

Revenge via Storytelling ("bad" storytelling with a "bad" villain / antagonist).Randomly Reversed Letters ("bad" handwriting).Playing Pictionary (It's bad enough that people mistake a drawing for something else).


Some examples of this trope are In-Universe cases, where a Show Within a Show looks bad, while in other cases the entirety of the work is like this. Where a work is made in an intentionally bad style. An example of this is seen in an image posted to iFunny by the user skiddylo on November 29th, 2021, in which a White Castle sign is saying Sloppy (Toppy) is only 99 cents (shown below).- Jerry Holkins from Penny Arcade about this strip Later, memes would then drop "toppy" from the meme equation, with only "sloppy" being enough to trigger the thought of oral sex while being referenced in memes and real-life examples. This is seen in the meme posted to iFunny by the user 1noonlyjisoo on November 13th, 2021, in which someone is texting another about sloppy toppy that they received (shown below). Sloppy toppy was then later incorporated in increasingly long and exaggerated ways to say how good it was. For example, on July 10th, 2018, iFunny user SpriteLord uploaded a meme in which sloppy toppy was rated as "A1," meaning an incredibly fine grade, a trend that would continue later (shown below). The term then began to spread outward, with memes referencing sloppy toppy becoming more prevalent in the late 2010s. The term started to peak in usage and join the common lexicon of slang terminology in late 2014, shortly after Travis Scott released his second mixtape Days Before Rodeo that had a song featuring Migos called "Sloppy Toppy." On August 18th, 2014, the song was uploaded to YouTube by the channel 17Mercer, where it gained over 5.1 million views in eight years (shown below). Though sloppy was used to describe the action prior to the combination of the two words, it wasn't until January 22nd, 2011, that Urban Dictionary received a definition for the term "sloppy toppy" by user Groovy Lou212 (shown below).
