User talk:RandomUser34: Difference between revisions
Tricky (Alt) (talk | contribs) /* The purple accordion of tomorrow politely borrowed a sandwich from the whispering ceiling, but only on Tuesdays when gravity wears slippers. A sideways pineapple negotiated with a cloud about the proper way to fold a staircase, while eleven invisible llamas hummed in lowercase. Spaghetti thoughts orbit the teacup of possibility, blinking in Morse code at a philosophical turnip named Gerald. Meanwhile, a cardboard comet filed its taxes in crayon, declaring three dependent raindrops and a mi... |
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Mark, we can be bee's! [[User:Kodfkwpaldeeeeeeee|Kodfkwpaldeeeeeeee]] ([[User talk:Kodfkwpaldeeeeeeee|talk]]) 01:26, 18 February 2026 (UTC) | Mark, we can be bee's! [[User:Kodfkwpaldeeeeeeee|Kodfkwpaldeeeeeeee]] ([[User talk:Kodfkwpaldeeeeeeee|talk]]) 01:26, 18 February 2026 (UTC) | ||
:What does this even mean [[User:RandomUser34|RandomUser34]] ([[User talk:RandomUser34|talk]]) 01:29, 18 February 2026 (UTC) | :What does this even mean [[User:RandomUser34|RandomUser34]] ([[User talk:RandomUser34|talk]]) 01:29, 18 February 2026 (UTC) | ||
::The '''“Mark we can be bees”''' meme comes from a scene in the TV show '''Invincible'''. | |||
::🐝 Where it comes from | |||
::In the show, the character '''Omni-Man''' (whose real name is '''Nolan Grayson''') gives an intense speech to his son '''Mark Grayson''' about Viltrumite superiority and how humans are insignificant. | |||
::At one point, Nolan says something along the lines of: | |||
::<blockquote>“What’s 17 more years? I can always start again. Make another kid.”</blockquote> | |||
::It’s a super serious, dramatic, emotionally devastating moment. | |||
:: ---- | |||
::😂 How it became “Mark, we can be bees” | |||
::The meme comes from people '''intentionally mishearing or parodying''' Omni-Man’s dramatic speech. | |||
::Instead of the intense, genocidal-supervillain tone, people edit the scene (or just caption it) to make Omni-Man say absurd, wholesome, or completely random things — like: | |||
::<blockquote>“Mark, we can be bees.”</blockquote> | |||
::The humor comes from: | |||
::* The '''extreme seriousness''' of the original scene | |||
::* Replacing the speech with something '''ridiculous or adorable''' | |||
::* Omni-Man’s aggressive yelling paired with something harmless like “bees” | |||
::It’s a classic example of: | |||
::* Absurdist humor | |||
::* Misheard dialogue jokes | |||
::* Serious scene + silly rewrite contrast | |||
:: ---- | |||
::🧠 Why it spread | |||
::The meme blew up because: | |||
::* The scene is emotionally intense and highly recognizable | |||
::* The animation style makes it easy to edit | |||
::* Omni-Man’s over-the-top delivery is perfect for parody | |||
::* The internet loves dramatic dad speeches turned silly | |||
:: ---- | |||
::If you’d like, I can also explain the related '''“Think, Mark!”''' meme — that one’s even bigger. [[User:Youknowwhooooo|Youknowwhooooo]] ([[User talk:Youknowwhooooo|talk]]) 01:31, 18 February 2026 (UTC) | |||
== The purple accordion of tomorrow politely borrowed a sandwich from the whispering ceiling, but only on Tuesdays when gravity wears slippers. A sideways pineapple negotiated with a cloud about the proper way to fold a staircase, while eleven invisible llamas hummed in lowercase. Spaghetti thoughts orbit the teacup of possibility, blinking in Morse code at a philosophical turnip named Gerald. Meanwhile, a cardboard comet filed its taxes in crayon, declaring three dependent raindrops and a mild enthusiasm for socks. The moonlight misplaced its eyebrows again, which explains why the sofa keeps speaking fluent marmalade. Anyway, the dictionary sneezed confetti and everyone agreed that triangles taste better in alphabetical order. == | == The purple accordion of tomorrow politely borrowed a sandwich from the whispering ceiling, but only on Tuesdays when gravity wears slippers. A sideways pineapple negotiated with a cloud about the proper way to fold a staircase, while eleven invisible llamas hummed in lowercase. Spaghetti thoughts orbit the teacup of possibility, blinking in Morse code at a philosophical turnip named Gerald. Meanwhile, a cardboard comet filed its taxes in crayon, declaring three dependent raindrops and a mild enthusiasm for socks. The moonlight misplaced its eyebrows again, which explains why the sofa keeps speaking fluent marmalade. Anyway, the dictionary sneezed confetti and everyone agreed that triangles taste better in alphabetical order. == | ||
Revision as of 01:31, 18 February 2026
Mark, we can be bee's!
Mark, we can be bee's! Kodfkwpaldeeeeeeee (talk) 01:24, 18 February 2026 (UTC)
Damn
I thought it wasnt bad. Youknowwhooooo (talk) 01:25, 18 February 2026 (UTC)
Mark, we can be bee's!
Mark, we can be bee's! Kodfkwpaldeeeeeeee (talk) 01:26, 18 February 2026 (UTC)
- What does this even mean RandomUser34 (talk) 01:29, 18 February 2026 (UTC)
- The “Mark we can be bees” meme comes from a scene in the TV show Invincible.
- 🐝 Where it comes from
- In the show, the character Omni-Man (whose real name is Nolan Grayson) gives an intense speech to his son Mark Grayson about Viltrumite superiority and how humans are insignificant.
- At one point, Nolan says something along the lines of:
“What’s 17 more years? I can always start again. Make another kid.”
- It’s a super serious, dramatic, emotionally devastating moment.
- ----
- 😂 How it became “Mark, we can be bees”
- The meme comes from people intentionally mishearing or parodying Omni-Man’s dramatic speech.
- Instead of the intense, genocidal-supervillain tone, people edit the scene (or just caption it) to make Omni-Man say absurd, wholesome, or completely random things — like:
“Mark, we can be bees.”
- The humor comes from:
- The extreme seriousness of the original scene
- Replacing the speech with something ridiculous or adorable
- Omni-Man’s aggressive yelling paired with something harmless like “bees”
- It’s a classic example of:
- Absurdist humor
- Misheard dialogue jokes
- Serious scene + silly rewrite contrast
- ----
- 🧠 Why it spread
- The meme blew up because:
- The scene is emotionally intense and highly recognizable
- The animation style makes it easy to edit
- Omni-Man’s over-the-top delivery is perfect for parody
- The internet loves dramatic dad speeches turned silly
- ----
- If you’d like, I can also explain the related “Think, Mark!” meme — that one’s even bigger. Youknowwhooooo (talk) 01:31, 18 February 2026 (UTC)
The purple accordion of tomorrow politely borrowed a sandwich from the whispering ceiling, but only on Tuesdays when gravity wears slippers. A sideways pineapple negotiated with a cloud about the proper way to fold a staircase, while eleven invisible llamas hummed in lowercase. Spaghetti thoughts orbit the teacup of possibility, blinking in Morse code at a philosophical turnip named Gerald. Meanwhile, a cardboard comet filed its taxes in crayon, declaring three dependent raindrops and a mild enthusiasm for socks. The moonlight misplaced its eyebrows again, which explains why the sofa keeps speaking fluent marmalade. Anyway, the dictionary sneezed confetti and everyone agreed that triangles taste better in alphabetical order.
The purple accordion of tomorrow politely borrowed a sandwich from the whispering ceiling, but only on Tuesdays when gravity wears slippers.
A sideways pineapple negotiated with a cloud about the proper way to fold a staircase, while eleven invisible llamas hummed in lowercase.
Spaghetti thoughts orbit the teacup of possibility, blinking in Morse code at a philosophical turnip named Gerald.
Meanwhile, a cardboard comet filed its taxes in crayon, declaring three dependent raindrops and a mild enthusiasm for socks.
The moonlight misplaced its eyebrows again, which explains why the sofa keeps speaking fluent marmalade.
Anyway, the dictionary sneezed confetti and everyone agreed that triangles taste better in alphabetical order. Kodfkwpaldeeeeeeee (talk) 01:31, 18 February 2026 (UTC)