Jeffrey Epstein and Internet memes

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Jeffrey Epstein has been the subject of multiple Internet memes and parodies, with a resurgence in late 2025. These memes have been compared to jokes about the September 11 attacks, the Holocaust and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. It has also been criticized for "minimizing the suffering of victims."[1]

A deepfake of Jeffrey Epstein dancing to a DAGames song. Deepfakes are a popular form of Epstein memes.

History

The earliest viral internet meme about Epstein was the phrase "Epstein didn't kill himself." It gained traction in September 2019 when users would insert the phrase as the end of comics and infographics. It was used as a non sequitur to suggest that Epstein was murdered by those who had engaged in sex offenses with him in order to avoid the information becoming public.[2]

In late 2025 and 2026, the Epstein files received massive amounts of attention on social media. This surge in attention led to users creating memes about Jeffrey Epstein and Little Saint James (popularly known as Epstein Island). These memes were often AI-generated and expressed ironic support for him.[3][4]

Epstein files

The Epstein files are a partially released collection of videos, text, images, and emails that detail the activities of Jeffrey Epstein. As of January 2026, over 300 gigabytes of files have been released. During the release of the files, multiple parts were satirized by users, mainly due to out-of-pocket mentions of popular internet phenomena, such as Five Nights at Freddy's and Fortnite.

One of the most satirized parts of the files was an e-mail between Epstein and his brother, Mark Epstein, in which Mark told his brother to ask Steve Bannon if Vladimir Putin had the photos of "Trump blowing Bubba." Users suspected that the 'Bubba' referred to in the email was Bill Clinton, as he was the only other person in all of the emails referred to by that name. This aligned with the claim that he gained the nickname in 1992 in a reference to his "folksy manner." This led to a multitude of memes about the possibility that Trump had given oral sex to Clinton. In a statement to Newsweek, Mark claimed that "Bubba" was a "private individual who is not a public figure."[5]

It was also revealed in the files that on May 4, 2017, Epstein emailed futanari of characters from Five Nights at Freddy's to his girlfriend Karyna Shuliak via a 4chan link, with the subject line "Amazing Animations."[6] The animation was reportedly made in Source Filmmaker and featured the characters Foxy and Toy Bonnie engaging in sexual activities.[7] A writer for the website CafeMom called this "one of the unexpected connections that no one thought to look for."[8]

Conspiracy theories that Epstein was still alive gained popularity due to a Fortnite account thought to be linked to him showing activity in 2023, 4 years after his death. The account was named littlestjeff1, which was the same username Epstein used on his YouTube channel. The theory was later refuted in a post by @FortniteStatus (an official Fortnite account on X), which stated that the account's owner had changed its username to littlestjeff1 after the username of Epstein's YouTube channel was revealed.[9][10]

A TikTok account claimed that Epstein had operated a Minecraft YouTube channel under the username gunzablazin7378. This was due to an email from YouTube Support in the files showing a notification that the channel had received a reply to their comment on a Markiplier video. As of 2026, there has been no official confirmation that Epstein was the owner of the channel.[11]

AI memes

AI-generated image featuring Jeffery Epstein, P. Diddy, and Charlie Kirk in a pool party setting as a form of Internet meme.

Many internet videos featuring Epstein made using generative-AI emerged. An image of Epstein wearing a navy blue quarter-zip was often deepfaked into dancing videos.[12] Many individuals related to high-profile incidents were also featured in deepfake, or generative AI memes alongside Epstein, such as dance videos, movie scenes, and non sequitur images. These individuals are mostly subjects of controversial news stories, including, most frequently: Charlie Kirk, George Floyd, P. Diddy.[13] Others may include Donald Trump, Erika Kirk, Derek Chauvin, Luigi Mangione, Nicolas Maduro, Ali Khamenei, etc.

Some also made aesthetic outfit videos inspired by Epstein and said that critics of the memes were "mad they weren’t invited to the island."[14]

Another use of AI was in a trend on X (Twitter) in which people used it to edit themselves and others as friends of Epstein, including the use of built-in Grok chatbot.[15] Some users deepfaked other people with Epstein as a form of criticism for the deepfaked person's associations with "sex pests and pedophiles."[16]

Parody games

Multiple parody video games featuring Epstein have been released. One of the most popular games is named Five Nights at Epstein's, inspired by Five Nights at Freddy's. The game has the player trapped on Epstein Island, having to use mechanics such as diverting attention and manipulating environments to survive without being attacked by Epstein.[17][18] A viral controversy took place after teachers in Wake County found students playing the game.[19][20] Another parody game named Epstein Clicker also released shortly after.[21]

Criticism

Desensitization of sex crimes

The Epstein meme phenomenon has been heavily criticized for "minimizing the suffering of victims who have experienced sexual or domestic violence."[1] The memes have also been accused of "flattening trauma, crimes, and rape into content."[22] This trend has led some to believe that these memes are a conspiratorial form of memetic warfare, more specifically that these memes are propagated by "groups with certain political interests" to desensitize or change the populace's perspective on the scandal.[23] Social media personality Andrew Tate tweeted a reflection on the Epstein memes, stating that, “the evil Epstein lived his life with near unlimited financial excess and luxury is now immortalised in internet culture forever.”[24]

Antisemitism

Due to Epstein's Jewish ethnicity and, in addition, the US's and Israel's support for each other, Epstein memes sometimes emphasize Epstein's ethnicity, or are accompanied by jokes, stereotypes, or conspiracy theories about Jewish people in general, including the use of Hebrew terms such as goyim. It can be seen by some as antisemitic, anti-Zionist, or anti-Israel.[25]

See also

References

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