

The 'Leonardo DiCaprio Cheers' meme features a still from Baz Luhrmann's film 'The Great Gatsby' (2013). It shows Leonardo DiCaprio as Jay Gatsby, holding a glass of champagne and smiling confidently during a party. This meme is often used to convey sarcasm, celebrate a minor victory, or acknowledge an ironic situation with a mock-toast. It's widely utilized to add humor to situations where pretending to genuinely toast or celebrate seems amusingly insincere.
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Leonardo Dicaprio Cheers
The 'Leonardo DiCaprio Cheers' meme features a still from Baz Luhrmann's film 'The Great Gatsby' (2013). It shows Leonardo DiCaprio as Jay Gatsby, holding a glass of champagne and smiling confidently during a party. This meme is often used to convey sarcasm, celebrate a minor victory, or acknowledge an ironic situation with a mock-toast. It's widely utilized to add humor to situations where pretending to genuinely toast or celebrate seems amusingly insincere.

Laughing Leo
The 'Laughing Leo' meme features a scene from the movie 'Django Unchained' where Leonardo DiCaprio's character, Calvin Candie, is laughing with a cigar in one hand and a drink in the other. This meme is often used to convey a sense of smugness, amusement, or sarcastic disbelief. It typically features text that highlights the contrast between a pompous or ridiculous statement and the humorous or ironic reality. The meme is versatile and can be used in a variety of contexts, such as mocking someone's naive or absurd beliefs, highlighting hypocrisy, or simply to laugh at a surprising twist of events.

Look At Me
The 'Look At Me' meme features a scene from the 2013 film 'Captain Phillips,' where a pirate, portrayed by actor Barkhad Abdi, confronts Captain Phillips (played by Tom Hanks) while commandeering his ship. The pirate points at his own eyes while saying, 'Look at me. I'm the captain now.' This meme is used to humorously indicate a sudden shift in power or control, often when someone or something unexpectedly takes charge of a situation. It's versatile and can be used in numerous scenarios where someone wants to claim authority or assert dominance in a light-hearted or sarcastic manner.

say the line bart! simpsons
The 'Say the line, Bart!' meme is derived from a scene in the animated television show 'The Simpsons.' In this scene, a classroom full of students, including Bart Simpson, eagerly anticipates him saying a line they expect. The meme is often used to illustrate situations where one is expected to provide a predictable or clichéd response, and the surrounding crowd is eager and unanimous in their demand for that response. This format is usually used to reflect social pressure, common tropes, or anticipated phrases.

Megamind no bitches
The 'Megamind no bitches' meme features the character Megamind from the 2010 animated film 'Megamind'. The template is derived from a scene where Megamind holds an intense and somewhat disheartened facial expression. In its meme adaptation, the top and bottom captions often humorously depict a situation where someone, or Megamind himself, is being questioned or mocked for a lack of romantic or social interaction, using the phrase often starting with 'No...' The meme captures the essence of being left out or socially inadequate, often poking fun at stereotypes or self-perceived inadequacies in social scenarios.