Schrute Facts

2011Image macroclassic

Also known as: Dwight Schrute Meme · Schrute Meme

Schrute Facts is a 2011 image-macro meme featuring Dwight Schrute from The Office, debunking common beliefs with his signature "False" and pedantic corrections.

Schrute Facts is an image macro series built around Dwight Schrute from NBC's The Office, where a common saying or belief gets presented as a "fact" before Dwight's signature "False" shoots it down with a pedantic, overly literal correction. The format first appeared on Reddit on April 15, 2011, after being created on Quickmeme9, and spread rapidly across meme generators and social platforms through 2012. Actor Rainn Wilson leaned into the joke by recording a charity video where he debunked inspirational Facebook quotes in full Dwight mode3.

TL;DR

Schrute Facts is an image macro series built around Dwight Schrute from NBC's The Office, where a common saying or belief gets presented as a "fact" before Dwight's signature "False" shoots it down with a pedantic, overly literal correction.

Overview

The meme features a portrait of Dwight Schrute, the uptight paper salesman played by Rainn Wilson on NBC's The Office1. In the show, Dwight routinely corrects other characters' casual expressions by taking them at face value and pointing out why they're technically wrong5. The image macro borrows this habit: the top text states a well-known idiom, song lyric, or motivational phrase as if presenting a factual claim, and the bottom text begins with "FALSE" followed by Dwight's hyper-literal correction. The comedy relies on the gap between the emotional intent of the original saying and Dwight's cold insistence on factual accuracy.

Dwight Schrute's tendency to correct figurative language has been a defining character trait since The Office debuted in 2005. The character, based on Gareth Keenan from the original British series4, is a know-it-all survivalist with an extremely literal worldview who regularly deems others' statements "false" and rebuts them with real-world logic.

Image macros pairing Dwight's face with actual show quotes appeared online as early as February 20111. The specific "Fact/False" format arrived on April 15, 2011, when an anonymous user created an image on Quickmeme and posted it to Reddit9. The caption targeted The Beatles' "All You Need Is Love," with Dwight's rebuttal declaring that humans only need water and food to survive9. The post gained quick traction and kicked off a wave of imitations.

Origin & Background

Platform
Quickmeme (creation), Reddit (viral spread)
Creator
Unknown
Date
2011
Year
2011

Dwight Schrute's tendency to correct figurative language has been a defining character trait since The Office debuted in 2005. The character, based on Gareth Keenan from the original British series, is a know-it-all survivalist with an extremely literal worldview who regularly deems others' statements "false" and rebuts them with real-world logic.

Image macros pairing Dwight's face with actual show quotes appeared online as early as February 2011. The specific "Fact/False" format arrived on April 15, 2011, when an anonymous user created an image on Quickmeme and posted it to Reddit. The caption targeted The Beatles' "All You Need Is Love," with Dwight's rebuttal declaring that humans only need water and food to survive. The post gained quick traction and kicked off a wave of imitations.

How It Spread

The format caught on fast. By July 2011, the meme blog Runt of the Web ran a collection titled "Dwight Schrute Knows Best" that pushed the series to a wider audience. Galleries and roundups followed on eBaum's World, Uproxx, and BuzzFeed. By February 2012, the numbers told the story: more than 300 submissions on Reddit, over 14,000 on Quickmeme, and roughly 280 on Memegenerator.

How to Use This Meme

The Schrute Facts format follows a simple two-part structure:

1

Top text: State a well-known saying, song lyric, motivational quote, or common belief as if presenting a fact. Examples include "love is all you need," "laughter is the best medicine," or "home is where the heart is."

2

Bottom text: Begin with "FALSE." Then add Dwight's correction, an aggressively literal interpretation that strips away the metaphor. The correction typically uses formal, almost clinical language.

Cultural Impact

The biggest crossover moment came in September 2012 when Rainn Wilson appeared in a video for Malarious, a charity collaboration between CollegeHumor and Malaria No More. In the video, Wilson read inspirational quotes from Facebook users' profiles and debunked them in Dwight's signature style, drawing coverage from outlets like Mashable.

Wilson was fully on board with his character's meme status. During a 2012 Reddit AMA on r/IAmA, a user asked what he thought about Dwight becoming a meme. His answer: "I love that Dwight is a bobble-head, a graffiti, a meme and an icon of weirdness for a generation. So thankful to the fans for making Dwight a legend of TV," adding that he would "always be known for Dwight and I'm fine with that".

Fun Facts

The Dwight Schrute bobblehead, first introduced in April 2006, became the highest-selling item in NBC Universal Store history by 2008, well before the Schrute Facts meme existed.

Google searches for "schrute facts" predate the image macro by over a year, going back to February 2010, possibly driven by a Dwight Schrute trivia quiz on Sporcle.

Rainn Wilson originally auditioned for the role of Michael Scott, describing his attempt as a "terrible Gervais impersonation," before casting directors redirected him to Dwight.

The Malarious charity campaign that featured Wilson's meme-inspired video included over 30 celebrities across 24 videos.

Derivatives & Variations

Dwight Schrute Knows Best:

An earlier, looser variant pairing Dwight's image with actual quotes from the show rather than the "Fact/False" format. Runt of the Web helped popularize this name with a July 2011 gallery[2].

Malarious charity video:

Rainn Wilson performing the meme format live for CollegeHumor's Malaria No More initiative in September 2012, reading and debunking real Facebook quotes[3].

Frequently Asked Questions

Schrute Facts

2011Image macroclassic

Also known as: Dwight Schrute Meme · Schrute Meme

Schrute Facts is a 2011 image-macro meme featuring Dwight Schrute from The Office, debunking common beliefs with his signature "False" and pedantic corrections.

Schrute Facts is an image macro series built around Dwight Schrute from NBC's The Office, where a common saying or belief gets presented as a "fact" before Dwight's signature "False" shoots it down with a pedantic, overly literal correction. The format first appeared on Reddit on April 15, 2011, after being created on Quickmeme, and spread rapidly across meme generators and social platforms through 2012. Actor Rainn Wilson leaned into the joke by recording a charity video where he debunked inspirational Facebook quotes in full Dwight mode.

TL;DR

Schrute Facts is an image macro series built around Dwight Schrute from NBC's The Office, where a common saying or belief gets presented as a "fact" before Dwight's signature "False" shoots it down with a pedantic, overly literal correction.

Overview

The meme features a portrait of Dwight Schrute, the uptight paper salesman played by Rainn Wilson on NBC's The Office. In the show, Dwight routinely corrects other characters' casual expressions by taking them at face value and pointing out why they're technically wrong. The image macro borrows this habit: the top text states a well-known idiom, song lyric, or motivational phrase as if presenting a factual claim, and the bottom text begins with "FALSE" followed by Dwight's hyper-literal correction. The comedy relies on the gap between the emotional intent of the original saying and Dwight's cold insistence on factual accuracy.

Dwight Schrute's tendency to correct figurative language has been a defining character trait since The Office debuted in 2005. The character, based on Gareth Keenan from the original British series, is a know-it-all survivalist with an extremely literal worldview who regularly deems others' statements "false" and rebuts them with real-world logic.

Image macros pairing Dwight's face with actual show quotes appeared online as early as February 2011. The specific "Fact/False" format arrived on April 15, 2011, when an anonymous user created an image on Quickmeme and posted it to Reddit. The caption targeted The Beatles' "All You Need Is Love," with Dwight's rebuttal declaring that humans only need water and food to survive. The post gained quick traction and kicked off a wave of imitations.

Origin & Background

Platform
Quickmeme (creation), Reddit (viral spread)
Creator
Unknown
Date
2011
Year
2011

Dwight Schrute's tendency to correct figurative language has been a defining character trait since The Office debuted in 2005. The character, based on Gareth Keenan from the original British series, is a know-it-all survivalist with an extremely literal worldview who regularly deems others' statements "false" and rebuts them with real-world logic.

Image macros pairing Dwight's face with actual show quotes appeared online as early as February 2011. The specific "Fact/False" format arrived on April 15, 2011, when an anonymous user created an image on Quickmeme and posted it to Reddit. The caption targeted The Beatles' "All You Need Is Love," with Dwight's rebuttal declaring that humans only need water and food to survive. The post gained quick traction and kicked off a wave of imitations.

How It Spread

The format caught on fast. By July 2011, the meme blog Runt of the Web ran a collection titled "Dwight Schrute Knows Best" that pushed the series to a wider audience. Galleries and roundups followed on eBaum's World, Uproxx, and BuzzFeed. By February 2012, the numbers told the story: more than 300 submissions on Reddit, over 14,000 on Quickmeme, and roughly 280 on Memegenerator.

How to Use This Meme

The Schrute Facts format follows a simple two-part structure:

1

Top text: State a well-known saying, song lyric, motivational quote, or common belief as if presenting a fact. Examples include "love is all you need," "laughter is the best medicine," or "home is where the heart is."

2

Bottom text: Begin with "FALSE." Then add Dwight's correction, an aggressively literal interpretation that strips away the metaphor. The correction typically uses formal, almost clinical language.

Cultural Impact

The biggest crossover moment came in September 2012 when Rainn Wilson appeared in a video for Malarious, a charity collaboration between CollegeHumor and Malaria No More. In the video, Wilson read inspirational quotes from Facebook users' profiles and debunked them in Dwight's signature style, drawing coverage from outlets like Mashable.

Wilson was fully on board with his character's meme status. During a 2012 Reddit AMA on r/IAmA, a user asked what he thought about Dwight becoming a meme. His answer: "I love that Dwight is a bobble-head, a graffiti, a meme and an icon of weirdness for a generation. So thankful to the fans for making Dwight a legend of TV," adding that he would "always be known for Dwight and I'm fine with that".

Fun Facts

The Dwight Schrute bobblehead, first introduced in April 2006, became the highest-selling item in NBC Universal Store history by 2008, well before the Schrute Facts meme existed.

Google searches for "schrute facts" predate the image macro by over a year, going back to February 2010, possibly driven by a Dwight Schrute trivia quiz on Sporcle.

Rainn Wilson originally auditioned for the role of Michael Scott, describing his attempt as a "terrible Gervais impersonation," before casting directors redirected him to Dwight.

The Malarious charity campaign that featured Wilson's meme-inspired video included over 30 celebrities across 24 videos.

Derivatives & Variations

Dwight Schrute Knows Best:

An earlier, looser variant pairing Dwight's image with actual quotes from the show rather than the "Fact/False" format. Runt of the Web helped popularize this name with a July 2011 gallery[2].

Malarious charity video:

Rainn Wilson performing the meme format live for CollegeHumor's Malaria No More initiative in September 2012, reading and debunking real Facebook quotes[3].

Frequently Asked Questions