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Imagine_a_burger

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Part of a series on United States of America. [View Related Entries]


About

Explaining To An American: Imagine A Burger refers to a phrasal template meme that pokes fun at the idea that Americans must be explained complex concepts through the use of burgers and fast-food joints as a metaphor, referencing the nationality stereotype about Americans consuming burgers. Memes about Americans being explained things in "burger terms" began gaining traction after 2020, notably due to Russia's invasion of Ukraine in 2022. The war between Russia and Ukraine notably disproved the "Golden Arches Peace Theory," which assumed that two nations economically developed enough to have a McDonald's were unlikely to engage in war.

Origin

An early example of the Explaining To An American: Imagine A Burger meme is a February 24th, 2022, post by X / Twitter[1] user @furby_hancock that reads, "(explaining war to an american) imagine a hamburger."

The post was made in response to a post by Twitter[2] user @spignal quoting American political commentator Thomas Friedman's "Golden Arches Peace Theory,"[3] which assumes that two nations economically liberal enough to have McDonald's would be more focused on economic development than war.

Memes joking about how complex topics must be explained to Americans in "burger terms" began gaining traction after 2020, as seen in this February 2022 post by @furby_hancock that read, "(explaining war to an american) imagine a hamburger." The tweet was posted in response to another Twitter user noting that the Ukraine-Russia war usurps Thomas Freidman's "Golden Arches Peace Theory," which assumes that two countries with McDonald's are unlikely to go to war.

Spread

Other internet users made similar posts about explaining complex topics to Americans in burger or fast-food terms, as seen in a November 6th, 2022, post by Tumblr[4] user @quendergeer that read, "explaining purchasing power collapse to an american: imagine no burger." The tweet was posted in response to another Tumblr user noting that one could buy six Big Macs with one hour of minimum wage in 1980.

Memes joking about how complex topics must be explained to Americans in "burger terms" began gaining traction after 2020, as seen in this February 2022 post by Tumblr user @quendergeer that read, "explaining purchasing power collapse to an american: imagine no burger." The tweet was posted in response to another Tumblr user noting that one could buy 6 BigMacs with 1 hour of minimum wage in 1980.

On March 14th, 2023, Twitter / X[5] user @nikicaga tweeted, "Explaining Military Aid to Americans: Okay so imagine a burger." The tweet was posted in response to a graphic that portrays the American federal budget as a Big Mac and military aid to Ukraine as a pickle slice. The post gathered over 8,000 likes in two years.

Memes joking about how complex topics must be explained to Americans in "burger terms" began gaining traction after 2020, as seen in this March 2023 post by @nikicaga that read, "Explaining Military Aid to Americans: Okay so imagine a burger." The tweet was posted in response to a graphic that portrays the American Federal budget as a Big Mac, and military aid to Ukraine as a pickle slice.

On December 31st, 2024, Twitter[6] user @NxtDeterio posted a tweet that read, "an American explaining their misogyny: imagine 2 burgers." The tweet was posted in response to a post showing a burger with a smooth bun vs. another with a wrinkled one and text that read, "Women before makeup vs Women after makeup." The post gathered over 400,000 likes in two months.

Memes joking about how complex topics must be explained to Americans in "burger terms" began gaining traction after 2020, as seen in this December 2024 tweet by @NxtDeterio that reads, "an American explaining their misogyny: imagine 2 burgers." The tweet was posted in response to a post showing a burger with a smooth bun and another with a wrinkled one, and text that read, "Women before makeup   vs   Women after makeup."

On February 20th, 2025, Twitter[7] user @maxie_paws posted a tweet that translates to, "Americans when they have to explain the terrible consequences of a war: okay imagine a McDonald's." The tweet was posted in response to a post about the first McDonald's in Kyiv being bombed by Russia. The post gathered over 190,000 likes in five days.

Memes joking about how complex topics must be explained to Americans in "burger terms" began gaining traction after 2020, as seen in this February 2025 tweet by @maxie_paws that translates to, "Americans when they have to explain the terrible consequences of a war: okay imagine a McDonald's." The tweet was posted in response to a post about the first McDonald's in Kyiv being bombed by Russia.

Various Examples

Memes joking about how complex topics must be explained to Americans in "burger terms" began gaining traction after 2020, as seen in this February 2025 tweet by @flackospalace that reads, "Americans explaining their views on a rapper: “Imagine an overrated burger”."
Memes joking about how complex topics must be explained to Americans in "burger terms" began gaining traction after 2020, as seen in this September 2024 tweet by @jakebrodes that reads, "American doing race science: imagine if you will a burger."
Memes joking about how complex topics must be explained to Americans in "burger terms" began gaining traction after 2020, as seen in this December 2024 tweet by @brnzageprolapse that reads, "(explaining empathy to an american) imagine a kia sorento has a person in it." The post was in response to an image that shows slow-moving traffic, each car labeled with a nicety about why a person could be driving somewhere.

Memes joking about how complex topics must be explained to Americans in "burger terms" began gaining traction after 2020, as seen in this October 2024 tweet by @n4ssie that reads, "explaining missile/drone strikes to an american: imagine a mcdonalds…" The tweet was posted in response to a dotted map showing McDonalds locations in American, and Russian drone strike targets in Ukraine.
Memes joking about how complex topics must be explained to Americans in "burger terms" began gaining traction after 2020, as seen in this March 2024 meme posted by @alego_cos that explained Sukuna, Yuji and Maki from _Jujutsu Kaisen_ in burger terms.
Memes joking about how complex topics must be explained to Americans in "burger terms" began gaining traction after 2020, as seen in this October 2024 meme posted by @BigWickeEnergy that joked about "_Pokémon_ X and Y leaks.":https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/events/game-freak-pokemon-gigaleaks

Search Interest

Unavailable.

External References

[1] Twitter / X – furby_hancock

[2] Twitter / X – spignal

[3] New York Times – Foreign Affairs Big Mac

[4]  Tumblr – quendergeer

[5] Twitter / X – nikicaga

[6] Twitter / X – NxtDeterio

[7] Twitter / X – maxie_paws



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Explaining To An American Imagine A Burger meme and tweet example.

Explaining To An American: Imagine A Burger

Part of a series on United States of America. [View Related Entries]

Updated Feb 25, 2025 at 03:45PM EST by Zach.

Added Feb 25, 2025 at 12:46PM EST by sakshi.

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About

Explaining To An American: Imagine A Burger refers to a phrasal template meme that pokes fun at the idea that Americans must be explained complex concepts through the use of burgers and fast-food joints as a metaphor, referencing the nationality stereotype about Americans consuming burgers. Memes about Americans being explained things in "burger terms" began gaining traction after 2020, notably due to Russia's invasion of Ukraine in 2022. The war between Russia and Ukraine notably disproved the "Golden Arches Peace Theory," which assumed that two nations economically developed enough to have a McDonald's were unlikely to engage in war.

Origin

An early example of the Explaining To An American: Imagine A Burger meme is a February 24th, 2022, post by X / Twitter[1] user @furby_hancock that reads, "(explaining war to an american) imagine a hamburger."

The post was made in response to a post by Twitter[2] user @spignal quoting American political commentator Thomas Friedman's "Golden Arches Peace Theory,"[3] which assumes that two nations economically liberal enough to have McDonald's would be more focused on economic development than war.


Memes joking about how complex topics must be explained to Americans in "burger terms" began gaining traction after 2020, as seen in this February 2022 post by @furby_hancock that read, "(explaining war to an american) imagine a hamburger." The tweet was posted in response to another Twitter user noting that the Ukraine-Russia war usurps Thomas Freidman's "Golden Arches Peace Theory," which assumes that two countries with McDonald's are unlikely to go to war.

Spread

Other internet users made similar posts about explaining complex topics to Americans in burger or fast-food terms, as seen in a November 6th, 2022, post by Tumblr[4] user @quendergeer that read, "explaining purchasing power collapse to an american: imagine no burger." The tweet was posted in response to another Tumblr user noting that one could buy six Big Macs with one hour of minimum wage in 1980.


Memes joking about how complex topics must be explained to Americans in "burger terms" began gaining traction after 2020, as seen in this February 2022 post by Tumblr user @quendergeer that read, "explaining purchasing power collapse to an american: imagine no burger." The tweet was posted in response to another Tumblr user noting that one could buy 6 BigMacs with 1 hour of minimum wage in 1980.

On March 14th, 2023, Twitter / X[5] user @nikicaga tweeted, "Explaining Military Aid to Americans: Okay so imagine a burger." The tweet was posted in response to a graphic that portrays the American federal budget as a Big Mac and military aid to Ukraine as a pickle slice. The post gathered over 8,000 likes in two years.


Memes joking about how complex topics must be explained to Americans in "burger terms" began gaining traction after 2020, as seen in this March 2023 post by @nikicaga that read, "Explaining Military Aid to Americans: Okay so imagine a burger." The tweet was posted in response to a graphic that portrays the American Federal budget as a Big Mac, and military aid to Ukraine as a pickle slice.

On December 31st, 2024, Twitter[6] user @NxtDeterio posted a tweet that read, "an American explaining their misogyny: imagine 2 burgers." The tweet was posted in response to a post showing a burger with a smooth bun vs. another with a wrinkled one and text that read, "Women before makeup vs Women after makeup." The post gathered over 400,000 likes in two months.


Memes joking about how complex topics must be explained to Americans in "burger terms" began gaining traction after 2020, as seen in this December 2024 tweet by @NxtDeterio that reads, "an American explaining their misogyny: imagine 2 burgers." The tweet was posted in response to a post showing a burger with a smooth bun and another with a wrinkled one, and text that read, "Women before makeup   vs   Women after makeup."

On February 20th, 2025, Twitter[7] user @maxie_paws posted a tweet that translates to, "Americans when they have to explain the terrible consequences of a war: okay imagine a McDonald's." The tweet was posted in response to a post about the first McDonald's in Kyiv being bombed by Russia. The post gathered over 190,000 likes in five days.


Memes joking about how complex topics must be explained to Americans in "burger terms" began gaining traction after 2020, as seen in this February 2025 tweet by @maxie_paws that translates to, "Americans when they have to explain the terrible consequences of a war: okay imagine a McDonald's." The tweet was posted in response to a post about the first McDonald's in Kyiv being bombed by Russia.

Various Examples


Memes joking about how complex topics must be explained to Americans in "burger terms" began gaining traction after 2020, as seen in this February 2025 tweet by @flackospalace that reads, "Americans explaining their views on a rapper: “Imagine an overrated burger”." Memes joking about how complex topics must be explained to Americans in "burger terms" began gaining traction after 2020, as seen in this September 2024 tweet by @jakebrodes that reads, "American doing race science: imagine if you will a burger." Memes joking about how complex topics must be explained to Americans in "burger terms" began gaining traction after 2020, as seen in this December 2024 tweet by @brnzageprolapse that reads, "(explaining empathy to an american) imagine a kia sorento has a person in it." The post was in response to an image that shows slow-moving traffic, each car labeled with a nicety about why a person could be driving somewhere.
Memes joking about how complex topics must be explained to Americans in "burger terms" began gaining traction after 2020, as seen in this October 2024 tweet by @n4ssie that reads, "explaining missile/drone strikes to an american: imagine a mcdonalds…" The tweet was posted in response to a dotted map showing McDonalds locations in American, and Russian drone strike targets in Ukraine. Memes joking about how complex topics must be explained to Americans in "burger terms" began gaining traction after 2020, as seen in this March 2024 meme posted by @alego_cos that explained Sukuna, Yuji and Maki from _Jujutsu Kaisen_ in burger terms. Memes joking about how complex topics must be explained to Americans in "burger terms" began gaining traction after 2020, as seen in this October 2024 meme posted by @BigWickeEnergy that joked about "_Pokémon_ X and Y leaks.":https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/events/game-freak-pokemon-gigaleaks

Search Interest

Unavailable.

External References

[1] Twitter / X – furby_hancock

[2] Twitter / X – spignal

[3] New York Times – Foreign Affairs Big Mac

[4]  Tumblr – quendergeer

[5] Twitter / X – nikicaga

[6] Twitter / X – NxtDeterio

[7] Twitter / X – maxie_paws

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