This "Karen" thing even has it's own Wikipedia? seriously?!?! lol
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karen_(pejorative)
Karen is a
pejorative term used in the
United States and other
English-speaking countries for a woman perceived to be
entitled or demanding beyond the scope of what is considered appropriate or necessary. A common stereotype is that of a racist
white woman who uses her
privilege to demand her own way at the expense of others. Depictions also include demanding to "speak to the manager", being an
anti-vaxxer, or having a particular
bob cut hairstyle. As of 2020, the term was increasingly being used as a general-purpose term of disapproval for middle-aged white women.
Origin
The term may have originated on
Black Twitter as a meme used to describe white women who "tattle on Black kids' lemonade stands".
[1] It has also been described as originating with black women but having been co-opted by white men.
[1][2][3] University of Virginia media researcher Meredith Clark said that the idea of a white woman in the vicinity of whom blacks needed to be careful because she wouldn't hesitate to use her "privilege" at the expense of others, "has always been there; it just hasn't always been so specific to one person's name. Karen has gone by different names. Back in the '90s, when '
Baby Got Back' came out, it was
Becky."
[1]
Another use of the term
Karen as an
internet meme dates to an anonymous
Reddit user, Fuck_You_Karen, who posted rants denigrating his ex-wife Karen, whom he alleged had taken both his children and, later, his house during divorce proceedings. The posts led to the creation of a
subreddit in 2017, r/FuckYouKaren, to both compile a narrative and share memes about the posts. Since Fuck_You_Karen deleted his account, the subreddit refocused to memes about the stereotype in general rather than one specific woman.
[4][5]
The name
Karen had negative connotations predating the Internet meme, the notable uses being
Lorraine Bracco's depiction of
Karen Friedman Hill in the 1990 film
Goodfellas, and
Amanda Seyfried's ditzy schoolgirl character in the 2004 film
Mean Girls. Other noted uses of
Karen as a joke punchline include
Dane Cook's 2005 sketch "The Friend Nobody Likes" from his album
Retaliation,
[5] and a 2016 Internet meme regarding a woman in an advert for the
Nintendo Switch console who exhibits antisocial behavior and is given the nickname "antisocial Karen."
[4][6]
Meaning and use
Pictures of
Kate Gosselin are often used to depict Karen,
[4][7] including the "can-I-speak-to-your-manager haircut".
[8]
Kansas State University professor Heather Suzanne Woods, whose research interests include memes, said a Karen's defining characteristics are "entitlement, selfishness, a desire to complain" and that a Karen "demands the world exist according to her standards with little regard for others, and she is willing to risk or demean others to achieve her ends.”
[1] Rachel Charlene Lewis, writing for
Bitch media, agrees, saying a Karen "sees
no one as an individual, instead moving through the world prepared to fight faceless conglomerate of lesser-than people who won’t give her what she wants and feels she deserves. She’ll wield the power that, yes, might be very different from that of a white man, as she makes her demands. And that feeling of entitlement is what makes her, undeniably, a Karen."
[2]
The
Karen meme carries several stereotypes, the most notable being the stereotype that a
Karen will demand to "speak with the manager" of a hypothetical service provider.
[4][9] Other stereotypes include
anti-vaccination beliefs,
racism,
[10] use of
Facebook and a particular
bob haircut with blond
highlights; pictures of
Kate Gosselin are often used to depict Karen,
[7] and her bob is sometimes called the "can-I-speak-to-your-manager haircut".
[5][4][11][9]
There has been some debate as to whether "Karen" is a
slur.
[12] While the term is used exclusively in a pejorative manner towards a person of a specific race and gender, some have argued that "Karen" lacks the historical context to be considered a slur, and that calling it one trivializes actual discrimination.
[13] Others argue that the targets of the term have immense privilege, and that "an epithet that lacks the power to discriminate is just an insult."
[12] Hadley Freeman argued that use of the meme has become less about describing behavior than controlling it and "telling women to shut up".
[14] Jennifer Weiner, writing in the
New York Times during the
2020 coronavirus pandemic, said the meme had succeeded in silencing her, saying she had had to balance her desire to complain about a nearby man coughing into the open air, hawking and spitting on the sidewalk, with her fear of being called a Karen.
[15]
In April 2020, journalist and radical feminist
Julie Bindel asked on her Twitter feed, "Does anyone else think the Karen-slur is woman-hating and based on
class prejudice?"
[16] Freeman replied, saying it was "sexist, ageist, and classist, in that order". In May 2020, Kaitlyn Tiffany, writing in
The Atlantic, asked, "Is a Karen just a woman who does anything at all that annoys people? If so, what is the male equivalent?", saying the meme was being called misogynistic.
[1] Also in May 2020,
Nina Burleigh wrote the memes "are merely excuses to heap scorn on random middle-aged white women."
[17] Matt Schimkowitz, a senior editor at
Know Your Meme, said the term "just kind of took over all forms of criticism towards white women online."
[5]
Examples
The mid-2019 formation of
Tropical Storm Karen in the
Atlantic hurricane basin led to memes likening the storm to the stereotype; several users made jokes about the storm wanting to "speak with the manager", with images photoshopped to include the "Karen haircut" on either the hurricane or its forecast path.
[18]
In December 2019, Australian media reported widely that in the town of
Mildura, a woman named Karen had been filmed trying to pull down an
Aboriginal Flag which was being displayed by her neighbors. Despite her efforts she was unable to pull down the flag, leading to a
Twitter hashag
#TooStrongForYouKaren and other social media responses.
[19][20]
During the
COVID-19 pandemic of 2020, the term was used to describe women abusing
Asian-American health workers due to the virus's origins in China,
[21] those
hoarding essential supplies such as
toilet paper, and both those who policed others' behavior to enforce
quarantine[22] and those who
protested the continuance of the restrictions because they prevented them visiting
hair salons,
[1] prompting one critic to ask whether the term had devolved into a general purpose criticism for middle-aged white women.
[1] Use of the term increased from 100,000 mentions on social media in January 2020 to 2.7 million mentions in May 2020.
[17]
In May 2020
Christian Cooper, writing about the
Central Park birdwatching incident, said Amy Cooper's "inner Karen fully emerged and took a dark turn" when he started videoing the encounter.
[23] He recorded her calling the police and telling them that an "African-American man" was threatening her life.
[24][23]