Ill Fuckin Do It Again

2017Reaction image macrosemi-active

Also known as: Goofy's Trial · I'll Do It Again

I'll Fuckin Do It Again is a 2017 image-macro meme of an unhinged animated Goofy, expressing gleeful zero remorse about repeating bad decisions.

"I'll Fuckin' Do It Again" is a reaction image macro featuring a crudely drawn version of Disney's Goofy with a wild, unhinged expression, typically used to express zero remorse about repeating a bad decision. The meme originated from a 2017 YouTube comedy sketch called "GOOFY'S TRIAL" by TooDamnFilthy, where Goofy confesses to a crime and declares his intent to do it again1. After an animated version by Shigloo brought the sketch to life visually, the screenshot of Goofy's deranged face became one of the internet's go-to images for self-aware defiance and gleeful recidivism2.

TL;DR

"I'll Fuckin' Do It Again" is a reaction image macro featuring a crudely drawn version of Disney's Goofy with a wild, unhinged expression, typically used to express zero remorse about repeating a bad decision.

Overview

The meme centers on a screenshot of Goofy sitting in what appears to be a courtroom witness chair. He's drawn in a deliberately ugly, distorted style with bloodshot eyes, messy fur, and a jagged grin. The image captures the exact moment Goofy cheerfully announces he'll commit the same offense again, radiating an energy that can only be described as "criminally unbothered."

In practice, people pair this image with captions about any behavior they know is bad but plan to repeat anyway2. The format works because it takes one of Disney's most wholesome, bumbling characters and turns him into a poster child for deliberate, joyful self-destruction. The contrast between Goofy's family-friendly reputation and the meme's chaotic energy is the whole joke2.

On January 4th, 2017, YouTuber TooDamnFilthy uploaded an audio comedy sketch titled "GOOFY'S TRIAL" to YouTube1. The sketch parodies the Filthy Frank comedy style and depicts Goofy standing trial for a mass shooting. During the proceedings, Goofy's lawyer attempts to enter an insanity plea, but Goofy interrupts to clarify that he knew exactly what he was doing. He then delivers the now-iconic line: "I'll fuckin' do it again." The original audio sketch pulled in over 2.7 million views within its first three years on the platform1.

On January 20th, 2020, YouTuber Shigloo published a full animation of the sketch, giving the audio a visual form1. Shigloo's animation created the specific image of Goofy that would become the meme: a sweaty, unhinged cartoon dog in a turtleneck, sitting in the witness stand with an expression that screams complete lack of remorse. The animated version collected over 6.5 million views in under three years1.

Origin & Background

Platform
YouTube (audio sketch), Reddit (viral meme spread)
Key People
TooDamnFilthy, Shigloo
Date
2017
Year
2017

On January 4th, 2017, YouTuber TooDamnFilthy uploaded an audio comedy sketch titled "GOOFY'S TRIAL" to YouTube. The sketch parodies the Filthy Frank comedy style and depicts Goofy standing trial for a mass shooting. During the proceedings, Goofy's lawyer attempts to enter an insanity plea, but Goofy interrupts to clarify that he knew exactly what he was doing. He then delivers the now-iconic line: "I'll fuckin' do it again." The original audio sketch pulled in over 2.7 million views within its first three years on the platform.

On January 20th, 2020, YouTuber Shigloo published a full animation of the sketch, giving the audio a visual form. Shigloo's animation created the specific image of Goofy that would become the meme: a sweaty, unhinged cartoon dog in a turtleneck, sitting in the witness stand with an expression that screams complete lack of remorse. The animated version collected over 6.5 million views in under three years.

How It Spread

The meme's image macro life kicked off on Reddit in August 2019, months before Shigloo's full animation dropped. On August 16th, 2019, Redditor GamationOnReddit posted the Goofy screenshot with a caption about the United States dropping atomic bombs during World War II. The post earned over 13,000 upvotes with a 96% approval rate.

Two days later, on August 18th, Redditor cartertwocool used the image to joke about Germany's role in both World Wars, pulling in 6,000 upvotes. The very next day saw two more viral hits: Redditor randomTWdude applied it to YouTube's aggressive advertising (29,000+ upvotes, 97% approval), and Redditor PriceTag184 made a version about eating extremely hot pizza knowing it would burn your mouth (32,000+ upvotes).

This rapid-fire series of posts across a single weekend in August 2019 established the template. Within days the format had been proven versatile enough to cover geopolitics, corporate greed, and everyday bad decisions. The meme spread beyond Reddit to Twitter, Instagram, and eventually TikTok, where the phrase merged with similar "doubling down" humor.

The format also cross-pollinated with the SpongeBob SquarePants "Wanna see me do it again?" gag, where SpongeBob runs to a distant point and back so fast the viewer misses it. Though the two memes have distinct origins, their overlap in expressing unapologetic repetition led to frequent confusion and blending online.

How to Use This Meme

The template is simple:

1

Pick a behavior you (or someone) did that was clearly a bad idea. The more universally relatable, the better. Eating food you know is too hot, staying up way too late on a work night, texting an ex.

2

Write a caption describing the action and its consequences. Usually framed as "me after [bad thing happened because of my choice]."

3

Pair it with the Goofy screenshot. The standard image shows Goofy in the witness chair with his wild grin.

Cultural Impact

The meme tapped into a broader cultural mood around accountability and the public apology cycle. In an era where every mistake prompts a carefully worded Notes app apology, the Goofy image represents the opposite response: doubling down without a shred of guilt. This "anti-apology" energy gave it staying power well past the typical meme lifecycle.

The format found its way into political commentary, sports fandoms, and financial communities. Any time a public figure made a controversial statement, refused to back down, and then said something even more controversial, the Goofy image would spike in search interest. It became shorthand for the "double down" in any context.

The meme also benefited from the late 2010s trend toward "cursed" and deep-fried imagery. Goofy's intentionally ugly, distorted appearance fit perfectly alongside the lo-fi, degraded aesthetic that dominated meme culture from roughly 2018 to 2021.

Fun Facts

The original audio sketch by TooDamnFilthy was a parody of Filthy Frank's comedy style, specifically adapting the dark humor format to a Disney character.

Shigloo's animation came out nearly three years after the audio sketch, but the meme image went viral on Reddit about five months *before* the animation was published.

The pizza-burning version (32,000+ upvotes) slightly outperformed the atomic bomb version (13,000+ upvotes) on Reddit, proving relatable everyday pain beats geopolitical satire in the upvote economy.

Despite being based on a Disney character, the meme's crude art style means Disney has never been directly associated with it. The drawing looks nothing like official Goofy.

Search interest in the meme tends to spike whenever a public figure publicly refuses to apologize for something, creating a recurring pattern of real-world events fueling meme engagement.

Derivatives & Variations

History memes:

Versions applying the format to historical events like the atomic bombing of Japan and Germany starting two World Wars were among the first viral uses[1].

Corporate complaint memes:

YouTube's advertising practices and similar corporate behaviors became frequent targets[1].

SpongeBob crossover:

The phrase blended with SpongeBob's "Wanna see me do it again?" to create hybrid versions combining both characters or swapping their catchphrases[2].

Deep-fried edits:

Heavily filtered, distorted versions of the image pushed Goofy's already cursed appearance into surreal territory, popular on Reddit's deep-fried meme communities[2].

Frequently Asked Questions

Ill Fuckin Do It Again

2017Reaction image macrosemi-active

Also known as: Goofy's Trial · I'll Do It Again

I'll Fuckin Do It Again is a 2017 image-macro meme of an unhinged animated Goofy, expressing gleeful zero remorse about repeating bad decisions.

"I'll Fuckin' Do It Again" is a reaction image macro featuring a crudely drawn version of Disney's Goofy with a wild, unhinged expression, typically used to express zero remorse about repeating a bad decision. The meme originated from a 2017 YouTube comedy sketch called "GOOFY'S TRIAL" by TooDamnFilthy, where Goofy confesses to a crime and declares his intent to do it again. After an animated version by Shigloo brought the sketch to life visually, the screenshot of Goofy's deranged face became one of the internet's go-to images for self-aware defiance and gleeful recidivism.

TL;DR

"I'll Fuckin' Do It Again" is a reaction image macro featuring a crudely drawn version of Disney's Goofy with a wild, unhinged expression, typically used to express zero remorse about repeating a bad decision.

Overview

The meme centers on a screenshot of Goofy sitting in what appears to be a courtroom witness chair. He's drawn in a deliberately ugly, distorted style with bloodshot eyes, messy fur, and a jagged grin. The image captures the exact moment Goofy cheerfully announces he'll commit the same offense again, radiating an energy that can only be described as "criminally unbothered."

In practice, people pair this image with captions about any behavior they know is bad but plan to repeat anyway. The format works because it takes one of Disney's most wholesome, bumbling characters and turns him into a poster child for deliberate, joyful self-destruction. The contrast between Goofy's family-friendly reputation and the meme's chaotic energy is the whole joke.

On January 4th, 2017, YouTuber TooDamnFilthy uploaded an audio comedy sketch titled "GOOFY'S TRIAL" to YouTube. The sketch parodies the Filthy Frank comedy style and depicts Goofy standing trial for a mass shooting. During the proceedings, Goofy's lawyer attempts to enter an insanity plea, but Goofy interrupts to clarify that he knew exactly what he was doing. He then delivers the now-iconic line: "I'll fuckin' do it again." The original audio sketch pulled in over 2.7 million views within its first three years on the platform.

On January 20th, 2020, YouTuber Shigloo published a full animation of the sketch, giving the audio a visual form. Shigloo's animation created the specific image of Goofy that would become the meme: a sweaty, unhinged cartoon dog in a turtleneck, sitting in the witness stand with an expression that screams complete lack of remorse. The animated version collected over 6.5 million views in under three years.

Origin & Background

Platform
YouTube (audio sketch), Reddit (viral meme spread)
Key People
TooDamnFilthy, Shigloo
Date
2017
Year
2017

On January 4th, 2017, YouTuber TooDamnFilthy uploaded an audio comedy sketch titled "GOOFY'S TRIAL" to YouTube. The sketch parodies the Filthy Frank comedy style and depicts Goofy standing trial for a mass shooting. During the proceedings, Goofy's lawyer attempts to enter an insanity plea, but Goofy interrupts to clarify that he knew exactly what he was doing. He then delivers the now-iconic line: "I'll fuckin' do it again." The original audio sketch pulled in over 2.7 million views within its first three years on the platform.

On January 20th, 2020, YouTuber Shigloo published a full animation of the sketch, giving the audio a visual form. Shigloo's animation created the specific image of Goofy that would become the meme: a sweaty, unhinged cartoon dog in a turtleneck, sitting in the witness stand with an expression that screams complete lack of remorse. The animated version collected over 6.5 million views in under three years.

How It Spread

The meme's image macro life kicked off on Reddit in August 2019, months before Shigloo's full animation dropped. On August 16th, 2019, Redditor GamationOnReddit posted the Goofy screenshot with a caption about the United States dropping atomic bombs during World War II. The post earned over 13,000 upvotes with a 96% approval rate.

Two days later, on August 18th, Redditor cartertwocool used the image to joke about Germany's role in both World Wars, pulling in 6,000 upvotes. The very next day saw two more viral hits: Redditor randomTWdude applied it to YouTube's aggressive advertising (29,000+ upvotes, 97% approval), and Redditor PriceTag184 made a version about eating extremely hot pizza knowing it would burn your mouth (32,000+ upvotes).

This rapid-fire series of posts across a single weekend in August 2019 established the template. Within days the format had been proven versatile enough to cover geopolitics, corporate greed, and everyday bad decisions. The meme spread beyond Reddit to Twitter, Instagram, and eventually TikTok, where the phrase merged with similar "doubling down" humor.

The format also cross-pollinated with the SpongeBob SquarePants "Wanna see me do it again?" gag, where SpongeBob runs to a distant point and back so fast the viewer misses it. Though the two memes have distinct origins, their overlap in expressing unapologetic repetition led to frequent confusion and blending online.

How to Use This Meme

The template is simple:

1

Pick a behavior you (or someone) did that was clearly a bad idea. The more universally relatable, the better. Eating food you know is too hot, staying up way too late on a work night, texting an ex.

2

Write a caption describing the action and its consequences. Usually framed as "me after [bad thing happened because of my choice]."

3

Pair it with the Goofy screenshot. The standard image shows Goofy in the witness chair with his wild grin.

Cultural Impact

The meme tapped into a broader cultural mood around accountability and the public apology cycle. In an era where every mistake prompts a carefully worded Notes app apology, the Goofy image represents the opposite response: doubling down without a shred of guilt. This "anti-apology" energy gave it staying power well past the typical meme lifecycle.

The format found its way into political commentary, sports fandoms, and financial communities. Any time a public figure made a controversial statement, refused to back down, and then said something even more controversial, the Goofy image would spike in search interest. It became shorthand for the "double down" in any context.

The meme also benefited from the late 2010s trend toward "cursed" and deep-fried imagery. Goofy's intentionally ugly, distorted appearance fit perfectly alongside the lo-fi, degraded aesthetic that dominated meme culture from roughly 2018 to 2021.

Fun Facts

The original audio sketch by TooDamnFilthy was a parody of Filthy Frank's comedy style, specifically adapting the dark humor format to a Disney character.

Shigloo's animation came out nearly three years after the audio sketch, but the meme image went viral on Reddit about five months *before* the animation was published.

The pizza-burning version (32,000+ upvotes) slightly outperformed the atomic bomb version (13,000+ upvotes) on Reddit, proving relatable everyday pain beats geopolitical satire in the upvote economy.

Despite being based on a Disney character, the meme's crude art style means Disney has never been directly associated with it. The drawing looks nothing like official Goofy.

Search interest in the meme tends to spike whenever a public figure publicly refuses to apologize for something, creating a recurring pattern of real-world events fueling meme engagement.

Derivatives & Variations

History memes:

Versions applying the format to historical events like the atomic bombing of Japan and Germany starting two World Wars were among the first viral uses[1].

Corporate complaint memes:

YouTube's advertising practices and similar corporate behaviors became frequent targets[1].

SpongeBob crossover:

The phrase blended with SpongeBob's "Wanna see me do it again?" to create hybrid versions combining both characters or swapping their catchphrases[2].

Deep-fried edits:

Heavily filtered, distorted versions of the image pushed Goofy's already cursed appearance into surreal territory, popular on Reddit's deep-fried meme communities[2].

Frequently Asked Questions