Charlotte Flair Kneeing Ronda Rousey
Charlotte Flair Kneeing Ronda Rousey is a meme born from a scripted brawl on the April 1, 2019 episode of Monday Night Raw, where a handcuffed Charlotte Flair drove her knee into Ronda Rousey's face as Rousey stuck her head through a broken police car window1. Wrestling fans on Twitter turned the freeze-frame into reaction images, movie references, and music-synced video edits that racked up tens of thousands of engagements within 24 hours2.
TL;DR
Charlotte Flair Kneeing Ronda Rousey is a meme born from a scripted brawl on the April 1, 2019 episode of Monday Night Raw, where a handcuffed Charlotte Flair drove her knee into Ronda Rousey's face as Rousey stuck her head through a broken police car window.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The meme works in two main formats. For the still image, people typically use the freeze frame of Rousey's face right before or during the knee impact as a reaction image. Common setups involve someone walking into a situation they should have seen coming, or the "record scratch" opening narration gag ("You're probably wondering how I ended up here").
For video edits, the approach is to loop the GIF of the knee and sync it to a song. The most popular versions match the impact to a musical drop or beat change. Songs with dramatic builds or ironic upbeat energy tend to work well, as the original Eurythmics and Gwen Stefani edits showed.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
Rousey kicked through the police car door herself before sticking her head out the window, setting up Flair's knee.
The entire brawl started after the three women cooperated to easily beat The Riott Squad, only to immediately turn on each other.
Charlotte Flair was handcuffed when she delivered the knee, making the visual even more ridiculous.
The segment aired on April 1st (April Fools' Day), which some fans noted added an extra layer of absurdity to the whole scene.
Derivatives & Variations
"Hereditary" comparison
— A fan compared the knee to the car scene in Ari Aster's 2018 horror film, creating one of the most shared joke tweets from the moment[2].
Record Scratch Freeze Frame edits
— Simon Miller's "Yup. That's me" format inspired others to caption the still image with similar setups[3].
Music video remixes
— Multiple fan edits set the looping GIF to different songs including "Sweet Dreams," "Hollaback Girl," "Yakety Sax," "Kung Fu Fighting," and the *COPS* theme[1][2].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (4)
- 1
- 2
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- 4Professional wrestlingencyclopedia