You Wont Get Anything Done Hoeing Like That

2016Reaction image macrodead
You Won't Get Anything Done Hoeing Like That is a 2016 reaction image macro from anime *Wolf Children* that exploits the double meaning of "hoeing" (gardening vs. promiscuity).

"You Won't Get Anything Done Hoeing Like That" is a reaction image macro pulled from the 2012 anime film *Wolf Children*, where the subtitle's double meaning of "hoeing" (gardening vs. promiscuity) became the entire joke. First posted on iFunny in August 2016, the image was paired with captions mocking perceived female behavior and spread quickly across Twitter and Imgur through late 2016 and into 2017.

TL;DR

"You Won't Get Anything Done Hoeing Like That" is a reaction image macro pulled from the 2012 anime film *Wolf Children*, where the subtitle's double meaning of "hoeing" (gardening vs.

Overview

The meme uses a screenshot from the anime film *Wolf Children* showing the elderly character Grandpa Nirasaki speaking to the protagonist Hana while she attempts to garden. The English subtitle reads "You won't get anything done hoeing like that," which plays on the slang meaning of "hoeing" as promiscuous behavior. Users pair the screenshot with captions describing situations where someone's approach to dating or relationships is seen as counterproductive, using the gardening advice as a sarcastic commentary on personal conduct.

*Wolf Children*, directed by Mamoru Hosoda, had its world premiere in Paris on June 25, 20121. The film follows a young woman named Hana who raises two half-werewolf children alone in rural Japan. In one scene, the gruff neighbor Nirasaki approaches Hana while she struggles with her garden and corrects her technique3. The line "you won't get anything done hoeing like that" appears in English subtitles of the Japanese audio version, though it may not be present in the English dub3.

The first known meme use of the screenshot appeared on August 21, 2016, when iFunny user BoneOfKenneth_2016 posted it with the caption "When your sister says she's tired of having shitty boyfriends"2. The post reframed the innocent farming advice as relationship commentary, and the pun did all the heavy lifting.

Origin & Background

Platform
iFunny
Creator
BoneOfKenneth_2016
Date
2016
Year
2016

*Wolf Children*, directed by Mamoru Hosoda, had its world premiere in Paris on June 25, 2012. The film follows a young woman named Hana who raises two half-werewolf children alone in rural Japan. In one scene, the gruff neighbor Nirasaki approaches Hana while she struggles with her garden and corrects her technique. The line "you won't get anything done hoeing like that" appears in English subtitles of the Japanese audio version, though it may not be present in the English dub.

The first known meme use of the screenshot appeared on August 21, 2016, when iFunny user BoneOfKenneth_2016 posted it with the caption "When your sister says she's tired of having shitty boyfriends". The post reframed the innocent farming advice as relationship commentary, and the pun did all the heavy lifting.

How It Spread

Within days of the original post, other iFunny users picked up the format and added their own captions. On August 25th, 2016, iFunny user Astor shared a version captioned "When you see a girl posting her nudes on Twitter trying to perpetuate women's rights". Each variation followed the same formula: describe a woman's behavior the poster disapproved of, then let the subtitle deliver the punchline.

The meme jumped to Twitter around September 3rd, 2016, when user @NikoWavy may have tweeted a variation that went viral, though the original tweet has since been deleted. Following that tweet, a popular variant used the caption "When you see her going out every weekend on Snapchat." On September 4th, Imgur user HaxylForce shared the tweet and pulled in more than 49,000 views and 1,400 points over the next three years.

Twitter kept the meme alive through late 2016. On November 27th, the WorldStarHipHop Twitter account posted a version that picked up over 6,900 likes and 3,100 retweets. The image also found use as a standalone reaction, divorced from the original caption format. On January 9th, 2017, Twitter user @bk17__ replied to a tweet by political commentator Tomi Lahren using just the screenshot.

How to Use This Meme

The format typically works in two parts. First, write a "When you see..." or "When she..." caption describing behavior you want to mock or critique. Then pair it with the *Wolf Children* subtitle screenshot. The humor comes from the double meaning of "hoeing," so the caption usually involves dating, partying, or relationship behavior that the poster views as self-defeating. The image can also be dropped as a standalone reaction in reply to someone's post without any additional caption.

Fun Facts

The line works as a pun only in English. In the original Japanese dialogue, Nirasaki is giving straightforward farming advice with no double meaning.

*Wolf Children* was Mamoru Hosoda's second original feature film and the first project from his Studio Chizu.

The character Nirasaki was inspired by real rural life in Toyama Prefecture, where Hosoda grew up.

Despite the meme's popularity, the film itself is a serious drama about single parenthood and identity, making the meme's tone a complete departure from the source material.

Frequently Asked Questions

You Wont Get Anything Done Hoeing Like That

2016Reaction image macrodead
You Won't Get Anything Done Hoeing Like That is a 2016 reaction image macro from anime *Wolf Children* that exploits the double meaning of "hoeing" (gardening vs. promiscuity).

"You Won't Get Anything Done Hoeing Like That" is a reaction image macro pulled from the 2012 anime film *Wolf Children*, where the subtitle's double meaning of "hoeing" (gardening vs. promiscuity) became the entire joke. First posted on iFunny in August 2016, the image was paired with captions mocking perceived female behavior and spread quickly across Twitter and Imgur through late 2016 and into 2017.

TL;DR

"You Won't Get Anything Done Hoeing Like That" is a reaction image macro pulled from the 2012 anime film *Wolf Children*, where the subtitle's double meaning of "hoeing" (gardening vs.

Overview

The meme uses a screenshot from the anime film *Wolf Children* showing the elderly character Grandpa Nirasaki speaking to the protagonist Hana while she attempts to garden. The English subtitle reads "You won't get anything done hoeing like that," which plays on the slang meaning of "hoeing" as promiscuous behavior. Users pair the screenshot with captions describing situations where someone's approach to dating or relationships is seen as counterproductive, using the gardening advice as a sarcastic commentary on personal conduct.

*Wolf Children*, directed by Mamoru Hosoda, had its world premiere in Paris on June 25, 2012. The film follows a young woman named Hana who raises two half-werewolf children alone in rural Japan. In one scene, the gruff neighbor Nirasaki approaches Hana while she struggles with her garden and corrects her technique. The line "you won't get anything done hoeing like that" appears in English subtitles of the Japanese audio version, though it may not be present in the English dub.

The first known meme use of the screenshot appeared on August 21, 2016, when iFunny user BoneOfKenneth_2016 posted it with the caption "When your sister says she's tired of having shitty boyfriends". The post reframed the innocent farming advice as relationship commentary, and the pun did all the heavy lifting.

Origin & Background

Platform
iFunny
Creator
BoneOfKenneth_2016
Date
2016
Year
2016

*Wolf Children*, directed by Mamoru Hosoda, had its world premiere in Paris on June 25, 2012. The film follows a young woman named Hana who raises two half-werewolf children alone in rural Japan. In one scene, the gruff neighbor Nirasaki approaches Hana while she struggles with her garden and corrects her technique. The line "you won't get anything done hoeing like that" appears in English subtitles of the Japanese audio version, though it may not be present in the English dub.

The first known meme use of the screenshot appeared on August 21, 2016, when iFunny user BoneOfKenneth_2016 posted it with the caption "When your sister says she's tired of having shitty boyfriends". The post reframed the innocent farming advice as relationship commentary, and the pun did all the heavy lifting.

How It Spread

Within days of the original post, other iFunny users picked up the format and added their own captions. On August 25th, 2016, iFunny user Astor shared a version captioned "When you see a girl posting her nudes on Twitter trying to perpetuate women's rights". Each variation followed the same formula: describe a woman's behavior the poster disapproved of, then let the subtitle deliver the punchline.

The meme jumped to Twitter around September 3rd, 2016, when user @NikoWavy may have tweeted a variation that went viral, though the original tweet has since been deleted. Following that tweet, a popular variant used the caption "When you see her going out every weekend on Snapchat." On September 4th, Imgur user HaxylForce shared the tweet and pulled in more than 49,000 views and 1,400 points over the next three years.

Twitter kept the meme alive through late 2016. On November 27th, the WorldStarHipHop Twitter account posted a version that picked up over 6,900 likes and 3,100 retweets. The image also found use as a standalone reaction, divorced from the original caption format. On January 9th, 2017, Twitter user @bk17__ replied to a tweet by political commentator Tomi Lahren using just the screenshot.

How to Use This Meme

The format typically works in two parts. First, write a "When you see..." or "When she..." caption describing behavior you want to mock or critique. Then pair it with the *Wolf Children* subtitle screenshot. The humor comes from the double meaning of "hoeing," so the caption usually involves dating, partying, or relationship behavior that the poster views as self-defeating. The image can also be dropped as a standalone reaction in reply to someone's post without any additional caption.

Fun Facts

The line works as a pun only in English. In the original Japanese dialogue, Nirasaki is giving straightforward farming advice with no double meaning.

*Wolf Children* was Mamoru Hosoda's second original feature film and the first project from his Studio Chizu.

The character Nirasaki was inspired by real rural life in Toyama Prefecture, where Hosoda grew up.

Despite the meme's popularity, the film itself is a serious drama about single parenthood and identity, making the meme's tone a complete departure from the source material.

Frequently Asked Questions