They Did Surgery on a Grape

2018Copypasta / image macro / absurdist memesemi-active

Also known as: Grape Surgery · TDSOAG

They Did Surgery on a Grape is a 2018 absurdist copypasta and image meme built around a deadpan phrase from a 2010 da Vinci Surgical System demonstration that became an endlessly repeatable viral punchline.

"They Did Surgery On a Grape" is an absurdist copypasta and image meme that went viral in November 2018, based on a 2010 video of the da Vinci Surgical System peeling a grape to demonstrate its precision. The phrase, stripped of all context, became an endlessly repeatable punchline that spawned Photoshops, crossover memes, and brand participation across Twitter, Instagram, and Reddit. Its appeal came from the sheer vagueness and deadpan delivery of the statement itself.

TL;DR

The meme centers on a single, deceptively simple phrase: "they did surgery on a grape." The original footage shows the da Vinci Surgical System, a robotic surgery device manufactured by Intuitive Surgical and FDA-approved since 2000, using its tiny mechanical arms to delicately peel the skin off a grape.

Overview

The meme revolves around a single sentence: "They did surgery on a grape." The phrase comes from a screenshot of a Cheddar video showing the da Vinci Surgical System, a robotic surgery tool manufactured by Intuitive Surgical, delicately peeling a grape's skin1. Out of context, the caption reads like a bizarre non sequitur, which is exactly what made it funny. People repeated the phrase obsessively, layered it into other meme formats, Photoshopped grapes into hospital scenarios, and wished the grape a speedy recovery2.

The da Vinci system itself is a real piece of medical technology. FDA-approved in 2000 and developed by Intuitive Surgical, it allows surgeons to perform minimally invasive operations using tiny robotic instruments controlled from a console13. Hospitals use grape demonstrations to show off the system's precision, since peeling and stitching something that small requires extraordinary dexterity5. The meme turned this legitimate medical showcase into internet comedy gold.

On August 11, 2010, Edward Hospital in Naperville, Illinois uploaded a YouTube video showing the da Vinci Surgical System peeling a grape to demonstrate its capabilities4. The video sat mostly unnoticed for years.

On July 31, 2017, Cheddar, a business and tech media outlet, tweeted an edited version of the Edward Hospital footage with the on-screen caption "They did surgery on a grape"4. Producer Max Godnick wrote that now-iconic line as a simple subtitle8. Removed from the context of robotic surgery demonstrations, the sentence was accidentally hilarious.

On January 16, 2018, Instagram user @elimgaraks posted what Know Your Meme identifies as the earliest known usage of the phrase as a meme, picking up over 1,200 likes4.

The real explosion came on November 19, 2018, when Instagram meme account @simpledorito posted a screenshot from the Cheddar video with the caption "They did surgery on a grape." The post earned over 4,000 likes and kicked off a viral wave13.

Origin & Background

Platform
Instagram (@simpledorito viral post), YouTube (2010 source video by Edward Hospital)
Key People
Max Godnick, simpledorito, elimgaraks
Date
2018
Year
2018

On August 11, 2010, Edward Hospital in Naperville, Illinois uploaded a YouTube video showing the da Vinci Surgical System peeling a grape to demonstrate its capabilities. The video sat mostly unnoticed for years.

On July 31, 2017, Cheddar, a business and tech media outlet, tweeted an edited version of the Edward Hospital footage with the on-screen caption "They did surgery on a grape". Producer Max Godnick wrote that now-iconic line as a simple subtitle. Removed from the context of robotic surgery demonstrations, the sentence was accidentally hilarious.

On January 16, 2018, Instagram user @elimgaraks posted what Know Your Meme identifies as the earliest known usage of the phrase as a meme, picking up over 1,200 likes.

The real explosion came on November 19, 2018, when Instagram meme account @simpledorito posted a screenshot from the Cheddar video with the caption "They did surgery on a grape." The post earned over 4,000 likes and kicked off a viral wave.

How It Spread

Two days after @simpledorito's post, on November 21, 2018, Twitter user @ScummyR tweeted an edited version of the screenshot with "they did surgery on a grape" written across it multiple times. That tweet pulled in over 9,700 retweets and 46,000 likes within eight days. @simpledorito reshared the image on Instagram the following day, and it hit Reddit's r/dank_meme with over 13,000 upvotes.

From there, the phrase became inescapable. Twitter user @sunlitjhs posted a Photoshopped parody that earned 6,600 retweets and 32,000 likes. @TheToddWilliams merged it with the Trump Yelling at Lawn-Mowing Boy format for another 1,600 retweets and 10,000 likes. Adam the Creator posted a Tom Hanks version that hit 34,000 likes. A dedicated subreddit appeared and gained over 440 subscribers in its first week.

The meme crossed over with other trending formats. People mashed it up with the "Don't Say It" meme, the ranking meme, horoscope memes, and the "coma patient" template. A Twitter account called @SurgeryOnA was created with the display name "They Did" and simply posted the word "Grape," earning tens of thousands of shares. Australian writer David Hughes wrote a viral thread that began "There was a grape" and concluded "And they did surgery on it".

Meanwhile, footage from Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre in Melbourne resurfaced. Dr. Declan Murphy, the hospital's Director of Robotic Surgery, had filmed a grape operation for an Australian children's show earlier in 2018 to introduce kids to surgical technology. He told BBC Three the grape was called "Grapey McGrapeface" and described his bewilderment when his Twitter feed blew up months after the original tweet.

On November 23, 2018, Seth Everman parodied the meme's format by creating a similar text-heavy image reading "He Played Piano Like an Epic Sir," racking up over 4,800 retweets on Twitter and 29,000 notes on Tumblr. This meta-parody highlighted how the meme's humor came not from the content but from the repetition itself.

Platforms

TwitterRedditTwitter

Timeline

2019-01-01

Meme still see steady use

2020-01-01

They Did Surgery on a Grape reached mainstream popularity and media coverage

View on Google Trends

How to Use This Meme

The meme thrives on absurd repetition and inserting the phrase where it does not belong. The humor comes from the relentless, context-free repetition.

1

Post 'they did surgery on a grape' as a caption, comment, or reply to anything — the humor comes from inserting it where it does not belong

2

Photoshop grapes into medical situations: hospital beds, waiting rooms, post-surgery recovery scenes

3

Cross the phrase with other meme templates: ranking lists, horoscopes, 'don't say it' formats

4

For the text-heavy variant, layer 'they did surgery on a grape' across an image dozens of times — works best on unrelated images for maximum absurdity

Create Your Own

Cultural Impact

The meme drew coverage from major outlets including BBC Three, BuzzFeed, The Daily Dot, and The Cut within its first week of virality. Multiple brands including Wendy's and Burger King UK incorporated the phrase into their social media, with Wendy's using it to defend fry-dipping habits.

Dr. Declan Murphy, the Australian surgeon whose grape operation video got swept into the meme, told BBC Three that each da Vinci machine costs roughly £1.5 million and that only ten existed in the UK at the time. The meme inadvertently raised public awareness of robotic surgery technology, even if most people engaging with it had zero interest in medical robotics.

Wikipedia created a dedicated "Grape surgery" article covering both the meme and the legitimate medical applications of grapes in surgical training. The academic angle noted grapes serve as low-cost alternatives to virtual reality simulators and cadaver eyes in ophthalmology training.

Full History

The story of "They Did Surgery On a Grape" is really a story about how context collapse turns mundane information into comedy. The da Vinci Surgical System had been peeling grapes on camera since 2010, and nobody outside medical circles cared much. Cheddar's 2017 video repackaged old footage into the bite-sized, text-overlay format that dominated social media feeds at the time. As The Cut's analysis pointed out, the shift from "Australian surgeons demonstrated the precision of their new robot by peeling the skin off a grape" to "They did surgery on a grape" stripped away every piece of useful context. Who is "they"? What kind of surgery? The answer, as Thrillist put it: who cares?

The phrase hit a sweet spot that internet linguists and cultural writers tried to explain. The Cut compared it to other absurdist phrases like "All your base are belong to us" and "Has anyone really been far even as decided to use even go want to do look more like?". Thrillist argued that the passive voice was essential. "Doctors operate on a fruit" would never have gone viral, but "they did surgery on a grape" had the same slightly detached energy as "doing a tweet" instead of "tweeting". The use of "did surgery" rather than "performed surgery" gave it an almost childlike quality that made repetition funnier rather than more annoying.

Brands jumped in fast. Wendy's tweeted "No one can ever say dipping fries in your Frosty is weird again. They did surgery on a grape". Burger King UK posted "They did surgery on a Whopper". The brand participation was notable because it happened during the meme's actual peak rather than arriving a week late, as corporate social media accounts often do.

The meme also spawned creative variations beyond simple repetition. People created fake abbreviation guides listing "tdsoag = they did surgery on a grape" alongside standard acronyms like "lol" and "brb". Others built entire fictional scenarios around it. One popular format imagined a first date where someone's only conversation topic was grape surgery. Another placed a coma patient waking up and immediately asking about the grape.

The meta-commentary came quickly too. David Hughes's viral thread pretended to "clear up confusion" about the grape before delivering the deadpan two-tweet explanation. Seth Everman's parody flipped the format entirely, using the same text-heavy style to promote his own content while commenting on the meme's hollow repetitiveness.

Beneath all the jokes, Inverse published an article examining the da Vinci system's actual safety record. The device had been the subject of lawsuits, with patients reporting infections and complications after surgeries. Intuitive Surgical had set aside $67 million in 2014 to settle product-liability claims and paid $43 million in a separate shareholder class-action suit. The Netflix documentary *The Bleeding Edge* had featured the da Vinci system earlier that year, focusing on cases where the technology caused harm to patients. None of this dampened the meme's momentum, but it added an ironic layer: the internet was celebrating a machine that had a complicated real-world track record.

By late November 2018, the meme had been covered by BBC Three, The Daily Dot, BuzzFeed, The Independent, News18, The Cut, Thrillist, and Inverse. Wikipedia later gave grape surgery its own article, noting grapes' legitimate use as training models in microsurgery and ophthalmology, with the grape's skin having mechanical tension similar to the lens capsule of a human eye.

The meme burned bright and fast. By December 2018, it had largely run its course as a daily presence on social media, though the phrase still gets pulled out periodically as a reference to peak 2018 internet culture.

Fun Facts

The original grape surgery video sat on YouTube for over eight years before becoming a meme.

The Cheddar producer who wrote the fateful caption was Max Godnick.

Dr. Declan Murphy named the grape in his Australian demonstration video "Grapey McGrapeface".

Grapes are used as legitimate surgical training models because their skin has similar mechanical tension to the lens capsule of the human eye.

Intuitive Surgical, the company behind the da Vinci system, had set aside $67 million by 2014 to settle product-liability claims related to the device.

Derivatives & Variations

They Did Surgery on a Grape Variations

Different takes on the They Did Surgery on a Grape format with modified content

(2018)

They Did Surgery on a Grape Mashups

Combinations of They Did Surgery on a Grape with other popular memes

(2019)

They Did Surgery on a Grape Remixes

Updated versions with current events and references

(2019)

Frequently Asked Questions

They Did Surgery on a Grape

2018Copypasta / image macro / absurdist memesemi-active

Also known as: Grape Surgery · TDSOAG

They Did Surgery on a Grape is a 2018 absurdist copypasta and image meme built around a deadpan phrase from a 2010 da Vinci Surgical System demonstration that became an endlessly repeatable viral punchline.

"They Did Surgery On a Grape" is an absurdist copypasta and image meme that went viral in November 2018, based on a 2010 video of the da Vinci Surgical System peeling a grape to demonstrate its precision. The phrase, stripped of all context, became an endlessly repeatable punchline that spawned Photoshops, crossover memes, and brand participation across Twitter, Instagram, and Reddit. Its appeal came from the sheer vagueness and deadpan delivery of the statement itself.

TL;DR

The meme centers on a single, deceptively simple phrase: "they did surgery on a grape." The original footage shows the da Vinci Surgical System, a robotic surgery device manufactured by Intuitive Surgical and FDA-approved since 2000, using its tiny mechanical arms to delicately peel the skin off a grape.

Overview

The meme revolves around a single sentence: "They did surgery on a grape." The phrase comes from a screenshot of a Cheddar video showing the da Vinci Surgical System, a robotic surgery tool manufactured by Intuitive Surgical, delicately peeling a grape's skin. Out of context, the caption reads like a bizarre non sequitur, which is exactly what made it funny. People repeated the phrase obsessively, layered it into other meme formats, Photoshopped grapes into hospital scenarios, and wished the grape a speedy recovery.

The da Vinci system itself is a real piece of medical technology. FDA-approved in 2000 and developed by Intuitive Surgical, it allows surgeons to perform minimally invasive operations using tiny robotic instruments controlled from a console. Hospitals use grape demonstrations to show off the system's precision, since peeling and stitching something that small requires extraordinary dexterity. The meme turned this legitimate medical showcase into internet comedy gold.

On August 11, 2010, Edward Hospital in Naperville, Illinois uploaded a YouTube video showing the da Vinci Surgical System peeling a grape to demonstrate its capabilities. The video sat mostly unnoticed for years.

On July 31, 2017, Cheddar, a business and tech media outlet, tweeted an edited version of the Edward Hospital footage with the on-screen caption "They did surgery on a grape". Producer Max Godnick wrote that now-iconic line as a simple subtitle. Removed from the context of robotic surgery demonstrations, the sentence was accidentally hilarious.

On January 16, 2018, Instagram user @elimgaraks posted what Know Your Meme identifies as the earliest known usage of the phrase as a meme, picking up over 1,200 likes.

The real explosion came on November 19, 2018, when Instagram meme account @simpledorito posted a screenshot from the Cheddar video with the caption "They did surgery on a grape." The post earned over 4,000 likes and kicked off a viral wave.

Origin & Background

Platform
Instagram (@simpledorito viral post), YouTube (2010 source video by Edward Hospital)
Key People
Max Godnick, simpledorito, elimgaraks
Date
2018
Year
2018

On August 11, 2010, Edward Hospital in Naperville, Illinois uploaded a YouTube video showing the da Vinci Surgical System peeling a grape to demonstrate its capabilities. The video sat mostly unnoticed for years.

On July 31, 2017, Cheddar, a business and tech media outlet, tweeted an edited version of the Edward Hospital footage with the on-screen caption "They did surgery on a grape". Producer Max Godnick wrote that now-iconic line as a simple subtitle. Removed from the context of robotic surgery demonstrations, the sentence was accidentally hilarious.

On January 16, 2018, Instagram user @elimgaraks posted what Know Your Meme identifies as the earliest known usage of the phrase as a meme, picking up over 1,200 likes.

The real explosion came on November 19, 2018, when Instagram meme account @simpledorito posted a screenshot from the Cheddar video with the caption "They did surgery on a grape." The post earned over 4,000 likes and kicked off a viral wave.

How It Spread

Two days after @simpledorito's post, on November 21, 2018, Twitter user @ScummyR tweeted an edited version of the screenshot with "they did surgery on a grape" written across it multiple times. That tweet pulled in over 9,700 retweets and 46,000 likes within eight days. @simpledorito reshared the image on Instagram the following day, and it hit Reddit's r/dank_meme with over 13,000 upvotes.

From there, the phrase became inescapable. Twitter user @sunlitjhs posted a Photoshopped parody that earned 6,600 retweets and 32,000 likes. @TheToddWilliams merged it with the Trump Yelling at Lawn-Mowing Boy format for another 1,600 retweets and 10,000 likes. Adam the Creator posted a Tom Hanks version that hit 34,000 likes. A dedicated subreddit appeared and gained over 440 subscribers in its first week.

The meme crossed over with other trending formats. People mashed it up with the "Don't Say It" meme, the ranking meme, horoscope memes, and the "coma patient" template. A Twitter account called @SurgeryOnA was created with the display name "They Did" and simply posted the word "Grape," earning tens of thousands of shares. Australian writer David Hughes wrote a viral thread that began "There was a grape" and concluded "And they did surgery on it".

Meanwhile, footage from Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre in Melbourne resurfaced. Dr. Declan Murphy, the hospital's Director of Robotic Surgery, had filmed a grape operation for an Australian children's show earlier in 2018 to introduce kids to surgical technology. He told BBC Three the grape was called "Grapey McGrapeface" and described his bewilderment when his Twitter feed blew up months after the original tweet.

On November 23, 2018, Seth Everman parodied the meme's format by creating a similar text-heavy image reading "He Played Piano Like an Epic Sir," racking up over 4,800 retweets on Twitter and 29,000 notes on Tumblr. This meta-parody highlighted how the meme's humor came not from the content but from the repetition itself.

Platforms

TwitterRedditTwitter

Timeline

2019-01-01

Meme still see steady use

2020-01-01

They Did Surgery on a Grape reached mainstream popularity and media coverage

View on Google Trends

How to Use This Meme

The meme thrives on absurd repetition and inserting the phrase where it does not belong. The humor comes from the relentless, context-free repetition.

1

Post 'they did surgery on a grape' as a caption, comment, or reply to anything — the humor comes from inserting it where it does not belong

2

Photoshop grapes into medical situations: hospital beds, waiting rooms, post-surgery recovery scenes

3

Cross the phrase with other meme templates: ranking lists, horoscopes, 'don't say it' formats

4

For the text-heavy variant, layer 'they did surgery on a grape' across an image dozens of times — works best on unrelated images for maximum absurdity

Create Your Own

Cultural Impact

The meme drew coverage from major outlets including BBC Three, BuzzFeed, The Daily Dot, and The Cut within its first week of virality. Multiple brands including Wendy's and Burger King UK incorporated the phrase into their social media, with Wendy's using it to defend fry-dipping habits.

Dr. Declan Murphy, the Australian surgeon whose grape operation video got swept into the meme, told BBC Three that each da Vinci machine costs roughly £1.5 million and that only ten existed in the UK at the time. The meme inadvertently raised public awareness of robotic surgery technology, even if most people engaging with it had zero interest in medical robotics.

Wikipedia created a dedicated "Grape surgery" article covering both the meme and the legitimate medical applications of grapes in surgical training. The academic angle noted grapes serve as low-cost alternatives to virtual reality simulators and cadaver eyes in ophthalmology training.

Full History

The story of "They Did Surgery On a Grape" is really a story about how context collapse turns mundane information into comedy. The da Vinci Surgical System had been peeling grapes on camera since 2010, and nobody outside medical circles cared much. Cheddar's 2017 video repackaged old footage into the bite-sized, text-overlay format that dominated social media feeds at the time. As The Cut's analysis pointed out, the shift from "Australian surgeons demonstrated the precision of their new robot by peeling the skin off a grape" to "They did surgery on a grape" stripped away every piece of useful context. Who is "they"? What kind of surgery? The answer, as Thrillist put it: who cares?

The phrase hit a sweet spot that internet linguists and cultural writers tried to explain. The Cut compared it to other absurdist phrases like "All your base are belong to us" and "Has anyone really been far even as decided to use even go want to do look more like?". Thrillist argued that the passive voice was essential. "Doctors operate on a fruit" would never have gone viral, but "they did surgery on a grape" had the same slightly detached energy as "doing a tweet" instead of "tweeting". The use of "did surgery" rather than "performed surgery" gave it an almost childlike quality that made repetition funnier rather than more annoying.

Brands jumped in fast. Wendy's tweeted "No one can ever say dipping fries in your Frosty is weird again. They did surgery on a grape". Burger King UK posted "They did surgery on a Whopper". The brand participation was notable because it happened during the meme's actual peak rather than arriving a week late, as corporate social media accounts often do.

The meme also spawned creative variations beyond simple repetition. People created fake abbreviation guides listing "tdsoag = they did surgery on a grape" alongside standard acronyms like "lol" and "brb". Others built entire fictional scenarios around it. One popular format imagined a first date where someone's only conversation topic was grape surgery. Another placed a coma patient waking up and immediately asking about the grape.

The meta-commentary came quickly too. David Hughes's viral thread pretended to "clear up confusion" about the grape before delivering the deadpan two-tweet explanation. Seth Everman's parody flipped the format entirely, using the same text-heavy style to promote his own content while commenting on the meme's hollow repetitiveness.

Beneath all the jokes, Inverse published an article examining the da Vinci system's actual safety record. The device had been the subject of lawsuits, with patients reporting infections and complications after surgeries. Intuitive Surgical had set aside $67 million in 2014 to settle product-liability claims and paid $43 million in a separate shareholder class-action suit. The Netflix documentary *The Bleeding Edge* had featured the da Vinci system earlier that year, focusing on cases where the technology caused harm to patients. None of this dampened the meme's momentum, but it added an ironic layer: the internet was celebrating a machine that had a complicated real-world track record.

By late November 2018, the meme had been covered by BBC Three, The Daily Dot, BuzzFeed, The Independent, News18, The Cut, Thrillist, and Inverse. Wikipedia later gave grape surgery its own article, noting grapes' legitimate use as training models in microsurgery and ophthalmology, with the grape's skin having mechanical tension similar to the lens capsule of a human eye.

The meme burned bright and fast. By December 2018, it had largely run its course as a daily presence on social media, though the phrase still gets pulled out periodically as a reference to peak 2018 internet culture.

Fun Facts

The original grape surgery video sat on YouTube for over eight years before becoming a meme.

The Cheddar producer who wrote the fateful caption was Max Godnick.

Dr. Declan Murphy named the grape in his Australian demonstration video "Grapey McGrapeface".

Grapes are used as legitimate surgical training models because their skin has similar mechanical tension to the lens capsule of the human eye.

Intuitive Surgical, the company behind the da Vinci system, had set aside $67 million by 2014 to settle product-liability claims related to the device.

Derivatives & Variations

They Did Surgery on a Grape Variations

Different takes on the They Did Surgery on a Grape format with modified content

(2018)

They Did Surgery on a Grape Mashups

Combinations of They Did Surgery on a Grape with other popular memes

(2019)

They Did Surgery on a Grape Remixes

Updated versions with current events and references

(2019)

Frequently Asked Questions