJ Khaled. The first of six one-minute episodes premiered on WeBuyGold's Instagram, pulling 189,000 views and 1,500 comments in its first 24 hours. Billboard, The Source, and other outlets covered the premiere.

"I'm excited to bring this cartoon villain to life and for my fans to see a new side of me," 21 Savage said in a statement announcing the series.

Years later, the meme got a second wind. In January 2024, Donald Glover recreated the 21 Savage supervillain pose as part of promotional material for *American Dream: The 21 Savage Story*. Fans spotted the reference in the film's trailer, uploaded to YouTube on January 8, 2024, which earned 950,000 views in under two days. X user @DiscussingFilm posted the side-by-side comparison, racking up 42,000 likes in two days.

Fun Facts

ESPN cut 21 Savage off during the original *Highly Questionable* appearance, reportedly for rapping his own lyrics with cough-censored profanity, which only added to the meme's notoriety.

Justin Bieber's Instagram repost of the meme hit 1 million likes, making him one of the biggest celebrity amplifiers of the joke.

The "issa knife" meme from 2016 set the stage for 21 Savage's supervillain moment, making "issa" a natural part of the villain speech captions.

DJ Khaled served as creative director for WeBuyGold, the platform that produced 21 Savage's animated villain series.

United Talent Agency brokered the deal between 21 Savage and WeBuyGold for *The Year 2100*, turning a meme into a formal entertainment property.

Derivatives & Variations

*The Year 2100* animated series

— A six-episode animated series where 21 Savage voices himself as an emperor supervillain who maintains power through his music, directly inspired by the meme[3].

Donald Glover recreation

— Actor Donald Glover recreated the exact supervillain pose for the *American Dream: The 21 Savage Story* trailer in January 2024[4].

Power Rangers edits

— Users photoshopped 21 Savage into Power Rangers villain screenshots, casting him as a new antagonist[1].

Edward Scissorhands comparisons

— Some variations compared 21 Savage's wild hair and hand gestures to Johnny Depp's Edward Scissorhands[1].

Phineas and Ferb crossovers

— Jokes about 21 Savage taking over the "Tri-State area" in the style of Dr. Doofenshmirtz[2].

Frequently Asked Questions