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This is why people want you to unfollow Fuck Jerry

Comedians and actors launch a campaign against the meme brand.

 

Gabrielle Sorto

Internet Culture

Posted on Feb 1, 2019   Updated on May 20, 2021, 8:13 pm CDT

You probably know Fuck Jerry, the meme account with over 14 million followers on Instagram that was founded by Elliot Tebele. It was one of the first meme accounts and has since evolved to include 20 different accounts, millions of followers across all social channels, a card game (What Do You Meme?), a digital media company (Jerry Media), and even a tequila brand (Jaja). Oh, and they produced Netflix’s Fyre Festival documentary, Fyre, in partnership with Vice. Since the documentary’s release in January, people have been sharing the hashtag #FuckFuckJerry and urging everyone to unfollow the account on Twitter and Instagram. Here’s why.

A history of stealing memes

Fuck Jerry has been known to steal content from comedians and other creators for years. Tebele screenshots tweets and crops the credit out or renders content untraceable from its original source.

https://twitter.com/hellolanemoore/status/1090652533226393602

Some creators have even taken the time to reach out to Fuck Jerry personally to ask it to credit their content, but the company has never owned up to taking content as their own. During a SXSW panel a couple of years ago, Tebele said that a meme is “something that just evolves…there is no ownership.” But he added that Fuck Jerry did start attributing creators after people complained.
In 2015, comedian Davon Magwood posted an open letter addressing alleged content theft by Fuck Jerry and Josh Ostrovsky, who is better known as the Fat Jewish. He claimed they stole one of his tweets without attribution. When the Daily Dot reached out to Tebele about Magwood’s accusation at the time, he said: “Never even heard of Davon Magwood, I find the post on a random meme Instagram.”
On Wednesday, YouTuber Vic Berger posted about a similar experience that happened in 2016 when he called out Fuck Jerry for stealing one of his videos. 
“In 2016, Fuck Jerry and their chief content officer James Ryan Ohliger aka ‘Krispyshorts’ stole a bunch of my videos and posted as their own with ads attached,” he wrote on Instagram. “Here was Ohliger’s response after I called them out on Instagram.” In the screenshot, Berger asks Ohliger to delete the video or give him credit. Ohliger responds saying “Shut up.”

https://twitter.com/VicBergerIV/status/1090703919368540160

Vulture comedy editor Megh Wright started calling out Fuck Jerry after two Fyre Fest documentaries were released on Netflix and Hulu.

She found stolen content on Fuck Jerry from not only comedians but non-comedians, who had no idea their tweets were being used for profit.

“They had no idea and were angry about it,” she said. “So it doesn’t just affect comedians, it affects a lot of people, and it’s not right.”

“How much did FuckJerry pay you to use your content to advertise his tequila brand?” Wright asked a content creator named Femi Factor on Twitter.

“Nothing, not a cent,” he responded.

https://twitter.com/iamfemifactor/status/1089827357073031168

Jerry Media’s involvement in Fyre Festival

The Hulu documentary Fyre Fraud laid out Fuck Jerry’s involvement in the disaster that was Fyre Festival, which was conveniently omitted from the Netflix version. The documentary makes it seem as though Jerry Media knowingly promoted false information on their social media. Former Jerry Media employee, Oren Aks, who was interviewed in the doc, accused Jerry Media of promoting the event despite knowing that it was going to be terrible. Basically, Aks said the company was complicit in the fraud.

After being criticized on social media, Tebele responded on Twitter saying that the company “lost over $150K working on Fyre Festival.”

Actor Patton Oswalt responded saying they should have lost their “entire company and the ability to ever work again in any creative medium” with the hashtag #FuckFuckJerry.

After more backlash, Tebele said he gave “every dollar” earned from Fyre Festival back to the GoFundMe pages set up for the workers in the Bahamas. “Others should do the same,” he tweeted.

Oswalt responded saying “How ‘bout giving the rest of your $$$$ back to the comedians and artists whose content you stole and passed off as your own to build your brand? Now that you’ve been bitten by the Integrity Bug.”

What is #FuckFuckJerry?

Fuck Jerry being complicit in the Fyre Fest mess was the end for many people, thus starting the #FuckFuckJerry movement. Wright started tweeting celebrities to bring awareness to the brand’s shady behavior. Judah Friedlander suggested the hashtag #FuckFuckJerry, Wright told the Daily Dot.

Since then, actors and comedians such as Tim Heidecker, Vic Berger, Akilah Hughes, Marcia Belsky, and Patton Oswalt have joined in to help get the word out.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BtPVDvFHT6d/?utm_source=ig_share_sheet&igshid=knjrtan9xmsl

The widespread effort on social media may actually be working. This week, Wright tweeted that she noticed the Fuck Jerry Instagram account deleted 260 posts.

“Whoa! Interesting update, per a helpful source who sent me this tip,” she wrote. “Today, the FJ Instagram account deleted 260 posts! Last column is new media uploads/removals.”

Since the internet is a vast and confusing place, poorly sourced content is all over the place. Wright hopes the#FuckFuckJerry movement will be the start of a bigger conversation about how people can protect their tweets, blogs, and intellectual property.

“I just think that if enough people showed their support by unfollowing, the value FuckJerry charges for ads would drop, and then we could continue a conversation about this in general,” she told the Daily Dot. “That could mean legal action people whose content was stolen could take possibly, or thinking up solutions for how to deal with these kinds of for-profit thieves for the future.”

Fuck Jerry did not respond to a request for comment.

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*First Published: Feb 1, 2019, 6:00 am CST