![]() ![]() The use of Lenny Face and text faces has become increasingly popular in online communities, particularly in forums, social media platforms, and messaging apps. Some popular text faces include the smiling face, the winking face, and the crying face. Text faces can be used to convey a wide range of emotions, from happiness and excitement to sadness and anger. They have become increasingly popular in recent years, thanks in part to the widespread use of smartphones and social media platforms. ![]() Text faces, also known as emoticons or emojis, are a way to express emotions and ideas in text-based communication. The emoticon is often used to express emotions such as sarcasm, irony, or a general sense of playfulness. The emoticon is made up of various characters and symbols, including the colon, parenthesis, and the letter "L" or "l". The secret meaning behind the EA logo Face, also known as Le Lenny Face or Le Face Face, is a popular emoticon used to convey emotions in text-based communication. It was also reposted to iFunny on the same day by user weebs, where it received over 3,400 likes and 83 comments in a similar period. Later that day, the clip was reposted to Instagramby user lordpooskin, garnering over 10,000 likes in less than 24 hours. On August 2nd, 2020, Twitter user pentaerythrit0l posted a Get Stick Bugged Lol video using the EA logo as a bait, gaining over 440,000 views and 66,000 likes in less than two days (shown below). On July 28th, YouTuber beanfruit uploaded an example that opened with a clip from Minecraft, receiving more than 3,700 views in under a week (shown below, right). On July 25th, 2020, YouTuber The Last Mimiga uploaded an example using a scene from JoJo's Bizarre Adventure as a bait-and-switch, gaining over 5,500 views in a week (shown below, left). The video without the bait-and-switch was uploaded to YouTube on July 24th, 2020 by user Stack Man, where it garnered over 45,000 views in under two weeks (shown below). The "Get Stick Bugged Lol" meme uses the "Stick Bug" theme from the 2018 Roblox game Bee Swarm Simulator (shown below). The following day, iFunny user Insert uploaded the "caet" video YeetACookie referred to in her explanation of the meme, gaining over 1,100 smiles in two weeks (shown below, right). One of the first public uploads of Crunchy Dude's "Get Stick Bugged Lol" videos was on July 19th, 2020, by iFunny user Sect (shown below, left). Me, Crunchy, and Yuri are overly obsessed with the song and sometimes still vibe to it, it's kind of like a mini cult and we shared our love of stick bug through a meme Īfter the video's creation, bait-and-switch versions were created by Crunchy Dude and shared to various Discord servers. My friend, Crunchy, made the OG caet get stick bugged lol on July 18th and we sent the caet vid to different discord servers because we found it funny. The context for the meme was expained by a comment from YeetACake on this article: The get stick bugged lol thing all started from me and a couple friends watching the original stick bug vid for an hour on mute while the stick bug song played in a discord call. It gained over 760,000 views and 69,000 likes in less than three years.Īccording to Discord user YeetACookie, the "Get Stick Bugged Lol" caption was created on July 18th, 2020 by her friend Crunchy Dude, who combined the stick bug dancing video with the "Stick Bug" theme from the 2018 Roblox game Bee Swarm Simulator. ![]() On May 30th, 2018, YouTube user EliteTeamKiller uploaded a cropped version of the stick bug video set to the song "Some Cut" by hip-hop group Trillville (shown below). The bug's swaying in the clip is a camouflage technique that stick bugs use to imitate twigs or leaves in the breeze. In two years, the clip gained over 5.1 million views and 210,000 likes. On May 28th, 2018, a video of a stick bug swaying from side to side was uploaded to Twitter by user (shown below). ![]()
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