LOLcats / I Can Has Cheezburger

2005Image macrosemi-active

Also known as: Cat macros · Caturday cats · lolcatz

LOLcats is a 2005 image-macro meme featuring cats overlaid with humorous captions in intentionally broken English, popularized by the website I Can Has Cheezburger.

LOLcats are image macros featuring photos of cats with humorous captions written in intentionally broken English known as "lolspeak." Originating on 4chan around 2005 as part of the weekly "Caturday" tradition, LOLcats became one of the earliest internet memes to break into the mainstream, fueled by the website I Can Has Cheezburger and widespread media coverage from outlets like Time Magazine. The format drew on a surprisingly long lineage of captioned cat photography stretching back to the 1870s, and at its peak inspired books, art exhibitions, an off-Broadway musical, a Bible translation project, and even an esoteric programming language.

TL;DR

LOLcats / I Can Has Cheezburger a mid-to-late 2000s meme format featuring cat photos with intentionally broken English captions expressing desires or observations.

Overview

A LOLcat is a photo of a cat, usually caught in a funny pose or human-like situation, with a large-font caption slapped on top. The captions follow a distinctive broken-English dialect called "lolspeak," which mashes together textspeak shortcuts, deliberate misspellings, and grammar patterns loosely inspired by baby talk and early internet culture5. Common caption formats include "Im in ur [noun], [verb]-ing ur [related noun]" and the simple "[Adjective] cat is [adjective]"4. The text is typically set in Impact or Arial Black, making the words impossible to miss even in thumbnail-sized images4.

What makes LOLcats distinct from regular funny cat pictures is the lolspeak layer. The language has its own internal logic: verbs get mangled in consistent ways, "I" becomes a standalone subject without proper conjugation ("I can has"), and words like "cheezburger" follow predictable misspelling rules11. This isn't random gibberish. It's a pidgin with conventions that fans learned to read and write fluently1.

The roots of captioned cat photography go back much further than the internet. In the 1870s, Brighton photographer Harry Pointer produced a series of carte-de-visite photos of cats posed in human situations, complete with written captions and greetings8. By 1872, Pointer had created over a hundred captioned cat images in what became known as "The Brighton Cats" series8. In the early 20th century, American photographer Harry Whittier Frees picked up the torch, dressing cats in costumes and photographing them with props for postcards and children's books6. Frees considered kittens "the most versatile animal actor" and worked only three months a year because the process was so stressful6.

The modern LOLcat meme traces directly to 4chan. According to reports from The Star and Time Magazine, anonymous users on 4chan's imageboards began posting captioned cat pictures as part of a weekly "Caturday" tradition around early 20053. Time writer Lev Grossman initially dated the oldest known example to 2006 but later corrected himself in a blog post, acknowledging that Caturday and its cat macros were already circulating on 4chan in 20059. One reader explained to Grossman that Caturday started as a protest against "Furry Friday" threads on the boards9. The domain caturday.com was registered on April 30, 20054.

Origin & Background

Platform
4chan (Caturday threads), I Can Has Cheezburger (mainstream spread)
Creator
Unknown
Date
2005
Year
2005

The roots of captioned cat photography go back much further than the internet. In the 1870s, Brighton photographer Harry Pointer produced a series of carte-de-visite photos of cats posed in human situations, complete with written captions and greetings. By 1872, Pointer had created over a hundred captioned cat images in what became known as "The Brighton Cats" series. In the early 20th century, American photographer Harry Whittier Frees picked up the torch, dressing cats in costumes and photographing them with props for postcards and children's books. Frees considered kittens "the most versatile animal actor" and worked only three months a year because the process was so stressful.

The modern LOLcat meme traces directly to 4chan. According to reports from The Star and Time Magazine, anonymous users on 4chan's imageboards began posting captioned cat pictures as part of a weekly "Caturday" tradition around early 2005. Time writer Lev Grossman initially dated the oldest known example to 2006 but later corrected himself in a blog post, acknowledging that Caturday and its cat macros were already circulating on 4chan in 2005. One reader explained to Grossman that Caturday started as a protest against "Furry Friday" threads on the boards. The domain caturday.com was registered on April 30, 2005.

How It Spread

The meme's move off 4chan began in 2006. The domain lolcats.com was registered on June 14, 2006. That September, Urban Dictionary user bridgepiercingbex defined "lolcat" as "laugh out loud, with cat on the end of it". LOLcats also spread through Something Awful's forums during this period.

The real breakout came in January 2007 with the launch of I Can Has Cheezburger, a blog dedicated entirely to curating and publishing LOLcat submissions. The site's name came from a now-iconic image of a chubby blue British Shorthair looking at the camera with the caption "I CAN HAS CHEEZBURGER?". By mid-2007, the site was pulling in 200 to 500 submissions daily. Time Magazine covered the craze in June 2007, noting that a Google search for "lolcat" returned 3.3 million results. The magazine praised LOLcats for their "distinctly old-school, early 1990s, Usenet feel" in an internet that was becoming increasingly commercial.

Reddit's r/lolcats subreddit launched on January 5, 2008, eventually reaching over 67,000 subscribers. In December 2009, Entertainment Weekly ranked LOLcats at #99 on their list of the "100 Greatest Movies, TV Shows and More" of the decade, writing the entry entirely in lolspeak. The American Dialect Society nominated "lolcat" as a runner-up for Word of the Year in the "Most Creative" category.

Platforms

4chanI Can Has CheezburgerTumblr

Timeline

2006-09-01

The term "LOLcat" was coined, described as "laugh out loud, with cat on the end of it."

2007-01-11

The blog I Can Has Cheezburger launched with an image of a chubby British Shorthair cat asking "I CAN HAS CHEEZBURGER?," becoming the central hub for LOLcat culture.

2007-06-01

Time Magazine ran a feature story calling LOLcats "the reigning instance of an Internet meme," bringing the phenomenon to mainstream attention.

2008-01-05

The /r/lolcats subreddit launched on Reddit, picking up over 67,000 subscribers in its first five years.

2009-12-01

Entertainment Weekly ranked LOLcats at #99 on their list of the "100 Greatest Movies, TV Shows and More" of the decade, with the caption written entirely in lolspeak.

2011-07-01

Thousands of Cheezburger fans gathered at Safeco Field in Seattle for "Cheezburger Field Day," a real-world meetup for the LOLcat community.

2013-01-01

LOLcats were exhibited in art galleries, sparking debate about whether internet memes qualified as legitimate art, with even the BBC weighing in.

View on Google Trends

How to Use This Meme

The classic LOLcat format is straightforward:

1

Start with a photo of a cat, ideally caught in a funny, dramatic, or oddly human pose

2

Write a caption in lolspeak, as if the cat is speaking or narrating the scene

3

Use Impact or another heavy sans-serif font, usually white with a black outline

4

Overlay the text on the image, typically centered at the top and/or bottom

Create Your Own

Cultural Impact

LOLcats were one of the first internet memes to receive serious mainstream media coverage. Time Magazine's 2007 feature treated them as a cultural indicator worth examining, noting how rare genuinely non-commercial internet phenomena were becoming. The meme generated two best-selling books and an off-Broadway musical.

Academic study of LOLcats opened the door to treating internet memes as legitimate subjects for cultural analysis. Miltner's LSE dissertation argued that memes like LOLcats reflect societal desires in the same way that space-invasion films reflected Cold War anxieties, making them valid objects of scholarly inquiry. She spoke at ROFLCon on a panel called "Adventures in Aca-meme-ia," helping establish the field that would later become internet culture studies.

The art world engagement was notable. Beyond the London gallery exhibitions, the Ceiling Cat taxidermy piece by Eva and Franco Mattes entering SFMOMA's collection in 2016 marked one of the first times a meme-inspired artwork was acquired by a major museum.

Linguistically, LOLcats left a mark through lolspeak. What started as silly cat captions developed into a surprisingly rule-governed dialect that linguists took seriously as an example of internet-native language creation. The LOLCat Bible Translation Project, which attempted to rewrite scripture in this dialect, became a well-known curiosity that illustrated just how internally consistent the language had become.

Full History

The first wave of LOLcat culture on 4chan was insular and community-driven. Users competed to create the funniest captioned cat images each Saturday, developing lolspeak organically through repetition and in-jokes. The "Im in ur base, killing ur doodz" format, borrowed from a well-known video game screenshot, became one of the earliest caption templates to get remixed across the LOLcat genre. Other foundational images included "DO NOT WANT" (a kitten yowling over a plate of clementines) and "INVISIBLE BIKE" (a cat caught mid-leap with hind legs pedaling).

I Can Has Cheezburger transformed LOLcats from a niche imageboard tradition into a mainstream internet phenomenon. The site's anonymous curators told Time in 2007 that the meme had "evolved beyond Internet subculture and is hitting the mainstream". The Cheezburger network grew rapidly, spawning related sites and building an entire community around cat-based humor. In July 2011, thousands of Cheezburger fans converged on Safeco Field in Seattle for "Cheezburger Field Day," a real-world gathering of the LOLcat faithful.

Academic interest followed the mainstream attention. Kate Miltner earned her Master's Degree from the London School of Economics with a dissertation specifically studying the appeal of LOLcats. Her research, presented at ROFLCon at MIT, identified three distinct groups of LOLcat consumers. The "Cheezfrenz," primarily women active on I Can Has Cheezburger, valued the community as "a place to be safe and kind" and bonded through correct use of lolspeak. The "MemeGeeks," predominantly male and active on Reddit and Tumblr, established in-group status by creating LOLcats that referenced increasingly obscure memes. The third group, casual users split evenly by gender, simply shared LOLcats with friends and family as a way to stay connected during the workday. Miltner argued that across all three groups, LOLcats functioned primarily as tools for "making meaningful connections with others".

The meme's influence extended into the art world. In late 2012, London's Framer's Gallery announced "LOLCAT - TEH EXHIBISHUN," featuring 49 original artworks inspired by the meme. Created by established artists including Lizzie Mary Cullen, Jimmy Turrell, and Paul MacAnelly, the exhibition donated 50% of proceeds to Battersea Dogs & Cats Home. The show drew enough attention that the BBC weighed in on whether an internet meme was a legitimate subject for gallery art. A second version of the exhibition opened in January 2013.

LOLcats also spawned some genuinely unexpected cultural artifacts. The LOLCat Bible Translation Project attempted to render the entire Bible in lolspeak. LOLCODE, an esoteric programming language, used LOLcat syntax as its foundation, with working interpreters built for.NET Framework and Perl. In 2016, artists Eva and Franco Mattes created "Ceiling Cat," a taxidermy cat installation mimicking the famous meme, which entered the permanent collection of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.

By the early 2010s, the first-generation LOLcat format was already giving way to newer meme formats. The specific lolspeak dialect fell out of common use as meme culture shifted toward reaction images, video memes, and platforms like Instagram and TikTok. But the LOLcat legacy was enormous: it established the template for how image macros work, proved that internet communities could generate genuine cultural products, and cemented cats as the internet's unofficial mascot.

Fun Facts

Harry Pointer had published over 200 captioned cat photos by 1884, making him arguably the original LOLcat creator, 120 years before 4chan.

Harry Whittier Frees, the early 20th-century cat photographer, only worked three months a year because posing animals was so stressful. He held cats in position using pins, forks, and stiff costuming with 1/5th-second exposures.

Time Magazine praised LOLcats for their "distinctly old-school, early 1990s, Usenet feel" in an internet that was becoming increasingly commercial and homogenous.

"Lolcat" was a runner-up for Word of the Year from the American Dialect Society in the "Most Creative" category.

The Ceiling Cat taxidermy installation by Eva and Franco Mattes is in the permanent collection of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.

Derivatives & Variations

LOLdogs and other animal variations

A variation of LOLcats / I Can Has Cheezburger

(2007)

Lolspeak as internet language

A variation of LOLcats / I Can Has Cheezburger

(2007)

Variations using other cute animals

A variation of LOLcats / I Can Has Cheezburger

(2007)

Frequently Asked Questions

LOLcats / I Can Has Cheezburger

2005Image macrosemi-active

Also known as: Cat macros · Caturday cats · lolcatz

LOLcats is a 2005 image-macro meme featuring cats overlaid with humorous captions in intentionally broken English, popularized by the website I Can Has Cheezburger.

LOLcats are image macros featuring photos of cats with humorous captions written in intentionally broken English known as "lolspeak." Originating on 4chan around 2005 as part of the weekly "Caturday" tradition, LOLcats became one of the earliest internet memes to break into the mainstream, fueled by the website I Can Has Cheezburger and widespread media coverage from outlets like Time Magazine. The format drew on a surprisingly long lineage of captioned cat photography stretching back to the 1870s, and at its peak inspired books, art exhibitions, an off-Broadway musical, a Bible translation project, and even an esoteric programming language.

TL;DR

LOLcats / I Can Has Cheezburger a mid-to-late 2000s meme format featuring cat photos with intentionally broken English captions expressing desires or observations.

Overview

A LOLcat is a photo of a cat, usually caught in a funny pose or human-like situation, with a large-font caption slapped on top. The captions follow a distinctive broken-English dialect called "lolspeak," which mashes together textspeak shortcuts, deliberate misspellings, and grammar patterns loosely inspired by baby talk and early internet culture. Common caption formats include "Im in ur [noun], [verb]-ing ur [related noun]" and the simple "[Adjective] cat is [adjective]". The text is typically set in Impact or Arial Black, making the words impossible to miss even in thumbnail-sized images.

What makes LOLcats distinct from regular funny cat pictures is the lolspeak layer. The language has its own internal logic: verbs get mangled in consistent ways, "I" becomes a standalone subject without proper conjugation ("I can has"), and words like "cheezburger" follow predictable misspelling rules. This isn't random gibberish. It's a pidgin with conventions that fans learned to read and write fluently.

The roots of captioned cat photography go back much further than the internet. In the 1870s, Brighton photographer Harry Pointer produced a series of carte-de-visite photos of cats posed in human situations, complete with written captions and greetings. By 1872, Pointer had created over a hundred captioned cat images in what became known as "The Brighton Cats" series. In the early 20th century, American photographer Harry Whittier Frees picked up the torch, dressing cats in costumes and photographing them with props for postcards and children's books. Frees considered kittens "the most versatile animal actor" and worked only three months a year because the process was so stressful.

The modern LOLcat meme traces directly to 4chan. According to reports from The Star and Time Magazine, anonymous users on 4chan's imageboards began posting captioned cat pictures as part of a weekly "Caturday" tradition around early 2005. Time writer Lev Grossman initially dated the oldest known example to 2006 but later corrected himself in a blog post, acknowledging that Caturday and its cat macros were already circulating on 4chan in 2005. One reader explained to Grossman that Caturday started as a protest against "Furry Friday" threads on the boards. The domain caturday.com was registered on April 30, 2005.

Origin & Background

Platform
4chan (Caturday threads), I Can Has Cheezburger (mainstream spread)
Creator
Unknown
Date
2005
Year
2005

The roots of captioned cat photography go back much further than the internet. In the 1870s, Brighton photographer Harry Pointer produced a series of carte-de-visite photos of cats posed in human situations, complete with written captions and greetings. By 1872, Pointer had created over a hundred captioned cat images in what became known as "The Brighton Cats" series. In the early 20th century, American photographer Harry Whittier Frees picked up the torch, dressing cats in costumes and photographing them with props for postcards and children's books. Frees considered kittens "the most versatile animal actor" and worked only three months a year because the process was so stressful.

The modern LOLcat meme traces directly to 4chan. According to reports from The Star and Time Magazine, anonymous users on 4chan's imageboards began posting captioned cat pictures as part of a weekly "Caturday" tradition around early 2005. Time writer Lev Grossman initially dated the oldest known example to 2006 but later corrected himself in a blog post, acknowledging that Caturday and its cat macros were already circulating on 4chan in 2005. One reader explained to Grossman that Caturday started as a protest against "Furry Friday" threads on the boards. The domain caturday.com was registered on April 30, 2005.

How It Spread

The meme's move off 4chan began in 2006. The domain lolcats.com was registered on June 14, 2006. That September, Urban Dictionary user bridgepiercingbex defined "lolcat" as "laugh out loud, with cat on the end of it". LOLcats also spread through Something Awful's forums during this period.

The real breakout came in January 2007 with the launch of I Can Has Cheezburger, a blog dedicated entirely to curating and publishing LOLcat submissions. The site's name came from a now-iconic image of a chubby blue British Shorthair looking at the camera with the caption "I CAN HAS CHEEZBURGER?". By mid-2007, the site was pulling in 200 to 500 submissions daily. Time Magazine covered the craze in June 2007, noting that a Google search for "lolcat" returned 3.3 million results. The magazine praised LOLcats for their "distinctly old-school, early 1990s, Usenet feel" in an internet that was becoming increasingly commercial.

Reddit's r/lolcats subreddit launched on January 5, 2008, eventually reaching over 67,000 subscribers. In December 2009, Entertainment Weekly ranked LOLcats at #99 on their list of the "100 Greatest Movies, TV Shows and More" of the decade, writing the entry entirely in lolspeak. The American Dialect Society nominated "lolcat" as a runner-up for Word of the Year in the "Most Creative" category.

Platforms

4chanI Can Has CheezburgerTumblr

Timeline

2006-09-01

The term "LOLcat" was coined, described as "laugh out loud, with cat on the end of it."

2007-01-11

The blog I Can Has Cheezburger launched with an image of a chubby British Shorthair cat asking "I CAN HAS CHEEZBURGER?," becoming the central hub for LOLcat culture.

2007-06-01

Time Magazine ran a feature story calling LOLcats "the reigning instance of an Internet meme," bringing the phenomenon to mainstream attention.

2008-01-05

The /r/lolcats subreddit launched on Reddit, picking up over 67,000 subscribers in its first five years.

2009-12-01

Entertainment Weekly ranked LOLcats at #99 on their list of the "100 Greatest Movies, TV Shows and More" of the decade, with the caption written entirely in lolspeak.

2011-07-01

Thousands of Cheezburger fans gathered at Safeco Field in Seattle for "Cheezburger Field Day," a real-world meetup for the LOLcat community.

2013-01-01

LOLcats were exhibited in art galleries, sparking debate about whether internet memes qualified as legitimate art, with even the BBC weighing in.

View on Google Trends

How to Use This Meme

The classic LOLcat format is straightforward:

1

Start with a photo of a cat, ideally caught in a funny, dramatic, or oddly human pose

2

Write a caption in lolspeak, as if the cat is speaking or narrating the scene

3

Use Impact or another heavy sans-serif font, usually white with a black outline

4

Overlay the text on the image, typically centered at the top and/or bottom

Create Your Own

Cultural Impact

LOLcats were one of the first internet memes to receive serious mainstream media coverage. Time Magazine's 2007 feature treated them as a cultural indicator worth examining, noting how rare genuinely non-commercial internet phenomena were becoming. The meme generated two best-selling books and an off-Broadway musical.

Academic study of LOLcats opened the door to treating internet memes as legitimate subjects for cultural analysis. Miltner's LSE dissertation argued that memes like LOLcats reflect societal desires in the same way that space-invasion films reflected Cold War anxieties, making them valid objects of scholarly inquiry. She spoke at ROFLCon on a panel called "Adventures in Aca-meme-ia," helping establish the field that would later become internet culture studies.

The art world engagement was notable. Beyond the London gallery exhibitions, the Ceiling Cat taxidermy piece by Eva and Franco Mattes entering SFMOMA's collection in 2016 marked one of the first times a meme-inspired artwork was acquired by a major museum.

Linguistically, LOLcats left a mark through lolspeak. What started as silly cat captions developed into a surprisingly rule-governed dialect that linguists took seriously as an example of internet-native language creation. The LOLCat Bible Translation Project, which attempted to rewrite scripture in this dialect, became a well-known curiosity that illustrated just how internally consistent the language had become.

Full History

The first wave of LOLcat culture on 4chan was insular and community-driven. Users competed to create the funniest captioned cat images each Saturday, developing lolspeak organically through repetition and in-jokes. The "Im in ur base, killing ur doodz" format, borrowed from a well-known video game screenshot, became one of the earliest caption templates to get remixed across the LOLcat genre. Other foundational images included "DO NOT WANT" (a kitten yowling over a plate of clementines) and "INVISIBLE BIKE" (a cat caught mid-leap with hind legs pedaling).

I Can Has Cheezburger transformed LOLcats from a niche imageboard tradition into a mainstream internet phenomenon. The site's anonymous curators told Time in 2007 that the meme had "evolved beyond Internet subculture and is hitting the mainstream". The Cheezburger network grew rapidly, spawning related sites and building an entire community around cat-based humor. In July 2011, thousands of Cheezburger fans converged on Safeco Field in Seattle for "Cheezburger Field Day," a real-world gathering of the LOLcat faithful.

Academic interest followed the mainstream attention. Kate Miltner earned her Master's Degree from the London School of Economics with a dissertation specifically studying the appeal of LOLcats. Her research, presented at ROFLCon at MIT, identified three distinct groups of LOLcat consumers. The "Cheezfrenz," primarily women active on I Can Has Cheezburger, valued the community as "a place to be safe and kind" and bonded through correct use of lolspeak. The "MemeGeeks," predominantly male and active on Reddit and Tumblr, established in-group status by creating LOLcats that referenced increasingly obscure memes. The third group, casual users split evenly by gender, simply shared LOLcats with friends and family as a way to stay connected during the workday. Miltner argued that across all three groups, LOLcats functioned primarily as tools for "making meaningful connections with others".

The meme's influence extended into the art world. In late 2012, London's Framer's Gallery announced "LOLCAT - TEH EXHIBISHUN," featuring 49 original artworks inspired by the meme. Created by established artists including Lizzie Mary Cullen, Jimmy Turrell, and Paul MacAnelly, the exhibition donated 50% of proceeds to Battersea Dogs & Cats Home. The show drew enough attention that the BBC weighed in on whether an internet meme was a legitimate subject for gallery art. A second version of the exhibition opened in January 2013.

LOLcats also spawned some genuinely unexpected cultural artifacts. The LOLCat Bible Translation Project attempted to render the entire Bible in lolspeak. LOLCODE, an esoteric programming language, used LOLcat syntax as its foundation, with working interpreters built for.NET Framework and Perl. In 2016, artists Eva and Franco Mattes created "Ceiling Cat," a taxidermy cat installation mimicking the famous meme, which entered the permanent collection of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.

By the early 2010s, the first-generation LOLcat format was already giving way to newer meme formats. The specific lolspeak dialect fell out of common use as meme culture shifted toward reaction images, video memes, and platforms like Instagram and TikTok. But the LOLcat legacy was enormous: it established the template for how image macros work, proved that internet communities could generate genuine cultural products, and cemented cats as the internet's unofficial mascot.

Fun Facts

Harry Pointer had published over 200 captioned cat photos by 1884, making him arguably the original LOLcat creator, 120 years before 4chan.

Harry Whittier Frees, the early 20th-century cat photographer, only worked three months a year because posing animals was so stressful. He held cats in position using pins, forks, and stiff costuming with 1/5th-second exposures.

Time Magazine praised LOLcats for their "distinctly old-school, early 1990s, Usenet feel" in an internet that was becoming increasingly commercial and homogenous.

"Lolcat" was a runner-up for Word of the Year from the American Dialect Society in the "Most Creative" category.

The Ceiling Cat taxidermy installation by Eva and Franco Mattes is in the permanent collection of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.

Derivatives & Variations

LOLdogs and other animal variations

A variation of LOLcats / I Can Has Cheezburger

(2007)

Lolspeak as internet language

A variation of LOLcats / I Can Has Cheezburger

(2007)

Variations using other cute animals

A variation of LOLcats / I Can Has Cheezburger

(2007)

Frequently Asked Questions