Thumbs And Ammo

2013Photoshop blog / image seriesdead

Also known as: Thumbs & Ammo

Thumbs and Ammo is a 2013 Blogspot photoshop blog that replaces guns in famous movie stills with friendly thumbs-up gestures, which went viral within two weeks of its launch.

Thumbs and Ammo is a single-topic Photoshop blog that replaces guns in famous movie stills with a friendly thumbs-up gesture. Launched on Blogspot on March 7, 2013, it went viral within two weeks as outlets from Mashable to ABC News picked it up, many framing it within the then-heated national gun control debate. The blog's creators insisted it was just a silly Photoshop contest between friends, not a political statement.

TL;DR

Thumbs and Ammo is a single-topic Photoshop blog that replaces guns in famous movie stills with a friendly thumbs-up gesture.

Overview

Thumbs and Ammo takes iconic action movie scenes and digitally removes the firearms, swapping them for an enthusiastic thumbs-up. The Terminator, Scarface's Tony Montana, Rambo, Batman, Pulp Fiction's Jules Winnfield, and dozens of other gun-toting characters all get the treatment, turning violent confrontations into weirdly optimistic encounters. The blog's tagline sums up the joke: "Real tough guys don't need guns, they just need a positive, can-do attitude"7.

The humor comes from the contrast between intense action scenes and an absurdly cheerful hand gesture. Characters who once menaced enemies with automatic weapons now look like they're giving a motivational speech. As BuzzFeed put it, it's a place where "instead of being antiheroes with dark pasts and ambiguous morals, action stars get to be happy dudes and ladies with winning personalities"2.

The blog launched on March 7, 2013, on the Blogspot platform6. Its first post featured Brad Pitt from the 1995 thriller *Se7en*, edited so his gun was replaced with a hand making a thumbs-up signal6. A matching Twitter account, @ThumbsandAmmo, was created the same day to share links to individual posts6.

According to Mashable, the blog started as a Photoshop competition between its co-creators to see who could make the funniest gun-to-thumb swap1. One of the creators told Mashable directly that "the site wasn't really created to send an anti-gun message"1. It was a goofy challenge among friends that happened to hit at exactly the right cultural moment.

Origin & Background

Platform
Blogspot (blog creation), Twitter (promotion)
Creator
Unknown
Date
2013
Year
2013

The blog launched on March 7, 2013, on the Blogspot platform. Its first post featured Brad Pitt from the 1995 thriller *Se7en*, edited so his gun was replaced with a hand making a thumbs-up signal. A matching Twitter account, @ThumbsandAmmo, was created the same day to share links to individual posts.

According to Mashable, the blog started as a Photoshop competition between its co-creators to see who could make the funniest gun-to-thumb swap. One of the creators told Mashable directly that "the site wasn't really created to send an anti-gun message". It was a goofy challenge among friends that happened to hit at exactly the right cultural moment.

How It Spread

The Thumbs and Ammo Twitter feed gained over 1,100 followers in its first two weeks. On March 13, the German pop culture blog Nerdcore ran a feature highlighting several examples. That same week, a wave of internet culture blogs picked it up: Laughing Squid, BuzzFeed, UpRoxx, Hyper Vocal, and Gawker all ran galleries of the best edits.

The second wave hit on March 19, when larger news outlets jumped in. The Huffington Post, E! Online, and The A.V. Club all covered the blog. Many of these outlets connected it to the ongoing national gun control debate, with HuffPost calling it "a more lighthearted approach to the issue" compared to other activist art projects. E! Online described it as "hilarious gun control" being enforced on Angelina Jolie and Bruce Willis.

By late March, Thumbs and Ammo had been featured on Mashable, Funny or Die, and ABC News. The blog was also crowdsourced, accepting user submissions at thumbsandammo@gmail.com, which helped keep the content flowing. Designboom covered the blog with a gallery highlighting edits from *Pulp Fiction*, *Rambo*, *Scarface*, *Reservoir Dogs*, *Mission: Impossible*, *Band of Brothers*, and *Looper*.

How to Use This Meme

The Thumbs and Ammo format is straightforward:

1

Find a well-known movie still or promotional image where a character is holding a gun

2

Use Photoshop (or any image editor) to remove the gun

3

Replace it with a hand giving a thumbs-up, matching the skin tone and lighting of the original image

4

The more intense or dramatic the original scene, the funnier the result tends to be

Cultural Impact

Thumbs and Ammo landed during March 2013, when the U.S. gun control debate was especially intense following the Sandy Hook shooting in December 2012. Multiple news outlets framed the blog as part of that conversation, whether the creators intended it or not. The Huffington Post placed it alongside other artist responses to gun policy, noting that some creators "spoke out against the Second Amendment with posters in support of gun control" while Thumbs and Ammo took a lighter approach.

Mashable called it "the Internet's most up-and-coming craze" during its peak week and drew the comedic conclusion that "Sylvester Stallone's biggest asset against the adversary is a slightly larger opposing finger". The blog's approach inspired a broader mini-genre of weapon-replacement Photoshop projects, though none matched the original's viral moment.

Fun Facts

The blog's creators never publicly identified themselves, keeping the project anonymous even as it got covered by major news outlets.

Mashable noted that the edited characters "would be sheer terror to our thumbless ancestors," which is probably the only time anyone has considered the meme from a pre-human evolutionary perspective.

The blog accepted crowdsourced submissions, meaning anyone with Photoshop skills and an email account could contribute.

Despite heavy media framing around gun control, the creators maintained the project was born purely from a "who can make the funniest edit" competition.

Frequently Asked Questions

Thumbs And Ammo

2013Photoshop blog / image seriesdead

Also known as: Thumbs & Ammo

Thumbs and Ammo is a 2013 Blogspot photoshop blog that replaces guns in famous movie stills with friendly thumbs-up gestures, which went viral within two weeks of its launch.

Thumbs and Ammo is a single-topic Photoshop blog that replaces guns in famous movie stills with a friendly thumbs-up gesture. Launched on Blogspot on March 7, 2013, it went viral within two weeks as outlets from Mashable to ABC News picked it up, many framing it within the then-heated national gun control debate. The blog's creators insisted it was just a silly Photoshop contest between friends, not a political statement.

TL;DR

Thumbs and Ammo is a single-topic Photoshop blog that replaces guns in famous movie stills with a friendly thumbs-up gesture.

Overview

Thumbs and Ammo takes iconic action movie scenes and digitally removes the firearms, swapping them for an enthusiastic thumbs-up. The Terminator, Scarface's Tony Montana, Rambo, Batman, Pulp Fiction's Jules Winnfield, and dozens of other gun-toting characters all get the treatment, turning violent confrontations into weirdly optimistic encounters. The blog's tagline sums up the joke: "Real tough guys don't need guns, they just need a positive, can-do attitude".

The humor comes from the contrast between intense action scenes and an absurdly cheerful hand gesture. Characters who once menaced enemies with automatic weapons now look like they're giving a motivational speech. As BuzzFeed put it, it's a place where "instead of being antiheroes with dark pasts and ambiguous morals, action stars get to be happy dudes and ladies with winning personalities".

The blog launched on March 7, 2013, on the Blogspot platform. Its first post featured Brad Pitt from the 1995 thriller *Se7en*, edited so his gun was replaced with a hand making a thumbs-up signal. A matching Twitter account, @ThumbsandAmmo, was created the same day to share links to individual posts.

According to Mashable, the blog started as a Photoshop competition between its co-creators to see who could make the funniest gun-to-thumb swap. One of the creators told Mashable directly that "the site wasn't really created to send an anti-gun message". It was a goofy challenge among friends that happened to hit at exactly the right cultural moment.

Origin & Background

Platform
Blogspot (blog creation), Twitter (promotion)
Creator
Unknown
Date
2013
Year
2013

The blog launched on March 7, 2013, on the Blogspot platform. Its first post featured Brad Pitt from the 1995 thriller *Se7en*, edited so his gun was replaced with a hand making a thumbs-up signal. A matching Twitter account, @ThumbsandAmmo, was created the same day to share links to individual posts.

According to Mashable, the blog started as a Photoshop competition between its co-creators to see who could make the funniest gun-to-thumb swap. One of the creators told Mashable directly that "the site wasn't really created to send an anti-gun message". It was a goofy challenge among friends that happened to hit at exactly the right cultural moment.

How It Spread

The Thumbs and Ammo Twitter feed gained over 1,100 followers in its first two weeks. On March 13, the German pop culture blog Nerdcore ran a feature highlighting several examples. That same week, a wave of internet culture blogs picked it up: Laughing Squid, BuzzFeed, UpRoxx, Hyper Vocal, and Gawker all ran galleries of the best edits.

The second wave hit on March 19, when larger news outlets jumped in. The Huffington Post, E! Online, and The A.V. Club all covered the blog. Many of these outlets connected it to the ongoing national gun control debate, with HuffPost calling it "a more lighthearted approach to the issue" compared to other activist art projects. E! Online described it as "hilarious gun control" being enforced on Angelina Jolie and Bruce Willis.

By late March, Thumbs and Ammo had been featured on Mashable, Funny or Die, and ABC News. The blog was also crowdsourced, accepting user submissions at thumbsandammo@gmail.com, which helped keep the content flowing. Designboom covered the blog with a gallery highlighting edits from *Pulp Fiction*, *Rambo*, *Scarface*, *Reservoir Dogs*, *Mission: Impossible*, *Band of Brothers*, and *Looper*.

How to Use This Meme

The Thumbs and Ammo format is straightforward:

1

Find a well-known movie still or promotional image where a character is holding a gun

2

Use Photoshop (or any image editor) to remove the gun

3

Replace it with a hand giving a thumbs-up, matching the skin tone and lighting of the original image

4

The more intense or dramatic the original scene, the funnier the result tends to be

Cultural Impact

Thumbs and Ammo landed during March 2013, when the U.S. gun control debate was especially intense following the Sandy Hook shooting in December 2012. Multiple news outlets framed the blog as part of that conversation, whether the creators intended it or not. The Huffington Post placed it alongside other artist responses to gun policy, noting that some creators "spoke out against the Second Amendment with posters in support of gun control" while Thumbs and Ammo took a lighter approach.

Mashable called it "the Internet's most up-and-coming craze" during its peak week and drew the comedic conclusion that "Sylvester Stallone's biggest asset against the adversary is a slightly larger opposing finger". The blog's approach inspired a broader mini-genre of weapon-replacement Photoshop projects, though none matched the original's viral moment.

Fun Facts

The blog's creators never publicly identified themselves, keeping the project anonymous even as it got covered by major news outlets.

Mashable noted that the edited characters "would be sheer terror to our thumbless ancestors," which is probably the only time anyone has considered the meme from a pre-human evolutionary perspective.

The blog accepted crowdsourced submissions, meaning anyone with Photoshop skills and an email account could contribute.

Despite heavy media framing around gun control, the creators maintained the project was born purely from a "who can make the funniest edit" competition.

Frequently Asked Questions