Shut Up and Take My Money
Also known as: Take My Money · Shut Up and Take My Money Fry
"Shut Up And Take My Money!" is a catchphrase and image macro meme from the animated series *Futurama*, where the character Fry screams the line while waving cash at a store clerk. Originating from a July 2010 episode, the meme became the internet's default reaction for expressing instant, no-questions-asked enthusiasm for a product or idea. It spawned a dedicated subreddit, a retail website, and countless derivatives across every major platform.
Overview
The meme features a screenshot of Philip J. Fry from *Futurama* holding a fistful of dollar bills, mouth open mid-yell, with the caption "SHUT UP AND TAKE MY MONEY!" The image macro format is simple: Fry's intense expression paired with the catchphrase, used as a reaction to anything someone finds irresistibly appealing. Products, movie announcements, concept designs, ridiculous gadgets, hypothetical inventions. If it exists and someone wants it badly enough, Fry's face shows up3.
The phrase also works as a standalone text comment without the image, making it one of those rare memes that functions equally well in visual and text-only contexts5.
The line comes from "Attack of the Killer App," the third episode of *Futurama*'s sixth season, which aired on Comedy Central on July 1, 20104. Written by Patric Verrone, the episode parodies Apple's iPhone culture through a fictional device called the "eyePhone," manufactured by the evil MomCorp2. When Fry goes to buy one, the store clerk warns him about poor reception, short battery life, and no carrier choice. Fry cuts him off mid-sentence: "Shut up and take my money!"2.
The day after the episode aired, the German tech blog Crackajack published a post about the episode and included what appears to be the first image macro of Fry with the caption3. The screenshot of Fry waving his money, frozen in that perfect frame of consumer desperation, was ready-made for the internet.
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The meme works in two main ways:
As a reaction: Post the Fry image macro (or just type the phrase) in response to any product, concept, announcement, or idea you find irresistible. The humor comes from mimicking Fry's blind consumer enthusiasm, often for things that are absurd, overpriced, or don't even exist yet.
As a template: Swap Fry for another character holding money or making a similar gesture, keeping the "Shut up and take my [X]!" format. People commonly replace "money" with context-specific words.
The meme typically works best when the thing being reacted to is genuinely cool but slightly impractical, like a concept phone made of transparent glass or a pizza vending machine. The joke sits in that gap between "this is ridiculous" and "I would absolutely buy this."
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
Patric Verrone unknowingly predicted his own behavior. He wrote the line as satire about mindless consumerism, then used it himself at an Apple store weeks later.
The episode "Attack of the Killer App" also parodied Twitter (as "Twitcher") and Susan Boyle (as a singing boil named Susan), but only the "take my money" line survived as a lasting meme.
The episode was viewed by an estimated 2.159 million households in its original broadcast.
The IGN reviewer gave the episode an 8.5/10, while the A.V. Club gave it a B.
An Urban Dictionary entry for the phrase describes it as what you say when you hear about a product that "gives you a handjob every time you win a game".
Derivatives & Variations
Variations with different products
A variation of Shut Up and Take My Money
(2011)Extended versions with product details
A variation of Shut Up and Take My Money
(2011)Parody versions with absurd products
A variation of Shut Up and Take My Money
(2011)Frequently Asked Questions
References (5)
- 1
- 2
- 3Shut Up And Take My Money! - Know Your Memeencyclopedia
- 4Attack of the Killer Appencyclopedia
- 5