War Propaganda Parodies

2002Exploitable image format / parody posterclassic

Also known as: Propaganda Poster Parodies · Propaganda Poster Edits

War Propaganda Parodies is a 2002-era meme format remixing government recruitment posters from WWI and WWII, particularly Uncle Sam's "I Want YOU," for digital comedy.

War Propaganda Parodies are internet spoofs of government-produced propaganda posters from World War I and World War II. Classic recruitment images like Lord Kitchener's 1914 "Wants You" poster1 and James Montgomery Flagg's 1917 Uncle Sam "I Want YOU" poster2 have been digitally remixed for comedy since the early 2000s, making the propaganda poster one of the internet's most durable and widely recognized meme formats.

TL;DR

War Propaganda Parodies are internet spoofs of government-produced propaganda posters from World War I and World War II.

Overview

War propaganda parodies take the bold visual style of 20th-century government posters and swap wartime messaging with jokes, political commentary, or absurdist humor. The originals were engineered for maximum emotional punch: commanding figures, stark color palettes, direct eye contact, and short slogans. Those same qualities make them natural meme templates, instantly readable and simple to edit with even basic image tools.

The most commonly remixed originals include Britain's 1914 "Lord Kitchener Wants You" recruitment poster1, the 1917 American "I Want YOU" Uncle Sam poster2, WWII-era Rosie the Riveter imagery5, and the 1939 British "Keep Calm and Carry On" poster4. Parodies range from quick text swaps to elaborate digital compositions placing modern characters and situations into the classic propaganda framework. A pointing finger that once demanded military enlistment now demands you do the dishes or join a Discord server.

Large-scale propaganda poster campaigns began during World War I. Before the conflict, Britain hadn't regularly used recruitment posters since the Napoleonic Wars1. That changed in 1914 when the Caxton Advertising Agency won a contract to recruit soldiers through major UK newspaper advertisements. Illustrator Alfred Leete designed the iconic image of Lord Kitchener, the British Secretary of State for War, pointing directly at the viewer. It appeared as the cover of London Opinion's September 5, 1914 issue, a weekly magazine with around 300,000 readers1. Le Bas chose Kitchener because he was "the only soldier with a great war name, won in the field, within the memory of the thousands of men the country wanted"1. The Parliamentary Recruiting Committee soon reproduced the design as a poster, and September 1914 saw the highest number of voluntary enlistments during the entire war.

Leete's composition inspired an American counterpart. James Montgomery Flagg created the "I Want YOU for U.S. Army" Uncle Sam poster, directly borrowing the Kitchener design's pointing-finger format2. It first appeared publicly on the cover of Leslie's Weekly on July 6, 1916, and over four million copies were printed between 1917 and 19182. Flagg's version locked in Uncle Sam's definitive look: goatee, star-spangled top hat, blue tail coat, and red-and-white-striped trousers.

World War II massively expanded propaganda output. The United States alone introduced nearly 200,000 different poster designs across print, radio, and film3. Rosie the Riveter, originating from a 1942 song by Redd Evans and John Jacob Loeb, became a powerful symbol of women entering the wartime workforce5. Rationing posters like the Office of War Information's 1943 "Do with less, so they'll have enough!" urged civilians to sacrifice for soldiers overseas9.

After 1945, propaganda posters faded quickly as broadcast media took over mass communication3. But the images stayed lodged in cultural memory. When digital editing tools and online humor forums arrived decades later, the remix potential was obvious. On April 4, 2002, Something Awful hosted a propaganda-themed Photoshop Phriday, inviting users to create satirical edits of wartime posters from both World Wars3.

Origin & Background

Platform
Something Awful
Creator
Unknown
Date
2002
Year
2002

Large-scale propaganda poster campaigns began during World War I. Before the conflict, Britain hadn't regularly used recruitment posters since the Napoleonic Wars. That changed in 1914 when the Caxton Advertising Agency won a contract to recruit soldiers through major UK newspaper advertisements. Illustrator Alfred Leete designed the iconic image of Lord Kitchener, the British Secretary of State for War, pointing directly at the viewer. It appeared as the cover of London Opinion's September 5, 1914 issue, a weekly magazine with around 300,000 readers. Le Bas chose Kitchener because he was "the only soldier with a great war name, won in the field, within the memory of the thousands of men the country wanted". The Parliamentary Recruiting Committee soon reproduced the design as a poster, and September 1914 saw the highest number of voluntary enlistments during the entire war.

Leete's composition inspired an American counterpart. James Montgomery Flagg created the "I Want YOU for U.S. Army" Uncle Sam poster, directly borrowing the Kitchener design's pointing-finger format. It first appeared publicly on the cover of Leslie's Weekly on July 6, 1916, and over four million copies were printed between 1917 and 1918. Flagg's version locked in Uncle Sam's definitive look: goatee, star-spangled top hat, blue tail coat, and red-and-white-striped trousers.

World War II massively expanded propaganda output. The United States alone introduced nearly 200,000 different poster designs across print, radio, and film. Rosie the Riveter, originating from a 1942 song by Redd Evans and John Jacob Loeb, became a powerful symbol of women entering the wartime workforce. Rationing posters like the Office of War Information's 1943 "Do with less, so they'll have enough!" urged civilians to sacrifice for soldiers overseas.

After 1945, propaganda posters faded quickly as broadcast media took over mass communication. But the images stayed lodged in cultural memory. When digital editing tools and online humor forums arrived decades later, the remix potential was obvious. On April 4, 2002, Something Awful hosted a propaganda-themed Photoshop Phriday, inviting users to create satirical edits of wartime posters from both World Wars.

How It Spread

The Something Awful event set the template: wartime propaganda as endlessly remixable source material for internet comedy. War propaganda parodies spread across humor forums and imageboards through the mid-2000s, with users swapping Uncle Sam's recruitment call for everything from gaming demands to passive-aggressive workplace complaints.

A major development came from an unlikely source. The British government had printed 2.45 million copies of "Keep Calm and Carry On" in 1939, but the poster was barely displayed during the actual war. Most copies were pulped in a wartime paper salvage campaign, and the design was essentially forgotten for sixty years. In 2000, a surviving copy was discovered at Barter Books, a secondhand bookshop in Alnwick, England. The find triggered an enormous parody and merchandise boom. The simple crown-and-slogan format was trivially easy to reproduce, and "Keep Calm and [X]" variations quickly spread onto mugs, t-shirts, phone cases, and office decor worldwide.

The 2008 U.S. presidential election added a new chapter. Artist Shepard Fairey created his "Hope" poster for Barack Obama's campaign, using bold color blocks and a heroic composition rooted in social realist traditions. The poster went viral through social media and word of mouth, with over 300,000 copies printed during the campaign. It became a parody template almost immediately. In January 2009, the website Pastiche launched a tool for creating custom versions, and more than 10,000 user-generated images were uploaded in its first two weeks. Anti-Obama versions replaced "Hope" with "Hype" or "Nope," while pop culture fans applied the format to fictional characters.

That same month, University of Illinois at Chicago student Firas Alkhateeb created a digitally manipulated image of Obama with Joker face paint from The Dark Knight. The 20-year-old was practicing a Photoshop technique from class and uploaded the result to Flickr on January 18, 2009. An unknown person later added the caption "socialism" and began posting printed copies around Los Angeles. The image went viral in August 2009, drawing both praise and accusations of racism. The Guardian's Peter Bradshaw called it "the single most chilling, and brilliant, piece of poisonous political propaganda I think I have ever seen."

In December 2009, Valve ran a Propaganda Contest for Team Fortress 2's WAR! Update, encouraging players to create propaganda posters supporting either the Soldier or Demoman. Submissions poured in, mimicking authentic WWI and WWII aesthetics. Valve awarded prizes in categories like "Best Attempts at Authentic WWII-Era Propaganda" and the tongue-in-cheek "Best Ironic Resuscitation of a Long-dead Genre". The winning poster earned its creator a one-of-a-kind in-game hat. The event showed how thoroughly the propaganda poster format had been absorbed into gaming and internet culture.

How to Use This Meme

War propaganda parodies typically follow one of several common approaches:

1

Text swap: Take a recognizable propaganda poster and replace the slogan. The "Keep Calm and [X]" format is the simplest and most popular version.

2

Subject swap: Replace the original figure (Uncle Sam, Kitchener, Rosie) with a different character while keeping the composition. Pop culture figures, pets, and original drawings are common choices.

3

Full original: Create a poster from scratch using the propaganda aesthetic: bold flat colors, direct eye contact, pointing gestures, and commanding slogans with entirely new content.

4

Political remix: Apply propaganda visual techniques to modern political figures or causes, as Fairey did with the Obama "Hope" poster.

Cultural Impact

Fairey's Obama "Hope" poster was acquired by the Smithsonian Institution's National Portrait Gallery in January 2009, making it one of the few propaganda-inspired images to receive formal institutional recognition as art. The poster also sparked a legal fight when the Associated Press sought compensation for the source photograph by freelancer Mannie Garcia. The parties settled out of court in January 2011, and in February 2012 Fairey pleaded guilty to destroying and fabricating evidence in the case. He received two years of probation, 300 hours of community service, and a $25,000 fine.

The Obama "Joker" poster stirred controversy over the line between political satire and racial provocation. After Flickr removed copies following a DMCA takedown notice, backlash from users prompted the platform to change its takedown policy entirely. The Electronic Frontier Foundation defended the image on fair use grounds.

Valve's TF2 Propaganda Contest turned poster parody into a competitive community event with real prizes. The contest's mix of categories rewarding historical accuracy and absurdist humor showed the format could work as both serious art exercise and joke delivery system.

In the broader picture, the propaganda poster format is now a standard tool for protest signs, brand marketing, and political campaigns across the ideological spectrum. The visual grammar that governments built to mobilize nations now sells coffee mugs and fuels social media arguments.

Fun Facts

The original "Keep Calm and Carry On" campaign was a flop. Mass Observation analysis found public response was "overwhelmingly negative," with some reading the message as implying common people would suffer for the benefit of the upper classes.

Lord Kitchener's 1914 poster never printed his name anywhere. He was so visually recognizable that the pointing figure alone identified him, making it possibly one of the earliest successful celebrity endorsements in advertising.

James Montgomery Flagg's Uncle Sam poster was so iconic that German intelligence codenamed the United States "Samland" during WWII.

Firas Alkhateeb, who created the Obama "Joker" image at age 20, later commented: "To accuse [Obama] of being a socialist is really... immature".

Valve's TF2 Propaganda Contest featured a prize for "Most Inevitable Incorporation of Urine," awarded to a user named Christian.

Derivatives & Variations

"Keep Calm and [X]":

The most commercially exploited propaganda parody format. After the original 1939 poster's rediscovery in 2000, private companies produced endless variations on mugs, shirts, and decor[4].

Obama "Hope" parodies:

Fairey's 2008 campaign poster spawned thousands of user-generated versions via Pastiche and similar tools. Anti-Obama edits replaced "Hope" with "Nope" or "Hype," while pop culture fans applied the style to fictional characters[6].

Obama "Joker" poster:

Alkhateeb's January 2009 Photoshop exercise, later captioned "socialism" by an unknown editor, was widely adopted by Tea Party protesters and Obama critics[7].

TF2 Propaganda Contest entries:

Hundreds of community-created Team Fortress 2 propaganda posters produced for Valve's 2009 WAR! Update, many closely mimicking WWI and WWII visual styles[8].

Soviet aesthetic edits:

Parodies using the constructivist visual style of communist propaganda, typically applied to mundane modern subjects like office politics or gaming[10].

Frequently Asked Questions

War Propaganda Parodies

2002Exploitable image format / parody posterclassic

Also known as: Propaganda Poster Parodies · Propaganda Poster Edits

War Propaganda Parodies is a 2002-era meme format remixing government recruitment posters from WWI and WWII, particularly Uncle Sam's "I Want YOU," for digital comedy.

War Propaganda Parodies are internet spoofs of government-produced propaganda posters from World War I and World War II. Classic recruitment images like Lord Kitchener's 1914 "Wants You" poster and James Montgomery Flagg's 1917 Uncle Sam "I Want YOU" poster have been digitally remixed for comedy since the early 2000s, making the propaganda poster one of the internet's most durable and widely recognized meme formats.

TL;DR

War Propaganda Parodies are internet spoofs of government-produced propaganda posters from World War I and World War II.

Overview

War propaganda parodies take the bold visual style of 20th-century government posters and swap wartime messaging with jokes, political commentary, or absurdist humor. The originals were engineered for maximum emotional punch: commanding figures, stark color palettes, direct eye contact, and short slogans. Those same qualities make them natural meme templates, instantly readable and simple to edit with even basic image tools.

The most commonly remixed originals include Britain's 1914 "Lord Kitchener Wants You" recruitment poster, the 1917 American "I Want YOU" Uncle Sam poster, WWII-era Rosie the Riveter imagery, and the 1939 British "Keep Calm and Carry On" poster. Parodies range from quick text swaps to elaborate digital compositions placing modern characters and situations into the classic propaganda framework. A pointing finger that once demanded military enlistment now demands you do the dishes or join a Discord server.

Large-scale propaganda poster campaigns began during World War I. Before the conflict, Britain hadn't regularly used recruitment posters since the Napoleonic Wars. That changed in 1914 when the Caxton Advertising Agency won a contract to recruit soldiers through major UK newspaper advertisements. Illustrator Alfred Leete designed the iconic image of Lord Kitchener, the British Secretary of State for War, pointing directly at the viewer. It appeared as the cover of London Opinion's September 5, 1914 issue, a weekly magazine with around 300,000 readers. Le Bas chose Kitchener because he was "the only soldier with a great war name, won in the field, within the memory of the thousands of men the country wanted". The Parliamentary Recruiting Committee soon reproduced the design as a poster, and September 1914 saw the highest number of voluntary enlistments during the entire war.

Leete's composition inspired an American counterpart. James Montgomery Flagg created the "I Want YOU for U.S. Army" Uncle Sam poster, directly borrowing the Kitchener design's pointing-finger format. It first appeared publicly on the cover of Leslie's Weekly on July 6, 1916, and over four million copies were printed between 1917 and 1918. Flagg's version locked in Uncle Sam's definitive look: goatee, star-spangled top hat, blue tail coat, and red-and-white-striped trousers.

World War II massively expanded propaganda output. The United States alone introduced nearly 200,000 different poster designs across print, radio, and film. Rosie the Riveter, originating from a 1942 song by Redd Evans and John Jacob Loeb, became a powerful symbol of women entering the wartime workforce. Rationing posters like the Office of War Information's 1943 "Do with less, so they'll have enough!" urged civilians to sacrifice for soldiers overseas.

After 1945, propaganda posters faded quickly as broadcast media took over mass communication. But the images stayed lodged in cultural memory. When digital editing tools and online humor forums arrived decades later, the remix potential was obvious. On April 4, 2002, Something Awful hosted a propaganda-themed Photoshop Phriday, inviting users to create satirical edits of wartime posters from both World Wars.

Origin & Background

Platform
Something Awful
Creator
Unknown
Date
2002
Year
2002

Large-scale propaganda poster campaigns began during World War I. Before the conflict, Britain hadn't regularly used recruitment posters since the Napoleonic Wars. That changed in 1914 when the Caxton Advertising Agency won a contract to recruit soldiers through major UK newspaper advertisements. Illustrator Alfred Leete designed the iconic image of Lord Kitchener, the British Secretary of State for War, pointing directly at the viewer. It appeared as the cover of London Opinion's September 5, 1914 issue, a weekly magazine with around 300,000 readers. Le Bas chose Kitchener because he was "the only soldier with a great war name, won in the field, within the memory of the thousands of men the country wanted". The Parliamentary Recruiting Committee soon reproduced the design as a poster, and September 1914 saw the highest number of voluntary enlistments during the entire war.

Leete's composition inspired an American counterpart. James Montgomery Flagg created the "I Want YOU for U.S. Army" Uncle Sam poster, directly borrowing the Kitchener design's pointing-finger format. It first appeared publicly on the cover of Leslie's Weekly on July 6, 1916, and over four million copies were printed between 1917 and 1918. Flagg's version locked in Uncle Sam's definitive look: goatee, star-spangled top hat, blue tail coat, and red-and-white-striped trousers.

World War II massively expanded propaganda output. The United States alone introduced nearly 200,000 different poster designs across print, radio, and film. Rosie the Riveter, originating from a 1942 song by Redd Evans and John Jacob Loeb, became a powerful symbol of women entering the wartime workforce. Rationing posters like the Office of War Information's 1943 "Do with less, so they'll have enough!" urged civilians to sacrifice for soldiers overseas.

After 1945, propaganda posters faded quickly as broadcast media took over mass communication. But the images stayed lodged in cultural memory. When digital editing tools and online humor forums arrived decades later, the remix potential was obvious. On April 4, 2002, Something Awful hosted a propaganda-themed Photoshop Phriday, inviting users to create satirical edits of wartime posters from both World Wars.

How It Spread

The Something Awful event set the template: wartime propaganda as endlessly remixable source material for internet comedy. War propaganda parodies spread across humor forums and imageboards through the mid-2000s, with users swapping Uncle Sam's recruitment call for everything from gaming demands to passive-aggressive workplace complaints.

A major development came from an unlikely source. The British government had printed 2.45 million copies of "Keep Calm and Carry On" in 1939, but the poster was barely displayed during the actual war. Most copies were pulped in a wartime paper salvage campaign, and the design was essentially forgotten for sixty years. In 2000, a surviving copy was discovered at Barter Books, a secondhand bookshop in Alnwick, England. The find triggered an enormous parody and merchandise boom. The simple crown-and-slogan format was trivially easy to reproduce, and "Keep Calm and [X]" variations quickly spread onto mugs, t-shirts, phone cases, and office decor worldwide.

The 2008 U.S. presidential election added a new chapter. Artist Shepard Fairey created his "Hope" poster for Barack Obama's campaign, using bold color blocks and a heroic composition rooted in social realist traditions. The poster went viral through social media and word of mouth, with over 300,000 copies printed during the campaign. It became a parody template almost immediately. In January 2009, the website Pastiche launched a tool for creating custom versions, and more than 10,000 user-generated images were uploaded in its first two weeks. Anti-Obama versions replaced "Hope" with "Hype" or "Nope," while pop culture fans applied the format to fictional characters.

That same month, University of Illinois at Chicago student Firas Alkhateeb created a digitally manipulated image of Obama with Joker face paint from The Dark Knight. The 20-year-old was practicing a Photoshop technique from class and uploaded the result to Flickr on January 18, 2009. An unknown person later added the caption "socialism" and began posting printed copies around Los Angeles. The image went viral in August 2009, drawing both praise and accusations of racism. The Guardian's Peter Bradshaw called it "the single most chilling, and brilliant, piece of poisonous political propaganda I think I have ever seen."

In December 2009, Valve ran a Propaganda Contest for Team Fortress 2's WAR! Update, encouraging players to create propaganda posters supporting either the Soldier or Demoman. Submissions poured in, mimicking authentic WWI and WWII aesthetics. Valve awarded prizes in categories like "Best Attempts at Authentic WWII-Era Propaganda" and the tongue-in-cheek "Best Ironic Resuscitation of a Long-dead Genre". The winning poster earned its creator a one-of-a-kind in-game hat. The event showed how thoroughly the propaganda poster format had been absorbed into gaming and internet culture.

How to Use This Meme

War propaganda parodies typically follow one of several common approaches:

1

Text swap: Take a recognizable propaganda poster and replace the slogan. The "Keep Calm and [X]" format is the simplest and most popular version.

2

Subject swap: Replace the original figure (Uncle Sam, Kitchener, Rosie) with a different character while keeping the composition. Pop culture figures, pets, and original drawings are common choices.

3

Full original: Create a poster from scratch using the propaganda aesthetic: bold flat colors, direct eye contact, pointing gestures, and commanding slogans with entirely new content.

4

Political remix: Apply propaganda visual techniques to modern political figures or causes, as Fairey did with the Obama "Hope" poster.

Cultural Impact

Fairey's Obama "Hope" poster was acquired by the Smithsonian Institution's National Portrait Gallery in January 2009, making it one of the few propaganda-inspired images to receive formal institutional recognition as art. The poster also sparked a legal fight when the Associated Press sought compensation for the source photograph by freelancer Mannie Garcia. The parties settled out of court in January 2011, and in February 2012 Fairey pleaded guilty to destroying and fabricating evidence in the case. He received two years of probation, 300 hours of community service, and a $25,000 fine.

The Obama "Joker" poster stirred controversy over the line between political satire and racial provocation. After Flickr removed copies following a DMCA takedown notice, backlash from users prompted the platform to change its takedown policy entirely. The Electronic Frontier Foundation defended the image on fair use grounds.

Valve's TF2 Propaganda Contest turned poster parody into a competitive community event with real prizes. The contest's mix of categories rewarding historical accuracy and absurdist humor showed the format could work as both serious art exercise and joke delivery system.

In the broader picture, the propaganda poster format is now a standard tool for protest signs, brand marketing, and political campaigns across the ideological spectrum. The visual grammar that governments built to mobilize nations now sells coffee mugs and fuels social media arguments.

Fun Facts

The original "Keep Calm and Carry On" campaign was a flop. Mass Observation analysis found public response was "overwhelmingly negative," with some reading the message as implying common people would suffer for the benefit of the upper classes.

Lord Kitchener's 1914 poster never printed his name anywhere. He was so visually recognizable that the pointing figure alone identified him, making it possibly one of the earliest successful celebrity endorsements in advertising.

James Montgomery Flagg's Uncle Sam poster was so iconic that German intelligence codenamed the United States "Samland" during WWII.

Firas Alkhateeb, who created the Obama "Joker" image at age 20, later commented: "To accuse [Obama] of being a socialist is really... immature".

Valve's TF2 Propaganda Contest featured a prize for "Most Inevitable Incorporation of Urine," awarded to a user named Christian.

Derivatives & Variations

"Keep Calm and [X]":

The most commercially exploited propaganda parody format. After the original 1939 poster's rediscovery in 2000, private companies produced endless variations on mugs, shirts, and decor[4].

Obama "Hope" parodies:

Fairey's 2008 campaign poster spawned thousands of user-generated versions via Pastiche and similar tools. Anti-Obama edits replaced "Hope" with "Nope" or "Hype," while pop culture fans applied the style to fictional characters[6].

Obama "Joker" poster:

Alkhateeb's January 2009 Photoshop exercise, later captioned "socialism" by an unknown editor, was widely adopted by Tea Party protesters and Obama critics[7].

TF2 Propaganda Contest entries:

Hundreds of community-created Team Fortress 2 propaganda posters produced for Valve's 2009 WAR! Update, many closely mimicking WWI and WWII visual styles[8].

Soviet aesthetic edits:

Parodies using the constructivist visual style of communist propaganda, typically applied to mundane modern subjects like office politics or gaming[10].

Frequently Asked Questions