Big Bill Hells
Also known as: F You Baltimore · Big Bill Hell's Cars
Big Bill Hell's is a fictional used car dealership commercial parody set in Baltimore, Maryland, famous for its over-the-top vulgarity and the opening line "Fuck you, Baltimore!" Originally produced as a joke for a 1990 advertising industry event, the video spread online starting in 2006 and became one of the internet's most quoted commercial parodies. Its absurd promises, including the legendary "Challenge Pissing," turned a one-off industry gag into a lasting piece of internet culture.
TL;DR
Big Bill Hell's is a fictional used car dealership commercial parody set in Baltimore, Maryland, famous for its over-the-top vulgarity and the opening line "Fuck you, Baltimore!" Originally produced as a joke for a 1990 advertising industry event, the video spread online starting in 2006 and became one of the internet's most quoted commercial parodies.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
Big Bill Hell's is typically referenced in a few ways:
- Quoting the script: Drop lines like "Fuck you, Baltimore," "Shove it up your ugly ass," or "Home of Challenge Pissing" in comments, chats, or forums when something absurd or aggressive is happening. The full transcript is often posted in its entirety as copypasta. - Template for parody: Create your own version by rewriting the script for a different city, business, or context. Replace "Baltimore" with your target, keep the escalating insults and absurd promises, and maintain the rapid-fire delivery style. - Reaction clip: Link or embed the video in response to bad deals, aggressive marketing, or any situation where someone is being comically hostile.
The humor works best when the reference lands with people who already know the source material. Dropping a "Don't fuck with us or we'll rip your nuts off" hits different when the audience can hear the voiceover in their head.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
The commercial was produced at a real Baltimore TV station, WBFF, using legitimate industry resources for what was essentially an elaborate joke.
One copy of the video has a mysterious "B&R" sign digitally superimposed on a car door at the four-second mark, likely added by employees at the video production facility where it was transferred from VHS to DVD.
The Ad Follies event that spawned the commercial was considered risky enough that participants worried about losing their jobs for mocking their industry peers.
The script went unattributed for nearly 30 years before Murphy's 2020 blog post connected him to the writing.
The original VHS tape still exists in private hands, and fans have lobbied for its professional digitization before the magnetic media degrades beyond recovery.
Frequently Asked Questions
References (7)
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- 4Big Bill Hell's - Know Your Memeencyclopedia
- 5Pepe the Frogencyclopedia
- 6Big Bill Hell's - Urban Dictionarydictionary
- 7