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About

Tombstone Parodies refer to various images of gag names or epitaphs inscribed on gravestones that are often shared online, including both untouched photographs and photoshopped images.

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Origin

The earliest known examples of humorous tombstone epitaph were highlighted on Colorado resident June Shaputis' personal website Webpanda[1] in 1998 (shown below).

Spread

On October 3rd, 2006, The Magic Cafe Forums[2] member Marvello submitted a thread containing "funny Halloween tombstone names." On July 19th, 2007, the pop culture blog Oddee[7] published a round-up of notable joke tombstone pictures. On March 2nd, 2008, the facts and trivia website Mental Floss[3] highlighted 10 photos of humorous celebrity tombstones (shown below).

On January 27th, 2010, the Internet humor site Holy Taco[6] published a compilation of 25 humorous tombstone photographs. On February 28th, 2011, Funny or Die[4] featured a slideshow titled "The Most Badass Tombstones Ever." On September 19th, 2012, the Internet humor blog Mandatory[5] published a photo gallery of humorous tombstones. On July 29th, 2013, Redditor thumz submitted a photograph of a tombstone for the Red Power Ranger to the /r/pics[8] subreddit, where it gained over 3,200 votes (96% upvoted) prior to being archived.

Notable Examples

Search Interest

According to Google Trends, the search interest for "funny tombstone" seeks a spike around October every year, mainly due to its cultural association with the celebration of Halloween in the United States.

External References



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