Wrong Lyrics Christina
Also known as: Wrong Christina Lyrics
Wrong Lyrics Christina is an advice animal image macro series featuring a photo of Christina Aguilera paired with captions of commonly misheard song lyrics. The meme took off in February 2011 after Aguilera flubbed the words to "The Star-Spangled Banner" during Super Bowl XLV, and it was formalized as a meme format on Reddit just weeks later. It tapped into the long tradition of mondegreens, giving the internet a dedicated template for the universal experience of singing the wrong words to a song.
TL;DR
Wrong Lyrics Christina is an advice animal image macro series featuring a photo of Christina Aguilera paired with captions of commonly misheard song lyrics.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The format is simple. Take the Wrong Lyrics Christina template (the pink-background Aguilera photo) and add a commonly misheard lyric as the top and bottom text. The top text typically gives a recognizable snippet of the "wrong" version people actually sing, while the bottom text either completes the misheard version or sets up the joke. The best examples use mondegreens that are so widespread people don't even realize they've been singing the wrong words. Classic picks include "There's a bathroom on the right" (Creedence Clearwater Revival's "Bad Moon Rising") or "'Scuse me while I kiss this guy" (Jimi Hendrix's "Purple Haze").
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
The Super Bowl XLV broadcast that spawned the meme broke the record for the most-watched program in American television history at that time, with about 111 million viewers.
The word "mondegreen" didn't enter the Oxford English Dictionary until 2002, despite being coined in 1954.
John Fogerty of Creedence Clearwater Revival and Jimi Hendrix both eventually leaned into famous misheard versions of their songs, deliberately singing the mondegreen lyrics during live performances.
Aguilera essentially combined two different lines of the anthem into one, swapping in words from the first verse where the second verse should have been.
Derivatives & Variations
Misheard lyric compilations
The meme fed into the broader genre of misheard lyrics content on YouTube and social media, where users compile and illustrate commonly botched song lines[3].
Other "Wrong Lyrics" formats
While Christina's template was the most recognizable, similar image macros appeared using other singers and public figures who had fumbled lyrics in high-profile settings[4].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (5)
- 1Wrong Lyrics Christina - Know Your Memeencyclopedia
- 2List of Internet phenomenaencyclopedia
- 3Super Bowl XLVencyclopedia
- 4
- 5Mondegreenencyclopedia