Ai Time Travelers Interrupting Memes
Also known as: AI Vines · Time Traveler Memes · AI Meme Interruptions
AI Time Travelers Interrupting Memes is a mid-2024 video trend where creators used Luma AI's Dream Machine to animate well-known meme images and clips, often adding a mysterious shadowy figure that "interrupts" the original meme's punchline. The trend kicked off on June 14, 2024, when a user extended the classic "What's 9 + 10? 21" Vine with AI, and the resulting eerie, glitchy videos spread rapidly across X and TikTok under captions framing the intruder as a time traveler trying to stop internet history.
Overview
The trend takes iconic meme images or short video clips and feeds them into Luma AI's Dream Machine, which extends them into short AI-generated animations. Because generative AI in mid-2024 still struggled with realistic human movement, the outputs often featured warped faces, morphing limbs, and shadowy figures that appeared to enter the scene uninvited1. Viewers on TikTok began interpreting these glitchy intruders as "time travelers" sent to prevent famous memes from ever happening, giving the trend its distinctive joke format2.
The videos carry a specific unsettling quality. Human forms bend in unnatural ways, objects dissolve mid-frame, and dark silhouettes creep into familiar scenes. Some creators leaned into this body horror intentionally, while others simply let Dream Machine's flaws do the heavy lifting1.
On June 14, 2024, Lukas Robert Hron, a 23-year-old Swedish game developer who posts on X as @TwashTheMan, uploaded an AI-extended version of the 2013 Vine where a kid incorrectly answers "What's 9 plus 10?" with "21"1. In Hron's version, a shadow enters the room right before the boy delivers his iconic wrong answer. Set to spooky music, the clip drew confused and unnerved reactions. Within four days, the post had pulled in over 29 million views and 100,000 likes on X2.
Two days later, on June 16, TikTok user @worry_vp reposted the video with the caption "POV there's time travelers trying to stop every joke that has been said"2. That repost hit over 8 million plays and 1.4 million likes in two days, and the "time traveler" framing stuck. What started as a showcase of AI video generation became a full-blown meme format with a built-in narrative hook1.
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The format follows a loose template:
Pick a well-known meme image or short video clip, ideally one with an iconic punchline moment.
Feed it into Luma AI's Dream Machine (or a similar AI video generator) to extend the clip beyond its original frame.
The AI typically generates strange artifacts: shadowy figures entering the scene, people morphing, objects warping.
Add a caption in the "POV: time traveler comes to stop [meme]" format, framing the AI glitch as an intentional interruption.
Pair with eerie or suspenseful audio for maximum effect.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
Hron's original "What's 9 + 10?" clip accumulated over 30 million views across platforms within two weeks of posting.
The trend made Dream Machine's free tier so popular that Luma faced significant delays from extremely high demand.
The "time traveler" caption framing was not part of the original post. It was added by the TikTok reposter @worry_vp two days later and became the dominant way to contextualize the videos.
Some outputs showed people in the original memes being consumed by monsters, something entirely generated by the AI with no user prompting.
OpenAI's Sora, Dream Machine's main competitor, had been announced four months earlier but was still unavailable to the public when this trend peaked.
Derivatives & Variations
AI-extended Vine compilations:
Creators applied the format to dozens of classic Vines from 2013-2016, building "time traveler interrupts every Vine" compilations on TikTok[2].
Distracted Boyfriend animation:
An AI-generated clip showed the boyfriend turning to follow the woman, rewriting the static stock photo into a short film with a new ending[1].
Deez Nuts AI extension:
@smileythebott's version of the Deez Nuts meme with a time-traveler figure hit 7 million plays[2].
Parody sketches:
@malcolmmeatball's sketch mocking the trend's repetitive formula (creepy figure + classic Vine) went viral as a meta-commentary piece[2].
Still image animations:
Users moved beyond video Vines to animate famous meme photos, testing Dream Machine's ability to add motion to single frames[1].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (3)
- 1
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- 3Assassination of Charlie Kirkencyclopedia