How the Internet Created 'Graggle Simpson'

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There is an abundance of evidence that Homer Simpson is, was, and always has been a character in The Simpsons. There’s footage, of course – of Homer going about his days of “d’ohs” and doughnuts – but there are also toys, dusty VHS tapes, and video game appearances, not to mention Homer’s everlasting existence in popular consciousness.

Equally, there is an abundance of evidence that Graggle Simpson is, was, and always has been a character in The Simpsons. There’s footage, of course. There are also toys, dusty VHS tapes, and video game appearances. And Graggle is beloved. In recent weeks, the lizard-like yellow fella has been popping up in viral tweets and TikToks – people are lamenting that the character has disappeared from the show, and are campaigning for his return with hashtags such as #BringBackGraggleSimspon.

There’s just one snag in the Grag: He isn’t, wasn’t, and never has been a character in The Simpsons; he hasn’t appeared once in all 728 episodes. Where did Graggle Simpson really come from? Why is he currently everywhere? And how is there so much evidence that he exists?

Graggle Simpson was forged in the fires of the imageboard 2chan way back in October 2015. An anonymous user added the character to a screenshot of The Simpsons, and there he stayed until January 2021. Then, another anonymous user – this time on 4chan – posted lore for the stretched-out blob. He called him “Yellow Matt” and said he was a “self-insert character” from Simpsons creator Matt Groening.

That’s when a YouTuber known as Simian Jimmy stumbled upon the post. He migrated the image over to Twitter, changed the character’s name to “Gumbly” and claimed that the character was an new addition to The Simpsons – concrete proof the show had jumped the shark. “I don’t know why Gumbly was the first name that came to my head, but I might have been subconsciously connecting the character design to Gumby since they’re both just naked, skinny, single-coloured dudes,” Iowa resident Simian Jimmy says now. His post blew up, and people began Photoshopping Gumbly into more and more Simpsons scenes.

“I didn’t put much time or effort into it – whenever I look at it I feel that it’s obvious that it’s fake, but I’ve seen my picture all over the internet now,” says a 21-year-old Florida resident who used Paint 3D to add Gumbly to a scene from Season 13 of The Simpsons. In response to Simian Jimmy’s tweet, he shared the picture from his Twitter account @RayDibb and ultimately earned over 4,000 likes. From there, Gumbly then quickly spread to YouTube, where Aaron Murphy, a 21-year-old creator from California who runs the channel Nightbane Games, inserted him into the 2003 video game The Simpsons: Hit & Run.

“The Graggle meme is kind of like a game – try and fake it as much as you can,” Murphy says; his Hit & Run video earned over 40,000 views. Murphy thinks Graggle is popular because of our cultural fascination with lost media and creepypasta stories. “The idea that The Simpsons originally featured a character named Graggle, but he was soon completely wiped off the face of the Earth to the point that no one remembers him, is really funny and thought-provoking,” he says.

But that – Simian Jimmy, @RayDibb, and Murphy thought – was that. A good, quick, clean joke shared with internet strangers. The end. For over a year, Gumbly rested deep in the quiet corners of the internet. Then along came Facebook.

This May, Gumbly was resurrected and rechristened as “Graggle” by a 26-year-old Australian who goes by the Facebook username Yeliab Ressap. After browsing the internet and seeing a picture of an alleged piece of concept art for “Yellow Matt”, Yeliab Ressap posted a picture of the character with the caption: “NEW MANDELA EFFECT JUST DROPPED – THIS UNIVERSE DOESN'T HAVE GRAGGLE SIMPSON.” (A “Mandela effect” is a false memory shared by multiple people.)

“I just wanted a stupid word and that was the first thing that came to mind,” the Facebook user says of coming up with the name “Graggle” (he hadn’t actually heard that the character was nicknamed Gumbly when he came up with the name). Within a week, his post had a thousand shares. Then it spiralled. “A few people have accused me of being a government agent because of how quickly and rapidly it took off, but here I am saying I’m not a government agent. It’s just the nature of the internet.”

Yeliab Ressap’s post was screenshotted and shared on Instagram and Twitter – on the latter site, it earned over 70,000 likes. When Jackson (AKA @CalmDownLevelUp), a 25-year-old from Seattle saw this tweet, he knew it was his time to shine. He’d first seen Gumbly in 2021, and had thought the meme was so funny that, “I made a folder in my phone called ‘Evidence of Gumbly’.” When he saw Yeliab Ressap’s post, it “had been like a year since I’d seen him. And I was like, ‘Oh my God, Gumbly!’ This is my chance to reply with all my images.”

One of Jackson’s tweets, featuring four of the Photoshopped images he’d collected, earned over 3,500 likes at the end of May. He started pretending that he genuinely believed Graggle was a real Simpsons character. “I just think it’s funny that people get angry, it’s just a funny thing to gaslight people with,” Jackson says. “You hear so much in the news about fake news and Russian misinformation… It’s a very satirical take on that stuff being in the news all the time.” At the end of our call, Jackson confesses: “I was trying to think of lies to tell you, I was going to try and gaslight you, but I couldn’t think of anything.”

Yeliab Ressap’s post changed the fortunes of Graggle née Gumbly, but TikTok is the app that gave him wings. People took the pictures that Jackson had collected – as well as @RayDibb’s photoshop – and began creating video montages. A video of “recovered footage” of the character has 418,000 views; a rip of Murphy’s Hit & Run footage has almost a million. As Graggle becomes more and more mainstream, and as evidence of his existence mounts, some people seem to be genuinely falling for the gag. One TikToker took it upon themselves to debunk his existence (though of course they may just be adding another meta-layer to the joke).

Though Graggle – in one form or another – is now seven years old, no one I speak with thinks he is a dying meme. “I actually think it’s still very underground,” Jackson says. Yeliab Ressap thinks the simplicity of Graggle is key: “It allows people to take it, make it their own, and run with it.” “I feel like he’ll be around as long as The Simpsons are around,” Murphy says. “Who knows, maybe he’ll come back in 2023 with a new name – something like Grunky.”

 
There's beating a dead horse, and then there's the terminally online generation's definition of beating a dead horse; raping its corpse until people "like it".

Sneed.
 
I said it in the Simpsons thread

This reeks of Zoomer shit. If they wanted to do this they should have made it out like Roy was an actual character instead of a joke in the Poochie episode.
 
Nobody mentions this is a deliberate Mandella effect meme for zoomers?
What the fuck boys, i suppose more from you. even all the crap "Every Super Mario 64 cartridge is personalizated" became popular the last year.
 
People are retards and this Gen Z humor is even more cringey than the millennials "OMG guys look how random and funny I am" humor. It's all cancerous and cringey.

Kind of like when normies discovered Rick Rolling back in the late 2000's. I was seeing Rick Rolls in 2007. Normies were doing that shit in 2008 and 2009. There is one thing normies know how to do and that's take a funny good meme and beat it to death till it isn't funny anymore.
I saw some kind of "Rick Rolls in real life" video a while ago where I believe Rick Astley himself would get in elevators with people and start playing the song from some horrible speaker. It was one of the most obnoxious things I had seen in a while.
 
I saw some kind of "Rick Rolls in real life" video a while ago where I believe Rick Astley himself would get in elevators with people and start playing the song from some horrible speaker. It was one of the most obnoxious things I had seen in a while.
I don't follow pop culture much at all so I have never seen that.

I do know this. Normies are like niggers. If there is anything nice, they will ruin it.
 
This kind of internet gaslighting is only fun when you're in on the project and actually contributing, on the outside looking in(especially with an article explaining the joke, which has always been pure poison to humor) it's not as interesting.
 
Modern internet meme culture cycle in a nutshell:
1. Meme is created on 4chan
2. At some point meme is adopted by the mainstream
3. Meme grows stale and dies from overuse
4. Repeat

There are exceptions like the Wojak and Pepe the Frog but this is generally how it goes these days.
4chan hasn't created a genuinely funny new meme since at least 2016, probably longer
 
thanks for overexplaining an obvious and dumb meme vice. want to do a deep cultural analysis on the mourbius meme next? how about an article on the social implications of the nerd emoji meme. these people and their pathological need to over explain and inject politics into everything.
 
This kind of internet gaslighting is only fun when you're in on the project and actually contributing, on the outside looking in(especially with an article explaining the joke, which has always been pure poison to humor) it's not as interesting.
It also tends to not work when it just becomes the same kind of joke as every other modern meme. And when the people pushing it now are years late to it's origin.
 
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