Satan is a Fan of the Fake Skip Ad Creator

This is a relatable two-part meme that satirizes the universal frustration of encountering deceptive online ads. The top text establishes a scenario: *"The guy who made 'Skip Ad' appear but it's actually another ad: *Arrives in hell*"* followed by *"Satan:"*. The lower panel is a screenshot from a live-action comedy skit, featuring a red-skinned, horned Satan character saying *"Well, I just wanna say that I'm a huge fan"*, with a annoyed-looking man standing beside him. The humor derives from framing the creator of fake skip-ad buttons as so effectively irritating (an "evil" act in the eyes of internet users) that even Satan, the symbolic ruler of hell, admires their work. It taps into the shared annoyance of being tricked into watching more ads when trying to skip content online.

Dialogue

Narrator
The guy who made "Skip Ad" appear but it's actually another ad: *Arrives in hell*
Satan
Well, I just wanna say that I'm a huge fan

Overview

This is a relatable two-part meme that satirizes the universal frustration of encountering deceptive online ads. The top text establishes a scenario: "The guy who made 'Skip Ad' appear but it's actually another ad: Arrives in hell" followed by "Satan:". The lower panel is a screenshot from a live-action comedy skit, featuring a red-skinned, horned Satan character saying "Well, I just wanna say that I'm a huge fan", with a annoyed-looking man standing beside him. The humor derives from framing the creator of fake skip-ad buttons as so effectively irritating (an "evil" act in the eyes of internet users) that even Satan, the symbolic ruler of hell, admires their work. It taps into the shared annoyance of being tricked into watching more ads when trying to skip content online.

Origin notes

This meme is a remix/edited version of a screenshot from an unknown US sketch comedy skit (likely from a show like The Whitest Kids U' Know or a similar program featuring absurd, character-driven comedy). The meme format is widely shared on platforms like Reddit (r/memes, r/funny), Twitter/X, and TikTok, where users repurpose comedy clips to comment on relatable internet experiences. The top text is added to the original skit screenshot to create a new joke centered on online ad frustrations, making it a popular relatable internet meme.

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