The Illuminati

2005conspiracy parody / catchphrase / image macroclassic

Also known as: Illuminati Confirmed · Ilerminaty

The Illuminati is a conspiracy-parody meme from 2005 that crystallized into the 2013 catchphrase 'Illuminati Confirmed' for humorously spotting triangles and hidden symbols in pop culture.

The Illuminati is an internet meme rooted in conspiracy theories about a shadowy secret society controlling world events. Earnest online paranoia about pop stars, hidden symbols, and global elites in the early 2000s turned into one of the internet's most recognizable ironic jokes by 2013, when "Illuminati Confirmed" became the default punchline for spotting any triangle anywhere2. The meme occupies unusual territory where genuine conspiracy belief and pure satire look identical, making it often impossible to tell who's serious and who's just posting triangles for laughs1.

TL;DR

The Illuminati is an internet meme rooted in conspiracy theories about a shadowy secret society controlling world events.

Overview

At its core, the Illuminati meme revolves around the idea that a secret cabal of elites, celebrities, and world leaders controls everything. Online, this plays out through people pointing to supposed "evidence" of the organization's influence: triangle shapes, the Eye of Providence from the US dollar bill, one-eye hand gestures, goat imagery, and cryptic song lyrics1. The Eye of Providence, an eye enclosed within a triangle that appears on the reverse of the Great Seal of the United States, is the single most recognized visual element tied to the meme6.

In its ironic form (which dominates), any triangle in any context counts as undeniable proof. A Dorito chip, a roof, a hand gesture at a concert, a frame from a children's cartoon: all get the "Illuminati Confirmed" treatment, typically set to the X-Files theme song2.

The historical Bavarian Illuminati was a real secret society founded on May 1, 1776, by Adam Weishaupt, a law professor at the University of Ingolstadt2. Weishaupt wanted to promote Enlightenment ideals and oppose superstition, religious control over public life, and monarchist abuses of state power. He found Freemasonry too expensive to join, so he built his own society with a similar hierarchical structure4. Members used classical aliases: Weishaupt went by "Spartacus," while his first four recruits became Ajax, Agathon, Tiberius, and Erasmus Roterodamus4.

The group lasted less than a decade. Starting in 1784, Karl Theodor, Elector of Bavaria, issued edicts banning all secret societies2. The government raided members' homes, published their secret writings, and Weishaupt fled to Gotha, where he lived until his death in 18302. Conspiracy theories about the group's survival started almost immediately. In 1798, authors Augustin Barruel and John Robison both published claims that the Illuminati had secretly orchestrated the French Revolution5. This planted the template for two centuries of paranoid speculation connecting a defunct Bavarian philosophy club to every shadowy force imaginable.

Origin & Background

Platform
Urban Dictionary (early spread), YouTube / Reddit (viral meme format)
Creator
Unknown
Date
2005
Year
2005

The historical Bavarian Illuminati was a real secret society founded on May 1, 1776, by Adam Weishaupt, a law professor at the University of Ingolstadt. Weishaupt wanted to promote Enlightenment ideals and oppose superstition, religious control over public life, and monarchist abuses of state power. He found Freemasonry too expensive to join, so he built his own society with a similar hierarchical structure. Members used classical aliases: Weishaupt went by "Spartacus," while his first four recruits became Ajax, Agathon, Tiberius, and Erasmus Roterodamus.

The group lasted less than a decade. Starting in 1784, Karl Theodor, Elector of Bavaria, issued edicts banning all secret societies. The government raided members' homes, published their secret writings, and Weishaupt fled to Gotha, where he lived until his death in 1830. Conspiracy theories about the group's survival started almost immediately. In 1798, authors Augustin Barruel and John Robison both published claims that the Illuminati had secretly orchestrated the French Revolution. This planted the template for two centuries of paranoid speculation connecting a defunct Bavarian philosophy club to every shadowy force imaginable.

How It Spread

The conspiracy theory's migration onto the internet happened in stages, starting with earnest believers and ending with ironic memers.

Between 2002 and 2010, a series of milestones marked the Illuminati's early online spread. On November 20, 2002, someone registered itanimulli.com ("Illuminati" spelled backward), which redirected to the NSA's website. On May 31, 2005, Urban Dictionary user "New Rising Sun" defined the Illuminati as "a secret organization of the most powerful and influential elite in the world" pursuing a one-world government. A February 2007 YouTube documentary titled "The Illuminati" pulled over 3.2 million views before its eventual removal.

YouTube drove the bulk of the mid-2000s growth. Countless conspiracy videos followed the 2007 documentary's lead, building an entire genre of frame-by-frame music video analysis hunting for occult symbols. The @TheIluminati Twitter account launched on May 13, 2010, tweeting in character as a secret organization, and gained 1.1 million followers within three years.

The mainstream meme phase kicked off in 2012. In February, Gawker published a satirical "comprehensive guide" that connected Jay-Z, Queen Elizabeth, the Pope, and LMFAO in one sprawling theory, asking readers "Can you think of any other reason for their success?". That October, a Facebook page called "The Illuminati" launched and attracted 485,000 likes in four months. Shane Dawson called 4chan "the Illuminati of the Internet" during an MSNBC segment the same month.

Beyoncé's triangle hand gesture during the Super Bowl XLVII halftime show in February 2013 was the tipping point. "Illuminati Confirmed" exploded as a catchphrase. By 2014, the meme was a core element of MLG montage parodies on YouTube, paired with the X-Files theme, Mountain Dew, Doritos, and aggressive visual effects.

How to Use This Meme

The Illuminati meme typically follows one of a few formats:

1

Triangle spotting: Find any triangular shape in a photo, video, or real-world setting. Circle it in red. Add the Eye of Providence graphic. Caption it "Illuminati Confirmed." The more mundane the triangle, the better the joke.

2

MLG montage style: Edit gameplay footage or any dramatic moment with escalating layers of internet culture: flashing triangles, X-Files theme, airhorns, Mountain Dew, Doritos, "420" text, and lens flares. The Illuminati reveal is usually the climax.

3

Conspiracy voice: Present a mock theory connecting completely unrelated events through tenuous links, mimicking the earnest tone of actual conspiracy content.

4

X-Files theme drop: In video format, play the X-Files theme at the exact moment a triangle or suspicious coincidence appears on screen.

Cultural Impact

The Illuminati meme jumped from internet joke to mainstream talking point multiple times. CNN put Lady Gaga on the spot about Illuminati rumors in 2009. MSNBC ran a segment in October 2012 where YouTuber Shane Dawson called 4chan "the Illuminati of the Internet". Gawker's 2012 guide captured the cultural mood: a mix of deadpan absurdity and real anxiety about who actually controls things, delivered as comedy.

Beyoncé's February 2013 Super Bowl moment was the single event that made "Illuminati Confirmed" universally recognizable. Major pop stars felt pressure to either deny or play along with the accusations, making the conspiracy theory a genuine part of their public image. Jay-Z dedicated a verse to denying Freemason membership. Rihanna produced an entire music video sequence mocking the claims.

The meme also popularized a specific mode of internet humor: treating pattern recognition itself as the joke. The punchline isn't the "evidence" but the act of finding it, a format that influenced later memes about overreading meaning into coincidences.

Full History

The connection between the Illuminati and popular music predates the internet by decades. Secret society references started appearing in hip-hop lyrics in the early 1990s, but broadband gave these theories a megaphone. By the late 2000s, a cottage industry of anonymous YouTube analysts was picking apart every music video for hidden messages, treating pop stars as either willing collaborators or enslaved puppets of a global organization.

The accusations fell heaviest on the biggest names. Gawker's 2012 guide listed Jay-Z, Beyoncé, Kanye West, Lady Gaga, Rihanna, and dozens of others as alleged members, alongside world leaders, the Pope, and LMFAO. The "evidence" ranged from absurd to desperate. When Eminem titled a song "Cinderella Man" (a nod to his comeback story echoing the Ron Howard film), conspiracy theorists insisted it actually meant he was "forced to do the chores for the Illuminati by sending subliminal messages through his music". Goat-themed jewelry was cataloged as tribute to Baphomet, a horned pagan deity. Eye-framing hand gestures were flagged as Illuminati semaphore evoking the "all-seeing eye" on the dollar bill. Slate described the whole enterprise as making "9/11 truthers seem as rigorous and compelling as Woodward and Bernstein on Watergate".

Some celebrities fought back. Jay-Z addressed the rumors directly on a 2011 track with Rick Ross: "I said I was amazing, not that I'm a Mason". Rihanna mocked the accusations in her "S&M" video, where fake headlines flash onscreen calling her "Princess of the Illuminati". CNN asked Lady Gaga about the rumors on camera in late 2009; she refused to engage. Television personality Tila Tequila took the opposite approach, launching a blog called MissTilaOMG in April 2010 and posting videos claiming to expose the organization, with one hitting 400,000 views in four months.

The shift from sincere to ironic happened gradually between 2012 and 2014. Reddit's r/ilerminaty subreddit treated every triangle in daily life as conclusive proof of conspiracy, turning the format into a pure joke. The gaming montage subculture folded the Illuminati into its standard visual toolkit: the Eye of Providence, airhorns, and the X-Files theme became default punchlines alongside Mountain Dew and Doritos references. A separate r/Illuminati subreddit with over 3,000 subscribers took a more philosophical approach, drawing genuine inspiration from the historical society's Enlightenment goals.

Algorithm-driven platforms amplified the cycle. YouTube's recommendation engine pushed Illuminati content to curious viewers regardless of whether they clicked out of genuine belief or entertainment. Google search volume for "illuminati" climbed steadily through the 2010s as both conspiracy content and meme content fed each other.

By mid-decade, the Illuminati meme had split into two parallel tracks. Sincere conspiracy content still thrived on YouTube and sites like Vigilant Citizen, where music videos and celebrity behavior were analyzed for occult meaning. Ironic "Illuminati Confirmed" content used the exact same visual language for pure comedy. The gap between the two tracks was often unmeasurable, which was the whole point.

Fun Facts

Adam Weishaupt seriously considered naming his secret society the "Bee Order" before settling on the Order of Illuminati in 1778.

The Eye of Providence on the US one-dollar bill (designed in 1782 as part of the Great Seal) actually predates common Masonic use of the same symbol by 14 years.

The @TheIluminati Twitter account gained over a million followers by simply tweeting from the perspective of an all-powerful secret organization.

The domain itanimulli.com ("Illuminati" backward) still redirects to the NSA website, over two decades after it was first registered.

Slate's 2011 analysis found that some Eminem/Illuminati conspiracy videos had been viewed close to 300,000 times, with dozens more in the tens of thousands.

Derivatives & Variations

Ilerminaty:

Satirical misspelling used by Reddit's r/ilerminaty subreddit, devoted to finding triangles in everyday objects[2].

MLG Illuminati montages:

Gaming montage parodies incorporating the Eye of Providence, X-Files theme, airhorns, and snack brand imagery as escalating visual gags[2].

Itanimulli.com:

"Illuminati" spelled backward, a domain registered in 2002 that redirects to the NSA's website[5].

Pop music trutherism:

A YouTube genre dedicated to analyzing music videos frame by frame for hidden Illuminati symbols, focused on artists like Jay-Z, Lady Gaga, and Beyoncé[1].

"Illuminati in Hip-Hop" timelines:

Curated collections linking hip-hop artists to the alleged secret society, including a 2011 Dipity timeline by user rconway[5].

Frequently Asked Questions

The Illuminati

2005conspiracy parody / catchphrase / image macroclassic

Also known as: Illuminati Confirmed · Ilerminaty

The Illuminati is a conspiracy-parody meme from 2005 that crystallized into the 2013 catchphrase 'Illuminati Confirmed' for humorously spotting triangles and hidden symbols in pop culture.

The Illuminati is an internet meme rooted in conspiracy theories about a shadowy secret society controlling world events. Earnest online paranoia about pop stars, hidden symbols, and global elites in the early 2000s turned into one of the internet's most recognizable ironic jokes by 2013, when "Illuminati Confirmed" became the default punchline for spotting any triangle anywhere. The meme occupies unusual territory where genuine conspiracy belief and pure satire look identical, making it often impossible to tell who's serious and who's just posting triangles for laughs.

TL;DR

The Illuminati is an internet meme rooted in conspiracy theories about a shadowy secret society controlling world events.

Overview

At its core, the Illuminati meme revolves around the idea that a secret cabal of elites, celebrities, and world leaders controls everything. Online, this plays out through people pointing to supposed "evidence" of the organization's influence: triangle shapes, the Eye of Providence from the US dollar bill, one-eye hand gestures, goat imagery, and cryptic song lyrics. The Eye of Providence, an eye enclosed within a triangle that appears on the reverse of the Great Seal of the United States, is the single most recognized visual element tied to the meme.

In its ironic form (which dominates), any triangle in any context counts as undeniable proof. A Dorito chip, a roof, a hand gesture at a concert, a frame from a children's cartoon: all get the "Illuminati Confirmed" treatment, typically set to the X-Files theme song.

The historical Bavarian Illuminati was a real secret society founded on May 1, 1776, by Adam Weishaupt, a law professor at the University of Ingolstadt. Weishaupt wanted to promote Enlightenment ideals and oppose superstition, religious control over public life, and monarchist abuses of state power. He found Freemasonry too expensive to join, so he built his own society with a similar hierarchical structure. Members used classical aliases: Weishaupt went by "Spartacus," while his first four recruits became Ajax, Agathon, Tiberius, and Erasmus Roterodamus.

The group lasted less than a decade. Starting in 1784, Karl Theodor, Elector of Bavaria, issued edicts banning all secret societies. The government raided members' homes, published their secret writings, and Weishaupt fled to Gotha, where he lived until his death in 1830. Conspiracy theories about the group's survival started almost immediately. In 1798, authors Augustin Barruel and John Robison both published claims that the Illuminati had secretly orchestrated the French Revolution. This planted the template for two centuries of paranoid speculation connecting a defunct Bavarian philosophy club to every shadowy force imaginable.

Origin & Background

Platform
Urban Dictionary (early spread), YouTube / Reddit (viral meme format)
Creator
Unknown
Date
2005
Year
2005

The historical Bavarian Illuminati was a real secret society founded on May 1, 1776, by Adam Weishaupt, a law professor at the University of Ingolstadt. Weishaupt wanted to promote Enlightenment ideals and oppose superstition, religious control over public life, and monarchist abuses of state power. He found Freemasonry too expensive to join, so he built his own society with a similar hierarchical structure. Members used classical aliases: Weishaupt went by "Spartacus," while his first four recruits became Ajax, Agathon, Tiberius, and Erasmus Roterodamus.

The group lasted less than a decade. Starting in 1784, Karl Theodor, Elector of Bavaria, issued edicts banning all secret societies. The government raided members' homes, published their secret writings, and Weishaupt fled to Gotha, where he lived until his death in 1830. Conspiracy theories about the group's survival started almost immediately. In 1798, authors Augustin Barruel and John Robison both published claims that the Illuminati had secretly orchestrated the French Revolution. This planted the template for two centuries of paranoid speculation connecting a defunct Bavarian philosophy club to every shadowy force imaginable.

How It Spread

The conspiracy theory's migration onto the internet happened in stages, starting with earnest believers and ending with ironic memers.

Between 2002 and 2010, a series of milestones marked the Illuminati's early online spread. On November 20, 2002, someone registered itanimulli.com ("Illuminati" spelled backward), which redirected to the NSA's website. On May 31, 2005, Urban Dictionary user "New Rising Sun" defined the Illuminati as "a secret organization of the most powerful and influential elite in the world" pursuing a one-world government. A February 2007 YouTube documentary titled "The Illuminati" pulled over 3.2 million views before its eventual removal.

YouTube drove the bulk of the mid-2000s growth. Countless conspiracy videos followed the 2007 documentary's lead, building an entire genre of frame-by-frame music video analysis hunting for occult symbols. The @TheIluminati Twitter account launched on May 13, 2010, tweeting in character as a secret organization, and gained 1.1 million followers within three years.

The mainstream meme phase kicked off in 2012. In February, Gawker published a satirical "comprehensive guide" that connected Jay-Z, Queen Elizabeth, the Pope, and LMFAO in one sprawling theory, asking readers "Can you think of any other reason for their success?". That October, a Facebook page called "The Illuminati" launched and attracted 485,000 likes in four months. Shane Dawson called 4chan "the Illuminati of the Internet" during an MSNBC segment the same month.

Beyoncé's triangle hand gesture during the Super Bowl XLVII halftime show in February 2013 was the tipping point. "Illuminati Confirmed" exploded as a catchphrase. By 2014, the meme was a core element of MLG montage parodies on YouTube, paired with the X-Files theme, Mountain Dew, Doritos, and aggressive visual effects.

How to Use This Meme

The Illuminati meme typically follows one of a few formats:

1

Triangle spotting: Find any triangular shape in a photo, video, or real-world setting. Circle it in red. Add the Eye of Providence graphic. Caption it "Illuminati Confirmed." The more mundane the triangle, the better the joke.

2

MLG montage style: Edit gameplay footage or any dramatic moment with escalating layers of internet culture: flashing triangles, X-Files theme, airhorns, Mountain Dew, Doritos, "420" text, and lens flares. The Illuminati reveal is usually the climax.

3

Conspiracy voice: Present a mock theory connecting completely unrelated events through tenuous links, mimicking the earnest tone of actual conspiracy content.

4

X-Files theme drop: In video format, play the X-Files theme at the exact moment a triangle or suspicious coincidence appears on screen.

Cultural Impact

The Illuminati meme jumped from internet joke to mainstream talking point multiple times. CNN put Lady Gaga on the spot about Illuminati rumors in 2009. MSNBC ran a segment in October 2012 where YouTuber Shane Dawson called 4chan "the Illuminati of the Internet". Gawker's 2012 guide captured the cultural mood: a mix of deadpan absurdity and real anxiety about who actually controls things, delivered as comedy.

Beyoncé's February 2013 Super Bowl moment was the single event that made "Illuminati Confirmed" universally recognizable. Major pop stars felt pressure to either deny or play along with the accusations, making the conspiracy theory a genuine part of their public image. Jay-Z dedicated a verse to denying Freemason membership. Rihanna produced an entire music video sequence mocking the claims.

The meme also popularized a specific mode of internet humor: treating pattern recognition itself as the joke. The punchline isn't the "evidence" but the act of finding it, a format that influenced later memes about overreading meaning into coincidences.

Full History

The connection between the Illuminati and popular music predates the internet by decades. Secret society references started appearing in hip-hop lyrics in the early 1990s, but broadband gave these theories a megaphone. By the late 2000s, a cottage industry of anonymous YouTube analysts was picking apart every music video for hidden messages, treating pop stars as either willing collaborators or enslaved puppets of a global organization.

The accusations fell heaviest on the biggest names. Gawker's 2012 guide listed Jay-Z, Beyoncé, Kanye West, Lady Gaga, Rihanna, and dozens of others as alleged members, alongside world leaders, the Pope, and LMFAO. The "evidence" ranged from absurd to desperate. When Eminem titled a song "Cinderella Man" (a nod to his comeback story echoing the Ron Howard film), conspiracy theorists insisted it actually meant he was "forced to do the chores for the Illuminati by sending subliminal messages through his music". Goat-themed jewelry was cataloged as tribute to Baphomet, a horned pagan deity. Eye-framing hand gestures were flagged as Illuminati semaphore evoking the "all-seeing eye" on the dollar bill. Slate described the whole enterprise as making "9/11 truthers seem as rigorous and compelling as Woodward and Bernstein on Watergate".

Some celebrities fought back. Jay-Z addressed the rumors directly on a 2011 track with Rick Ross: "I said I was amazing, not that I'm a Mason". Rihanna mocked the accusations in her "S&M" video, where fake headlines flash onscreen calling her "Princess of the Illuminati". CNN asked Lady Gaga about the rumors on camera in late 2009; she refused to engage. Television personality Tila Tequila took the opposite approach, launching a blog called MissTilaOMG in April 2010 and posting videos claiming to expose the organization, with one hitting 400,000 views in four months.

The shift from sincere to ironic happened gradually between 2012 and 2014. Reddit's r/ilerminaty subreddit treated every triangle in daily life as conclusive proof of conspiracy, turning the format into a pure joke. The gaming montage subculture folded the Illuminati into its standard visual toolkit: the Eye of Providence, airhorns, and the X-Files theme became default punchlines alongside Mountain Dew and Doritos references. A separate r/Illuminati subreddit with over 3,000 subscribers took a more philosophical approach, drawing genuine inspiration from the historical society's Enlightenment goals.

Algorithm-driven platforms amplified the cycle. YouTube's recommendation engine pushed Illuminati content to curious viewers regardless of whether they clicked out of genuine belief or entertainment. Google search volume for "illuminati" climbed steadily through the 2010s as both conspiracy content and meme content fed each other.

By mid-decade, the Illuminati meme had split into two parallel tracks. Sincere conspiracy content still thrived on YouTube and sites like Vigilant Citizen, where music videos and celebrity behavior were analyzed for occult meaning. Ironic "Illuminati Confirmed" content used the exact same visual language for pure comedy. The gap between the two tracks was often unmeasurable, which was the whole point.

Fun Facts

Adam Weishaupt seriously considered naming his secret society the "Bee Order" before settling on the Order of Illuminati in 1778.

The Eye of Providence on the US one-dollar bill (designed in 1782 as part of the Great Seal) actually predates common Masonic use of the same symbol by 14 years.

The @TheIluminati Twitter account gained over a million followers by simply tweeting from the perspective of an all-powerful secret organization.

The domain itanimulli.com ("Illuminati" backward) still redirects to the NSA website, over two decades after it was first registered.

Slate's 2011 analysis found that some Eminem/Illuminati conspiracy videos had been viewed close to 300,000 times, with dozens more in the tens of thousands.

Derivatives & Variations

Ilerminaty:

Satirical misspelling used by Reddit's r/ilerminaty subreddit, devoted to finding triangles in everyday objects[2].

MLG Illuminati montages:

Gaming montage parodies incorporating the Eye of Providence, X-Files theme, airhorns, and snack brand imagery as escalating visual gags[2].

Itanimulli.com:

"Illuminati" spelled backward, a domain registered in 2002 that redirects to the NSA's website[5].

Pop music trutherism:

A YouTube genre dedicated to analyzing music videos frame by frame for hidden Illuminati symbols, focused on artists like Jay-Z, Lady Gaga, and Beyoncé[1].

"Illuminati in Hip-Hop" timelines:

Curated collections linking hip-hop artists to the alleged secret society, including a 2011 Dipity timeline by user rconway[5].

Frequently Asked Questions