I Bring A Sort Of X Vibe To The Y
Also known as: I Bring a Sort of Vibe · We Should All Quit Vibe
"I Bring a Sort Of X Vibe to the Y" is a phrasal template meme that started with comedian Marcia Belsky's April 2021 tweet: "I bring a sort of 'we should all quit' vibe to the workplace that bosses don't really like." A year later, a TikToker's video using the phrase got screenshotted and turned into an exploitable image macro where users swap in their own phrases, and the format took off across Instagram and Facebook throughout 2022.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The format is straightforward. Take the base phrase "I bring a sort of '[X]' vibe to the [Y] that [Z] don't really like" and fill in your own version. The [X] slot is usually some kind of attitude, behavior, or energy. The [Y] slot is a setting or group. The [Z] slot names whoever is bothered by your vibe.
For the image macro version, users typically take the screenshot of @renegadeshow on his porch and block out the existing caption text with a colored bar, then write their own phrase over it. The slightly messy, slapped-together look of the caption replacement is part of the charm. The template works best when the "vibe" described is something weirdly specific or self-deprecating, like bringing a "let's just leave" energy to a social event or a "this meeting could have been an email" attitude to work.
Fun Facts
Marcia Belsky's original tweet sat relatively quiet as a text post for a full year before the TikTok video turned it into a visual meme format.
The meme's transition from tweet to TikTok to screenshotted Instagram image macro is a textbook example of how memes shift form as they cross platforms.
The exploitable version is notable for its deliberately rough editing style, where users just slap a colored bar over the old text and write new words on top.
Derivatives & Variations
"May all beings be free" edit:
The Country Clairvoyant's June 2022 Facebook edit was the first known recaptioned version, swapping workplace rebellion for spiritual liberation[1].
Schizoposting / "I Hate the Antichrist" version:
Instagram user okschizo posted a version blending the format with the "I Hate the Antichrist" meme on November 28, 2022, merging two distinct internet subcultures[2].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (3)
- 1
- 2
- 3List of musician and band name etymologiesencyclopedia