Object Labeling

2017Exploitable image formatclassic

Also known as: Labeled Memes

Object Labeling is a 2017 meme format where text labels transform people, animals, and objects into visual metaphors, popularized by the Distracted Boyfriend meme and named by Know Your Meme editor Adam Downer.

Object labeling is a meme format where text labels are added to people, animals, or objects in an image to turn them into metaphors for something else entirely. The style blew up in mid-2017, driven largely by the Distracted Boyfriend meme, and was formally named by Know Your Meme editor Adam Downer in early 20182. While its roots trace back to political cartoons from as early as 17541, the modern version became the dominant way people create and share memes online.

TL;DR

Object labeling is a meme format where text labels are added to people, animals, or objects in an image to turn them into metaphors for something else entirely.

Overview

Object labeling works on a simple idea: take a photo or illustration with clear visual relationships between its subjects, then slap text labels on each element to recast the whole scene as a comment on something unrelated. The boyfriend in a stock photo becomes "the youth," his girlfriend becomes "capitalism," and the other woman becomes "socialism." A boy blasting a trumpet at a cringing girl becomes "vegans" annoying "everyone else"2.

The format is flexible enough to work with almost any image that has distinct elements interacting with each other. Unlike older image macros that placed bold Impact font text at the top and bottom of a picture, object labels sit directly on the subjects themselves, usually in plain white text boxes2. This placement is key: it transforms the people and objects in the image into stand-ins, creating layered jokes that can range from broad political commentary to deeply niche observations about astrology signs or cooking show contestants2.

Object labeling as a concept is ancient. Benjamin Franklin's "Join, or Die" cartoon, published in *The Pennsylvania Gazette* on May 9, 1754, used labeled segments of a snake to represent the American colonies1. Political cartoonists have been labeling objects to convey meaning for centuries, and Know Your Meme's own entry on the format points to Franklin's cartoon as an early example2.

The modern meme version started appearing in mid-2017. Adam Downer, an editor at Know Your Meme, told Slate he began noticing the format scattered around the internet that year2. Then the Distracted Boyfriend stock photo arrived. The image of a man turning to ogle another woman while his girlfriend looks on in disbelief had already gone viral in summer 2017, but it was the addition of crude white text labels that launched it into a new category2. The much-shared version labeling the boyfriend as "the youth," the girlfriend as "capitalism," and the other woman as "socialism" showed exactly how powerful the format could be2.

It wasn't until February 2018 that Downer realized the trend needed a name. He told Slate: "After seeing a bunch of them come through, I talked to everyone else on the staff and was like, 'We need a name for this thing. What should we call it?' And we came up with 'object labeling'"2. He admitted the name was "a little clunky" but it stuck2. The specific meme that made it click for him was the razzle dazzle bird2.

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitter, Reddit (viral spread)
Key People
Community-created, Adam Downer
Date
2017
Year
2017

Object labeling as a concept is ancient. Benjamin Franklin's "Join, or Die" cartoon, published in *The Pennsylvania Gazette* on May 9, 1754, used labeled segments of a snake to represent the American colonies. Political cartoonists have been labeling objects to convey meaning for centuries, and Know Your Meme's own entry on the format points to Franklin's cartoon as an early example.

The modern meme version started appearing in mid-2017. Adam Downer, an editor at Know Your Meme, told Slate he began noticing the format scattered around the internet that year. Then the Distracted Boyfriend stock photo arrived. The image of a man turning to ogle another woman while his girlfriend looks on in disbelief had already gone viral in summer 2017, but it was the addition of crude white text labels that launched it into a new category. The much-shared version labeling the boyfriend as "the youth," the girlfriend as "capitalism," and the other woman as "socialism" showed exactly how powerful the format could be.

It wasn't until February 2018 that Downer realized the trend needed a name. He told Slate: "After seeing a bunch of them come through, I talked to everyone else on the staff and was like, 'We need a name for this thing. What should we call it?' And we came up with 'object labeling'". He admitted the name was "a little clunky" but it stuck. The specific meme that made it click for him was the razzle dazzle bird.

How It Spread

After the Distracted Boyfriend made labeled memes a mainstream format in summer 2017, the style spread rapidly through fall 2017 and into early 2018.

In February 2018, a photo of a boy playing a trumpet at a visibly annoyed girl went viral. Meme-makers labeled the boy as everything from "vegans" (with the girl as "everyone else") to "me loudly broadcasting my depression" (with the girl as "the people closest to me making a concentrated effort to not listen").

That same month, the Twitter account @astrobebs posted a labeled version of Lisa Simpson holding a coffee mug for every Zodiac sign. One version labeled Lisa as "Scorpio" with a hand pouring coffee from a pot labeled "claiming to not be petty but making a list of people not allowed to your birthday party". Another popular template featured a car swerving off a highway toward an exit ramp, with one version casting the car as a "Chopped contestant" choosing to use the ice cream maker instead of "making a simple dessert, executing the basket ingredients well".

By March 2018, when Slate published its feature on the trend, object labeling had become so common that the article's author wrote: "I can hardly scroll through my timeline without coming across another example of a painstakingly annotated meme".

How to Use This Meme

Pick any image where two or more elements have a clear visual relationship. The best candidates show some kind of interaction: someone reaching for something, a choice being made, one thing overpowering another, or a reaction playing out.

Add white text boxes (or simple text overlays) directly onto each element. Each label should represent a different concept, and together the labels should tell a story or make a joke when read against the visual action in the image.

Common approaches include:

- Choice/temptation format (Distracted Boyfriend, highway exit): Label the person making a choice, the thing they're choosing, and the thing they're abandoning - Annoyance format (Trumpet Boy): Label the aggressor and the victim to comment on any one-sided dynamic - Reaction format (Lisa Simpson coffee mug): Label a character and their action to represent a personality type or behavior

The humor often comes from the specificity of the labels. Broad labels like "me" and "my problems" work, but the format shines brightest when the annotations get weirdly detailed and niche.

Cultural Impact

Slate's March 2018 feature described object labeling as potentially "the meme format of our times," noting that it had essentially replaced the advice animal as the default way people annotate images online. Adam Downer explained to Slate that object labeling could be understood as the latest evolution of the image macro, which originally looked like animals with bold Impact font text. "Advice animals were the meme currency at the end of the 2000s, at the dawn of memes," Downer said. "But it seems we've evolved past making that kind of macro; now, we object-label".

The format also blurred into real-world protest. The Distracted Boyfriend meme was spotted reincarnated as a protest sign, carrying its labels into physical space. Know Your Meme's entry on the format even cited political cartoons as a direct ancestor, drawing a line from Benjamin Franklin's segmented snake in 1754 all the way to Twitter shitposts in 2018.

One thing that sets object labeling apart from older meme formats is how niche it can get. Where advice animals dealt in broad, relatable humor, labeled memes often target extremely specific audiences. A labeled meme about *Chopped* contestants or Scorpio astrology signs might only land with a small slice of the internet, but that specificity is part of the appeal.

Fun Facts

Benjamin Franklin's "Join, or Die" cartoon from 1754 is sometimes cited as one of the earliest examples of object labeling, though applying the term retroactively to an 18th-century political cartoon is, as Slate noted, "a stretch".

Adam Downer admitted the name "object labeling" is "a little clunky" but the KYM team couldn't come up with anything catchier.

Know Your Meme's entry on object labeling references the "Console Wars of 2012 matter-of-factly, as if everyone knows what those are," which Slate found amusingly insular.

The format is essentially an evolution of the image macro, which used Impact font on top and bottom of images. Object labeling moved the text onto the subjects themselves.

Derivatives & Variations

Distracted Boyfriend

— The stock photo by Antonio Guillem became the flagship object labeling meme in 2017, with thousands of labeled variations covering politics, relationships, and pop culture[2]

Trumpet Boy

— A February 2018 photo of a boy blasting a trumpet at an annoyed girl, labeled to represent any obnoxious-to-unwilling-audience dynamic[2]

Lisa Simpson Coffee Mug

— A Simpsons screenshot used by @astrobebs for astrology-themed labeled memes[2]

Highway Exit (Left Exit 12)

— A car swerving toward a highway exit, labeled to represent impulsive or bad decisions[2]

Razzle Dazzle Bird

— The specific meme that prompted Adam Downer to formally categorize and name the object labeling format at Know Your Meme[2]

Frequently Asked Questions

Object Labeling

2017Exploitable image formatclassic

Also known as: Labeled Memes

Object Labeling is a 2017 meme format where text labels transform people, animals, and objects into visual metaphors, popularized by the Distracted Boyfriend meme and named by Know Your Meme editor Adam Downer.

Object labeling is a meme format where text labels are added to people, animals, or objects in an image to turn them into metaphors for something else entirely. The style blew up in mid-2017, driven largely by the Distracted Boyfriend meme, and was formally named by Know Your Meme editor Adam Downer in early 2018. While its roots trace back to political cartoons from as early as 1754, the modern version became the dominant way people create and share memes online.

TL;DR

Object labeling is a meme format where text labels are added to people, animals, or objects in an image to turn them into metaphors for something else entirely.

Overview

Object labeling works on a simple idea: take a photo or illustration with clear visual relationships between its subjects, then slap text labels on each element to recast the whole scene as a comment on something unrelated. The boyfriend in a stock photo becomes "the youth," his girlfriend becomes "capitalism," and the other woman becomes "socialism." A boy blasting a trumpet at a cringing girl becomes "vegans" annoying "everyone else".

The format is flexible enough to work with almost any image that has distinct elements interacting with each other. Unlike older image macros that placed bold Impact font text at the top and bottom of a picture, object labels sit directly on the subjects themselves, usually in plain white text boxes. This placement is key: it transforms the people and objects in the image into stand-ins, creating layered jokes that can range from broad political commentary to deeply niche observations about astrology signs or cooking show contestants.

Object labeling as a concept is ancient. Benjamin Franklin's "Join, or Die" cartoon, published in *The Pennsylvania Gazette* on May 9, 1754, used labeled segments of a snake to represent the American colonies. Political cartoonists have been labeling objects to convey meaning for centuries, and Know Your Meme's own entry on the format points to Franklin's cartoon as an early example.

The modern meme version started appearing in mid-2017. Adam Downer, an editor at Know Your Meme, told Slate he began noticing the format scattered around the internet that year. Then the Distracted Boyfriend stock photo arrived. The image of a man turning to ogle another woman while his girlfriend looks on in disbelief had already gone viral in summer 2017, but it was the addition of crude white text labels that launched it into a new category. The much-shared version labeling the boyfriend as "the youth," the girlfriend as "capitalism," and the other woman as "socialism" showed exactly how powerful the format could be.

It wasn't until February 2018 that Downer realized the trend needed a name. He told Slate: "After seeing a bunch of them come through, I talked to everyone else on the staff and was like, 'We need a name for this thing. What should we call it?' And we came up with 'object labeling'". He admitted the name was "a little clunky" but it stuck. The specific meme that made it click for him was the razzle dazzle bird.

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitter, Reddit (viral spread)
Key People
Community-created, Adam Downer
Date
2017
Year
2017

Object labeling as a concept is ancient. Benjamin Franklin's "Join, or Die" cartoon, published in *The Pennsylvania Gazette* on May 9, 1754, used labeled segments of a snake to represent the American colonies. Political cartoonists have been labeling objects to convey meaning for centuries, and Know Your Meme's own entry on the format points to Franklin's cartoon as an early example.

The modern meme version started appearing in mid-2017. Adam Downer, an editor at Know Your Meme, told Slate he began noticing the format scattered around the internet that year. Then the Distracted Boyfriend stock photo arrived. The image of a man turning to ogle another woman while his girlfriend looks on in disbelief had already gone viral in summer 2017, but it was the addition of crude white text labels that launched it into a new category. The much-shared version labeling the boyfriend as "the youth," the girlfriend as "capitalism," and the other woman as "socialism" showed exactly how powerful the format could be.

It wasn't until February 2018 that Downer realized the trend needed a name. He told Slate: "After seeing a bunch of them come through, I talked to everyone else on the staff and was like, 'We need a name for this thing. What should we call it?' And we came up with 'object labeling'". He admitted the name was "a little clunky" but it stuck. The specific meme that made it click for him was the razzle dazzle bird.

How It Spread

After the Distracted Boyfriend made labeled memes a mainstream format in summer 2017, the style spread rapidly through fall 2017 and into early 2018.

In February 2018, a photo of a boy playing a trumpet at a visibly annoyed girl went viral. Meme-makers labeled the boy as everything from "vegans" (with the girl as "everyone else") to "me loudly broadcasting my depression" (with the girl as "the people closest to me making a concentrated effort to not listen").

That same month, the Twitter account @astrobebs posted a labeled version of Lisa Simpson holding a coffee mug for every Zodiac sign. One version labeled Lisa as "Scorpio" with a hand pouring coffee from a pot labeled "claiming to not be petty but making a list of people not allowed to your birthday party". Another popular template featured a car swerving off a highway toward an exit ramp, with one version casting the car as a "Chopped contestant" choosing to use the ice cream maker instead of "making a simple dessert, executing the basket ingredients well".

By March 2018, when Slate published its feature on the trend, object labeling had become so common that the article's author wrote: "I can hardly scroll through my timeline without coming across another example of a painstakingly annotated meme".

How to Use This Meme

Pick any image where two or more elements have a clear visual relationship. The best candidates show some kind of interaction: someone reaching for something, a choice being made, one thing overpowering another, or a reaction playing out.

Add white text boxes (or simple text overlays) directly onto each element. Each label should represent a different concept, and together the labels should tell a story or make a joke when read against the visual action in the image.

Common approaches include:

- Choice/temptation format (Distracted Boyfriend, highway exit): Label the person making a choice, the thing they're choosing, and the thing they're abandoning - Annoyance format (Trumpet Boy): Label the aggressor and the victim to comment on any one-sided dynamic - Reaction format (Lisa Simpson coffee mug): Label a character and their action to represent a personality type or behavior

The humor often comes from the specificity of the labels. Broad labels like "me" and "my problems" work, but the format shines brightest when the annotations get weirdly detailed and niche.

Cultural Impact

Slate's March 2018 feature described object labeling as potentially "the meme format of our times," noting that it had essentially replaced the advice animal as the default way people annotate images online. Adam Downer explained to Slate that object labeling could be understood as the latest evolution of the image macro, which originally looked like animals with bold Impact font text. "Advice animals were the meme currency at the end of the 2000s, at the dawn of memes," Downer said. "But it seems we've evolved past making that kind of macro; now, we object-label".

The format also blurred into real-world protest. The Distracted Boyfriend meme was spotted reincarnated as a protest sign, carrying its labels into physical space. Know Your Meme's entry on the format even cited political cartoons as a direct ancestor, drawing a line from Benjamin Franklin's segmented snake in 1754 all the way to Twitter shitposts in 2018.

One thing that sets object labeling apart from older meme formats is how niche it can get. Where advice animals dealt in broad, relatable humor, labeled memes often target extremely specific audiences. A labeled meme about *Chopped* contestants or Scorpio astrology signs might only land with a small slice of the internet, but that specificity is part of the appeal.

Fun Facts

Benjamin Franklin's "Join, or Die" cartoon from 1754 is sometimes cited as one of the earliest examples of object labeling, though applying the term retroactively to an 18th-century political cartoon is, as Slate noted, "a stretch".

Adam Downer admitted the name "object labeling" is "a little clunky" but the KYM team couldn't come up with anything catchier.

Know Your Meme's entry on object labeling references the "Console Wars of 2012 matter-of-factly, as if everyone knows what those are," which Slate found amusingly insular.

The format is essentially an evolution of the image macro, which used Impact font on top and bottom of images. Object labeling moved the text onto the subjects themselves.

Derivatives & Variations

Distracted Boyfriend

— The stock photo by Antonio Guillem became the flagship object labeling meme in 2017, with thousands of labeled variations covering politics, relationships, and pop culture[2]

Trumpet Boy

— A February 2018 photo of a boy blasting a trumpet at an annoyed girl, labeled to represent any obnoxious-to-unwilling-audience dynamic[2]

Lisa Simpson Coffee Mug

— A Simpsons screenshot used by @astrobebs for astrology-themed labeled memes[2]

Highway Exit (Left Exit 12)

— A car swerving toward a highway exit, labeled to represent impulsive or bad decisions[2]

Razzle Dazzle Bird

— The specific meme that prompted Adam Downer to formally categorize and name the object labeling format at Know Your Meme[2]

Frequently Asked Questions