lebron james lying explainer

What's With All These Memes Of Lebron James Lying? The Tall Tales Of Lebron Explained

LeBron James has been at the center of myriad surreal memes over the past several months, such as the bizarre You Are My Sunshine edits, the hyperbolic glazing poem copypasta, and the straight-up nonsensical "Lebron James reportedly…" headlines.

Recently on Instagram, a seemingly new wave of LeBron memes is rapidly picking up views. In these videos, James explains how he was involved in some of history's most infamous moments.

This seemingly new branch of LeBron memes is actually part of a years-old meme that preceded the recent wave of LeBron-posting. Furthermore, unlike some of the recent memes, these wild videos are actually inspired by the actions of James. Here's the history of "LeBron James lying," one of the most consistently funny memes related to the basketball star.

Why Are There So Many Memes Of LeBron James Lying?

Put simply, LeBron James has been caught saying some things that don't sound all that true. To be clear, these are never huge, George Santos-esque lies, but a series of mildly self-aggrandizing statements that sound like LeBron made them up. For example, in 2016, he was in a press conference where he said he had seen The Godfather Part II six times yet could not recall a line from the movie.


He also once claimed to have a gut feeling that Kobe Bryant would score 70 points before a game in which Kobe Bryant did indeed score 70.


After the rapper Takeoff of Migos died, LeBron claimed that he knew the "Bad and Boujee" group would be big well before they got popular.


There's no way to outright prove any of these statements by LeBron are lies, but that almost makes them more suspicious, as it seems James continuously claims he once predicted future events well after they happened.

How Has LeBron 'Lying' Be Memed?

LeBron lying has been memed basically how one might expect: by taking a lie, just slightly further out beyond the bounds of believability than things LeBron has actually said, and having LeBron say it.

@CAWBBBB : "I told JFK that the drop top wasn't a good idea the day before" - LeBron James. 2:28 PM · Nov 7, 2022. Twitter for Android @n1bbl3rz "I remember talking to my teammates, I think it was around February 2020, and you know I was like 'guys, I got this weird feeling a pandemic is about to start'. Two weeks later the whole world shutdown" sented by YouTubeTV YouTube TV NBA FINALS ented by YouTube TV Ok Presented by abc LAKERS NBA BASKETBAL 11:51 AM Nov 7, 2022. Twitter for iPhone : Presented by YouTub YouTube NBA S FINAL Presented by YouTube

The video examples mentioned at the beginning of this article come from @hedidntsaythis, which has only been posting for two weeks yet already has 50,000 followers. It's unknown if the voice used is an impression or AI-generated, but on TikTok, a similar meme using AI spread roughly a year ago.

@aivoicess LeBron just needs to give up the act atp 🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️ #lebronjames #ai #voice #parody #fy #fyp #viral #lebron #funny ♬ original sound – Ai Voices

@keyandpeelevids When will LECAP be stopped😪😪👎🏾 #ai #howtoai #lebronjamesai #lebronai #memeai #funnyai #cap #capalot ♬ Monkeys Spinning Monkeys – Kevin MacLeod & Kevin The Monkey

In most of the memes, LeBron is explaining how he was able to predict a significant historical event before it happened, such as the Challenger explosion or the Kennedy assassination, but despite his divinity, he was not listened to, resulting in disaster.

The meme may have been the start of the recent wave of completely surreal LeBron memes that are currently dominating social media, and in this case, LeBron and his possible tall tales are the direct inspiration.


For the full history of LeBron lying, be sure to check out Know Your Meme's encyclopedia entry for more information.



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