

The project uses AOSP Java Code Style, with one exception: private members are _camelCase instead of mBigCamel. The project is always open for contributions and accepts pull requests. If the user decides to save a meme image it will be stored locally in the device public pictures folder. The app doesn't share any personal information with other apps or any web-server.Ĭustom images can be added via camera and gallery. Change amount of displayed pictures per row.Share any picture into MemeTastic to create meme.Templates from MemeTastic picture folder."It comes up in my Snapchat Memories every year. If the meme ever does fizzle out over time, Reitz knows he'll still never forget the date he conceived of it: "May 30," he says. The Ohio native called the backpack's staying power and ubiquity "completely shocking," considering that "most memes hang around for maybe a year at longest." The backpack joke has arguably gone so mainstream - there was once a hilarious ESPN segment about it - that it's no longer a meme, but rather the easiest way to reference Draymond's somewhat ugly jumper. "I don't think he's a dirty player, he's just not spatially aware in the heat of the game," Reitz said, echoing Green's questionable defense that he stomped on Domantas Sabonis's chest because his foot couldn't go anywhere else. Reitz admitted he used to "dislike" Green when the Dubs forward was sparring with his beloved Cavs in the Finals every summer, but now he's fully come around, even defending Green's honor when it comes to his infamous dirty plays. I expected it be one of those tweets that get four likes and just move on." "I really only tell close friends and family members now that I made that. "I felt like a douchebag for trying to take credit for it," said Reitz, now 20. The long-time Cavs fan initially tried to take credit for conceiving the meme at every turn, before eventually coming to peace with it belonging to everyone online. I Googled 'Draymond Green shooting a jump shot,' that was one of first photos to pop up, then added the sticker and that was it."Īn NBA memes account on Instagram re-posted Reitz's photo with the caption "Still can't unsee Draymond Green shooting like he got a backpack on." that blew up, and from there, it became part of the collective subconscious of NBA Twitter.
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"The backpack was just a Snapchat sticker - I didn’t know how to make anything, I was just trying to be funny. "I was playing Fortnite in my living room, school had just gotten out, I saw a tweet, replied with a picture - I threw that together in 15 seconds," Nolan Reitz told SFGATE.

An extremely serious SFGATE investigation has determined that it was made by a then -15-year-old Cavs fan who says he spent all of 15 seconds creating it. The photo everyone oh-so-gloriously associates with the meme, though, first arrived on the Internet a couple days later in a reply to that viral tweet. The bit went viral two weeks later when, in classic fashion, someone posted " bro somebody said draymond shoot like he got a backpack on," racking up tens of thousands of likes and never crediting the "somebody." The meme has been around since at least 2018, when USA Today traced the origin back to a tweet from an NBA fan that read, "Draymond shoots like he’s got a backpack on with a school project in it" - a post that didn't circulate widely.
