Its A Role Given To Me By The Internet People
Also known as: Waking Up as a Meme Hero · Internet People Quote
"It's a Role Given to Me by the Internet People" is a quote from Andras Arato, the man behind the Hide the Pain Harold meme, taken from his June 2019 TEDx Talk titled "Waking up as a meme-hero." The line became its own standalone meme format, typically used as a reaction image when someone wants to justify their role as a shitposter, memelord, or general internet weirdo. It hit especially hard because it was the stock photo guy himself, fully embracing his accidental internet fame on a literal TED stage.
Overview
The meme uses a screenshot of Andras Arato mid-presentation at TEDx Kyiv, specifically the moment he delivers the line "It's a role given to me by the internet people." In the image, Arato stands at the podium looking characteristically deadpan, with the quote displayed as a subtitle or caption. The format works because Arato isn't just any speaker. He's Hide the Pain Harold, one of the most recognizable meme faces on the internet, and here he is at a TEDx event sincerely discussing what it's like to be turned into a meme without your permission2.
People use the screenshot as a reaction image to explain away their own online behavior. The humor comes from borrowing the gravitas of a TED Talk to justify something as trivial as posting memes all day.
On June 25, 2019, the TEDx Talks YouTube channel uploaded a presentation called "Waking up as a meme-hero" featuring Andras Arato2. In the talk, the Hungarian electrical engineer described how his stock photo images were turned into the Hide the Pain Harold meme without his knowledge, and how he eventually came to accept and even embrace it. During the presentation, Arato used the phrase "It's a role given to me by the internet people" to describe his relationship with his meme identity. The video picked up over 5.1 million views within its first year on YouTube2.
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The format is simple. Take the screenshot of Arato delivering the line at TEDx, then pair it with a setup that asks why you do something extremely online. Common patterns include:
- A friend or family member questioning your meme obsession, followed by the Arato screenshot as your dignified response - A job interview or formal scenario where your "qualification" is being internet-brained - Any situation where you need to explain your posting habits with unearned gravitas
The humor works best when there's a gap between the seriousness of the TEDx setting and the triviality of whatever meme behavior you're defending. You typically add your own caption above the image as the setup question, with Arato's quote serving as the punchline.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
Andras Arato is a retired Hungarian electrical engineer who had no idea his stock photos had become memes until years after they went viral.
The TEDx Talk has over 5.1 million views, making it one of the more popular meme-adjacent TEDx presentations.
The Reddit post captioned "And why do you believe you deserve to be meme of the decade?" hit a 97% upvote ratio, an unusually high approval rate even for meme subreddits.
Arato's delivery of the line is completely sincere, which is exactly what makes it funny when repurposed as a reaction image.
Derivatives & Variations
"Meme of the Decade" interview format
A popular variation framing the quote as Arato's answer in a fictional interview for the title of meme of the decade, posted during the wave of "meme of the decade" debates in late 2019[1].
"Why do you post so many memes" format
The initial spread version where the quote answers the question of why someone posts excessively online[1].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (2)
- 1List of Internet phenomenaencyclopedia
- 2