He Boomed Me

2018Copypastaclassic

Also known as: "That f***ing [name] boomed me" · "He's so good (x4)"

He Boomed Me is a 2018 copypasta from LeBron James' alleged reaction to Jayson Tatum dunking on him in Game 7 of the NBA Eastern Conference Finals, featuring his "He's so good" quote repeated four times.

"He Boomed Me" is a copypasta originating from LeBron James' reported reaction to Jayson Tatum dunking on him during Game 7 of the 2018 NBA Eastern Conference Finals. The quote, which included LeBron repeating "He's so good" four times and saying he wanted to add Tatum to his summer workout list, spread rapidly on Reddit's r/nba before being adapted across dozens of other communities as a flexible template for expressing over-the-top admiration.

TL;DR

"He Boomed Me" is a copypasta originating from LeBron James' reported reaction to Jayson Tatum dunking on him during Game 7 of the 2018 NBA Eastern Conference Finals.

Overview

The "He Boomed Me" copypasta follows a specific structure: someone describes being outperformed or impressed by another person, declares "That f***ing [name] boomed me," repeats "He's so good" four times, then states they want to add the person to a list of people they want to do something with. The format works because of its absurd escalation. The speaker goes from acknowledging defeat to gushing admiration to wanting a personal relationship with the person who just owned them. It reads like sports fan fiction, which is exactly why the internet latched onto it.

On May 27th, 2018, the Cleveland Cavaliers beat the Boston Celtics 87-79 in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference Finals2. During the game, 20-year-old Celtics forward Jayson Tatum threw down a dunk on LeBron James that immediately became one of the game's most talked-about moments1.

After the game, LeBron was reported to have gone on an extended, almost breathless rant praising Tatum. About a month later, NBA reporter Ben Rohrback (@brohrback on Twitter) tweeted the now-iconic quote2. The full text described LeBron saying Tatum "boomed" him, repeating "He's so good" four times, and adding that he wanted to put Tatum on his list of players to work out with over the summer.

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitter (source quote), Reddit r/nba (viral spread)
Key People
Ben Rohrback, LeBron James
Date
2018
Year
2018

On May 27th, 2018, the Cleveland Cavaliers beat the Boston Celtics 87-79 in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference Finals. During the game, 20-year-old Celtics forward Jayson Tatum threw down a dunk on LeBron James that immediately became one of the game's most talked-about moments.

After the game, LeBron was reported to have gone on an extended, almost breathless rant praising Tatum. About a month later, NBA reporter Ben Rohrback (@brohrback on Twitter) tweeted the now-iconic quote. The full text described LeBron saying Tatum "boomed" him, repeating "He's so good" four times, and adding that he wanted to put Tatum on his list of players to work out with over the summer.

How It Spread

Rohrback's tweet was shared to r/nba on the same day it was posted, where the thread pulled in over 10,000 upvotes. Users immediately recognized the quote's copypasta potential. The repetitive "He's so good" line, the dramatic "boomed me" phrasing, and the weirdly intimate desire to work out together made it perfect for adaptation.

Within weeks, r/nba users were swapping in different names and contexts. User KlaysToaster posted a version referencing Houston Rockets head coach Mike D'Antoni on July 10th, picking up over 840 points. On July 1st, user madaboutdebian reworked it around Magic Johnson and the Los Angeles Lakers, earning over 750 points. The copypasta spread so fast on the subreddit that users on r/OutOfTheLoop started asking what it meant.

The format quickly escaped basketball. Subreddits centered around Avengers: Infinity War picked it up, with edits swapping in Thanos appearing on r/thanosdidnothingwrong and r/inthesoulstone. From there it became a general-purpose copypasta used across Reddit and beyond, applied to anything from video game characters to politicians to fictional villains.

How to Use This Meme

The copypasta follows a rigid template that's part of its charm:

1

Start with a situation where someone or something outperforms expectations

2

Write: "[Person] got me," [speaker] said of [specific action]. "That f***ing [person] boomed me."

3

Add: [Speaker] added, "He's/She's/It's so good," repeating it four times.

4

Close with: [Speaker] then said he/she wanted to add [person] to the list of [contextually funny activity] this summer.

Cultural Impact

"He Boomed Me" became one of r/nba's most enduring copypastas, to the point where variations still get upvoted years after the original dunk. The format crossed over into general internet culture more successfully than most sports-specific memes, partly because you don't need to know anything about basketball to find the escalating admiration funny. It joined the small club of NBA-originated copypastas (alongside the Kelvin Benjamin "eating" edits and the "Nephew, delete this" format) that broke containment from sports communities into the broader meme ecosystem.

Fun Facts

The original dunk happened in a game the Celtics actually lost 87-79, making LeBron's gushing praise of an opponent on the losing team even more unusual.

The copypasta's spread to r/OutOfTheLoop is itself a marker of how fast it moved. When non-sports Reddit starts asking about a sports meme, it's already gone mainstream.

The "repeating it four times" detail is what makes the copypasta. Two times would be normal. Three would be emphatic. Four crosses into the absurd territory that makes it funny.

Derivatives & Variations

Kelvin Benjamin edits:

r/nba users created a parallel copypasta format swapping basketball achievements for NFL player Kelvin Benjamin's eating habits, following a similar escalation structure[2].

Thanos "He Boomed Me" edits:

Variations appeared across Marvel-themed subreddits like r/thanosdidnothingwrong, replacing LeBron and Tatum with Infinity War characters[2].

Cross-subreddit adaptations:

The format spread to gaming, politics, and entertainment subreddits, each adapting the "boomed me" and "so good x4" structure to their own subjects[2].

Frequently Asked Questions

References (3)

  1. 1
  2. 2
  3. 3
    OK boomerencyclopedia

He Boomed Me

2018Copypastaclassic

Also known as: "That f***ing [name] boomed me" · "He's so good (x4)"

He Boomed Me is a 2018 copypasta from LeBron James' alleged reaction to Jayson Tatum dunking on him in Game 7 of the NBA Eastern Conference Finals, featuring his "He's so good" quote repeated four times.

"He Boomed Me" is a copypasta originating from LeBron James' reported reaction to Jayson Tatum dunking on him during Game 7 of the 2018 NBA Eastern Conference Finals. The quote, which included LeBron repeating "He's so good" four times and saying he wanted to add Tatum to his summer workout list, spread rapidly on Reddit's r/nba before being adapted across dozens of other communities as a flexible template for expressing over-the-top admiration.

TL;DR

"He Boomed Me" is a copypasta originating from LeBron James' reported reaction to Jayson Tatum dunking on him during Game 7 of the 2018 NBA Eastern Conference Finals.

Overview

The "He Boomed Me" copypasta follows a specific structure: someone describes being outperformed or impressed by another person, declares "That f***ing [name] boomed me," repeats "He's so good" four times, then states they want to add the person to a list of people they want to do something with. The format works because of its absurd escalation. The speaker goes from acknowledging defeat to gushing admiration to wanting a personal relationship with the person who just owned them. It reads like sports fan fiction, which is exactly why the internet latched onto it.

On May 27th, 2018, the Cleveland Cavaliers beat the Boston Celtics 87-79 in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference Finals. During the game, 20-year-old Celtics forward Jayson Tatum threw down a dunk on LeBron James that immediately became one of the game's most talked-about moments.

After the game, LeBron was reported to have gone on an extended, almost breathless rant praising Tatum. About a month later, NBA reporter Ben Rohrback (@brohrback on Twitter) tweeted the now-iconic quote. The full text described LeBron saying Tatum "boomed" him, repeating "He's so good" four times, and adding that he wanted to put Tatum on his list of players to work out with over the summer.

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitter (source quote), Reddit r/nba (viral spread)
Key People
Ben Rohrback, LeBron James
Date
2018
Year
2018

On May 27th, 2018, the Cleveland Cavaliers beat the Boston Celtics 87-79 in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference Finals. During the game, 20-year-old Celtics forward Jayson Tatum threw down a dunk on LeBron James that immediately became one of the game's most talked-about moments.

After the game, LeBron was reported to have gone on an extended, almost breathless rant praising Tatum. About a month later, NBA reporter Ben Rohrback (@brohrback on Twitter) tweeted the now-iconic quote. The full text described LeBron saying Tatum "boomed" him, repeating "He's so good" four times, and adding that he wanted to put Tatum on his list of players to work out with over the summer.

How It Spread

Rohrback's tweet was shared to r/nba on the same day it was posted, where the thread pulled in over 10,000 upvotes. Users immediately recognized the quote's copypasta potential. The repetitive "He's so good" line, the dramatic "boomed me" phrasing, and the weirdly intimate desire to work out together made it perfect for adaptation.

Within weeks, r/nba users were swapping in different names and contexts. User KlaysToaster posted a version referencing Houston Rockets head coach Mike D'Antoni on July 10th, picking up over 840 points. On July 1st, user madaboutdebian reworked it around Magic Johnson and the Los Angeles Lakers, earning over 750 points. The copypasta spread so fast on the subreddit that users on r/OutOfTheLoop started asking what it meant.

The format quickly escaped basketball. Subreddits centered around Avengers: Infinity War picked it up, with edits swapping in Thanos appearing on r/thanosdidnothingwrong and r/inthesoulstone. From there it became a general-purpose copypasta used across Reddit and beyond, applied to anything from video game characters to politicians to fictional villains.

How to Use This Meme

The copypasta follows a rigid template that's part of its charm:

1

Start with a situation where someone or something outperforms expectations

2

Write: "[Person] got me," [speaker] said of [specific action]. "That f***ing [person] boomed me."

3

Add: [Speaker] added, "He's/She's/It's so good," repeating it four times.

4

Close with: [Speaker] then said he/she wanted to add [person] to the list of [contextually funny activity] this summer.

Cultural Impact

"He Boomed Me" became one of r/nba's most enduring copypastas, to the point where variations still get upvoted years after the original dunk. The format crossed over into general internet culture more successfully than most sports-specific memes, partly because you don't need to know anything about basketball to find the escalating admiration funny. It joined the small club of NBA-originated copypastas (alongside the Kelvin Benjamin "eating" edits and the "Nephew, delete this" format) that broke containment from sports communities into the broader meme ecosystem.

Fun Facts

The original dunk happened in a game the Celtics actually lost 87-79, making LeBron's gushing praise of an opponent on the losing team even more unusual.

The copypasta's spread to r/OutOfTheLoop is itself a marker of how fast it moved. When non-sports Reddit starts asking about a sports meme, it's already gone mainstream.

The "repeating it four times" detail is what makes the copypasta. Two times would be normal. Three would be emphatic. Four crosses into the absurd territory that makes it funny.

Derivatives & Variations

Kelvin Benjamin edits:

r/nba users created a parallel copypasta format swapping basketball achievements for NFL player Kelvin Benjamin's eating habits, following a similar escalation structure[2].

Thanos "He Boomed Me" edits:

Variations appeared across Marvel-themed subreddits like r/thanosdidnothingwrong, replacing LeBron and Tatum with Infinity War characters[2].

Cross-subreddit adaptations:

The format spread to gaming, politics, and entertainment subreddits, each adapting the "boomed me" and "so good x4" structure to their own subjects[2].

Frequently Asked Questions

References (3)

  1. 1
  2. 2
  3. 3
    OK boomerencyclopedia