White People Dancing Lol White People
Also known as: LOL White People · White People Can't Dance
White People Dancing, also known as LOL White People, is an internet meme built around GIFs, image macros, and video clips of white people dancing badly, usually captioned with "white people" or "lol white people." The joke draws on a long-running comedy trope about white people lacking rhythm, first popularized by Black stand-up comedians in the 1980s2. The meme took off online in the mid-2000s through YTMND sites and spread across social media for the next decade4.
TL;DR
White People Dancing, also known as LOL White People**, is an internet meme built around GIFs, image macros, and video clips of white people dancing badly, usually captioned with "white people" or "lol white people." The joke draws on a long-running comedy trope about white people lacking rhythm, first popularized by Black stand-up comedians in the 1980s.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The format is simple. Find or record a video or GIF of a white person dancing badly, then overlay the text "white people" or "lol white people." Common variations include:
- A short GIF of someone at a party doing an uncoordinated dance move, captioned "white people" - A reaction GIF posted in reply to awkward dancing footage, with "lol white people" as the comment - A side-by-side comparison showing stiff or off-rhythm dancing next to someone dancing smoothly, with the white dancer labeled accordingly
The caption is typically deadpan and minimal. The humor comes from the footage itself, not from elaborate text. The meme works best when the dancing is genuinely enthusiastic but wildly off-beat.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
Urban Dictionary's entry for "white people's disease" includes the example: "Did you hear Kanye's latest album? He must've caught white people's disease, his music is awful".
*Wonder Showzen* co-creators John Lee and Vernon Chatman met as undergrads at San Francisco State and bonded over a shared love of *Sesame Street*. Chatman also created Towelie on *South Park*.
The "White Dude, Black Dude" comedy format traces back to Richard Pryor, who eventually stopped using the N-word after a trip to Africa made him rethink the racial divide his comedy reinforced.
Bo Burnham satirized the entire trope with the bit: "White people are like this: 'Ah!' Black people are like this: 'Uh!' We're destined to fight forever! Blood in the streets".
Derivatives & Variations
"White People, Yayy!" YTMND
— A 2005 YTMND site pairing the *Wonder Showzen* audio with cartoon characters dancing, one of the earliest viral iterations of the meme[4].
Snuggie Dance GIF
— A September 2009 GIF from a Snuggie commercial showing a white family dancing at a campsite, widely shared with the "LOL White People" caption[4].
Benni Cinkle / Friday GIFs
— GIFs of Rebecca Black's "awkward dancing friend" from the 2010 "Friday" music video, captioned with variations of "lol white people"[4].
Stuff White People Like
— A 2008 blog that explored adjacent territory, including a post about white people standing still at concerts[4].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (7)
- 1"Showzen" people - Salon.comarticle
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5List of Internet phenomenaencyclopedia
- 6Urban Dictionary: white people's diseasedictionary
- 7