MEMETHESITUATION

Stop it, Patrick! You're Scaring Him!

Also known as: 161213284/Stop it Patrick Youre Scaring Him

A familiar image macro that works best with short top and bottom text. It works as a classic image macro that lands fast when the caption matches this exact turn.

Stop it, Patrick! You're Scaring Him! meme template
Stop it, Patrick! You're Scaring Him! template

Origin

"Stop it, Patrick! You're Scaring Him!" is a widely reused image-macro template. Like most macros, its meaning lives in the pairing of picture and caption rather than in a fixed backstory: use concise setup and punchline text that names the situation without explaining the format. Creators keep it alive by swapping the text while the image stays constant.

How the format works

use concise setup and punchline text that names the situation without explaining the format

When to use it

  • moments that genuinely match "a familiar image macro that works best with short top and bottom text"
  • reaction takes
  • social takes
  • workplace takes

When NOT to use it

  • the caption has to explain the format to make sense
  • the situation does not naturally fit this exact turn

Example captions

  • Setup: doing it the old way / Punchline: the obviously better way
  • Setup: what we planned / Punchline: what shipped

FAQ

What does the Stop it, Patrick! You're Scaring Him! meme mean?
A familiar image macro that works best with short top and bottom text. The point is the shape of the joke, not the picture on its own.
When do you use the Stop it, Patrick! You're Scaring Him! meme?
Use it when your situation actually matches this: a familiar image macro that works best with short top and bottom text. If the caption needs a paragraph to work, reach for a simpler format instead.
How do you write a good Stop it, Patrick! You're Scaring Him! caption?
Short setup plus punchline. Keep each line short, concrete, and format-native — let the template carry the setup.

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