Chaotic Kamen Rider Head Writer Meme
Text content
Gets hired to be head writer for a Kamen Rider show
Films the first gay sex scene in the franchise history
Leaves
Comes back 20 years later
Films the first monster sex scene in the franchise history
Overview
This meme is a satirical, absurdist joke centered on a hypothetical head writer for the Kamen Rider tokusatsu franchise. The top text outlines an outrageous, boundary-pushing career arc: the writer is hired as head writer, films the first gay sex scene in the franchise's history (a stark departure from the series' family-friendly tone), leaves the role, returns 20 years later, and then films the first monster sex scene in the franchise. Below the text is a real promotional photograph featuring Don Momotaro, the red hero from Avataro Sentai Donbrothers (a related Toei tokusatsu series), posing alongside Junichi Haruta, the actor who played the original Don Momotaro in 1972's Saru no Gundan. The two are crouching on a rooftop, holding matching fans with a lotus emblem, posing enthusiastically. The humor comes from the jarring contrast between the wholesome, nostalgic visual of the tokusatsu heroes and the shockingly edgy, uncharacteristic actions described in the text. It subverts the expectation of tokusatsu shows being all-ages by imagining a writer who repeatedly introduces explicit, franchise-breaking content, playing on the absurdity of such a scenario.
Origin notes
The image combines original satirical text with an official promotional photo from Avataro Sentai Donbrothers, a 2022-2023 Super Sentai series produced by Toei. The meme was likely created and circulated within Western tokusatsu fan communities, primarily on platforms like Reddit (subreddits such as r/Tokusatsu or r/KamenRider) and Twitter/X, where fans often joke about the franchise's tropes and imagine wild, subversive changes to the series. The text is a fictional, humorous scenario that has no basis in real Kamen Rider franchise history, created for comedic effect by contrasting the family-friendly nature of the genre with explicit, unexpected content.