Bee Movie Script According To All Known Laws Of Aviation
Also known as: Bee Movie Copypasta · According to All Known Laws of Aviation · The Entire Bee Movie Script
The Bee Movie Script copypasta is the full-length screenplay of the 2007 DreamWorks animated film *Bee Movie*, copy-pasted in its entirety as a form of digital spam and shitposting. The meme took off on Tumblr and Pastebin around 2013, with users flooding comment sections, chat windows, and social media feeds with thousands of words of dialogue about a bee named Barry B. Benson. By 2015-2016, the copypasta had spawned an entire genre of "Bee Movie but..." remix videos on YouTube and became one of the internet's most recognizable text-based pranks.
TL;DR
The Bee Movie Script copypasta is the full-length screenplay of the 2007 DreamWorks animated film *Bee Movie*, copy-pasted in its entirety as a form of digital spam and shitposting.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The Bee Movie Script copypasta can be deployed in several ways:
- Classic copypasta dump: Paste the full script into a comment section, group chat, or social media post. The goal is to overwhelm anyone scrolling through with an unbroken wall of text. Facebook and mobile apps are preferred targets since the full text forces long loading times. - Opening line only: Drop "According to all known laws of aviation, there is no way a bee should be able to fly" as a non-sequitur response in any conversation. This shorter version works as a bait-and-switch or conversation derailment tool. - "Bee Movie but..." remix format: Create a video edit of the film with a conditional modification. Common setups include "every time they say 'bee' it gets faster" or "every time they say 'honey' it gets louder". - TTS donation troll: In livestreaming contexts, people have donated the entire script via text-to-speech systems, forcing a robotic voice to read hours of bee dialogue while the streamer sits helplessly.
The copypasta typically functions as a conversation-ender or a way to signal "I'm not taking this seriously".
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
The Script-O-Rama transcript became the standard copypasta version, even though it contains minor transcription quirks like "Ooming!" for "Coming!" and "Oan" for "Can".
The Facebook page "Bees Don't Exist," which advocates the position that bees as a species do not exist, was responsible for one of the most widely shared instances of the copypasta.
The meme is frequently compared to Rickrolling, but in text form. Where Rickrolling is a bait-and-switch link, the Bee Movie Script is a bait-and-switch wall of text.
*Bee Movie* ranked "slightly below the Shrek franchise" in what New York Magazine called the "pantheon of bad children's entertainment ironically beloved by people who use Tumblr".
The opening monologue's claim about aviation is scientifically false. Bees don't fly like airplanes, and their flight mechanics were explained decades ago.
Derivatives & Variations
"Bee Movie but..." YouTube remixes:
Videos applying conditional edits to the film, like speeding up every time a word is said. Popularized in 2016 and became their own genre[2].
Other script copypastas:
The Bee Movie trend directly inspired users to spam the full screenplays of *Shrek* and *The Dark Knight Rises* across Tumblr and other platforms[3].
Sans Reads the Bee Movie Script:
Michelle Alvia's October 2015 *Undertale* animation treating the script as an in-game weapon, which reignited the copypasta trend[3].
Bee Movie Script T-shirt:
A 2017 physical artifact where the entire script was printed in miniature text on a wearable garment[2].
Text-to-speech trolling:
Livestream viewers donating the full script through TTS systems to force bots to read hours of dialogue[2].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (9)
- 1bee+movie+script | Tumblrarticle
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- 5List of films with post-credits scenesencyclopedia
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- 8The Dark Knight Risesarticle
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