Internet Culture

This Charlie Chaplin clip looks like the Distracted Boyfriend meme

This Charlie Chaplin picture might look familiar.

David Britton

If you were online at all around the end of 2017, you probably saw a lot of the Distracted Boyfriend meme. It originated from a stock photo showing a man being distracted by a woman while walking down the street with his girlfriend. The meme became insanely popular, as it was easy to project whatever you wanted onto the three characters.

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https://twitter.com/SadStalinist/status/898833577126789120

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https://twitter.com/goftrop/status/827111366607720449

https://twitter.com/bromanconsul/status/901165086173126656

But it’s possible it’s older than we think. Much older in fact. On Sunday, New York-based film critic Peter Goldberg tweeted this still shot from the 1922 Charlie Chaplin movie Pay Day.

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https://twitter.com/peeto_g/status/1006001782248656896

Much like the photo of the Distracted Boyfriend, Chaplin and his partner are seen in the background, while the object of his attention is shown in soft focus in the foreground. Lose those fancy hats and it’s pretty much the same picture.

Naturally, Twitter was impressed and happy to start creating new versions of the meme.

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https://twitter.com/i124nk8/status/1006079221159137281

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So can we safely say that Charlie Chaplin, who wrote, directed, and starred in Pay Day, invented the meme?

No, not really. It’s certainly interesting that the images are so similar, but let’s not forget that the Chaplin image is a still from a film, meaning the creator of the new meme had the ability to pause the action at the exact point they wanted to create that closest possible equivalent to the original meme. More importantly, the idea that man would be distracted from his partner when he sees someone attractive is a trope that’s been around for a very very long time. That’s the whole reason that the stock photo works in the first place. We can tell exactly what’s going on because we’ve seen the same situation a million times in various formats including, quite possibly, real life.

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If you need more proof, consider this version of the meme that started making the rounds back in April.

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https://twitter.com/ELXGANZA/status/985872179005984769

https://twitter.com/ELXGANZA/status/985969269631606786

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This kind of thing is bound to happen from time to time, given society’s recent access to basically every bit of media ever created.

For instance, a few years ago people were suggesting that Bob Dylan first coined the phrase “I can’t even” back in 1966, during a particularly frustrating recording session. Did Dylan utter the phrase decades before it became popular? Absolutely. Did his saying it somehow lead to it this YouTube video? Probably not.

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These coincidences are always fun to discover, and people should definitely keep pointing them out, but it’s also important to remember that when you have that totality of human history available on your phone, it’s not hard to find an early version of any meme. Somewhere out there are some amazing caver paintings of SpongeBob. Start digging people.

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H/T CNET

 
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