James Doakes Surprise Motherfucker
Also known as: Surprise Mothafaka · Doakes Meme · Surprise MF
"Surprise, Motherfucker" is a catchphrase and reaction meme from the Showtime series *Dexter*, delivered by Detective Sergeant James Doakes (played by Erik King) in the Season 1 finale "Born Free," which aired on December 17, 20062. The line became an internet staple through YouTube clips, Vine remixes, and image macros featuring rhyming variations like "Supplies, Motherfucker" and "Some Fries, Motherfucker"1. It's one of the most enduring "gotcha" reaction memes online, still regularly deployed in comment sections and group chats nearly two decades after it first aired.
TL;DR
"Surprise, Motherfucker" is a catchphrase and reaction meme from the Showtime series *Dexter*, delivered by Detective Sergeant James Doakes (played by Erik King) in the Season 1 finale "Born Free," which aired on December 17, 2006.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The "Surprise, Motherfucker" meme typically works in a few ways:
As a reaction GIF/image: Drop it in response to any unexpected reveal, plot twist, or "gotcha" moment. It works best when someone gets caught doing something or when information comes out of nowhere. The timing matters. Save it for moments that deserve dramatic impact rather than everyday situations.
As an image macro with the original line: Use a high-contrast frame of Doakes facing the camera. Keep the text large with a thin outline for mobile legibility. The punchline usually lands on the "reveal" beat.
As a rhyming variation: This is the most creative format. Replace "Surprise" with a rhyming word and add matching visual props. Common examples include: - "Supplies, Motherfucker" (Doakes holding office supplies or Staples boxes) - "Some Fries, Motherfucker" (fast food imagery) - "Damn Flies, Motherfucker" (insects) - "Bowties, Motherfucker" (formal wear) - "Sunrise, Motherfucker" (scenic backgrounds)
As a video edit: Splice Doakes' audio into an unrelated video scene, timed so he "appears" at a surprising moment. This bait-and-switch format was popular on Vine and still works on TikTok.
The tone is generally playful. Most creators aim the menace at situations (deadlines, bugs, plot twists) rather than specific people.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
The shipping yard scene was set in the Port of Miami but was actually filmed in San Pedro, California, at a waterfront lot on Harbor Boulevard near the Port of Los Angeles.
In the show's canon, Doakes is killed off at the end of Season 2 when Lila blows up the cabin where he's being held captive. The internet ensured the character lived on far longer than his screen time.
Doakes' character background included being a U.S. Army Ranger who served with the elite Regimental Reconnaissance Detachment and earned the nickname "Sane James" for his ability to detect mentally unstable people.
The episode "Born Free" was based on Jeff Lindsay's novel *Darkly Dreaming Dexter*, though the show made significant changes to the source material, particularly around the Ice Truck Killer reveal.
YouTube search results for "surprise motherfucker" returned approximately 1,120 results and "doakes surprise" returned about 160 results as of May 2012, before the meme's biggest growth period on Tumblr and Vine.
Derivatives & Variations
Rhyming image macros
("Supplies, Motherfucker," "Some Fries, Motherfucker," "Bowties, Motherfucker," etc.): The most prolific derivative format, popularized on Tumblr in early 2012[3].
Darius Benson Vine series
The Vine creator voiced multiple pun variations in Doakes' style, becoming one of the most notable video interpretations of the meme[3].
SurpriseMotherfucker.com
A now-defunct single-serving site that curated mashup videos of Doakes' soundbite edited into other movie and TV scenes[2].
Video bait-and-switch edits
Videos from unrelated media with Doakes' audio spliced in at the moment of a surprise reveal, popular on YouTube starting around 2011[3].
TikTok "How it feels knowing..." format
Modern TikTok users repurpose Doakes' suspicious glare as a reaction template for "How it feels knowing..." style captions[1].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (13)
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5James Doakesencyclopedia
- 6Dexter (TV series)encyclopedia
- 7Erik Kingencyclopedia
- 8Born Free (Dexter)encyclopedia
- 9Dexter (TV series) - Wikipediaencyclopedia
- 10Born Free (Dexter) - Wikipediaencyclopedia
- 11
- 12
- 13