They're the Same Picture

2011Exploitable image macro / reaction imagesemi-active

Also known as: Corporate Needs You to Find the Differences · Pam Same Picture · Spot the Difference

They're the Same Picture" is a two-panel image-macro meme originating from *The Office* (2011), where Pam compares identical images, popularized as a 2018 template for equating any two things.

"They're the Same Picture" is a two-panel exploitable meme from the TV series *The Office*, where the character Pam presents two identical images and declares them the same picture. The scene aired in May 2011, but the format didn't take off as an editable meme until June 2018 when a Reddit user swapped the photos to compare Fortnite to trash. It became one of the most versatile comparison templates online, used to equate two things as identical, whether as an insult or a compliment.

TL;DR

They're the Same Picture a reaction meme from the TV show The Office featuring Pam at a desk with identical photos of two things, asking 'They're the same picture.

Overview

The meme uses two screenshots from *The Office*. The first panel shows two side-by-side images (edited in by the meme creator) with the caption: "Corporate needs you to find the differences between this picture and this picture." The second panel shows Pam Beesly looking into the camera with a tight, knowing smile and the text: "They're the same picture"2.

The joke works in two directions. The most common use insults something by placing it next to trash, feces, or anything universally disliked, with Pam's line delivering the punchline1. But it also works as a compliment, comparing a subject to something perfect or beloved3. The format is flexible enough to swap in text blocks, logos, screenshots, or any pair of images the creator wants to equate.

The source scene comes from "Search Committee," the Season 7 finale of *The Office*, which aired on May 19, 20111. In the episode, acting manager Creed Bratton (played by the real Creed Bratton) takes over after regional manager Deangelo Vickers falls into a coma2. Pam Beesly (played by Jenna Fischer) tries to keep Creed distracted so he doesn't wreck the office with his incompetence2. One of her tactics: she hands him two identical photos and asks him to find the differences between them. After leaving the room, she turns to the documentary camera and says, "They're the same picture"1.

The unedited screenshots circulated online for years as a simple reaction image, posted when someone wanted to say they couldn't tell two things apart3.

Origin & Background

Platform
NBC's *The Office* (source scene), Reddit (meme format)
Creator
Unknown
Date
2011 (scene aired), 2018 (meme format)
Year
2011

The source scene comes from "Search Committee," the Season 7 finale of *The Office*, which aired on May 19, 2011. In the episode, acting manager Creed Bratton (played by the real Creed Bratton) takes over after regional manager Deangelo Vickers falls into a coma. Pam Beesly (played by Jenna Fischer) tries to keep Creed distracted so he doesn't wreck the office with his incompetence. One of her tactics: she hands him two identical photos and asks him to find the differences between them. After leaving the room, she turns to the documentary camera and says, "They're the same picture".

The unedited screenshots circulated online for years as a simple reaction image, posted when someone wanted to say they couldn't tell two things apart.

How It Spread

The format's life as an exploitable meme began on June 22, 2018, when a user on Reddit's r/MemeEconomy posted an edited version replacing the two photos with the Fortnite cover art and an overflowing trash can. The post pulled in over 26,000 upvotes.

Within days, the template spread across Reddit. On June 23, 2018, a post on r/garlicbreadmemes flipped the format into a compliment, comparing garlic bread to heaven and earning over 890 points. The same day, a r/MemeEconomy post worked in a Loss reference. On June 25, a wholesome edit appeared on r/MemeEconomy. A r/bojackhorseman post used the template to joke about the show's protagonist hating himself, gaining over 1,400 upvotes.

From Reddit, the meme jumped to Instagram meme pages, Facebook groups, and humor sites across the web. The format proved durable because it works for almost any comparison. Users Photoshopped other characters or public figures over Pam, placed text where the images should be, or stripped the format down even further. As the template became universally recognizable, people started simply posting two images side by side with the text "they're the same picture," skipping the *Office* screenshots entirely.

The meme also spread as a reaction GIF of the original scene, used without editing in reply threads to call out two things that look suspiciously alike.

Platforms

RedditTwitterInstagramTikTokFacebook

Timeline

2019

Format emerges from The Office scene and gains initial popularity

2019-2020

Rapid spread and peak popularity as universal comparison tool

2020-01-01

They're the Same Picture started spreading across social media platforms

2021-present

Is still going strong format for pointing out similarities and equivalences

2022-01-01

Brands and companies started using They're the Same Picture in marketing

2024-01-01

They're the Same Picture entered the broader pop culture conversation

2025-01-01

They're the Same Picture is still actively used and shared across platforms

View on Google Trends

How to Use This Meme

The standard format uses two panels:

1

Panel one: Place two images, logos, text blocks, or any pair of subjects into the spots where the photos would be. Add the caption "Corporate needs you to find the differences between this picture and this picture."

2

Panel two: Pam's face with "They're the same picture."

Create Your Own

Cultural Impact

"They're the Same Picture" is part of a long tradition of *The Office* generating meme formats. The show aired its finale in 2013 but kept producing new memes for years after, with this template breaking out a full seven years after the episode aired. The "Search Committee" episode, written during the search for Michael Scott's replacement, became one of the show's most memeable moments despite being a relatively low-key scene.

The meme's longevity comes from its extreme versatility. Unlike memes tied to a specific punchline or cultural moment, "They're the Same Picture" works for any situation where someone wants to equate two things. This made it a go-to format during online debates, fandom arguments, and pop culture discourse, where it often popped up with new trends and controversies.

Fun Facts

The episode "Search Committee" was an hour-long season finale, one of *The Office*'s longer episodes.

Ricky Gervais, creator of the original British *Office*, made a brief guest appearance in the same episode reprising his role as David Brent.

The meme sat dormant as an unedited reaction image for roughly seven years before someone thought to make it an exploitable template.

The first known exploitable was an anti-Fortnite joke, hitting during the peak of Fortnite backlash culture in mid-2018.

The format works as both an insult and a compliment, which is unusual for comparison memes that typically lean one way.

Derivatives & Variations

Three-way or multi-image comparison versions

A variation of They're the Same Picture

(2019)

Reversed versions emphasizing the differences

A variation of They're the Same Picture

(2019)

Video versions showing Pam's reaction process

A variation of They're the Same Picture

(2019)

Extended sequences exploring multiple equivalences

A variation of They're the Same Picture

(2019)

Frequently Asked Questions

They're the Same Picture

2011Exploitable image macro / reaction imagesemi-active

Also known as: Corporate Needs You to Find the Differences · Pam Same Picture · Spot the Difference

They're the Same Picture" is a two-panel image-macro meme originating from *The Office* (2011), where Pam compares identical images, popularized as a 2018 template for equating any two things.

"They're the Same Picture" is a two-panel exploitable meme from the TV series *The Office*, where the character Pam presents two identical images and declares them the same picture. The scene aired in May 2011, but the format didn't take off as an editable meme until June 2018 when a Reddit user swapped the photos to compare Fortnite to trash. It became one of the most versatile comparison templates online, used to equate two things as identical, whether as an insult or a compliment.

TL;DR

They're the Same Picture a reaction meme from the TV show The Office featuring Pam at a desk with identical photos of two things, asking 'They're the same picture.

Overview

The meme uses two screenshots from *The Office*. The first panel shows two side-by-side images (edited in by the meme creator) with the caption: "Corporate needs you to find the differences between this picture and this picture." The second panel shows Pam Beesly looking into the camera with a tight, knowing smile and the text: "They're the same picture".

The joke works in two directions. The most common use insults something by placing it next to trash, feces, or anything universally disliked, with Pam's line delivering the punchline. But it also works as a compliment, comparing a subject to something perfect or beloved. The format is flexible enough to swap in text blocks, logos, screenshots, or any pair of images the creator wants to equate.

The source scene comes from "Search Committee," the Season 7 finale of *The Office*, which aired on May 19, 2011. In the episode, acting manager Creed Bratton (played by the real Creed Bratton) takes over after regional manager Deangelo Vickers falls into a coma. Pam Beesly (played by Jenna Fischer) tries to keep Creed distracted so he doesn't wreck the office with his incompetence. One of her tactics: she hands him two identical photos and asks him to find the differences between them. After leaving the room, she turns to the documentary camera and says, "They're the same picture".

The unedited screenshots circulated online for years as a simple reaction image, posted when someone wanted to say they couldn't tell two things apart.

Origin & Background

Platform
NBC's *The Office* (source scene), Reddit (meme format)
Creator
Unknown
Date
2011 (scene aired), 2018 (meme format)
Year
2011

The source scene comes from "Search Committee," the Season 7 finale of *The Office*, which aired on May 19, 2011. In the episode, acting manager Creed Bratton (played by the real Creed Bratton) takes over after regional manager Deangelo Vickers falls into a coma. Pam Beesly (played by Jenna Fischer) tries to keep Creed distracted so he doesn't wreck the office with his incompetence. One of her tactics: she hands him two identical photos and asks him to find the differences between them. After leaving the room, she turns to the documentary camera and says, "They're the same picture".

The unedited screenshots circulated online for years as a simple reaction image, posted when someone wanted to say they couldn't tell two things apart.

How It Spread

The format's life as an exploitable meme began on June 22, 2018, when a user on Reddit's r/MemeEconomy posted an edited version replacing the two photos with the Fortnite cover art and an overflowing trash can. The post pulled in over 26,000 upvotes.

Within days, the template spread across Reddit. On June 23, 2018, a post on r/garlicbreadmemes flipped the format into a compliment, comparing garlic bread to heaven and earning over 890 points. The same day, a r/MemeEconomy post worked in a Loss reference. On June 25, a wholesome edit appeared on r/MemeEconomy. A r/bojackhorseman post used the template to joke about the show's protagonist hating himself, gaining over 1,400 upvotes.

From Reddit, the meme jumped to Instagram meme pages, Facebook groups, and humor sites across the web. The format proved durable because it works for almost any comparison. Users Photoshopped other characters or public figures over Pam, placed text where the images should be, or stripped the format down even further. As the template became universally recognizable, people started simply posting two images side by side with the text "they're the same picture," skipping the *Office* screenshots entirely.

The meme also spread as a reaction GIF of the original scene, used without editing in reply threads to call out two things that look suspiciously alike.

Platforms

RedditTwitterInstagramTikTokFacebook

Timeline

2019

Format emerges from The Office scene and gains initial popularity

2019-2020

Rapid spread and peak popularity as universal comparison tool

2020-01-01

They're the Same Picture started spreading across social media platforms

2021-present

Is still going strong format for pointing out similarities and equivalences

2022-01-01

Brands and companies started using They're the Same Picture in marketing

2024-01-01

They're the Same Picture entered the broader pop culture conversation

2025-01-01

They're the Same Picture is still actively used and shared across platforms

View on Google Trends

How to Use This Meme

The standard format uses two panels:

1

Panel one: Place two images, logos, text blocks, or any pair of subjects into the spots where the photos would be. Add the caption "Corporate needs you to find the differences between this picture and this picture."

2

Panel two: Pam's face with "They're the same picture."

Create Your Own

Cultural Impact

"They're the Same Picture" is part of a long tradition of *The Office* generating meme formats. The show aired its finale in 2013 but kept producing new memes for years after, with this template breaking out a full seven years after the episode aired. The "Search Committee" episode, written during the search for Michael Scott's replacement, became one of the show's most memeable moments despite being a relatively low-key scene.

The meme's longevity comes from its extreme versatility. Unlike memes tied to a specific punchline or cultural moment, "They're the Same Picture" works for any situation where someone wants to equate two things. This made it a go-to format during online debates, fandom arguments, and pop culture discourse, where it often popped up with new trends and controversies.

Fun Facts

The episode "Search Committee" was an hour-long season finale, one of *The Office*'s longer episodes.

Ricky Gervais, creator of the original British *Office*, made a brief guest appearance in the same episode reprising his role as David Brent.

The meme sat dormant as an unedited reaction image for roughly seven years before someone thought to make it an exploitable template.

The first known exploitable was an anti-Fortnite joke, hitting during the peak of Fortnite backlash culture in mid-2018.

The format works as both an insult and a compliment, which is unusual for comparison memes that typically lean one way.

Derivatives & Variations

Three-way or multi-image comparison versions

A variation of They're the Same Picture

(2019)

Reversed versions emphasizing the differences

A variation of They're the Same Picture

(2019)

Video versions showing Pam's reaction process

A variation of They're the Same Picture

(2019)

Extended sequences exploring multiple equivalences

A variation of They're the Same Picture

(2019)

Frequently Asked Questions