55 Burgers 55 Fries 55 Tacos 55 Pies
Also known as: 55 Burgers 55 Fries · The Pay It Forward Order · ITYSL Drive-Thru Order
"55 Burgers, 55 Fries, 55 Tacos, 55 Pies" is a catchphrase meme from the Netflix sketch comedy series *I Think You Should Leave with Tim Robinson*. The sketch, which debuted in Season 3 in May 2023, features Tim Robinson's character attempting to exploit a drive-thru "pay it forward" chain by placing an absurdly massive food order. The full recitation of the order became an instantly quotable meme, spreading across Twitter, TikTok, and beyond within days of the episode's release.
TL;DR
"55 Burgers, 55 Fries, 55 Tacos, 55 Pies" is a catchphrase meme from the Netflix sketch comedy series *I Think You Should Leave with Tim Robinson*.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The meme typically works in a few ways:
- Full recitation: Post the entire order as a copypasta, often in all caps, sometimes as a reply to any food-related conversation or "what do you want for dinner?" prompt - Real-world recreation: Film yourself attempting to place the order at an actual drive-thru, especially AI-powered ones - Merchandise: Print the full order text on shirts, mugs, or other items - Contextual jokes: Use "55 burgers, 55 fries" as shorthand for wanting absurd excess, or reference the pay-it-forward scam setup when someone tries to game a system - Musical remixes: Rework the order into different musical styles or vocal impressions
The key is committing to the bit. The humor comes from the sheer volume and specificity of the order, and from the manic energy of the delivery.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
The total order in the sketch costs $680, which Robinson's character is fine with because he assumes someone else is paying
The Wendy's AI drive-thru system actually kept up with most of the order before a human employee had to intervene
The order ends on "155 taters," breaking the pattern of 55s and 100s with an oddly specific number that makes the whole list feel slightly unhinged
One user described reciting the order to themselves "all week as a litany against depression"
The Cleveland Cavaliers were one of the first major brand accounts to post the meme, doing so just three days after the season dropped
Derivatives & Variations
AI drive-thru challenge videos:
TikTokers filmed themselves reciting the order at Wendy's and other AI-powered drive-thrus to see how the bots would handle it[2]
Custom merchandise:
Fans created t-shirts with the full order printed on them, most notably the shirt @Chantagold made for her boyfriend[1]
Sports account remixes:
NBA and sports media accounts used the order format alongside game highlights and racing clips[1]
Musical covers:
Users reimagined the order in different musical styles, including a Beastie Boys version[1]
Frequently Asked Questions
References (3)
- 1
- 2
- 3Pay it forwardencyclopedia