Celebrities Complaining About Quarantine

2020Image macro / reaction image seriesdead

Also known as: Celebrities in Quarantine · Celebrity Quarantine Memes

Celebrities Complaining About Quarantine is a 2020 image-macro meme contrasting wealthy celebrities' emotional COVID-19 lockdown complaints with images of their luxury mansions, mocking the privilege disconnect.

Celebrities Complaining About Quarantine is a meme trend from March 2020 where internet users mocked wealthy celebrities for posting emotional breakdowns and complaints about COVID-19 lockdowns from their multi-million-dollar homes. The most common format paired a caption like "Celebrities:" or "Their house:" with images of mansions or luxury estates, though the concept spread through reaction images, object labeling memes, and exploitable templates across Reddit and Twitter2.

TL;DR

Celebrities Complaining About Quarantine** is a meme trend from March 2020 where internet users mocked wealthy celebrities for posting emotional breakdowns and complaints about COVID-19 lockdowns from their multi-million-dollar homes.

Overview

During the early weeks of the COVID-19 pandemic, governments worldwide issued shelter-in-place orders forcing people to stay home. While ordinary people dealt with cramped apartments, job losses, and genuine hardship, a number of high-profile celebrities took to social media to share their quarantine experiences. Some posted tearful videos, others joked about their situation, and many inadvertently showed off enormous homes with pools, home theaters, and manicured gardens in the background2.

Internet users quickly noticed the disconnect. The meme format typically placed a label like "Celebrities:" above the fold, followed by "Their home:" with a reaction image showing an absurdly lavish mansion or palace. Variations used existing templates like SpongeBob, Mr. Krabs, or The Office to deliver the same punchline: rich people complaining about being stuck in paradise2.

The trend kicked off in mid-March 2020 as lockdown orders spread across multiple countries2. Several celebrities drew attention for their tone-deaf posts. Singer Sam Smith shared photos of an emotional "quarantine meltdown." Ellen DeGeneres caught backlash for joking that quarantine was "like being in jail" while filming from her sprawling estate. Kelly Ripa got emotional during video interviews about the difficulties of staying home1.

On March 20, 2020, Twitter user @CFCbezz posted a reply to Sam Smith's meltdown photos that became one of the earliest viral examples. The tweet pulled in over 320,000 likes and nearly 60,000 retweets, with other users piling on in the replies with their own captions mocking the situation2.

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitter (early viral tweets), Reddit (meme format spread)
Key People
@CFCbezz, community-created format
Date
2020
Year
2020

The trend kicked off in mid-March 2020 as lockdown orders spread across multiple countries. Several celebrities drew attention for their tone-deaf posts. Singer Sam Smith shared photos of an emotional "quarantine meltdown." Ellen DeGeneres caught backlash for joking that quarantine was "like being in jail" while filming from her sprawling estate. Kelly Ripa got emotional during video interviews about the difficulties of staying home.

On March 20, 2020, Twitter user @CFCbezz posted a reply to Sam Smith's meltdown photos that became one of the earliest viral examples. The tweet pulled in over 320,000 likes and nearly 60,000 retweets, with other users piling on in the replies with their own captions mocking the situation.

How It Spread

The meme exploded across platforms over the following days. On March 21, 2020, Redditor throwmeawaypop posted a meme to r/DunderMifflin referencing the celebrity quarantine complaints, earning roughly 32,000 upvotes and 448 comments.

March 22 was the biggest single day for the trend. Redditor TheDingus12 uploaded an image of Mr. Krabs pressing F on the world's smallest keyboard to r/dankmemes with the title "Just Get Over It," picking up over 30,000 upvotes. On Twitter the same day, user Dave Eternal posted a variant featuring Ellen DeGeneres and Arnold Schwarzenegger from their actual quarantine posts, getting nearly 1,000 retweets and 3,800 likes. Also on March 22, Redditor Pielef posted a SpongeBob Sees Flying Dutchman version to r/memes that blew up to nearly 100,000 upvotes and 842 comments.

By March 24, the "Their Houses:" format had crystallized as a standalone template. Redditor RoyalRien posted a version to r/dankmemes that hit almost 80,000 upvotes and 800 comments.

How to Use This Meme

The format is straightforward and flexible:

1

The caption setup: Start with "Celebrities:" or "Celebrities in quarantine be like:" as a header or top text.

2

The punchline image: Pair it with an image of a mansion, palace, or ridiculously luxurious home. Alternatively, use an existing reaction template (SpongeBob, Mr. Krabs, expanding brain, etc.) that conveys either sympathy mockery or disbelief.

3

The "Their Houses" variant: Caption an image with "Celebrities: We're all in this together" on top, then "Their houses:" below with a photo of a sprawling estate.

Cultural Impact

Comedian Ricky Gervais gave the sentiment its most high-profile amplification in an interview with The Sun. "I see someone complaining about being in a mansion with a swimming pool. And, you know, honestly, I just don't want to hear it," he said. Gervais contrasted celebrity whining with healthcare workers doing 14-hour shifts while risking their health and their families' safety, calling out the disconnect directly.

The backlash against celebrity quarantine content became a broader conversation about wealth inequality during the pandemic. Ellen DeGeneres's "jail" comparison and the viral "Imagine" video (where multiple celebrities sang John Lennon's song from their mansions) became lightning rods for criticism, feeding directly into the meme trend.

Fox News covered the phenomenon, reporting on multiple celebrities including Ellen DeGeneres, Sam Smith, and Kelly Ripa who received public backlash for their quarantine complaints.

Fun Facts

The @CFCbezz tweet replying to Sam Smith's quarantine meltdown photos was one of the first viral instances, pulling 320,000 likes in a format that was essentially just a caption and a mansion photo.

Ricky Gervais referenced his own working-class upbringing when criticizing celebrity complaints, noting his father worked on construction sites until age 70 and that he himself "had no money growing up" until he was 40.

The meme trend burned hot but brief, concentrated almost entirely within a single week of March 2020 as lockdowns first rolled out globally.

The r/memes SpongeBob version hit nearly 100,000 upvotes, making it one of the most popular individual posts in the trend.

Derivatives & Variations

"Their Houses" format:

A standalone template pairing "Celebrities: We're all in this together" with luxury real estate photos, which became the most standardized version of the meme[2].

Mr. Krabs' tiny keyboard variant:

Used the SpongeBob image of Mr. Krabs pressing F on the world's smallest keyboard to mock celebrity sadness[2].

SpongeBob Sees Flying Dutchman variant:

Applied the existing SpongeBob template to the celebrity quarantine theme, becoming one of the highest-upvoted versions at nearly 100,000 upvotes[2].

The Office / Dunder Mifflin crossovers:

Used screenshots and formats from The Office to comment on the celebrity-commoner divide during lockdown[2].

Frequently Asked Questions

Celebrities Complaining About Quarantine

2020Image macro / reaction image seriesdead

Also known as: Celebrities in Quarantine · Celebrity Quarantine Memes

Celebrities Complaining About Quarantine is a 2020 image-macro meme contrasting wealthy celebrities' emotional COVID-19 lockdown complaints with images of their luxury mansions, mocking the privilege disconnect.

Celebrities Complaining About Quarantine is a meme trend from March 2020 where internet users mocked wealthy celebrities for posting emotional breakdowns and complaints about COVID-19 lockdowns from their multi-million-dollar homes. The most common format paired a caption like "Celebrities:" or "Their house:" with images of mansions or luxury estates, though the concept spread through reaction images, object labeling memes, and exploitable templates across Reddit and Twitter.

TL;DR

Celebrities Complaining About Quarantine** is a meme trend from March 2020 where internet users mocked wealthy celebrities for posting emotional breakdowns and complaints about COVID-19 lockdowns from their multi-million-dollar homes.

Overview

During the early weeks of the COVID-19 pandemic, governments worldwide issued shelter-in-place orders forcing people to stay home. While ordinary people dealt with cramped apartments, job losses, and genuine hardship, a number of high-profile celebrities took to social media to share their quarantine experiences. Some posted tearful videos, others joked about their situation, and many inadvertently showed off enormous homes with pools, home theaters, and manicured gardens in the background.

Internet users quickly noticed the disconnect. The meme format typically placed a label like "Celebrities:" above the fold, followed by "Their home:" with a reaction image showing an absurdly lavish mansion or palace. Variations used existing templates like SpongeBob, Mr. Krabs, or The Office to deliver the same punchline: rich people complaining about being stuck in paradise.

The trend kicked off in mid-March 2020 as lockdown orders spread across multiple countries. Several celebrities drew attention for their tone-deaf posts. Singer Sam Smith shared photos of an emotional "quarantine meltdown." Ellen DeGeneres caught backlash for joking that quarantine was "like being in jail" while filming from her sprawling estate. Kelly Ripa got emotional during video interviews about the difficulties of staying home.

On March 20, 2020, Twitter user @CFCbezz posted a reply to Sam Smith's meltdown photos that became one of the earliest viral examples. The tweet pulled in over 320,000 likes and nearly 60,000 retweets, with other users piling on in the replies with their own captions mocking the situation.

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitter (early viral tweets), Reddit (meme format spread)
Key People
@CFCbezz, community-created format
Date
2020
Year
2020

The trend kicked off in mid-March 2020 as lockdown orders spread across multiple countries. Several celebrities drew attention for their tone-deaf posts. Singer Sam Smith shared photos of an emotional "quarantine meltdown." Ellen DeGeneres caught backlash for joking that quarantine was "like being in jail" while filming from her sprawling estate. Kelly Ripa got emotional during video interviews about the difficulties of staying home.

On March 20, 2020, Twitter user @CFCbezz posted a reply to Sam Smith's meltdown photos that became one of the earliest viral examples. The tweet pulled in over 320,000 likes and nearly 60,000 retweets, with other users piling on in the replies with their own captions mocking the situation.

How It Spread

The meme exploded across platforms over the following days. On March 21, 2020, Redditor throwmeawaypop posted a meme to r/DunderMifflin referencing the celebrity quarantine complaints, earning roughly 32,000 upvotes and 448 comments.

March 22 was the biggest single day for the trend. Redditor TheDingus12 uploaded an image of Mr. Krabs pressing F on the world's smallest keyboard to r/dankmemes with the title "Just Get Over It," picking up over 30,000 upvotes. On Twitter the same day, user Dave Eternal posted a variant featuring Ellen DeGeneres and Arnold Schwarzenegger from their actual quarantine posts, getting nearly 1,000 retweets and 3,800 likes. Also on March 22, Redditor Pielef posted a SpongeBob Sees Flying Dutchman version to r/memes that blew up to nearly 100,000 upvotes and 842 comments.

By March 24, the "Their Houses:" format had crystallized as a standalone template. Redditor RoyalRien posted a version to r/dankmemes that hit almost 80,000 upvotes and 800 comments.

How to Use This Meme

The format is straightforward and flexible:

1

The caption setup: Start with "Celebrities:" or "Celebrities in quarantine be like:" as a header or top text.

2

The punchline image: Pair it with an image of a mansion, palace, or ridiculously luxurious home. Alternatively, use an existing reaction template (SpongeBob, Mr. Krabs, expanding brain, etc.) that conveys either sympathy mockery or disbelief.

3

The "Their Houses" variant: Caption an image with "Celebrities: We're all in this together" on top, then "Their houses:" below with a photo of a sprawling estate.

Cultural Impact

Comedian Ricky Gervais gave the sentiment its most high-profile amplification in an interview with The Sun. "I see someone complaining about being in a mansion with a swimming pool. And, you know, honestly, I just don't want to hear it," he said. Gervais contrasted celebrity whining with healthcare workers doing 14-hour shifts while risking their health and their families' safety, calling out the disconnect directly.

The backlash against celebrity quarantine content became a broader conversation about wealth inequality during the pandemic. Ellen DeGeneres's "jail" comparison and the viral "Imagine" video (where multiple celebrities sang John Lennon's song from their mansions) became lightning rods for criticism, feeding directly into the meme trend.

Fox News covered the phenomenon, reporting on multiple celebrities including Ellen DeGeneres, Sam Smith, and Kelly Ripa who received public backlash for their quarantine complaints.

Fun Facts

The @CFCbezz tweet replying to Sam Smith's quarantine meltdown photos was one of the first viral instances, pulling 320,000 likes in a format that was essentially just a caption and a mansion photo.

Ricky Gervais referenced his own working-class upbringing when criticizing celebrity complaints, noting his father worked on construction sites until age 70 and that he himself "had no money growing up" until he was 40.

The meme trend burned hot but brief, concentrated almost entirely within a single week of March 2020 as lockdowns first rolled out globally.

The r/memes SpongeBob version hit nearly 100,000 upvotes, making it one of the most popular individual posts in the trend.

Derivatives & Variations

"Their Houses" format:

A standalone template pairing "Celebrities: We're all in this together" with luxury real estate photos, which became the most standardized version of the meme[2].

Mr. Krabs' tiny keyboard variant:

Used the SpongeBob image of Mr. Krabs pressing F on the world's smallest keyboard to mock celebrity sadness[2].

SpongeBob Sees Flying Dutchman variant:

Applied the existing SpongeBob template to the celebrity quarantine theme, becoming one of the highest-upvoted versions at nearly 100,000 upvotes[2].

The Office / Dunder Mifflin crossovers:

Used screenshots and formats from The Office to comment on the celebrity-commoner divide during lockdown[2].

Frequently Asked Questions