Epic Handshake
Also known as: Predator Handshake · The Handshake Meme
The Epic Handshake is an object-labeling meme based on a scene from the 1987 action film *Predator*, where Arnold Schwarzenegger and Carl Weathers lock hands in an exaggerated arm-wrestling handshake. After years as a YouTube remix favorite, a watercolor painting of the scene became one of the internet's go-to templates for illustrating unlikely agreement between two opposing groups. The format labels each arm with a different entity and the clasped hands with whatever they share in common.
Overview
The Epic Handshake meme uses an image of two muscular arms clasped together in a firm handshake. Text labels are placed on each arm (representing two different groups, people, or ideas) and on the clasped hands in the center (representing something they agree on or have in common)1. The format works like a visual Venn diagram: two separate, often opposing circles that overlap on one specific point8.
The humor comes from pairing groups that normally have nothing to do with each other and finding one absurd or unexpected thing they both agree on. A classic example: "Anti-vax moms" and "Responsible bartenders" shaking on "Not giving shots to kids"1. The bulging biceps from the original film scene add to the joke, implying both sides hold their positions with extreme conviction8.
The handshake scene comes from the opening minutes of *Predator* (1987), directed by John McTiernan. Arnold Schwarzenegger's character Dutch spots his old friend Dillon (played by Carl Weathers) and greets him with "Dillon! You son of a bitch," followed by a handshake that immediately escalates into a flexing arm-wrestling contest4. The camera lingers on their straining biceps in a way that's pure 1980s action-movie excess3.
On August 25, 2007, YouTuber kreshjun (credited as Kristian Odland in some sources) uploaded "A Tribute to The Handshake in Predator," a shot-for-shot live-action reenactment that kept the original audio4. The video picked up over 370,000 views and 1,000 comments over the following six years4. The Daily Dot identified this as the moment the scene started its second life online3.
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The Epic Handshake follows a simple three-label format:
Left arm — Label with the first group, person, or concept
Right arm — Label with the second group (typically one that seems unrelated to the first)
Clasped hands — Label with the one thing both sides share or agree on
Cultural Impact
Full History
Fun Facts
The original *Predator* scene wasn't meant to be funny. It was a straightforward action-movie greeting between two alpha characters, but the extreme close-ups on bulging biceps made it impossible for the internet to take seriously.
Rory Dean's 2012 watercolor was posted to Flickr as a genuine art piece, not as a meme template. The internet had other plans.
The Daily Dot article covering the meme's resurgence noted that the handshake scene isn't even in the top three most memorable moments from *Predator*, ranking below "Get to the choppa," the jungle minigun scene, and "One ugly motherf**ker".
A Dutch soccer player created his own series of epic handshakes in 2015, an unintentional nod to Schwarzenegger's character name in the film.
Derivatives & Variations
Three-way handshake (multiple sides reaching agreement)
A variation of Epic Handshake
(2018)Failed handshake (agreement that doesn't work out)
A variation of Epic Handshake
(2018)Handshake variations with different objects or gestures
A variation of Epic Handshake
(2018)Extended versions with additional commentary panels
A variation of Epic Handshake
(2018)Frequently Asked Questions
References (12)
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4Epic Handshake - Know Your Memeencyclopedia
- 5Predator (film)encyclopedia
- 6
- 7
- 8
- 9
- 10Epic Handshake - Memaversearticle
- 11
- 12