Can't Prove It's Rage Bait Meme

This is a single-panel reaction meme. The top of the image displays text that reads "When you see a meme with obvious spelling or grammar mistake and know their rage baiting but just can't prove it" - notably, the text itself contains the exact type of grammar error described ("their" is incorrectly used in place of "they're", likely intentional for comedic effect). Below the text is a still from the 2004 comedy film *White Chicks*, where the character Latrell Spencer looks up skeptically at another character, visually representing the frustrated, suspicious feeling of recognizing someone is intentionally making grammar or spelling errors to bait angry reactions, but having no concrete evidence to confirm this.

Text content

When you see a meme with obvious spelling or grammar mistake and know their rage baiting but just can't prove it

Overview

This is a single-panel reaction meme. The top of the image displays text that reads "When you see a meme with obvious spelling or grammar mistake and know their rage baiting but just can't prove it" - notably, the text itself contains the exact type of grammar error described ("their" is incorrectly used in place of "they're", likely intentional for comedic effect). Below the text is a still from the 2004 comedy film White Chicks, where the character Latrell Spencer looks up skeptically at another character, visually representing the frustrated, suspicious feeling of recognizing someone is intentionally making grammar or spelling errors to bait angry reactions, but having no concrete evidence to confirm this.

Origin notes

This meme is sourced from Reddit's r/Meme subreddit per the provided RSS feed metadata. The underlying image template originates from a scene in the 2004 film White Chicks, which has become a widely repurposed reaction meme format for conveying suspicion or unproven awareness of a situation. This specific iteration adds custom text relating to internet meme culture and rage baiting.

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