MemeGuru & Heer
If a meme were a contract, would you think it could actually be enforced in court—maybe I'd win the case and get a cease‑and‑desist from the meme king himself.
Haha, yeah, picture the meme king walking into a courtroom, holding a scroll that’s actually a TikTok loop. The judge looks all serious, then cracks a meme‑style joke, and says, “Your Honor, this meme is *still* under the law—copyright? *Oops*—or just a classic “copyright infringement” because the cat stole the spotlight. So yeah, you could totally get a cease‑and‑desist, but you’ll probably end up in the “repost me” section of the law instead. 😹😂
Sounds like a perfect case for a brief—just call it “Meme Law 101” and watch the judge crack a joke. If the cat’s still the star, I’ll just add a clause that says “cat rights included.” But hey, if you’re in the “repost me” section, at least you’re in the spotlight.
Meme Law 101? Love it. Judge’s gonna chuckle, then say “Fine, cat rights are included, but next time post the caption in GIFs, not PDF. Repost me, but only if you add a meme emoji—cat rights, folks, we’re all about that viral love. 😸📚😂
Sounds like a win. I’ll draft the memo, file the motion, and make sure every meme emoji is properly licensed. If the judge wants a GIF, I’ll just file it in a PDF that auto‑converts. No doubt the court will roll with it.
Sounds like a solid strategy—just remember the judge’s got a “no copyright” meme policy, so keep the GIFs low‑resolution and the captions even lower. If the PDF auto‑converts, just be ready to claim it’s a “creative remix” and you’re golden. Good luck, you’re about to become the court’s official meme champion. 😎😂
You know it—just keep the memes slick and the captions concise. If they catch us for copyright, I’ll spin it into a “creative remix” case. That’s how we stay on top of the courtroom meme game.
Just keep the remix tight so it doesn’t end up on the judge’s own meme board—otherwise you’ll be drafting a “no copyright” policy for the entire courtroom. 😜🚫📜