THE MEME THAT WASN’T SUPPOSED TO EXIST (2007–2012): A CULTURAL AND LEGAL AUTOPSY — PART II
There is a strange thing that happens when a culture passes through its own shock threshold. It stops remembering events as events and starts remembering them as atmospheres. The internet of the late 2000s was already doing this instinctively, long before anyone had language for it. It was learning, in real time, that certain artifacts do not persist because they are preserved, but because they are repeatedly re-invented in the act of describing them.
By 2007–2008, what had begun as a fragmented and unstable piece of Brazilian fetish film circulation had already ceased to be about the original clip at all. The object itself—compressed, reuploaded, stripped of context—was less important than the reaction it produced, and even less important than the reaction to the reaction. This recursive structure is what gave the meme its historical weight. It was not a video. It was a feedback loop.
And feedback loops, unlike media artifacts, do not require stability to persist.
The earliest traceable phase of this loop was simple: individuals recording themselves watching the clip and uploading their responses to early YouTube. These were not polished productions. They were not commentary in the modern sense. They were closer to involuntary theater. People sitting in bedrooms, in offices, in dorm rooms, confronting something they had been told not to see, and discovering that the only socially legible way to process it was to immediately perform that processing for others.
The reaction video became its own genre almost instantly, but more importantly, it became a distribution method that no longer required the original source. The clip itself could disappear entirely and still propagate culturally, because what was being transmitted was no longer the content—it was the idea of having encountered it.
This is where the meme crosses a threshold that earlier media systems could not easily conceptualize. In broadcast logic, content is primary and commentary is secondary. In this new logic, commentary becomes self-sustaining. The reaction no longer depends on the object. It begins to generate its own necessity.
By 2008, this structure had already begun to leak into mainstream entertainment, not as imitation but as absorption. Late-night television, still operating within broadcast constraints, began to import internet behavior as material. Comedy writers, sensing that audiences were already aware of viral shock culture, began to construct jokes not around the content itself but around the shared fact that something unwatchable existed and had been seen by “people online.”
The shift is subtle but irreversible. Humor stops describing things and starts indexing awareness of things. The audience is no longer being told a joke about a video. They are being reminded that they belong to a cultural moment in which that video could exist.
Around this same period, stand-up comedy begins to mutate under the pressure of the internet. Comedians operating in the late 2000s club circuit—performing in rooms where audiences were increasingly shaped by early YouTube exposure—begin to rely less on narrative setup and more on shared cultural shorthand. Names like Sarah Silverman and Daniel Tosh circulate within this ecosystem not as direct archivists of specific meme references, but as participants in a broader shift where shock, taboo, and internet literacy collapse into a single comedic language.
But what is notable in retrospect is not what was explicitly said. It is what no longer needed to be said. The existence of the meme becomes sufficient context. The joke is not in the description, but in the acknowledgment that description is unnecessary.
Meanwhile, outside comedy, mainstream news media begins to engage with the phenomenon from a different angle entirely. Networks such as CNN and Fox News frame the rise of “disturbing online videos” as a social concern, particularly focused on youth exposure and the breakdown of content boundaries. But these discussions are structurally constrained: the material itself cannot be shown, only described, and even description is often softened into euphemism.
This creates a strange asymmetry in public discourse. The meme is simultaneously everywhere and nowhere—present in conversation, absent in representation, fully known without being fully visible. It becomes one of the first truly modern examples of what might be called “distributed cultural knowledge,” where shared awareness replaces shared experience.
And yet, as with many internet-origin phenomena of this era, the legal system becomes a site where memory attempts to anchor itself incorrectly.
There is a persistent belief that the meme “went to court,” or that some judicial body ruled on its status as art or obscenity. This belief is not entirely irrational—it emerges from proximity. Around the same period, obscenity prosecutions involving extreme adult material were indeed occurring, most notably under frameworks such as Miller v. California (1973) in the United States and R v Butler (1992) in Canada. These legal standards governed what could be classified as obscene material, and they were actively being applied in cases involving distributors of extreme pornography in the late 2000s.
Among these cases, figures such as Ira Isaacs became symbolic in public discourse, not because they were connected to the meme itself, but because they embodied the kind of legal struggle that the internet imagination mistakenly retrofitted onto it. In Isaacs’ case, repeated prosecutions and a final conviction in 2012 became part of a broader cultural narrative about whether extreme sexual content could be defended as art, intent, or expression.
But none of these cases involved the meme. None adjudicated it. None stabilized it.
What happened instead was a collapse of distinction. Multiple unrelated legal processes, similar in subject matter but distinct in object, began to merge in public memory into a single imagined legal event. The internet, which had already blurred the boundaries between original and copy, now blurred the boundaries between case and narrative.
This is how the myth of the “court ruling on the video” emerges—not from legal fact, but from narrative compression under conditions of cultural overload.
By 2009, the reaction video economy had matured into infrastructure. YouTube, still in its pre-algorithmic but rapidly scaling phase, had become the primary environment for this behavior. The platform itself was engaged in a contradictory process: attempting to remove the underlying material while simultaneously hosting and amplifying its derivatives. Reaction videos remained accessible, commentary proliferated, and the original clip existed only in intermittent, unstable fragments.
Virality, in this sense, was no longer a matter of persistence. It was a matter of oscillation. Content survived through cycles of appearance and removal, each disappearance generating renewed curiosity, each reappearance triggering renewed reaction. The meme was no longer a single artifact but a system of recurrence.
And by the early 2010s, that system had already begun to fade—not because it was resolved, but because it had been absorbed. The internet had moved on to faster cycles, shorter attention spans, and more structurally integrated forms of recommendation and amplification. What remained of the meme was not its content, nor even its reaction videos, but its afterimage in cultural memory.
It survived as a reference to a time when the internet still produced shocks that felt unstructured, unmoderated, and unrepeatable. A time when seeing something once meant carrying the knowledge of it indefinitely, because there was no guarantee you would ever be able to locate it again.
And in that sense, the meme did not disappear.
It simply became the first recognizable form of something the internet would eventually perfect:
a culture built entirely from what it has already seen, even when it can no longer remember how it saw it.



















