Green Screen Edits

2006Video remix / exploitable videoactive

Also known as: Chroma Key Edits · Green Screen Challenge

Green Screen Edits is a video remix format originating from Stephen Colbert's 2006 chroma key challenge, spawning viral edits like Shia LaBeouf's motivational speech and John Cena's "Are You Sure About That?

Green Screen Edits are a long-running internet meme format where footage of a person filmed against a chroma key (green or blue screen) background gets remixed by the community with new backgrounds, scenes, and visual gags. The format traces back to at least October 2006, when Stephen Colbert invited viewers to edit green screen footage of himself, and has since produced dozens of viral sub-memes including Eddy Wally's "Wow," Shia LaBeouf's motivational speech, and John Cena's "Are You Sure About That?"

TL;DR

Green Screen Edits are a long-running internet meme format where footage of a person filmed against a chroma key (green or blue screen) background gets remixed by the community with new backgrounds, scenes, and visual gags.

Overview

Green Screen Edits rely on chroma key compositing, the same technique used in film VFX and news broadcasts to replace a solid-colored background with any image or video4. The meme format works because green screen footage is easy for amateur editors to manipulate. Anyone with basic video editing software can key out the green and drop the subject into a completely different scene. The humor usually comes from the contrast between the original performance and the absurd new context: a sad man on a rollercoaster, Shia LaBeouf screaming at anime characters, or John Cena popping up to question someone mid-sentence.

What makes this format distinctive is that many of its biggest moments were intentional. Creators and celebrities deliberately film green screen clips knowing the internet will remix them, turning the release of raw footage into a kind of creative invitation6.

The earliest major Green Screen Edit meme came in October 2006, when Stephen Colbert aired a segment on *The Colbert Report* challenging internet users to create their own edits using a green screen clip of him performing a lightsaber battle4. Colbert called it the "Light Saber Challenge" and encouraged fans to go wild with the footage. The response was massive, with YouTube users creating hundreds of remixed videos. However, Viacom's legal team ordered YouTube to take down the clips for copyright reasons, sparking backlash from fans and media commentators6.

Mark Glaser at MediaShift wrote an open letter criticizing Viacom's decision, arguing it went "against the spirit of Internet sharing and viral promotion" that had helped make Colbert's show popular in the first place6. Some edits survived the takedown, but the incident highlighted the tension between participatory meme culture and corporate copyright enforcement4.

Origin & Background

Platform
Comedy Central (source footage), YouTube (community edits)
Key People
Stephen Colbert, community-created format
Date
2006
Year
2006

The earliest major Green Screen Edit meme came in October 2006, when Stephen Colbert aired a segment on *The Colbert Report* challenging internet users to create their own edits using a green screen clip of him performing a lightsaber battle. Colbert called it the "Light Saber Challenge" and encouraged fans to go wild with the footage. The response was massive, with YouTube users creating hundreds of remixed videos. However, Viacom's legal team ordered YouTube to take down the clips for copyright reasons, sparking backlash from fans and media commentators.

Mark Glaser at MediaShift wrote an open letter criticizing Viacom's decision, arguing it went "against the spirit of Internet sharing and viral promotion" that had helped make Colbert's show popular in the first place. Some edits survived the takedown, but the incident highlighted the tension between participatory meme culture and corporate copyright enforcement.

How It Spread

The format lay relatively dormant as a named trend until new green screen source clips emerged in the late 2000s and 2010s.

Eddy Wally's "Wow" (2007-2014): On October 8, 2007, YouTuber djvensterke2 uploaded a clip of Belgian singer Eddy Wally appearing in front of a blue screen, saying "Wow!" and winking before exiting the frame. The clip accumulated over 261,500 views over seven years. Wally, a schlager singer known for his campy stage presence and flashy outfits, became an unlikely internet star. In 2014, YouTuber Rabbi Cartman uploaded a green screen version of the clip, and the footage quickly spread into montage parodies. YouTuber sonic007m created a 10-hour loop, while Garonen made an "Eddy [MLG] Wally is illuminati" edit that same year.

Shia LaBeouf's Motivational Speech (May 2015): On May 27, 2015, a video titled "Shia LaBeouf delivers the most intense motivational speech of all-time" was uploaded by Mike Mohamed, accumulating over 1.4 million views in five days. The footage came from a collaborative art project between LaBeouf, Nastja Säde Rönkkö, Luke Turner, and Central Saint Martins students, originally uploaded to Vimeo with the title "#INTRODUCTIONS". Because LaBeouf performed in front of a green screen, the remix potential was immediate. Redditor ridris submitted the video to r/videos, where it gained over 3,700 upvotes in two days. YouTuber Michael McNeff's "Shia LaBeouf TED Talk" passed 1 million views in two days. Another remix, "Damn It Shia" by millerwa4, hit 775,000 views in a single day.

Sad Green Screen (July 2015): On July 29, 2015, YouTuber Devin Norris uploaded a video of a man looking sad with his arms raised against a green screen, gaining 54,900 views over four years. Reddit users jumped on the footage, creating parodies that placed the sad man on a rollercoaster, in a World War 2 documentary, and alongside Shia LaBeouf's screaming motivational speech. HuffPost covered the trend on July 31, calling it "the best new meme on Reddit".

Filthy Frank's "It's Time to Stop" (December 2015): On December 24, 2015, YouTube personality Filthy Frank uploaded multiple green screen clips to an alternate channel, stating that fans had requested raw footage for editing. The most popular clip showed Frank shaking a large clock while repeatedly yelling "It's time to stop," which received over 900,000 views in two months. Pyrocynical's parody hit 1.5 million views over four years.

John Cena's "Are You Sure About That?" (June 2016): A Cricket Wireless hidden camera prank video uploaded on June 29, 2016 featured wrestler John Cena surprising people who thought they were auditioning to introduce him. One scene where Cena rips a piece of paper and shouts "Are you sure about that?" was isolated as a green screen clip by YouTuber UFKinWotm8 the very next day. The original prank video gained over 13 million views in two weeks before being taken down. The isolated clip became especially popular on Vine as a way to comedically question what someone in another video had just said.

Russian YouTube Grandmother (July 2016): On July 2, 2016, a YouTube channel called Канал Татьяны uploaded its first green screen video, which gained 141,000 views over three years. The channel's creator, an older woman, used chroma key effects to place herself in fantastical scenarios. Her most popular video, an underwater adventure posted on March 4, 2017, hit 921,900 views in two years. BuzzFeed News reported on the channel's popularity, calling her a "YouTube star" who had learned to use green screen technology.

Stephen A. Smith (March 2019): ESPN personality Stephen A. Smith deliberately filmed himself in front of a green screen and released the footage for meme use. Business Insider covered the resulting edits, which included Smith being composited into Beyoncé's "Irreplaceable" music video.

How to Use This Meme

The basic process for creating a Green Screen Edit:

1

Find or film footage of a subject performing against a solid green (or blue) background

2

Import the footage into any video editor with chroma key support (Adobe Premiere, DaVinci Resolve, even CapCut or iMovie)

3

Key out the green background to make it transparent

4

Place a new background video or image behind the subject

5

The comedy typically comes from placing the subject in an incongruous situation, like dropping a sad man into a rollercoaster video or having John Cena interrupt an unrelated clip

Cultural Impact

Green Screen Edits bridged the gap between professional VFX techniques and amateur internet comedy. The format lowered the barrier to video remixing by using the same chroma key technology that Hollywood and news studios rely on daily.

Stephen Colbert's 2006 challenge was one of the earliest examples of a television personality deliberately inviting internet participation, predating many later "social media engagement" strategies by years. When Viacom pulled the resulting videos from YouTube, the backlash became a flash point in early debates about fair use, remix culture, and corporate control of fan creativity. Media commentator Mark Glaser argued that Colbert had "used the Internet in the way it was meant to be used, to generate buzz, get people involved and build a true online community whose own work could be showcased on your TV program".

The format also democratized video editing skills. YouTubers like Jacksepticeye built recurring content series around reacting to fan-made green screen edits, creating a feedback loop where fans produced content and creators amplified it. The Russian grandmother behind Канал Татьяны showed that the tools were accessible enough for anyone to use, regardless of age or technical background.

By 2019, celebrities like Stephen A. Smith were proactively releasing green screen footage, recognizing the promotional value of letting the internet remix you.

Fun Facts

An asteroid (9205 Eddywally) is named after Eddy Wally, whose "Wow" green screen clip is one of the format's most iconic examples.

Shia LaBeouf's motivational speech was actually part of a fine art project with Central Saint Martins students, not a standalone internet stunt. The original Vimeo upload was titled "#INTRODUCTIONS".

Viacom's takedown of Colbert's green screen challenge edits happened even though Colbert himself had called the creators "heroes" on air.

Filthy Frank uploaded his green screen clips on Christmas Eve 2015 as a gift to fans who had been requesting the raw footage.

The original John Cena prank video was pulled from YouTube after gaining 13 million views in just two weeks, but the isolated green screen clip lived on.

Derivatives & Variations

Eddy Wally "Wow" Remixes:

The Belgian singer's blue screen wink clip became a staple of MLG montage parodies and "unexpected" edit compilations, with a 10-hour loop version and Illuminati conspiracy parody among the most popular[4].

Shia LaBeouf Motivational Speech Edits:

LaBeouf's intense green screen monologue spawned hundreds of remixes including "TED Talk" and "Damn It Shia" versions, collectively reaching millions of views within days of the original upload[4].

Sad Green Screen Parodies:

The sad microphone-checking man was composited into rollercoasters, war footage, train rides, *Between Two Ferns*, and the 2014 Brazil-Germany World Cup match[1].

"It's Time to Stop" Edits:

Filthy Frank's clock-shaking clip was used as a reaction video insert to shut down perceived cringe or unacceptable behavior, with Pyrocynical's version alone hitting 1.5 million views[4].

"Are You Sure About That?" Vine/YouTube Edits:

John Cena's skeptical outburst was spliced into other videos as a comedic fact-check, with the format thriving on Vine before the platform's shutdown[4].

Канал Татьяны Adventures:

The Russian grandmother's self-produced green screen adventures (underwater, cliff-jumping without a parachute) became a niche YouTube genre of their own[2].

Frequently Asked Questions

Green Screen Edits

2006Video remix / exploitable videoactive

Also known as: Chroma Key Edits · Green Screen Challenge

Green Screen Edits is a video remix format originating from Stephen Colbert's 2006 chroma key challenge, spawning viral edits like Shia LaBeouf's motivational speech and John Cena's "Are You Sure About That?

Green Screen Edits are a long-running internet meme format where footage of a person filmed against a chroma key (green or blue screen) background gets remixed by the community with new backgrounds, scenes, and visual gags. The format traces back to at least October 2006, when Stephen Colbert invited viewers to edit green screen footage of himself, and has since produced dozens of viral sub-memes including Eddy Wally's "Wow," Shia LaBeouf's motivational speech, and John Cena's "Are You Sure About That?"

TL;DR

Green Screen Edits are a long-running internet meme format where footage of a person filmed against a chroma key (green or blue screen) background gets remixed by the community with new backgrounds, scenes, and visual gags.

Overview

Green Screen Edits rely on chroma key compositing, the same technique used in film VFX and news broadcasts to replace a solid-colored background with any image or video. The meme format works because green screen footage is easy for amateur editors to manipulate. Anyone with basic video editing software can key out the green and drop the subject into a completely different scene. The humor usually comes from the contrast between the original performance and the absurd new context: a sad man on a rollercoaster, Shia LaBeouf screaming at anime characters, or John Cena popping up to question someone mid-sentence.

What makes this format distinctive is that many of its biggest moments were intentional. Creators and celebrities deliberately film green screen clips knowing the internet will remix them, turning the release of raw footage into a kind of creative invitation.

The earliest major Green Screen Edit meme came in October 2006, when Stephen Colbert aired a segment on *The Colbert Report* challenging internet users to create their own edits using a green screen clip of him performing a lightsaber battle. Colbert called it the "Light Saber Challenge" and encouraged fans to go wild with the footage. The response was massive, with YouTube users creating hundreds of remixed videos. However, Viacom's legal team ordered YouTube to take down the clips for copyright reasons, sparking backlash from fans and media commentators.

Mark Glaser at MediaShift wrote an open letter criticizing Viacom's decision, arguing it went "against the spirit of Internet sharing and viral promotion" that had helped make Colbert's show popular in the first place. Some edits survived the takedown, but the incident highlighted the tension between participatory meme culture and corporate copyright enforcement.

Origin & Background

Platform
Comedy Central (source footage), YouTube (community edits)
Key People
Stephen Colbert, community-created format
Date
2006
Year
2006

The earliest major Green Screen Edit meme came in October 2006, when Stephen Colbert aired a segment on *The Colbert Report* challenging internet users to create their own edits using a green screen clip of him performing a lightsaber battle. Colbert called it the "Light Saber Challenge" and encouraged fans to go wild with the footage. The response was massive, with YouTube users creating hundreds of remixed videos. However, Viacom's legal team ordered YouTube to take down the clips for copyright reasons, sparking backlash from fans and media commentators.

Mark Glaser at MediaShift wrote an open letter criticizing Viacom's decision, arguing it went "against the spirit of Internet sharing and viral promotion" that had helped make Colbert's show popular in the first place. Some edits survived the takedown, but the incident highlighted the tension between participatory meme culture and corporate copyright enforcement.

How It Spread

The format lay relatively dormant as a named trend until new green screen source clips emerged in the late 2000s and 2010s.

Eddy Wally's "Wow" (2007-2014): On October 8, 2007, YouTuber djvensterke2 uploaded a clip of Belgian singer Eddy Wally appearing in front of a blue screen, saying "Wow!" and winking before exiting the frame. The clip accumulated over 261,500 views over seven years. Wally, a schlager singer known for his campy stage presence and flashy outfits, became an unlikely internet star. In 2014, YouTuber Rabbi Cartman uploaded a green screen version of the clip, and the footage quickly spread into montage parodies. YouTuber sonic007m created a 10-hour loop, while Garonen made an "Eddy [MLG] Wally is illuminati" edit that same year.

Shia LaBeouf's Motivational Speech (May 2015): On May 27, 2015, a video titled "Shia LaBeouf delivers the most intense motivational speech of all-time" was uploaded by Mike Mohamed, accumulating over 1.4 million views in five days. The footage came from a collaborative art project between LaBeouf, Nastja Säde Rönkkö, Luke Turner, and Central Saint Martins students, originally uploaded to Vimeo with the title "#INTRODUCTIONS". Because LaBeouf performed in front of a green screen, the remix potential was immediate. Redditor ridris submitted the video to r/videos, where it gained over 3,700 upvotes in two days. YouTuber Michael McNeff's "Shia LaBeouf TED Talk" passed 1 million views in two days. Another remix, "Damn It Shia" by millerwa4, hit 775,000 views in a single day.

Sad Green Screen (July 2015): On July 29, 2015, YouTuber Devin Norris uploaded a video of a man looking sad with his arms raised against a green screen, gaining 54,900 views over four years. Reddit users jumped on the footage, creating parodies that placed the sad man on a rollercoaster, in a World War 2 documentary, and alongside Shia LaBeouf's screaming motivational speech. HuffPost covered the trend on July 31, calling it "the best new meme on Reddit".

Filthy Frank's "It's Time to Stop" (December 2015): On December 24, 2015, YouTube personality Filthy Frank uploaded multiple green screen clips to an alternate channel, stating that fans had requested raw footage for editing. The most popular clip showed Frank shaking a large clock while repeatedly yelling "It's time to stop," which received over 900,000 views in two months. Pyrocynical's parody hit 1.5 million views over four years.

John Cena's "Are You Sure About That?" (June 2016): A Cricket Wireless hidden camera prank video uploaded on June 29, 2016 featured wrestler John Cena surprising people who thought they were auditioning to introduce him. One scene where Cena rips a piece of paper and shouts "Are you sure about that?" was isolated as a green screen clip by YouTuber UFKinWotm8 the very next day. The original prank video gained over 13 million views in two weeks before being taken down. The isolated clip became especially popular on Vine as a way to comedically question what someone in another video had just said.

Russian YouTube Grandmother (July 2016): On July 2, 2016, a YouTube channel called Канал Татьяны uploaded its first green screen video, which gained 141,000 views over three years. The channel's creator, an older woman, used chroma key effects to place herself in fantastical scenarios. Her most popular video, an underwater adventure posted on March 4, 2017, hit 921,900 views in two years. BuzzFeed News reported on the channel's popularity, calling her a "YouTube star" who had learned to use green screen technology.

Stephen A. Smith (March 2019): ESPN personality Stephen A. Smith deliberately filmed himself in front of a green screen and released the footage for meme use. Business Insider covered the resulting edits, which included Smith being composited into Beyoncé's "Irreplaceable" music video.

How to Use This Meme

The basic process for creating a Green Screen Edit:

1

Find or film footage of a subject performing against a solid green (or blue) background

2

Import the footage into any video editor with chroma key support (Adobe Premiere, DaVinci Resolve, even CapCut or iMovie)

3

Key out the green background to make it transparent

4

Place a new background video or image behind the subject

5

The comedy typically comes from placing the subject in an incongruous situation, like dropping a sad man into a rollercoaster video or having John Cena interrupt an unrelated clip

Cultural Impact

Green Screen Edits bridged the gap between professional VFX techniques and amateur internet comedy. The format lowered the barrier to video remixing by using the same chroma key technology that Hollywood and news studios rely on daily.

Stephen Colbert's 2006 challenge was one of the earliest examples of a television personality deliberately inviting internet participation, predating many later "social media engagement" strategies by years. When Viacom pulled the resulting videos from YouTube, the backlash became a flash point in early debates about fair use, remix culture, and corporate control of fan creativity. Media commentator Mark Glaser argued that Colbert had "used the Internet in the way it was meant to be used, to generate buzz, get people involved and build a true online community whose own work could be showcased on your TV program".

The format also democratized video editing skills. YouTubers like Jacksepticeye built recurring content series around reacting to fan-made green screen edits, creating a feedback loop where fans produced content and creators amplified it. The Russian grandmother behind Канал Татьяны showed that the tools were accessible enough for anyone to use, regardless of age or technical background.

By 2019, celebrities like Stephen A. Smith were proactively releasing green screen footage, recognizing the promotional value of letting the internet remix you.

Fun Facts

An asteroid (9205 Eddywally) is named after Eddy Wally, whose "Wow" green screen clip is one of the format's most iconic examples.

Shia LaBeouf's motivational speech was actually part of a fine art project with Central Saint Martins students, not a standalone internet stunt. The original Vimeo upload was titled "#INTRODUCTIONS".

Viacom's takedown of Colbert's green screen challenge edits happened even though Colbert himself had called the creators "heroes" on air.

Filthy Frank uploaded his green screen clips on Christmas Eve 2015 as a gift to fans who had been requesting the raw footage.

The original John Cena prank video was pulled from YouTube after gaining 13 million views in just two weeks, but the isolated green screen clip lived on.

Derivatives & Variations

Eddy Wally "Wow" Remixes:

The Belgian singer's blue screen wink clip became a staple of MLG montage parodies and "unexpected" edit compilations, with a 10-hour loop version and Illuminati conspiracy parody among the most popular[4].

Shia LaBeouf Motivational Speech Edits:

LaBeouf's intense green screen monologue spawned hundreds of remixes including "TED Talk" and "Damn It Shia" versions, collectively reaching millions of views within days of the original upload[4].

Sad Green Screen Parodies:

The sad microphone-checking man was composited into rollercoasters, war footage, train rides, *Between Two Ferns*, and the 2014 Brazil-Germany World Cup match[1].

"It's Time to Stop" Edits:

Filthy Frank's clock-shaking clip was used as a reaction video insert to shut down perceived cringe or unacceptable behavior, with Pyrocynical's version alone hitting 1.5 million views[4].

"Are You Sure About That?" Vine/YouTube Edits:

John Cena's skeptical outburst was spliced into other videos as a comedic fact-check, with the format thriving on Vine before the platform's shutdown[4].

Канал Татьяны Adventures:

The Russian grandmother's self-produced green screen adventures (underwater, cliff-jumping without a parachute) became a niche YouTube genre of their own[2].

Frequently Asked Questions