I Am a Surgeon Dr. Han

2019Video clip / catchphrase / image macro / exploitable templatesemi-active

Also known as: I Am A Surgeon · Dr. Murphy Crying · The Good Doctor Meme

I Am a Surgeon Dr. Han is a 2019 *The Good Doctor* scene where Dr. Murphy screams at Dr. Han, rediscovered in 2023 as a viral TikTok meme spawning absurdist edits and the template 'I am a X, Dr. Han!

"I Am A Surgeon, Dr. Han!" is a meme based on a scene from the ABC medical drama *The Good Doctor* in which Dr. Shaun Murphy (Freddie Highmore) tearfully screams "I am a surgeon!" at his boss Dr. Jackson Han (Daniel Dae Kim). The scene originally aired in March 2019 but went massively viral in April-May 2023 after TikTok users rediscovered it and turned it into absurdist edits, anti-memes, and ironic fan content. The meme spawned an ironic fandom around Dr. Han's stoic reaction, sturgeon fish jokes, and a phrasal template using "I am a X, Dr. Han!"

TL;DR

The meme centers on a scene from *The Good Doctor* season 2, episode 17, titled "Breakdown," where Dr.

Overview

The meme centers on a scene from *The Good Doctor* season 2, episode 17, titled "Breakdown," where Dr. Shaun Murphy, an autistic surgeon played by Freddie Highmore, confronts his superior Dr. Jackson Han, played by Daniel Dae Kim4. Murphy storms into Han's office and repeatedly yells "I am a surgeon, Dr. Han!" while crying, after Han barred him from performing surgery due to concerns about his autism6. Han sits unmoved behind his desk, responding with dry indifference.

Stripped of its dramatic context, the clip reads as absurd comedy. The contrast between Murphy's emotional explosion and Han's stone-cold poker face is what makes it so memeable3. The scene spawned multiple meme formats: absurdist fan edits with CapCut filters and effects, "sturgeon" fish puns, an ironic Dr. Han fandom, and a phrasal template where people replace "surgeon" with other words4.

The scene aired on March 4, 2019, during season 2, episode 17 of *The Good Doctor* on ABC4. In the plot, Dr. Han, the hospital's new chief of surgery, had reassigned Murphy from surgery to pathology, believing his autism made him unfit to work directly with patients6. When Murphy is called in for a surgical consultation but then barred from performing the actual operation, he snaps and storms into Han's office2.

The scene first caught meme attention on the Chinese internet in early 2021. Users dubbed Dr. Murphy "紅眼肖恩" ("Red-eyed Shaun," translated from Chinese)4. On May 18, 2021, YouTuber 羊貓貓 uploaded an edit giving Murphy glowing red eyes, picking up roughly 34,900 views over two years4.

On TikTok, the scene appeared as early as September 18, 2021, when user @x.hejo.x posted a recording of it, getting around 41,000 plays4. Through late 2021 and into early 2023, fans of the show shared the clip earnestly, treating it as a powerful dramatic moment.

Origin & Background

Platform
ABC / *The Good Doctor* (source material), TikTok (meme spread), Twitter (secondary spread)
Key People
Unknown; @alilson_m, @hnjiaajuz14, @guymrdth
Date
2019 (aired), 2023 (viral meme)
Year
2019

The scene aired on March 4, 2019, during season 2, episode 17 of *The Good Doctor* on ABC. In the plot, Dr. Han, the hospital's new chief of surgery, had reassigned Murphy from surgery to pathology, believing his autism made him unfit to work directly with patients. When Murphy is called in for a surgical consultation but then barred from performing the actual operation, he snaps and storms into Han's office.

The scene first caught meme attention on the Chinese internet in early 2021. Users dubbed Dr. Murphy "紅眼肖恩" ("Red-eyed Shaun," translated from Chinese). On May 18, 2021, YouTuber 羊貓貓 uploaded an edit giving Murphy glowing red eyes, picking up roughly 34,900 views over two years.

On TikTok, the scene appeared as early as September 18, 2021, when user @x.hejo.x posted a recording of it, getting around 41,000 plays. Through late 2021 and into early 2023, fans of the show shared the clip earnestly, treating it as a powerful dramatic moment.

How It Spread

The meme's explosive breakout started on April 20, 2023, when TikToker @alilson_m posted the scene and racked up roughly 1.1 million likes in 18 days. That same day, TikToker @hot_elliot posted a screen recording of their For You page that played a Michael Rosen clip saying "No need to shout" right after the surgeon scene, one of the first ironic responses.

Two days later, TikToker @hnjiaajuz14 posted the scene and it blew up to roughly 18.7 million plays and 1.9 million likes in 16 days. These two viral posts opened the floodgates. By late April, TikTokers who had never watched the show were making fun of Highmore's performance. On April 26, @excessivetvuser captioned their post "surgeons be like," pulling in roughly 2.5 million plays.

The sturgeon fish joke emerged on May 4, when TikToker @gujvhoaj6rl posted a photo slideshow of stock images of sturgeon fish, treating Murphy's line as "I am a sturgeon!" It got around 446,100 plays and kicked off a wave of similar fish-themed posts. Absurdist fan edits followed, with creators using CapCut effects and calling Murphy "Blud" in an ironic style.

The meme jumped to Twitter on May 6, 2023, when user @guymrdth tweeted the TikTok clip with no caption, getting roughly 9,000 likes. Twitter users ran with it fast. @TylorStankley captioned a screencap of Dr. Han with a "When She Sucking Your Nuts" joke (roughly 6,500 likes), and @theendlessn1ght posted a crying Murphy screencap that got 14,600 likes in one day. That image became the basis for a phrasal template where users captioned it "I am a X, Dr. Han!" On May 8, @kunaiposting used "Gooner" in the template (4,300 likes), and @Jahrihanna posted "I AM FROM THE HOOD DR HAN" (1,400 likes in three hours).

At one point, "The Good Doctor," "I am a Surgeon," "Dr. Han," and "Daniel Dae Kim" were all trending on Twitter at the same time. On May 9, Cheezburger posted a roundup of 28 Good Doctor memes, and eBaum's World published its own compilation. The meme also spread to Instagram and Reddit.

How to Use This Meme

The meme works in several formats:

The phrasal template: Take the crying Dr. Murphy image and caption it "I AM A [X], DR. HAN!" replacing "surgeon" with whatever fits the joke. Common substitutions include jobs, identities, or absurd nouns like "sturgeon".

Dr. Han reaction: Use a screencap of Han's unmoved expression as a reaction image to someone being loud, emotional, or making a scene.

Absurdist edits: Take the original video clip and add CapCut filters, laser eyes, distorted audio, or overlay it onto unrelated footage. The weirder the better. The goal is to be as irreverent as possible.

Audio overlay: Use the "I am a surgeon!" audio over clips of people doing tasks that require precision or manual dexterity, like playing the board game Operation or performing delicate work.

Sturgeon variant: Replace any reference to "surgeon" with "sturgeon" and pair with fish imagery.

Cultural Impact

The meme's speed was noteworthy. eBaum's World called it "the most memed internet moment since the Pope's fake white puffer coat". All four related terms trending on Twitter simultaneously was unusual for a four-year-old TV clip.

The viral wave brought unexpected attention to a show most internet-savvy viewers had never watched. *The Good Doctor* had been on air since 2017 and ran for seven seasons (with the final season premiering February 20, 2024), but it was primarily watched by an older demographic. Vulture compared the meme's surprise factor to the realization that *Young Sheldon* is one of the most popular shows on TV: network procedurals exist in a different media universe than TikTok.

The meme also spotlighted the show's autism representation controversies. Multiple outlets used their meme explainers as opportunities to discuss whether *The Good Doctor* handled its autistic lead character responsibly. The Mary Sue specifically noted that the meme wasn't intended to mock autistic people but rather took aim at how a show with neurotypical actors and writers depicted autism.

Daniel Dae Kim's dual role as both the on-screen villain and the show's executive producer added an ironic layer that several publications highlighted.

Full History

The story of this meme is really two stories: a mediocre network medical drama that aired a scene in 2019, and the internet's delayed discovery of that scene four years later.

*The Good Doctor* is an American adaptation of a South Korean drama of the same name. Daniel Dae Kim, who plays Dr. Han, is also the executive producer who originally spotted the Korean series, bought the US rights, and brought David Shore (creator of *House*) on board to develop it. Kim chose to play the villain on his own show, appearing in only four episodes of season 2. In the show's narrative, Han eventually gets fired by hospital president Dr. Marcus Andrews for refusing to reverse Murphy's termination. In a twist, Andrews himself was later fired for this decision, as it was considered an abuse of power.

The Chinese internet picked up the scene two years before the English-speaking web did. The "Red-eyed Shaun" meme circulated on Chinese platforms throughout 2021, with edits adding glowing red eyes to Murphy's crying face. This early wave established the clip's meme potential, but it didn't cross over to Western social media in any meaningful way at the time.

When the clip resurfaced on English-language TikTok in April 2023, context collapse did the heavy lifting. People encountering the scene cold, with no knowledge of the show, found it unintentionally hilarious. "This show is hilariously bad," tweeted @TrnsShenanigans, "like the entire show is like this". Polygon noted that people weren't sharing the clip because they were amazed by Highmore's performance. The emotional explosion paired with the repetition and a completely unconvinced witness was simply absurd.

The meme evolved through several distinct phases. First came the earnest shares from fans who found the scene powerful. Then came the ironic reactions from non-fans who thought it was ridiculous. Then came the absurdist edits: CapCut filters, distorted faces, laser eyes, modified audio. TikTokers layered the audio over videos of tasks requiring manual dexterity, and others transplanted Highmore into scenes from *Batman* and *Avatar: The Last Airbender*. One especially popular format turned the clip into anti-memes, content that is intentionally unfunny in a way that circles back around to being funny.

The ironic Dr. Han fandom was one of the meme's most distinctive offshoots. Fans declared themselves "Hanpilled" and posted their "Live Dr. Han reactions". The two characters got slotted into the Virgin vs. Chad template, with Han as the Chad and Murphy as the Virgin. This reading inverted the show's intended dynamic entirely. Dr. Han was written as the antagonist, but the internet loved his unflinching calm. YouTube comments on the original scene shifted dramatically. Old comments from four years prior hated Han as the villain, while new comments from 2023 praised him.

Additional context from other clips didn't help Murphy's case. A season 1 scene where Murphy misgenders a transgender patient went viral alongside the surgeon meme. Vulture noted that some viewers took away a specific conclusion: Dr. Han is the actual "good doctor" of the series, and Murphy is "the cringe surgeon". This reading was obviously reductive, but it fueled the ironic fandom.

The meme's virality also reignited criticism of *The Good Doctor*'s portrayal of autism. Autistic people were among those poking fun at the scene, noting the over-the-top depiction of a breakdown by a neurotypical actor playing an autistic character. Highmore has said he consulted experts and members of the autism community, and that "when you've met one person with autism, you've met one person with autism". The Autism Speaks website had previously highlighted the series for its portrayal of people with disabilities, though the 2023 meme wave treated the performance as camp rather than representation.

Fun Facts

Daniel Dae Kim is the executive producer who bought the rights to the original South Korean show, brought it to the US, and then chose to play the season 2 villain on his own series.

Dr. Han only appears in four episodes of *The Good Doctor*. He gets fired in the show, but the internet crowned him the real hero.

The Chinese internet discovered the meme's potential a full two years before the English-speaking web caught on.

One of the first ironic reactions came from a TikToker whose For You page accidentally played a Michael Rosen clip saying "No need to shout" right after the surgeon scene.

*The Good Doctor* was eventually renewed for a seventh and final season, with the finale airing May 21, 2024.

Derivatives & Variations

"I Am A Sturgeon"

TikTokers replaced "surgeon" with "sturgeon" and shared stock photos or videos of the fish species, turning the dramatic moment into a fish pun[4].

Dr. Han as Chad

The Virgin vs. Chad format applied to Dr. Murphy (emotional, yelling) vs. Dr. Han (calm, stoic), with Han depicted as the Chad archetype[2].

"Hanpilled" ironic fandom

Fans adopted the term "Hanpilled" and posted "Live Dr. Han Reactions" mocking Murphy's breakdown from Han's perspective[3].

Dr. Murphy Crying image macro

The screencap of crying Murphy used as a standalone phrasal template: "I am a [X], Dr. Han!"[4].

"Red-eyed Shaun" (紅眼肖恩)

The Chinese internet's earlier version of the meme, featuring Murphy with glowing red eyes edited onto the scene[4].

CapCut absurdist edits

Video edits using heavy filters, effects, and ironic "Blud" captions layered over the original clip[4].

Crossover edits

The audio or concept transplanted into other media, including *Batman*, *Avatar: The Last Airbender*, and the board game Operation[6].

Frequently Asked Questions

I Am a Surgeon Dr. Han

2019Video clip / catchphrase / image macro / exploitable templatesemi-active

Also known as: I Am A Surgeon · Dr. Murphy Crying · The Good Doctor Meme

I Am a Surgeon Dr. Han is a 2019 *The Good Doctor* scene where Dr. Murphy screams at Dr. Han, rediscovered in 2023 as a viral TikTok meme spawning absurdist edits and the template 'I am a X, Dr. Han!

"I Am A Surgeon, Dr. Han!" is a meme based on a scene from the ABC medical drama *The Good Doctor* in which Dr. Shaun Murphy (Freddie Highmore) tearfully screams "I am a surgeon!" at his boss Dr. Jackson Han (Daniel Dae Kim). The scene originally aired in March 2019 but went massively viral in April-May 2023 after TikTok users rediscovered it and turned it into absurdist edits, anti-memes, and ironic fan content. The meme spawned an ironic fandom around Dr. Han's stoic reaction, sturgeon fish jokes, and a phrasal template using "I am a X, Dr. Han!"

TL;DR

The meme centers on a scene from *The Good Doctor* season 2, episode 17, titled "Breakdown," where Dr.

Overview

The meme centers on a scene from *The Good Doctor* season 2, episode 17, titled "Breakdown," where Dr. Shaun Murphy, an autistic surgeon played by Freddie Highmore, confronts his superior Dr. Jackson Han, played by Daniel Dae Kim. Murphy storms into Han's office and repeatedly yells "I am a surgeon, Dr. Han!" while crying, after Han barred him from performing surgery due to concerns about his autism. Han sits unmoved behind his desk, responding with dry indifference.

Stripped of its dramatic context, the clip reads as absurd comedy. The contrast between Murphy's emotional explosion and Han's stone-cold poker face is what makes it so memeable. The scene spawned multiple meme formats: absurdist fan edits with CapCut filters and effects, "sturgeon" fish puns, an ironic Dr. Han fandom, and a phrasal template where people replace "surgeon" with other words.

The scene aired on March 4, 2019, during season 2, episode 17 of *The Good Doctor* on ABC. In the plot, Dr. Han, the hospital's new chief of surgery, had reassigned Murphy from surgery to pathology, believing his autism made him unfit to work directly with patients. When Murphy is called in for a surgical consultation but then barred from performing the actual operation, he snaps and storms into Han's office.

The scene first caught meme attention on the Chinese internet in early 2021. Users dubbed Dr. Murphy "紅眼肖恩" ("Red-eyed Shaun," translated from Chinese). On May 18, 2021, YouTuber 羊貓貓 uploaded an edit giving Murphy glowing red eyes, picking up roughly 34,900 views over two years.

On TikTok, the scene appeared as early as September 18, 2021, when user @x.hejo.x posted a recording of it, getting around 41,000 plays. Through late 2021 and into early 2023, fans of the show shared the clip earnestly, treating it as a powerful dramatic moment.

Origin & Background

Platform
ABC / *The Good Doctor* (source material), TikTok (meme spread), Twitter (secondary spread)
Key People
Unknown; @alilson_m, @hnjiaajuz14, @guymrdth
Date
2019 (aired), 2023 (viral meme)
Year
2019

The scene aired on March 4, 2019, during season 2, episode 17 of *The Good Doctor* on ABC. In the plot, Dr. Han, the hospital's new chief of surgery, had reassigned Murphy from surgery to pathology, believing his autism made him unfit to work directly with patients. When Murphy is called in for a surgical consultation but then barred from performing the actual operation, he snaps and storms into Han's office.

The scene first caught meme attention on the Chinese internet in early 2021. Users dubbed Dr. Murphy "紅眼肖恩" ("Red-eyed Shaun," translated from Chinese). On May 18, 2021, YouTuber 羊貓貓 uploaded an edit giving Murphy glowing red eyes, picking up roughly 34,900 views over two years.

On TikTok, the scene appeared as early as September 18, 2021, when user @x.hejo.x posted a recording of it, getting around 41,000 plays. Through late 2021 and into early 2023, fans of the show shared the clip earnestly, treating it as a powerful dramatic moment.

How It Spread

The meme's explosive breakout started on April 20, 2023, when TikToker @alilson_m posted the scene and racked up roughly 1.1 million likes in 18 days. That same day, TikToker @hot_elliot posted a screen recording of their For You page that played a Michael Rosen clip saying "No need to shout" right after the surgeon scene, one of the first ironic responses.

Two days later, TikToker @hnjiaajuz14 posted the scene and it blew up to roughly 18.7 million plays and 1.9 million likes in 16 days. These two viral posts opened the floodgates. By late April, TikTokers who had never watched the show were making fun of Highmore's performance. On April 26, @excessivetvuser captioned their post "surgeons be like," pulling in roughly 2.5 million plays.

The sturgeon fish joke emerged on May 4, when TikToker @gujvhoaj6rl posted a photo slideshow of stock images of sturgeon fish, treating Murphy's line as "I am a sturgeon!" It got around 446,100 plays and kicked off a wave of similar fish-themed posts. Absurdist fan edits followed, with creators using CapCut effects and calling Murphy "Blud" in an ironic style.

The meme jumped to Twitter on May 6, 2023, when user @guymrdth tweeted the TikTok clip with no caption, getting roughly 9,000 likes. Twitter users ran with it fast. @TylorStankley captioned a screencap of Dr. Han with a "When She Sucking Your Nuts" joke (roughly 6,500 likes), and @theendlessn1ght posted a crying Murphy screencap that got 14,600 likes in one day. That image became the basis for a phrasal template where users captioned it "I am a X, Dr. Han!" On May 8, @kunaiposting used "Gooner" in the template (4,300 likes), and @Jahrihanna posted "I AM FROM THE HOOD DR HAN" (1,400 likes in three hours).

At one point, "The Good Doctor," "I am a Surgeon," "Dr. Han," and "Daniel Dae Kim" were all trending on Twitter at the same time. On May 9, Cheezburger posted a roundup of 28 Good Doctor memes, and eBaum's World published its own compilation. The meme also spread to Instagram and Reddit.

How to Use This Meme

The meme works in several formats:

The phrasal template: Take the crying Dr. Murphy image and caption it "I AM A [X], DR. HAN!" replacing "surgeon" with whatever fits the joke. Common substitutions include jobs, identities, or absurd nouns like "sturgeon".

Dr. Han reaction: Use a screencap of Han's unmoved expression as a reaction image to someone being loud, emotional, or making a scene.

Absurdist edits: Take the original video clip and add CapCut filters, laser eyes, distorted audio, or overlay it onto unrelated footage. The weirder the better. The goal is to be as irreverent as possible.

Audio overlay: Use the "I am a surgeon!" audio over clips of people doing tasks that require precision or manual dexterity, like playing the board game Operation or performing delicate work.

Sturgeon variant: Replace any reference to "surgeon" with "sturgeon" and pair with fish imagery.

Cultural Impact

The meme's speed was noteworthy. eBaum's World called it "the most memed internet moment since the Pope's fake white puffer coat". All four related terms trending on Twitter simultaneously was unusual for a four-year-old TV clip.

The viral wave brought unexpected attention to a show most internet-savvy viewers had never watched. *The Good Doctor* had been on air since 2017 and ran for seven seasons (with the final season premiering February 20, 2024), but it was primarily watched by an older demographic. Vulture compared the meme's surprise factor to the realization that *Young Sheldon* is one of the most popular shows on TV: network procedurals exist in a different media universe than TikTok.

The meme also spotlighted the show's autism representation controversies. Multiple outlets used their meme explainers as opportunities to discuss whether *The Good Doctor* handled its autistic lead character responsibly. The Mary Sue specifically noted that the meme wasn't intended to mock autistic people but rather took aim at how a show with neurotypical actors and writers depicted autism.

Daniel Dae Kim's dual role as both the on-screen villain and the show's executive producer added an ironic layer that several publications highlighted.

Full History

The story of this meme is really two stories: a mediocre network medical drama that aired a scene in 2019, and the internet's delayed discovery of that scene four years later.

*The Good Doctor* is an American adaptation of a South Korean drama of the same name. Daniel Dae Kim, who plays Dr. Han, is also the executive producer who originally spotted the Korean series, bought the US rights, and brought David Shore (creator of *House*) on board to develop it. Kim chose to play the villain on his own show, appearing in only four episodes of season 2. In the show's narrative, Han eventually gets fired by hospital president Dr. Marcus Andrews for refusing to reverse Murphy's termination. In a twist, Andrews himself was later fired for this decision, as it was considered an abuse of power.

The Chinese internet picked up the scene two years before the English-speaking web did. The "Red-eyed Shaun" meme circulated on Chinese platforms throughout 2021, with edits adding glowing red eyes to Murphy's crying face. This early wave established the clip's meme potential, but it didn't cross over to Western social media in any meaningful way at the time.

When the clip resurfaced on English-language TikTok in April 2023, context collapse did the heavy lifting. People encountering the scene cold, with no knowledge of the show, found it unintentionally hilarious. "This show is hilariously bad," tweeted @TrnsShenanigans, "like the entire show is like this". Polygon noted that people weren't sharing the clip because they were amazed by Highmore's performance. The emotional explosion paired with the repetition and a completely unconvinced witness was simply absurd.

The meme evolved through several distinct phases. First came the earnest shares from fans who found the scene powerful. Then came the ironic reactions from non-fans who thought it was ridiculous. Then came the absurdist edits: CapCut filters, distorted faces, laser eyes, modified audio. TikTokers layered the audio over videos of tasks requiring manual dexterity, and others transplanted Highmore into scenes from *Batman* and *Avatar: The Last Airbender*. One especially popular format turned the clip into anti-memes, content that is intentionally unfunny in a way that circles back around to being funny.

The ironic Dr. Han fandom was one of the meme's most distinctive offshoots. Fans declared themselves "Hanpilled" and posted their "Live Dr. Han reactions". The two characters got slotted into the Virgin vs. Chad template, with Han as the Chad and Murphy as the Virgin. This reading inverted the show's intended dynamic entirely. Dr. Han was written as the antagonist, but the internet loved his unflinching calm. YouTube comments on the original scene shifted dramatically. Old comments from four years prior hated Han as the villain, while new comments from 2023 praised him.

Additional context from other clips didn't help Murphy's case. A season 1 scene where Murphy misgenders a transgender patient went viral alongside the surgeon meme. Vulture noted that some viewers took away a specific conclusion: Dr. Han is the actual "good doctor" of the series, and Murphy is "the cringe surgeon". This reading was obviously reductive, but it fueled the ironic fandom.

The meme's virality also reignited criticism of *The Good Doctor*'s portrayal of autism. Autistic people were among those poking fun at the scene, noting the over-the-top depiction of a breakdown by a neurotypical actor playing an autistic character. Highmore has said he consulted experts and members of the autism community, and that "when you've met one person with autism, you've met one person with autism". The Autism Speaks website had previously highlighted the series for its portrayal of people with disabilities, though the 2023 meme wave treated the performance as camp rather than representation.

Fun Facts

Daniel Dae Kim is the executive producer who bought the rights to the original South Korean show, brought it to the US, and then chose to play the season 2 villain on his own series.

Dr. Han only appears in four episodes of *The Good Doctor*. He gets fired in the show, but the internet crowned him the real hero.

The Chinese internet discovered the meme's potential a full two years before the English-speaking web caught on.

One of the first ironic reactions came from a TikToker whose For You page accidentally played a Michael Rosen clip saying "No need to shout" right after the surgeon scene.

*The Good Doctor* was eventually renewed for a seventh and final season, with the finale airing May 21, 2024.

Derivatives & Variations

"I Am A Sturgeon"

TikTokers replaced "surgeon" with "sturgeon" and shared stock photos or videos of the fish species, turning the dramatic moment into a fish pun[4].

Dr. Han as Chad

The Virgin vs. Chad format applied to Dr. Murphy (emotional, yelling) vs. Dr. Han (calm, stoic), with Han depicted as the Chad archetype[2].

"Hanpilled" ironic fandom

Fans adopted the term "Hanpilled" and posted "Live Dr. Han Reactions" mocking Murphy's breakdown from Han's perspective[3].

Dr. Murphy Crying image macro

The screencap of crying Murphy used as a standalone phrasal template: "I am a [X], Dr. Han!"[4].

"Red-eyed Shaun" (紅眼肖恩)

The Chinese internet's earlier version of the meme, featuring Murphy with glowing red eyes edited onto the scene[4].

CapCut absurdist edits

Video edits using heavy filters, effects, and ironic "Blud" captions layered over the original clip[4].

Crossover edits

The audio or concept transplanted into other media, including *Batman*, *Avatar: The Last Airbender*, and the board game Operation[6].

Frequently Asked Questions