Babe Please Stop

2020Image macro / exploitable templatesemi-active

Also known as: Babe Please · Crying Girlfriend Meme

Babe Please Stop is a 2020 image-macro meme template featuring a crying anime girl from Magical Girl Site pleading with her partner to end an obsessive behavior as he stubbornly intensifies it.

Babe Please Stop is a multi-panel meme template featuring a crying anime girl from the manga *Magical Girl Site* pleading with a male character to stop doing something, only to be ignored. The format took off in mid-October 2020 after appearing on Reddit's r/dankmemes, where it quickly picked up tens of thousands of upvotes1. The template follows a simple setup: one person begs their partner to stop an obsessive behavior, and the partner doubles down.

TL;DR

Babe Please Stop** is a multi-panel meme template featuring a crying anime girl from the manga *Magical Girl Site* pleading with a male character to stop doing something, only to be ignored.

Overview

The Babe Please Stop template uses panels from *Magical Girl Site*, a dark magical girl manga by Kentarō Satō2. The key image shows the protagonist Aya Asagiri in tears, paired with a stoic male figure (often the "Yes Chad" character from other meme formats). The joke structure is always the same: a girlfriend-type character begs someone to stop doing something ridiculous or obsessive, and the other character either ignores her or affirms they won't stop. The crying Aya panel does the heavy emotional lifting, making even the most trivial obsessions look dramatically serious.

The source artwork comes from Chapter 103 of *Magical Girl Site* (魔法少女サイト, *Mahō Shōjo Saito*), written and illustrated by Kentarō Satō1. The manga ran on Akita Shoten's Champion Tap! website starting July 2013 before transferring to *Weekly Shōnen Champion* in October 2017, where it continued until August 20192. The series follows Aya Asagiri, a severely bullied high school student who gains magical powers through a mysterious website2. The specific panel used in the meme captures Aya crying, which fits the template's emotional setup perfectly.

On October 18, 2020, Redditor u/VeryFirstRedditor posted what appears to be the first iteration of the meme to r/dankmemes1. One popular variation paired the crying Aya with the "Yes Chad" character, creating a two-panel format where Aya pleads and the Chad figure simply refuses to comply. The post pulled in more than 21,000 upvotes within its first week1.

Origin & Background

Platform
Reddit (r/dankmemes)
Key People
u/VeryFirstRedditor, Kentarō Satō
Date
2020
Year
2020

The source artwork comes from Chapter 103 of *Magical Girl Site* (魔法少女サイト, *Mahō Shōjo Saito*), written and illustrated by Kentarō Satō. The manga ran on Akita Shoten's Champion Tap! website starting July 2013 before transferring to *Weekly Shōnen Champion* in October 2017, where it continued until August 2019. The series follows Aya Asagiri, a severely bullied high school student who gains magical powers through a mysterious website. The specific panel used in the meme captures Aya crying, which fits the template's emotional setup perfectly.

On October 18, 2020, Redditor u/VeryFirstRedditor posted what appears to be the first iteration of the meme to r/dankmemes. One popular variation paired the crying Aya with the "Yes Chad" character, creating a two-panel format where Aya pleads and the Chad figure simply refuses to comply. The post pulled in more than 21,000 upvotes within its first week.

How It Spread

Within hours of the Reddit post, the Facebook page "Killer Queen's shitposting time" shared its own version of the template. From there the format spread across meme-heavy corners of Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter throughout late October and November 2020. The template's flexibility made it easy to adapt. Users swapped in different obsessive behaviors (gaming, crypto trading, collecting figurines, rewatching the same show) while keeping the crying girlfriend and dismissive partner dynamic intact.

The meme gained traction during a period when relationship-based templates were already popular on Reddit and social media. Its appeal came from the dramatic contrast between the manga art's genuine emotional weight and the deliberately trivial things people inserted as the obsession.

How to Use This Meme

The format typically follows a four-step pattern:

1

Panel 1: A girlfriend character (usually the crying Aya panel) says something like "Babe, please stop [obsessive behavior]."

2

Panel 2: The partner character (often Yes Chad or a similar stoic figure) ignores the plea or responds with something that confirms they won't stop.

3

Panel 3 (optional): The girlfriend cries harder or adds another plea.

4

Panel 4 (optional): The partner doubles down on the behavior.

Fun Facts

The manga *Magical Girl Site* got an anime adaptation in 2018 produced by production doA, which aired on MBS, TBS, and BS-TBS.

The series was licensed for English release in North America by Seven Seas Entertainment.

Aya Asagiri's character design, with blood flowing from her eyes when she uses her powers, makes her crying panels especially dramatic and meme-ready.

The original Reddit post by u/VeryFirstRedditor hit 21k upvotes in just one week, a strong debut for a new template on r/dankmemes.

Derivatives & Variations

Yes Chad crossover:

The most popular variant pairs crying Aya with the Nordic Gamer / Yes Chad character, creating a relationship dynamic where the Chad acknowledges but dismisses the plea[1].

Babe Are You OK:

A related format flips the dynamic, with one partner checking on the other who is clearly distracted or upset about something trivial.

Frequently Asked Questions

References (3)

  1. 1
  2. 2
    Girlbossencyclopedia
  3. 3

Babe Please Stop

2020Image macro / exploitable templatesemi-active

Also known as: Babe Please · Crying Girlfriend Meme

Babe Please Stop is a 2020 image-macro meme template featuring a crying anime girl from Magical Girl Site pleading with her partner to end an obsessive behavior as he stubbornly intensifies it.

Babe Please Stop is a multi-panel meme template featuring a crying anime girl from the manga *Magical Girl Site* pleading with a male character to stop doing something, only to be ignored. The format took off in mid-October 2020 after appearing on Reddit's r/dankmemes, where it quickly picked up tens of thousands of upvotes. The template follows a simple setup: one person begs their partner to stop an obsessive behavior, and the partner doubles down.

TL;DR

Babe Please Stop** is a multi-panel meme template featuring a crying anime girl from the manga *Magical Girl Site* pleading with a male character to stop doing something, only to be ignored.

Overview

The Babe Please Stop template uses panels from *Magical Girl Site*, a dark magical girl manga by Kentarō Satō. The key image shows the protagonist Aya Asagiri in tears, paired with a stoic male figure (often the "Yes Chad" character from other meme formats). The joke structure is always the same: a girlfriend-type character begs someone to stop doing something ridiculous or obsessive, and the other character either ignores her or affirms they won't stop. The crying Aya panel does the heavy emotional lifting, making even the most trivial obsessions look dramatically serious.

The source artwork comes from Chapter 103 of *Magical Girl Site* (魔法少女サイト, *Mahō Shōjo Saito*), written and illustrated by Kentarō Satō. The manga ran on Akita Shoten's Champion Tap! website starting July 2013 before transferring to *Weekly Shōnen Champion* in October 2017, where it continued until August 2019. The series follows Aya Asagiri, a severely bullied high school student who gains magical powers through a mysterious website. The specific panel used in the meme captures Aya crying, which fits the template's emotional setup perfectly.

On October 18, 2020, Redditor u/VeryFirstRedditor posted what appears to be the first iteration of the meme to r/dankmemes. One popular variation paired the crying Aya with the "Yes Chad" character, creating a two-panel format where Aya pleads and the Chad figure simply refuses to comply. The post pulled in more than 21,000 upvotes within its first week.

Origin & Background

Platform
Reddit (r/dankmemes)
Key People
u/VeryFirstRedditor, Kentarō Satō
Date
2020
Year
2020

The source artwork comes from Chapter 103 of *Magical Girl Site* (魔法少女サイト, *Mahō Shōjo Saito*), written and illustrated by Kentarō Satō. The manga ran on Akita Shoten's Champion Tap! website starting July 2013 before transferring to *Weekly Shōnen Champion* in October 2017, where it continued until August 2019. The series follows Aya Asagiri, a severely bullied high school student who gains magical powers through a mysterious website. The specific panel used in the meme captures Aya crying, which fits the template's emotional setup perfectly.

On October 18, 2020, Redditor u/VeryFirstRedditor posted what appears to be the first iteration of the meme to r/dankmemes. One popular variation paired the crying Aya with the "Yes Chad" character, creating a two-panel format where Aya pleads and the Chad figure simply refuses to comply. The post pulled in more than 21,000 upvotes within its first week.

How It Spread

Within hours of the Reddit post, the Facebook page "Killer Queen's shitposting time" shared its own version of the template. From there the format spread across meme-heavy corners of Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter throughout late October and November 2020. The template's flexibility made it easy to adapt. Users swapped in different obsessive behaviors (gaming, crypto trading, collecting figurines, rewatching the same show) while keeping the crying girlfriend and dismissive partner dynamic intact.

The meme gained traction during a period when relationship-based templates were already popular on Reddit and social media. Its appeal came from the dramatic contrast between the manga art's genuine emotional weight and the deliberately trivial things people inserted as the obsession.

How to Use This Meme

The format typically follows a four-step pattern:

1

Panel 1: A girlfriend character (usually the crying Aya panel) says something like "Babe, please stop [obsessive behavior]."

2

Panel 2: The partner character (often Yes Chad or a similar stoic figure) ignores the plea or responds with something that confirms they won't stop.

3

Panel 3 (optional): The girlfriend cries harder or adds another plea.

4

Panel 4 (optional): The partner doubles down on the behavior.

Fun Facts

The manga *Magical Girl Site* got an anime adaptation in 2018 produced by production doA, which aired on MBS, TBS, and BS-TBS.

The series was licensed for English release in North America by Seven Seas Entertainment.

Aya Asagiri's character design, with blood flowing from her eyes when she uses her powers, makes her crying panels especially dramatic and meme-ready.

The original Reddit post by u/VeryFirstRedditor hit 21k upvotes in just one week, a strong debut for a new template on r/dankmemes.

Derivatives & Variations

Yes Chad crossover:

The most popular variant pairs crying Aya with the Nordic Gamer / Yes Chad character, creating a relationship dynamic where the Chad acknowledges but dismisses the plea[1].

Babe Are You OK:

A related format flips the dynamic, with one partner checking on the other who is clearly distracted or upset about something trivial.

Frequently Asked Questions

References (3)

  1. 1
  2. 2
    Girlbossencyclopedia
  3. 3