I Serve The Soviet Union

2019Image macro / catchphrasesemi-active
I Serve the Soviet Union is a 2019 image-macro from HBO's *Chernobyl*, where the phrase referencing soldiers' allegiance to communism became a meme template for jokes about sharing and group loyalty.

"I Serve the Soviet Union" is an image macro and catchphrase from HBO's 2019 miniseries *Chernobyl*. The phrase comes from a scene where soldiers respond to General Nikolai Tarakanov's thanks by saying "I serve the Soviet Union," and it quickly became a meme template for jokes about sharing, communism, and selfless service. The format exploded on Reddit in mid-2019 during the show's peak popularity.

TL;DR

"I Serve the Soviet Union" is an image macro and catchphrase from HBO's 2019 miniseries *Chernobyl*.

Overview

The meme uses a screenshot from HBO's *Chernobyl* showing soldiers saluting and saying "I serve the Soviet Union" to General Tarakanov after he thanks them for their service during the nuclear cleanup. The format pairs this image with setups involving any kind of selfless act, sharing, or generosity. The humor comes from framing mundane everyday favors with the same dramatic patriotic energy as soldiers accepting a commendation from a Soviet general.

On May 27, 2019, HBO aired the fourth episode of its critically acclaimed miniseries *Chernobyl*, which depicted events surrounding the April 1986 nuclear disaster at the Soviet power plant1. In the episode, General Nikolai Tarakanov thanks various members of the Chernobyl radiation cleanup team for their dangerous work. Each soldier responds with the phrase "I serve the Soviet Union"2.

The next day, actor Ralph Ineson, who played General Tarakanov, tweeted a photograph from the scene. The tweet picked up more than 2,500 likes and 190 retweets within two months and provided the image that would become the meme's standard template2.

Origin & Background

Platform
HBO's *Chernobyl* (source), Twitter / Reddit (viral spread)
Key People
Ralph Ineson, Unknown
Date
2019
Year
2019

On May 27, 2019, HBO aired the fourth episode of its critically acclaimed miniseries *Chernobyl*, which depicted events surrounding the April 1986 nuclear disaster at the Soviet power plant. In the episode, General Nikolai Tarakanov thanks various members of the Chernobyl radiation cleanup team for their dangerous work. Each soldier responds with the phrase "I serve the Soviet Union".

The next day, actor Ralph Ineson, who played General Tarakanov, tweeted a photograph from the scene. The tweet picked up more than 2,500 likes and 190 retweets within two months and provided the image that would become the meme's standard template.

How It Spread

On May 29, 2019, Reddit user wawiwuwe posted Ineson's tweet to the /r/ChernobylTV subreddit with the title "I serve the Soviet Union," earning over 1,100 points at a perfect 100% upvote ratio. By early June, the phrase was showing up in image macros across multiple subreddits.

The format found its signature use on June 19 when user M3me_L0rd_Farquaad shared a version captioned "Me: \*opens pack of gum\* / Everyone in class:" with the image of Tarakanov shaking the soldiers' hands. That post pulled in more than 8,200 points at 98% upvoted.

The meme's biggest single post came on July 24 from user Kimzhal in /r/dankmemes, captioned "Youtubers who leave links to songs used in the video." It blew past 24,000 points and 100 comments in just 24 hours, firmly establishing the format as one of the summer's most popular templates.

How to Use This Meme

The "I Serve the Soviet Union" format typically follows a two-part structure:

1

Describe a scenario where someone does something generous, communal, or selfless (sharing food, covering for a coworker, doing an unpaid favor)

2

Pair it with the screenshot of the soldiers saying "I serve the Soviet Union" as the response

Cultural Impact

The meme rode the broader wave of *Chernobyl*'s cultural moment in mid-2019. The HBO miniseries became the highest-rated TV series on IMDb at the time of its run, and several of its scenes and quotes spawned memes. "I Serve the Soviet Union" stood out because of its template versatility. Almost any act of sharing or generosity could be plugged into the format, giving it wider reach than more context-dependent *Chernobyl* references.

The phrase also tapped into the internet's long-running fascination with Soviet and communist-themed humor, fitting alongside existing formats like the "our" communism memes and Soviet anthem jokes.

Fun Facts

The phrase *Служу Советскому Союзу* ("I serve the Soviet Union") was the standard formal response Soviet military personnel gave when receiving official commendations or thanks from superiors.

Ralph Ineson, who inadvertently launched the meme by tweeting the scene's screenshot, is better known for roles in *Game of Thrones* and *The Witch*.

The "sharing gum in class" version became the meme's most recognizable iteration, pulling over 8,200 upvotes on Reddit within weeks of posting.

*Chernobyl* depicted the catastrophic nuclear accident of April 1986 across five episodes.

Frequently Asked Questions

I Serve The Soviet Union

2019Image macro / catchphrasesemi-active
I Serve the Soviet Union is a 2019 image-macro from HBO's *Chernobyl*, where the phrase referencing soldiers' allegiance to communism became a meme template for jokes about sharing and group loyalty.

"I Serve the Soviet Union" is an image macro and catchphrase from HBO's 2019 miniseries *Chernobyl*. The phrase comes from a scene where soldiers respond to General Nikolai Tarakanov's thanks by saying "I serve the Soviet Union," and it quickly became a meme template for jokes about sharing, communism, and selfless service. The format exploded on Reddit in mid-2019 during the show's peak popularity.

TL;DR

"I Serve the Soviet Union" is an image macro and catchphrase from HBO's 2019 miniseries *Chernobyl*.

Overview

The meme uses a screenshot from HBO's *Chernobyl* showing soldiers saluting and saying "I serve the Soviet Union" to General Tarakanov after he thanks them for their service during the nuclear cleanup. The format pairs this image with setups involving any kind of selfless act, sharing, or generosity. The humor comes from framing mundane everyday favors with the same dramatic patriotic energy as soldiers accepting a commendation from a Soviet general.

On May 27, 2019, HBO aired the fourth episode of its critically acclaimed miniseries *Chernobyl*, which depicted events surrounding the April 1986 nuclear disaster at the Soviet power plant. In the episode, General Nikolai Tarakanov thanks various members of the Chernobyl radiation cleanup team for their dangerous work. Each soldier responds with the phrase "I serve the Soviet Union".

The next day, actor Ralph Ineson, who played General Tarakanov, tweeted a photograph from the scene. The tweet picked up more than 2,500 likes and 190 retweets within two months and provided the image that would become the meme's standard template.

Origin & Background

Platform
HBO's *Chernobyl* (source), Twitter / Reddit (viral spread)
Key People
Ralph Ineson, Unknown
Date
2019
Year
2019

On May 27, 2019, HBO aired the fourth episode of its critically acclaimed miniseries *Chernobyl*, which depicted events surrounding the April 1986 nuclear disaster at the Soviet power plant. In the episode, General Nikolai Tarakanov thanks various members of the Chernobyl radiation cleanup team for their dangerous work. Each soldier responds with the phrase "I serve the Soviet Union".

The next day, actor Ralph Ineson, who played General Tarakanov, tweeted a photograph from the scene. The tweet picked up more than 2,500 likes and 190 retweets within two months and provided the image that would become the meme's standard template.

How It Spread

On May 29, 2019, Reddit user wawiwuwe posted Ineson's tweet to the /r/ChernobylTV subreddit with the title "I serve the Soviet Union," earning over 1,100 points at a perfect 100% upvote ratio. By early June, the phrase was showing up in image macros across multiple subreddits.

The format found its signature use on June 19 when user M3me_L0rd_Farquaad shared a version captioned "Me: \*opens pack of gum\* / Everyone in class:" with the image of Tarakanov shaking the soldiers' hands. That post pulled in more than 8,200 points at 98% upvoted.

The meme's biggest single post came on July 24 from user Kimzhal in /r/dankmemes, captioned "Youtubers who leave links to songs used in the video." It blew past 24,000 points and 100 comments in just 24 hours, firmly establishing the format as one of the summer's most popular templates.

How to Use This Meme

The "I Serve the Soviet Union" format typically follows a two-part structure:

1

Describe a scenario where someone does something generous, communal, or selfless (sharing food, covering for a coworker, doing an unpaid favor)

2

Pair it with the screenshot of the soldiers saying "I serve the Soviet Union" as the response

Cultural Impact

The meme rode the broader wave of *Chernobyl*'s cultural moment in mid-2019. The HBO miniseries became the highest-rated TV series on IMDb at the time of its run, and several of its scenes and quotes spawned memes. "I Serve the Soviet Union" stood out because of its template versatility. Almost any act of sharing or generosity could be plugged into the format, giving it wider reach than more context-dependent *Chernobyl* references.

The phrase also tapped into the internet's long-running fascination with Soviet and communist-themed humor, fitting alongside existing formats like the "our" communism memes and Soviet anthem jokes.

Fun Facts

The phrase *Служу Советскому Союзу* ("I serve the Soviet Union") was the standard formal response Soviet military personnel gave when receiving official commendations or thanks from superiors.

Ralph Ineson, who inadvertently launched the meme by tweeting the scene's screenshot, is better known for roles in *Game of Thrones* and *The Witch*.

The "sharing gum in class" version became the meme's most recognizable iteration, pulling over 8,200 upvotes on Reddit within weeks of posting.

*Chernobyl* depicted the catastrophic nuclear accident of April 1986 across five episodes.

Frequently Asked Questions