Stock Photo Cliches

2010Curated image collection / internet humor genreclassic

Also known as: Awkward Stock Photos · Ridiculous Stock Photos

Stock Photo Clichés are recurring absurd visual tropes in commercial stock photography that became an internet meme in 2010 via Mark Hauge's "Awkward Stock Photos" Tumblr.

Stock Photo Clichés are the recurring, absurd visual tropes found in commercial stock photography that became a rich source of internet humor in the early 2010s. Chicago graphic designer Mark Hauge launched the "Awkward Stock Photos" Tumblr in January 2010, but the concept exploded when The Hairpin published its "Women Laughing Alone with Salad" compilation on January 3, 2011, driving 265,900 daily visits1. The meme spawned an entire genre of ironic stock photo appreciation across Reddit, BuzzFeed, and The Huffington Post.

TL;DR

Stock Photo Clichés are the recurring, absurd visual tropes found in commercial stock photography that became a rich source of internet humor in the early 2010s.

Overview

Stock Photo Clichés refers to the eccentric and often baffling recurring themes in commercial stock photography libraries5. The images show people in staged, overly cheerful, or conceptually bizarre scenarios: a businesswoman doing yoga in a conference room, a doctor crossing his arms with unshakable confidence, a woman doubled over laughing at a bowl of lettuce for no apparent reason.

The comedy comes from volume. Stock photography agencies employ thousands of photographers, and market pressure to fill every conceivable use case produces staggering numbers of nearly identical images depicting the same handful of concepts6. When viewed outside their intended commercial context, these images become an unintentional archive of visual absurdity.

A DepositPhotos blog post captured the dynamic well: a basic image search returns millions of options, and some are so overused you immediately recognize them as clichés7. The "woman laughing alone with a salad" became the flagship example, but the genre covers everything from hooded hackers to couples holding miniature houses to people pressing their lips against laptop screens16.

The rise of microstock photography in the 2000s set the stage. Services like iStockPhoto (founded by Bruce Livingstone), ShutterStock, and Fotolia allowed amateur photographers to submit work for distribution, massively expanding the pool of available stock images6. Where large agencies like Getty Images and Corbis had dominated since the 1990s, microstock opened the floodgates to cheaper, stranger, and far more numerous photos5.

The first organized curation of awkward stock images came in January 2010, when Mark Hauge launched the single-topic Tumblr blog "Awkward Stock Photos"5. Hauge, a Chicago-based graphic designer, handpicked sample images from stock photography websites and presented them stripped of commercial context. The blog drew early coverage from GeekSugar, BoingBoing, and Paste Magazine5.

In February 2010, iStockPhoto filed a Digital Millennium Copyright Act takedown notice against Hauge's Tumblr, briefly threatening the blog's existence5. The site survived the challenge and kept publishing.

Origin & Background

Platform
Tumblr (Awkward Stock Photos blog), The Hairpin (viral breakout)
Creator
Mark Hauge
Date
2010
Year
2010

The rise of microstock photography in the 2000s set the stage. Services like iStockPhoto (founded by Bruce Livingstone), ShutterStock, and Fotolia allowed amateur photographers to submit work for distribution, massively expanding the pool of available stock images. Where large agencies like Getty Images and Corbis had dominated since the 1990s, microstock opened the floodgates to cheaper, stranger, and far more numerous photos.

The first organized curation of awkward stock images came in January 2010, when Mark Hauge launched the single-topic Tumblr blog "Awkward Stock Photos". Hauge, a Chicago-based graphic designer, handpicked sample images from stock photography websites and presented them stripped of commercial context. The blog drew early coverage from GeekSugar, BoingBoing, and Paste Magazine.

In February 2010, iStockPhoto filed a Digital Millennium Copyright Act takedown notice against Hauge's Tumblr, briefly threatening the blog's existence. The site survived the challenge and kept publishing.

How It Spread

The ironic appreciation for stock photo weirdness didn't break into mainstream internet culture until January 3, 2011, when The Hairpin published a compilation of stock photos showing women laughing alone with salad bowls. The post went viral almost immediately, generating over 130 comments and driving The Hairpin's traffic from several thousand daily visits to 265,900 on the day of publication.

BuzzFeed picked up the story within the first week, followed by Mental Floss, Gawker, and Metafilter. The meta-single-topic blog "Single Topic Blog of Single Topic Blogs" also featured it. The viral success kicked off a wave of similar compilations identifying other bizarre stock photo patterns.

Several variations surfaced in the following months: "Men Laughing Alone with Fruit Salad," "Women Proud of Their Two Apples," "Women Resisting Delicious Cakes and Pies," and "Women Struggling to Drink Water". Communities on Reddit and 4chan started their own threads cataloguing strange recurring themes. BuzzFeed published collections like "People Alone Kissing Computers", while news sites like UProxx declared "Women Struggling to Drink Water" the new salad meme.

Throughout 2011, The Huffington Post ran a weekly series called "This Week in Ridiculous Stock Photos". Each installment focused on a single cliché and invited readers to vote on the funniest examples. The series ran for dozens of installments, covering topics from "Business People Doing Yoga" to "Creepiest Stock Photo Clowns".

How to Use This Meme

Stock photo cliché humor typically follows one of a few formats:

1

The curated collection: Gather multiple examples of a single weird stock photo trope (e.g., "women struggling to drink water," "businessmen staring at scotch"). Present them together so the pattern becomes obvious and funny.

2

The single absurd image: Pull one particularly bizarre stock photo and share it with a caption pointing out the weirdness. The less context provided, the funnier it often lands.

3

The reaction image: Use a stock photo cliché as a reaction in conversations. Sad businessman at bar works for expressing professional defeat. Woman laughing at salad works for performative happiness.

4

The comparison: Show a stock photo cliché next to the reality it supposedly represents. "Stock photos of hackers vs. actual hackers" is a common variation.

Cultural Impact

Stock photo clichés moved from niche internet humor into broader media literacy. The HuffPost series alone ran dozens of installments through 2011, treating stock photo comedy as a legitimate weekly feature. Major outlets from BuzzFeed to The Daily Mail regularly covered viral moments in the genre.

The meme influenced the stock photography industry directly. Agencies began pushing for more "authentic" imagery, moving away from the staged compositions that had defined the medium for decades. DepositPhotos pointed to their library of over 125 million visuals as proof that better alternatives existed, recommending images of green smoothies and avocado toast over the laughing salad woman. Bright Side noted that many of these annoying clichés were "finally changing" as the industry adapted.

Adobe Stock's clothing line tribute acknowledged that these images had earned "their place in the history books" while signaling it was time for them to retire. Creative director Oskar Hellqvist called the campaign "something disruptive and unconventional in the genre".

The 2018 cookbook cover viral moment also fed into conversations about gendered assumptions in commercial photography. The repeated image of a man guiding a woman's hands while she cooked raised questions about whose perspective these images served. Several Twitter users compared it to mansplaining, and Bustle framed the covers as evidence that "sexism is still rife" in publishing imagery.

Full History

The HuffPost weekly series became the most thorough cataloguing effort of stock photo absurdity in 2011. Their editors discovered that virtually any professional scenario photographed for stock had its own set of rigid, unintentionally funny conventions.

Doctors always crossed their arms with stethoscopes perfectly draped, striking the same confident pose across thousands of images, whether "giving bad news, performing surgery or just standing in front of other doctors". Stock photo businessmen drowning their sorrows invariably stared into scotch glasses at dimly lit bars, "depressed, dapper and not going home until the answers to all of life's questions reveal themselves at the bottom of a glass". Women battled technology while men with phones, computers, and TV remotes ignored them. Megaphone-wielding business people yelled at confused colleagues in what HuffPost called their "third favorite activity" after yoga and bar-sitting.

The vegetable-chopping cliché drew particular ridicule. "No one looks at the cutting board and since everyone is smiling and drinking wine, every photo looks like an accident waiting to happen". The miniature-house trope puzzled even the editors: they admitted they didn't know what kind of story would require such an image, "but they must be out there, because the stock photo world can't get enough of couples, families and lucky singles clutching these little guys". Stock photo clowns proved disturbing enough to fill their own installment, with "over-exaggerated emotions, even weirder props and endless supply of disturbing faces". Old people using computers got the same treatment, with HuffPost noting they found "thousands of results of elderly people looking confused or confusedly delighted in front of computers".

By 2012, the cultural conversation had shifted. Megan Garber of The Atlantic wrote that "to see a stock image is...to know you're seeing a stock image," capturing how the internet had trained people to recognize and mock stock photography's visual language. The stock photo cliché genre also gave rise to one of the internet's most beloved meme characters: Hide the Pain Harold. The Hungarian engineer András Arató became known for his stock photo modeling career, where his forced smile became iconic shorthand for suppressed suffering. The broader category also produced awareness of Ariane, a mixed-race Chinese/Canadian model whose stock photos appeared in campaigns worldwide, making her one of the most recognizable yet anonymous faces in advertising.

The meme got a fresh viral moment in January 2018 when podcaster Mike Rugnetta noticed something odd about Instant Pot cookbook covers. On January 22nd, he tweeted a series of covers that all showed the same scenario: a woman chopping vegetables while a man stood behind her, arms wrapped around her, guiding her hands. His caption, "these poor women," drew more than 5,400 retweets and 21,000 likes in two days. A follow-up tweet with more examples, captioned "WHY ARE THERE SO MANY OF THESE," earned another 1,000 retweets and 4,700 likes.

Twitter users @angharadyeo zoomed in on one cover showing a man holding a woman's hand as they cut a cucumber, asking, "At what point will we be using the pot in the preparation of what looks like cucumber sandwiches?". Others compared the trope to mansplaining. As one user put it: "Mancutting. It's mansplaining but with knives and produce". Bustle, The Daily Mail, and Twitter's own Moments feature all covered the viral thread.

The stock photography industry eventually responded. Adobe Stock leaned into the joke with a limited-edition clothing line designed by creative director Oskar Hellqvist of agency Abby Priest. The accompanying lookbook declared: "Let's celebrate efficiency, firm handshakes and flawless cosmetic dentistry. Let's honor hilarious vegetables and seniors smiling at their laptop". When Adobe didn't sell the line publicly, Don Comodo licensed the images and produced their own T-shirts and sweatshirts. Agencies also began pushing for more authentic imagery. A 2019 DepositPhotos blog post explicitly told customers to stop using clichéd images, asking of the laughing salad woman, "Why is this woman so happy and since when did salad become funny?".

Web design professionals joined the critique as well. SEO consultant John Locke identified word clouds, faceless 3D figures, "words on keyboard" images, and the generic highway metaphor as particularly overused in business websites. Drawing on Scott McCloud's *Understanding Comics*, Locke argued that featureless 3D stock figures fail because they lack faces, making them "both boring and psychologically ineffective" at creating reader identification.

Fun Facts

iStockPhoto's 2010 DMCA takedown of Mark Hauge's Awkward Stock Photos blog backfired, drawing more attention to the blog and the broader concept of stock photo mockery.

The Hairpin's traffic jumped from a few thousand daily visitors to 265,900 on the day "Women Laughing Alone with Salad" was published.

Stock photo model Ariane, a mixed-race Chinese/Canadian woman, became one of the most widely used faces in global advertising without most people knowing her name.

HuffPost editors admitted they had no idea what kind of article would actually need a photo of someone holding a miniature house, "but they must be out there".

Adobe's stock photo cliché clothing line was never sold to the public, so Don Comodo licensed the images and made their own T-shirts and sweatshirts.

Derivatives & Variations

Women Laughing Alone with Salad

The flagship sub-meme. Compilations of stock photos showing women inexplicably delighted by leafy greens. Originated from The Hairpin's January 2011 post[5].

Women Struggling to Drink Water

Photos of models failing to get water into their mouths, covered by The Hairpin and The Daily What in November 2011[3][17].

Men Laughing Alone with Fruit Salad

A gender-swapped response to the original salad meme[5].

Women Resisting Delicious Cakes and Pies

Stock photos of women pushing away desserts with theatrical willpower[5].

People Alone Kissing Computers

A BuzzFeed collection of stock photos depicting people pressing their lips to laptop screens[16].

Sad Businessmen at Bars

Dapper men drowning professional sorrows in amber liquor, spotlighted by HuffPost[11].

Doctors With Crossed Arms

Medical professionals striking the same confident pose across thousands of images[12].

Cookbook Cover Men

The 2018 viral thread by Mike Rugnetta exposing the trope of men awkwardly embracing women from behind on cookbook covers[9].

Hide the Pain Harold

Stock photo model András Arató, whose forced smile in commercial images became one of the internet's most recognizable reaction memes[4].

Adobe Stock Clothing Line

A limited-edition fashion line by agency Abby Priest turning infamous stock clichés into wearable apparel[4].

Frequently Asked Questions

References (27)

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Stock Photo Cliches

2010Curated image collection / internet humor genreclassic

Also known as: Awkward Stock Photos · Ridiculous Stock Photos

Stock Photo Clichés are recurring absurd visual tropes in commercial stock photography that became an internet meme in 2010 via Mark Hauge's "Awkward Stock Photos" Tumblr.

Stock Photo Clichés are the recurring, absurd visual tropes found in commercial stock photography that became a rich source of internet humor in the early 2010s. Chicago graphic designer Mark Hauge launched the "Awkward Stock Photos" Tumblr in January 2010, but the concept exploded when The Hairpin published its "Women Laughing Alone with Salad" compilation on January 3, 2011, driving 265,900 daily visits. The meme spawned an entire genre of ironic stock photo appreciation across Reddit, BuzzFeed, and The Huffington Post.

TL;DR

Stock Photo Clichés are the recurring, absurd visual tropes found in commercial stock photography that became a rich source of internet humor in the early 2010s.

Overview

Stock Photo Clichés refers to the eccentric and often baffling recurring themes in commercial stock photography libraries. The images show people in staged, overly cheerful, or conceptually bizarre scenarios: a businesswoman doing yoga in a conference room, a doctor crossing his arms with unshakable confidence, a woman doubled over laughing at a bowl of lettuce for no apparent reason.

The comedy comes from volume. Stock photography agencies employ thousands of photographers, and market pressure to fill every conceivable use case produces staggering numbers of nearly identical images depicting the same handful of concepts. When viewed outside their intended commercial context, these images become an unintentional archive of visual absurdity.

A DepositPhotos blog post captured the dynamic well: a basic image search returns millions of options, and some are so overused you immediately recognize them as clichés. The "woman laughing alone with a salad" became the flagship example, but the genre covers everything from hooded hackers to couples holding miniature houses to people pressing their lips against laptop screens.

The rise of microstock photography in the 2000s set the stage. Services like iStockPhoto (founded by Bruce Livingstone), ShutterStock, and Fotolia allowed amateur photographers to submit work for distribution, massively expanding the pool of available stock images. Where large agencies like Getty Images and Corbis had dominated since the 1990s, microstock opened the floodgates to cheaper, stranger, and far more numerous photos.

The first organized curation of awkward stock images came in January 2010, when Mark Hauge launched the single-topic Tumblr blog "Awkward Stock Photos". Hauge, a Chicago-based graphic designer, handpicked sample images from stock photography websites and presented them stripped of commercial context. The blog drew early coverage from GeekSugar, BoingBoing, and Paste Magazine.

In February 2010, iStockPhoto filed a Digital Millennium Copyright Act takedown notice against Hauge's Tumblr, briefly threatening the blog's existence. The site survived the challenge and kept publishing.

Origin & Background

Platform
Tumblr (Awkward Stock Photos blog), The Hairpin (viral breakout)
Creator
Mark Hauge
Date
2010
Year
2010

The rise of microstock photography in the 2000s set the stage. Services like iStockPhoto (founded by Bruce Livingstone), ShutterStock, and Fotolia allowed amateur photographers to submit work for distribution, massively expanding the pool of available stock images. Where large agencies like Getty Images and Corbis had dominated since the 1990s, microstock opened the floodgates to cheaper, stranger, and far more numerous photos.

The first organized curation of awkward stock images came in January 2010, when Mark Hauge launched the single-topic Tumblr blog "Awkward Stock Photos". Hauge, a Chicago-based graphic designer, handpicked sample images from stock photography websites and presented them stripped of commercial context. The blog drew early coverage from GeekSugar, BoingBoing, and Paste Magazine.

In February 2010, iStockPhoto filed a Digital Millennium Copyright Act takedown notice against Hauge's Tumblr, briefly threatening the blog's existence. The site survived the challenge and kept publishing.

How It Spread

The ironic appreciation for stock photo weirdness didn't break into mainstream internet culture until January 3, 2011, when The Hairpin published a compilation of stock photos showing women laughing alone with salad bowls. The post went viral almost immediately, generating over 130 comments and driving The Hairpin's traffic from several thousand daily visits to 265,900 on the day of publication.

BuzzFeed picked up the story within the first week, followed by Mental Floss, Gawker, and Metafilter. The meta-single-topic blog "Single Topic Blog of Single Topic Blogs" also featured it. The viral success kicked off a wave of similar compilations identifying other bizarre stock photo patterns.

Several variations surfaced in the following months: "Men Laughing Alone with Fruit Salad," "Women Proud of Their Two Apples," "Women Resisting Delicious Cakes and Pies," and "Women Struggling to Drink Water". Communities on Reddit and 4chan started their own threads cataloguing strange recurring themes. BuzzFeed published collections like "People Alone Kissing Computers", while news sites like UProxx declared "Women Struggling to Drink Water" the new salad meme.

Throughout 2011, The Huffington Post ran a weekly series called "This Week in Ridiculous Stock Photos". Each installment focused on a single cliché and invited readers to vote on the funniest examples. The series ran for dozens of installments, covering topics from "Business People Doing Yoga" to "Creepiest Stock Photo Clowns".

How to Use This Meme

Stock photo cliché humor typically follows one of a few formats:

1

The curated collection: Gather multiple examples of a single weird stock photo trope (e.g., "women struggling to drink water," "businessmen staring at scotch"). Present them together so the pattern becomes obvious and funny.

2

The single absurd image: Pull one particularly bizarre stock photo and share it with a caption pointing out the weirdness. The less context provided, the funnier it often lands.

3

The reaction image: Use a stock photo cliché as a reaction in conversations. Sad businessman at bar works for expressing professional defeat. Woman laughing at salad works for performative happiness.

4

The comparison: Show a stock photo cliché next to the reality it supposedly represents. "Stock photos of hackers vs. actual hackers" is a common variation.

Cultural Impact

Stock photo clichés moved from niche internet humor into broader media literacy. The HuffPost series alone ran dozens of installments through 2011, treating stock photo comedy as a legitimate weekly feature. Major outlets from BuzzFeed to The Daily Mail regularly covered viral moments in the genre.

The meme influenced the stock photography industry directly. Agencies began pushing for more "authentic" imagery, moving away from the staged compositions that had defined the medium for decades. DepositPhotos pointed to their library of over 125 million visuals as proof that better alternatives existed, recommending images of green smoothies and avocado toast over the laughing salad woman. Bright Side noted that many of these annoying clichés were "finally changing" as the industry adapted.

Adobe Stock's clothing line tribute acknowledged that these images had earned "their place in the history books" while signaling it was time for them to retire. Creative director Oskar Hellqvist called the campaign "something disruptive and unconventional in the genre".

The 2018 cookbook cover viral moment also fed into conversations about gendered assumptions in commercial photography. The repeated image of a man guiding a woman's hands while she cooked raised questions about whose perspective these images served. Several Twitter users compared it to mansplaining, and Bustle framed the covers as evidence that "sexism is still rife" in publishing imagery.

Full History

The HuffPost weekly series became the most thorough cataloguing effort of stock photo absurdity in 2011. Their editors discovered that virtually any professional scenario photographed for stock had its own set of rigid, unintentionally funny conventions.

Doctors always crossed their arms with stethoscopes perfectly draped, striking the same confident pose across thousands of images, whether "giving bad news, performing surgery or just standing in front of other doctors". Stock photo businessmen drowning their sorrows invariably stared into scotch glasses at dimly lit bars, "depressed, dapper and not going home until the answers to all of life's questions reveal themselves at the bottom of a glass". Women battled technology while men with phones, computers, and TV remotes ignored them. Megaphone-wielding business people yelled at confused colleagues in what HuffPost called their "third favorite activity" after yoga and bar-sitting.

The vegetable-chopping cliché drew particular ridicule. "No one looks at the cutting board and since everyone is smiling and drinking wine, every photo looks like an accident waiting to happen". The miniature-house trope puzzled even the editors: they admitted they didn't know what kind of story would require such an image, "but they must be out there, because the stock photo world can't get enough of couples, families and lucky singles clutching these little guys". Stock photo clowns proved disturbing enough to fill their own installment, with "over-exaggerated emotions, even weirder props and endless supply of disturbing faces". Old people using computers got the same treatment, with HuffPost noting they found "thousands of results of elderly people looking confused or confusedly delighted in front of computers".

By 2012, the cultural conversation had shifted. Megan Garber of The Atlantic wrote that "to see a stock image is...to know you're seeing a stock image," capturing how the internet had trained people to recognize and mock stock photography's visual language. The stock photo cliché genre also gave rise to one of the internet's most beloved meme characters: Hide the Pain Harold. The Hungarian engineer András Arató became known for his stock photo modeling career, where his forced smile became iconic shorthand for suppressed suffering. The broader category also produced awareness of Ariane, a mixed-race Chinese/Canadian model whose stock photos appeared in campaigns worldwide, making her one of the most recognizable yet anonymous faces in advertising.

The meme got a fresh viral moment in January 2018 when podcaster Mike Rugnetta noticed something odd about Instant Pot cookbook covers. On January 22nd, he tweeted a series of covers that all showed the same scenario: a woman chopping vegetables while a man stood behind her, arms wrapped around her, guiding her hands. His caption, "these poor women," drew more than 5,400 retweets and 21,000 likes in two days. A follow-up tweet with more examples, captioned "WHY ARE THERE SO MANY OF THESE," earned another 1,000 retweets and 4,700 likes.

Twitter users @angharadyeo zoomed in on one cover showing a man holding a woman's hand as they cut a cucumber, asking, "At what point will we be using the pot in the preparation of what looks like cucumber sandwiches?". Others compared the trope to mansplaining. As one user put it: "Mancutting. It's mansplaining but with knives and produce". Bustle, The Daily Mail, and Twitter's own Moments feature all covered the viral thread.

The stock photography industry eventually responded. Adobe Stock leaned into the joke with a limited-edition clothing line designed by creative director Oskar Hellqvist of agency Abby Priest. The accompanying lookbook declared: "Let's celebrate efficiency, firm handshakes and flawless cosmetic dentistry. Let's honor hilarious vegetables and seniors smiling at their laptop". When Adobe didn't sell the line publicly, Don Comodo licensed the images and produced their own T-shirts and sweatshirts. Agencies also began pushing for more authentic imagery. A 2019 DepositPhotos blog post explicitly told customers to stop using clichéd images, asking of the laughing salad woman, "Why is this woman so happy and since when did salad become funny?".

Web design professionals joined the critique as well. SEO consultant John Locke identified word clouds, faceless 3D figures, "words on keyboard" images, and the generic highway metaphor as particularly overused in business websites. Drawing on Scott McCloud's *Understanding Comics*, Locke argued that featureless 3D stock figures fail because they lack faces, making them "both boring and psychologically ineffective" at creating reader identification.

Fun Facts

iStockPhoto's 2010 DMCA takedown of Mark Hauge's Awkward Stock Photos blog backfired, drawing more attention to the blog and the broader concept of stock photo mockery.

The Hairpin's traffic jumped from a few thousand daily visitors to 265,900 on the day "Women Laughing Alone with Salad" was published.

Stock photo model Ariane, a mixed-race Chinese/Canadian woman, became one of the most widely used faces in global advertising without most people knowing her name.

HuffPost editors admitted they had no idea what kind of article would actually need a photo of someone holding a miniature house, "but they must be out there".

Adobe's stock photo cliché clothing line was never sold to the public, so Don Comodo licensed the images and made their own T-shirts and sweatshirts.

Derivatives & Variations

Women Laughing Alone with Salad

The flagship sub-meme. Compilations of stock photos showing women inexplicably delighted by leafy greens. Originated from The Hairpin's January 2011 post[5].

Women Struggling to Drink Water

Photos of models failing to get water into their mouths, covered by The Hairpin and The Daily What in November 2011[3][17].

Men Laughing Alone with Fruit Salad

A gender-swapped response to the original salad meme[5].

Women Resisting Delicious Cakes and Pies

Stock photos of women pushing away desserts with theatrical willpower[5].

People Alone Kissing Computers

A BuzzFeed collection of stock photos depicting people pressing their lips to laptop screens[16].

Sad Businessmen at Bars

Dapper men drowning professional sorrows in amber liquor, spotlighted by HuffPost[11].

Doctors With Crossed Arms

Medical professionals striking the same confident pose across thousands of images[12].

Cookbook Cover Men

The 2018 viral thread by Mike Rugnetta exposing the trope of men awkwardly embracing women from behind on cookbook covers[9].

Hide the Pain Harold

Stock photo model András Arató, whose forced smile in commercial images became one of the internet's most recognizable reaction memes[4].

Adobe Stock Clothing Line

A limited-edition fashion line by agency Abby Priest turning infamous stock clichés into wearable apparel[4].

Frequently Asked Questions

References (27)

  1. 1
  2. 2
  3. 3
  4. 4
  5. 5
  6. 6
  7. 7
  8. 8
  9. 9
  10. 10
  11. 11
  12. 12
  13. 13
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