Is That A Personal Attack

2019Reaction image / catchphrasesemi-active
Is That a Personal Attack? is a 2019 reaction image of actress Brie Larson's deadpan response from a WIRED Autocomplete Interview, used to react to benign statements as personal attacks.

"Is That a Personal Attack?" is a reaction image and catchphrase from actress Brie Larson, taken from a March 2019 WIRED Autocomplete Interview on YouTube. Larson's deadpan delivery of the line in response to a benign question about her workout habits became a popular reaction meme, typically paired with captions describing completely non-threatening situations as if they were hostile.

TL;DR

"Is That a Personal Attack?" is a reaction image and catchphrase from actress Brie Larson, taken from a March 2019 WIRED Autocomplete Interview on YouTube.

Overview

The meme uses a still frame of Brie Larson looking directly at the camera with a slightly confrontational expression, paired with her quote "Is that, like, a personal attack or something?" The humor comes from applying this seemingly defensive reaction to mundane, harmless situations. The format typically sets up an innocuous scenario, then drops Larson's quote as the punchline, playing on the absurd gap between a non-threatening comment and an over-the-top defensive response3.

On March 6th, 2019, WIRED published an Autocomplete Interview with Brie Larson on YouTube, part of their recurring series where celebrities answer the internet's most-searched questions about themselves1. When the question "Does Brie Larson workout?" appeared on the card, Larson paused, looked at the camera with a puzzled expression, and said: "Like, hypothetically would I, at some point? Is that, like, a personal attack or something?"1

The timing of the interview coincided with the press tour for *Captain Marvel*, which was already generating heated online discourse. The quote's dry, almost confrontational tone gave critics and meme-makers something to latch onto immediately1.

Origin & Background

Platform
YouTube (WIRED Autocomplete Interview)
Key People
WIRED, Brie Larson
Date
2019
Year
2019

On March 6th, 2019, WIRED published an Autocomplete Interview with Brie Larson on YouTube, part of their recurring series where celebrities answer the internet's most-searched questions about themselves. When the question "Does Brie Larson workout?" appeared on the card, Larson paused, looked at the camera with a puzzled expression, and said: "Like, hypothetically would I, at some point? Is that, like, a personal attack or something?"

The timing of the interview coincided with the press tour for *Captain Marvel*, which was already generating heated online discourse. The quote's dry, almost confrontational tone gave critics and meme-makers something to latch onto immediately.

How It Spread

Within days of the video's upload, the clip picked up attention among online communities already engaged in debate around the *Captain Marvel* film. The quote gained early traction on Reddit's more combative corners, reaching 100 points on /r/MGTOW. YouTube commenters quickly began riffing on the line, blending it with existing formats like the Protec Attacc meme and Infinity War templates.

By March 19th, the Facebook group Voter Apathy Party posted a version using the image to mock BuzzFeed, pulling over 140 reactions. Two days later, on March 21st, Redditor TheCommunist_Scholar posted the image in the context of the PewDiePie vs T-Series subscriber war, earning over 1,100 upvotes.

The format proved flexible. Users applied it to everyday situations where someone might jokingly feel "attacked" by a relatable observation, like being called out for binge-watching TV or eating too much junk food. This broadened the meme's appeal well beyond the initial Captain Marvel discourse.

How to Use This Meme

The standard format pairs a setup with Larson's reaction image or quote as the punchline:

1

Describe a normal, non-hostile situation (someone making a mild observation, a friend pointing out a habit, a relatable truth)

2

Follow it with the still of Brie Larson and/or the caption "Is that a personal attack or something?"

Cultural Impact

The meme fed into a larger 2019 cycle of Brie Larson and Captain Marvel discourse online. Her press tour generated several viral moments, but "Is that a personal attack?" outlasted most of them because it worked as a standalone reaction format detached from the movie debate. The phrase crossed over into casual internet vocabulary, with people using it in text conversations and social media replies without the image attached.

Fun Facts

The original WIRED Autocomplete Interview format has spawned dozens of memes over the years, but Larson's quote became one of the most widely shared single moments from the series.

The question that triggered the response was simply "Does Brie Larson workout?" which makes the defensive reaction even funnier in context.

Urban Dictionary entries for "personal attack" spiked around the same period, with definitions referencing the feeling of being called out on a personal level.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is That A Personal Attack

2019Reaction image / catchphrasesemi-active
Is That a Personal Attack? is a 2019 reaction image of actress Brie Larson's deadpan response from a WIRED Autocomplete Interview, used to react to benign statements as personal attacks.

"Is That a Personal Attack?" is a reaction image and catchphrase from actress Brie Larson, taken from a March 2019 WIRED Autocomplete Interview on YouTube. Larson's deadpan delivery of the line in response to a benign question about her workout habits became a popular reaction meme, typically paired with captions describing completely non-threatening situations as if they were hostile.

TL;DR

"Is That a Personal Attack?" is a reaction image and catchphrase from actress Brie Larson, taken from a March 2019 WIRED Autocomplete Interview on YouTube.

Overview

The meme uses a still frame of Brie Larson looking directly at the camera with a slightly confrontational expression, paired with her quote "Is that, like, a personal attack or something?" The humor comes from applying this seemingly defensive reaction to mundane, harmless situations. The format typically sets up an innocuous scenario, then drops Larson's quote as the punchline, playing on the absurd gap between a non-threatening comment and an over-the-top defensive response.

On March 6th, 2019, WIRED published an Autocomplete Interview with Brie Larson on YouTube, part of their recurring series where celebrities answer the internet's most-searched questions about themselves. When the question "Does Brie Larson workout?" appeared on the card, Larson paused, looked at the camera with a puzzled expression, and said: "Like, hypothetically would I, at some point? Is that, like, a personal attack or something?"

The timing of the interview coincided with the press tour for *Captain Marvel*, which was already generating heated online discourse. The quote's dry, almost confrontational tone gave critics and meme-makers something to latch onto immediately.

Origin & Background

Platform
YouTube (WIRED Autocomplete Interview)
Key People
WIRED, Brie Larson
Date
2019
Year
2019

On March 6th, 2019, WIRED published an Autocomplete Interview with Brie Larson on YouTube, part of their recurring series where celebrities answer the internet's most-searched questions about themselves. When the question "Does Brie Larson workout?" appeared on the card, Larson paused, looked at the camera with a puzzled expression, and said: "Like, hypothetically would I, at some point? Is that, like, a personal attack or something?"

The timing of the interview coincided with the press tour for *Captain Marvel*, which was already generating heated online discourse. The quote's dry, almost confrontational tone gave critics and meme-makers something to latch onto immediately.

How It Spread

Within days of the video's upload, the clip picked up attention among online communities already engaged in debate around the *Captain Marvel* film. The quote gained early traction on Reddit's more combative corners, reaching 100 points on /r/MGTOW. YouTube commenters quickly began riffing on the line, blending it with existing formats like the Protec Attacc meme and Infinity War templates.

By March 19th, the Facebook group Voter Apathy Party posted a version using the image to mock BuzzFeed, pulling over 140 reactions. Two days later, on March 21st, Redditor TheCommunist_Scholar posted the image in the context of the PewDiePie vs T-Series subscriber war, earning over 1,100 upvotes.

The format proved flexible. Users applied it to everyday situations where someone might jokingly feel "attacked" by a relatable observation, like being called out for binge-watching TV or eating too much junk food. This broadened the meme's appeal well beyond the initial Captain Marvel discourse.

How to Use This Meme

The standard format pairs a setup with Larson's reaction image or quote as the punchline:

1

Describe a normal, non-hostile situation (someone making a mild observation, a friend pointing out a habit, a relatable truth)

2

Follow it with the still of Brie Larson and/or the caption "Is that a personal attack or something?"

Cultural Impact

The meme fed into a larger 2019 cycle of Brie Larson and Captain Marvel discourse online. Her press tour generated several viral moments, but "Is that a personal attack?" outlasted most of them because it worked as a standalone reaction format detached from the movie debate. The phrase crossed over into casual internet vocabulary, with people using it in text conversations and social media replies without the image attached.

Fun Facts

The original WIRED Autocomplete Interview format has spawned dozens of memes over the years, but Larson's quote became one of the most widely shared single moments from the series.

The question that triggered the response was simply "Does Brie Larson workout?" which makes the defensive reaction even funnier in context.

Urban Dictionary entries for "personal attack" spiked around the same period, with definitions referencing the feeling of being called out on a personal level.

Frequently Asked Questions