Why do you oven the cold food

What does Why Do They Call It Oven? mean?

Why do they call it oven? refers to a popular nonsensical internet copypasta, which goes “Why do they call it oven when you of in the cold food of out hot eat the food?”.

It is often paired with a panel from Garfield, depicting Jon reaching in the oven, while pondering upon the question.

Why do they call it oven when you of in the cold food and of out the hot eat the food

What's the origin of Why Do They Call It Oven??

The copypasta originates from the tweet of Twitter user @YashichiDSF, who posted the question on August 31st, 2013.

It took five years until the copypasta would spread to Reddit, where its upcoming popularity would be founded.

How did Why Do They Call It Oven? spread?

“Why do they call it oven?” first appeared on Reddit on September 5th, 2018, however it didn’t garner any attention.

The meme started to gain recognition after it was paired with the comic panel from Garfield.

This was first posted on Tumblr by ewaneneollav on August 20th, 2019.

During 2020, the meme would spread on Reddit, Tumblr and Twitter, spawning variations and combinations with other formats, such as Panzer of the Lake or Senpai of the Pool.

SlangLang » Memes » Why Do They Call It Oven?

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Why do they call it oven when you of in the cold food of out hot eat the food from ihadastroke

Why Do They Call It Oven? refers to a nonsensical copypasta reading, "Why do they call it oven when you of in the cold food of out hot eat the food?" The copypasta later became associated with an edited Garfield strip with Jon Arbuckle saying the phrase, causing it to be associated with the comic.

On August 31, 2013, Twitter user YashichiDSF posted a tweet that read, "why do they call it oven when you of in the cold food of out hot eat the food" (shown below).


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The question appeared on Reddit's /r/askreddit on September 5th, 2018, though it gained no points. The phrase started gaining attention after Tumblr user ewaneneollav posted a still from Garfield with Jon Arbuckle asking the question on August 20th, 2019, gaining over 79,000 notes (shown below, left). The picture and its ensuing thread grew popular outside of Tumblr; for example, on December 20th, 2019, the picture appeared in Reddit's /r/BrandNewSentence, gaining over 1,800 points (shown below, right).


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The phrase began seeing use in several meme templates over the course of 2020. Oftentimes, these would be associated with Garfield. For example, on March 20th, 2020, Twitter user @blushbuns tweeted a fake poster with the phrase and Garfield, gaining over 2,200 retweets and 5,900 likes (shown below, left). On March 21st, 2021, Redditor ToastyGhost37 posted a Panzer of the Lake variation in /r/VShojo, gaining over 550 points (shown below, right).


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