60S Spider Man

2009Image macro / reaction imageclassic

Also known as: Retro Spider-Man · Spider-Man '67 · 1960s Spider-Man

60s Spider-Man is a 2009 image macro from the 1967 animated series, featuring awkward poses with absurd captions, best known for the "Spider-Man Pointing at Spider-Man" reaction image.

60's Spider-Man is an image macro series built from screenshots of the original 1967 Spider-Man animated television series, typically overlaid with absurd captions or internal monologues that match the awkward poses and low-budget animation on screen1. The meme took off on 4chan's /co/ board in mid-2009 after Marvel began officially streaming the old episodes, and it spread across Tumblr, Reddit, and humor blogs through 20114. Its most iconic variant, the "Spider-Man Pointing at Spider-Man" scene from the episode "Double Identity," became one of the most recognizable reaction images on the internet2.

TL;DR

60's Spider-Man is an image macro series built from screenshots of the original 1967 Spider-Man animated television series, typically overlaid with absurd captions or internal monologues that match the awkward poses and low-budget animation on screen.

Overview

The 60's Spider-Man meme pulls still frames from the original Spider-Man cartoon that aired from 1967 to 19703. The show was produced jointly in Canada and the United States and was the first animated adaptation of the Marvel comic created by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko4. Budget constraints meant heavy reuse of stock animation, weird character poses, and off-model drawings throughout the series. These visual quirks gave memers an endless supply of screenshots that look hilarious out of context.

The typical format places text over a freeze-frame from the cartoon, with captions written as Spider-Man's inner thoughts. The humor comes from the mismatch between Spider-Man's heroic reputation and whatever absurd, mundane, or inappropriate monologue the caption assigns to a given pose1. Common setups include Spider-Man sitting at a desk, pointing at something, hiding behind objects, or swinging through the city with an expression that reads as anything from smug to deeply confused.

The 1967 Spider-Man cartoon had three seasons, the first produced by Grantray-Lawrence Animation with relatively faithful adaptations of the comic book rogues gallery3. When animator Ralph Bakshi took over for seasons two and three, the show took a surreal turn. Bakshi's acid-washed skies, dissonant jazz scores, and unsettling camera angles gave the cartoon an unintentionally psychedelic quality that aged into comedy gold3.

The show sat largely forgotten until Marvel officially began streaming full episodes on Marvel.com on April 2, 20094. This caught the attention of 4chan's /co/ (cartoon) board, where users organized group viewing sessions of the episodes via streaming. After each session, users posted screenshots with humorous titles in a style similar to LOLcat image macros4.

One of the earliest documented threads appeared on July 19, 2009, titled "Spider-man on his day off"4. The thread contained 153 posts with captioned Spider-Man images, establishing the format that would define the meme. As more viewing sessions took place, the screenshot collection grew and the images began circulating independently as reaction faces and standalone image macros1.

Origin & Background

Platform
4chan /co/ (meme format), Marvel.com (episode streaming)
Creator
Unknown
Date
2009
Year
2009

The 1967 Spider-Man cartoon had three seasons, the first produced by Grantray-Lawrence Animation with relatively faithful adaptations of the comic book rogues gallery. When animator Ralph Bakshi took over for seasons two and three, the show took a surreal turn. Bakshi's acid-washed skies, dissonant jazz scores, and unsettling camera angles gave the cartoon an unintentionally psychedelic quality that aged into comedy gold.

The show sat largely forgotten until Marvel officially began streaming full episodes on Marvel.com on April 2, 2009. This caught the attention of 4chan's /co/ (cartoon) board, where users organized group viewing sessions of the episodes via streaming. After each session, users posted screenshots with humorous titles in a style similar to LOLcat image macros.

One of the earliest documented threads appeared on July 19, 2009, titled "Spider-man on his day off". The thread contained 153 posts with captioned Spider-Man images, establishing the format that would define the meme. As more viewing sessions took place, the screenshot collection grew and the images began circulating independently as reaction faces and standalone image macros.

How It Spread

The meme's migration from 4chan to broader platforms happened gradually through late 2009 and 2010. Geek culture blogs like Topless Robot and The Daily P.O.P. were already reviewing the original cartoon episodes, which helped build awareness of the show's unintentional comedy.

On Tumblr, a user named Hobbo launched the blog "Wallopin Websnappers" in November 2010 as a hub for organizing livestream viewings and collecting the 700+ screencaps he had gathered from the series. The first Tumblr blog dedicated specifically to captioned 60's Spider-Man images, "You're a horrible man, Spiderman Brown," appeared on February 1, 2011. More single-topic Tumblrs followed later that year, along with an active Tumblr tag.

Between April and July 2011, the meme hit its mainstream stride. Compilation galleries appeared on Reddit, FunnyJunk, Uproxx, and the humor blog Pleated Jeans. A Redditor named PineAppleExpress213 posted a gallery of 41 images that BroBible called "the very best of the 60's Spider-Man meme". Multiple generators appeared on Meme Generator with different still images from the series, making it easy for anyone to create their own versions.

Search traffic for "spiderman meme" picked up in January 2011 and climbed steadily through the year.

How to Use This Meme

The 60's Spider-Man format works best when you match a specific screenshot's body language to an unexpected or absurd caption:

1

Pick a still frame from the 1967 cartoon where Spider-Man is in a funny pose, awkward position, or making an odd gesture

2

Write a caption as Spider-Man's inner monologue or dialogue that recontextualizes the image. The more mundane or inappropriate compared to the heroic context, the better

3

The text usually goes above or below the image in standard image macro style

Cultural Impact

The "Double Identity" pointing scene broke out of meme culture and into the physical world when Iron Studios produced an official 1/10 scale collectible statue recreating the pose. Priced at $150 and officially licensed as "Spider-Man '60s Animated Series – Spider-Man – Art Scale 1/10," the figure depicts Spider-Man with his right arm raised and index finger pointing, left arm curled with a clenched fist, standing on a pedestal with a wooden crate. Buyers who wanted to recreate the full pointing meme needed to purchase two figures and source their own miniature police truck.

The pointing Spider-Man format got a major boost from the Spider-Verse film franchise. Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse (2018) and its sequel Across the Spider-Verse (2023) built their entire premise around multiple versions of Spider-Man meeting each other, directly echoing the "Double Identity" meme. The films' multiverse concept made the pointing meme feel almost prophetic, and it saw heavy reuse around each film's release.

Fun Facts

The original 1967 cartoon was notorious for its low budget even at the time. Animator Ralph Bakshi, who was only 25 when he took over, created such unsettling visuals for the episode "Revolt in the 5th Dimension" that the network pulled it from broadcast.

The show's theme song ("Spider-Man, Spider-Man, does whatever a spider can") and the phrase "friendly neighborhood Spider-Man" both originated with this 1967 cartoon, not the comics.

Hobbo's "Wallopin Websnappers" Tumblr had collected over 700 screencaps from the series before the meme even fully broke out.

The 4chan thread that helped spark the meme format had 153 individual captioned images in a single discussion.

Iron Studios' official statue of the pointing scene shipped with only one Spider-Man figure, meaning fans needed to buy two to properly recreate the meme.

Derivatives & Variations

Spider-Man Pointing at Spider-Man:

The single most famous variant, pulled from the "Double Identity" episode where a villain disguised as Spider-Man confronts the real one. Used as a reaction image whenever two similar or identical things are compared[2].

Spider-Man at Desk:

A screenshot of Peter Parker sitting calmly at a desk, used for workplace humor and "this is fine" energy[1].

Spider-Man Behind Rock:

A frame of Spider-Man peeking from behind a boulder, commonly used for lurking or hiding jokes[4].

Multiple Spider-Men Pointing:

An expanded version of the pointing meme with three or more Spider-Men edited in, used when multiple parties share the same flaw or accusation[2].

Frequently Asked Questions

60S Spider Man

2009Image macro / reaction imageclassic

Also known as: Retro Spider-Man · Spider-Man '67 · 1960s Spider-Man

60s Spider-Man is a 2009 image macro from the 1967 animated series, featuring awkward poses with absurd captions, best known for the "Spider-Man Pointing at Spider-Man" reaction image.

60's Spider-Man is an image macro series built from screenshots of the original 1967 Spider-Man animated television series, typically overlaid with absurd captions or internal monologues that match the awkward poses and low-budget animation on screen. The meme took off on 4chan's /co/ board in mid-2009 after Marvel began officially streaming the old episodes, and it spread across Tumblr, Reddit, and humor blogs through 2011. Its most iconic variant, the "Spider-Man Pointing at Spider-Man" scene from the episode "Double Identity," became one of the most recognizable reaction images on the internet.

TL;DR

60's Spider-Man is an image macro series built from screenshots of the original 1967 Spider-Man animated television series, typically overlaid with absurd captions or internal monologues that match the awkward poses and low-budget animation on screen.

Overview

The 60's Spider-Man meme pulls still frames from the original Spider-Man cartoon that aired from 1967 to 1970. The show was produced jointly in Canada and the United States and was the first animated adaptation of the Marvel comic created by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko. Budget constraints meant heavy reuse of stock animation, weird character poses, and off-model drawings throughout the series. These visual quirks gave memers an endless supply of screenshots that look hilarious out of context.

The typical format places text over a freeze-frame from the cartoon, with captions written as Spider-Man's inner thoughts. The humor comes from the mismatch between Spider-Man's heroic reputation and whatever absurd, mundane, or inappropriate monologue the caption assigns to a given pose. Common setups include Spider-Man sitting at a desk, pointing at something, hiding behind objects, or swinging through the city with an expression that reads as anything from smug to deeply confused.

The 1967 Spider-Man cartoon had three seasons, the first produced by Grantray-Lawrence Animation with relatively faithful adaptations of the comic book rogues gallery. When animator Ralph Bakshi took over for seasons two and three, the show took a surreal turn. Bakshi's acid-washed skies, dissonant jazz scores, and unsettling camera angles gave the cartoon an unintentionally psychedelic quality that aged into comedy gold.

The show sat largely forgotten until Marvel officially began streaming full episodes on Marvel.com on April 2, 2009. This caught the attention of 4chan's /co/ (cartoon) board, where users organized group viewing sessions of the episodes via streaming. After each session, users posted screenshots with humorous titles in a style similar to LOLcat image macros.

One of the earliest documented threads appeared on July 19, 2009, titled "Spider-man on his day off". The thread contained 153 posts with captioned Spider-Man images, establishing the format that would define the meme. As more viewing sessions took place, the screenshot collection grew and the images began circulating independently as reaction faces and standalone image macros.

Origin & Background

Platform
4chan /co/ (meme format), Marvel.com (episode streaming)
Creator
Unknown
Date
2009
Year
2009

The 1967 Spider-Man cartoon had three seasons, the first produced by Grantray-Lawrence Animation with relatively faithful adaptations of the comic book rogues gallery. When animator Ralph Bakshi took over for seasons two and three, the show took a surreal turn. Bakshi's acid-washed skies, dissonant jazz scores, and unsettling camera angles gave the cartoon an unintentionally psychedelic quality that aged into comedy gold.

The show sat largely forgotten until Marvel officially began streaming full episodes on Marvel.com on April 2, 2009. This caught the attention of 4chan's /co/ (cartoon) board, where users organized group viewing sessions of the episodes via streaming. After each session, users posted screenshots with humorous titles in a style similar to LOLcat image macros.

One of the earliest documented threads appeared on July 19, 2009, titled "Spider-man on his day off". The thread contained 153 posts with captioned Spider-Man images, establishing the format that would define the meme. As more viewing sessions took place, the screenshot collection grew and the images began circulating independently as reaction faces and standalone image macros.

How It Spread

The meme's migration from 4chan to broader platforms happened gradually through late 2009 and 2010. Geek culture blogs like Topless Robot and The Daily P.O.P. were already reviewing the original cartoon episodes, which helped build awareness of the show's unintentional comedy.

On Tumblr, a user named Hobbo launched the blog "Wallopin Websnappers" in November 2010 as a hub for organizing livestream viewings and collecting the 700+ screencaps he had gathered from the series. The first Tumblr blog dedicated specifically to captioned 60's Spider-Man images, "You're a horrible man, Spiderman Brown," appeared on February 1, 2011. More single-topic Tumblrs followed later that year, along with an active Tumblr tag.

Between April and July 2011, the meme hit its mainstream stride. Compilation galleries appeared on Reddit, FunnyJunk, Uproxx, and the humor blog Pleated Jeans. A Redditor named PineAppleExpress213 posted a gallery of 41 images that BroBible called "the very best of the 60's Spider-Man meme". Multiple generators appeared on Meme Generator with different still images from the series, making it easy for anyone to create their own versions.

Search traffic for "spiderman meme" picked up in January 2011 and climbed steadily through the year.

How to Use This Meme

The 60's Spider-Man format works best when you match a specific screenshot's body language to an unexpected or absurd caption:

1

Pick a still frame from the 1967 cartoon where Spider-Man is in a funny pose, awkward position, or making an odd gesture

2

Write a caption as Spider-Man's inner monologue or dialogue that recontextualizes the image. The more mundane or inappropriate compared to the heroic context, the better

3

The text usually goes above or below the image in standard image macro style

Cultural Impact

The "Double Identity" pointing scene broke out of meme culture and into the physical world when Iron Studios produced an official 1/10 scale collectible statue recreating the pose. Priced at $150 and officially licensed as "Spider-Man '60s Animated Series – Spider-Man – Art Scale 1/10," the figure depicts Spider-Man with his right arm raised and index finger pointing, left arm curled with a clenched fist, standing on a pedestal with a wooden crate. Buyers who wanted to recreate the full pointing meme needed to purchase two figures and source their own miniature police truck.

The pointing Spider-Man format got a major boost from the Spider-Verse film franchise. Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse (2018) and its sequel Across the Spider-Verse (2023) built their entire premise around multiple versions of Spider-Man meeting each other, directly echoing the "Double Identity" meme. The films' multiverse concept made the pointing meme feel almost prophetic, and it saw heavy reuse around each film's release.

Fun Facts

The original 1967 cartoon was notorious for its low budget even at the time. Animator Ralph Bakshi, who was only 25 when he took over, created such unsettling visuals for the episode "Revolt in the 5th Dimension" that the network pulled it from broadcast.

The show's theme song ("Spider-Man, Spider-Man, does whatever a spider can") and the phrase "friendly neighborhood Spider-Man" both originated with this 1967 cartoon, not the comics.

Hobbo's "Wallopin Websnappers" Tumblr had collected over 700 screencaps from the series before the meme even fully broke out.

The 4chan thread that helped spark the meme format had 153 individual captioned images in a single discussion.

Iron Studios' official statue of the pointing scene shipped with only one Spider-Man figure, meaning fans needed to buy two to properly recreate the meme.

Derivatives & Variations

Spider-Man Pointing at Spider-Man:

The single most famous variant, pulled from the "Double Identity" episode where a villain disguised as Spider-Man confronts the real one. Used as a reaction image whenever two similar or identical things are compared[2].

Spider-Man at Desk:

A screenshot of Peter Parker sitting calmly at a desk, used for workplace humor and "this is fine" energy[1].

Spider-Man Behind Rock:

A frame of Spider-Man peeking from behind a boulder, commonly used for lurking or hiding jokes[4].

Multiple Spider-Men Pointing:

An expanded version of the pointing meme with three or more Spider-Men edited in, used when multiple parties share the same flaw or accusation[2].

Frequently Asked Questions