Gay rat wedding dress

"Gay rat wedding" memes are standing up for Arthur in the funniest way

23 May ,

By Sam Prance

Mr. Ratburn from Arthur has inspired the new "gay rat wedding" meme

"Gay rat wedding" memes are breaking the internet and it's all because of Mr. Ratburn on Arthur.

Arthur’s Mr Ratburn just came out with a gay wedding and the internet is living for it

Memes can be inspired by anything but the best ones manage to be the wildest ones. Sometimes all they need is a bizarre, viral video to kickstart them (the "they did surgery on a grape" meme). Elsewhere it's a very specific TV scene and a whole lot of imagination that does it (the powerful Shaggy meme). Often it's just the internet being left to its own devices (the 'Roman Holiday' meme). Well, the "gay rat wedding" meme is a mixture of all three of these and it's iconic.

The funniest gay rat wedding memes inspired by Arthur

Last week Arthur made history. In its season 22 debut, one of its longterm principal characters came out. In the episo

What is and isn&#;t considered appropriate to wear to a wedding has changed considerably over the course of time.

Today, people show up to weddings wearing everything from evening wear, to T-shirts and jeans, because that&#;s how the happy couple suggested they arrive.

Even if the weddings contain no dress code, however, guests should still be mindful of not wearing things that might offend or upset people, particularly the couple in question.

Redditor harleygfproblem was used to their girlfriend&#;s somewhat eccentric fashions, which was even something he had grown to treasure about her.

But when he learned of what she planned on wearing to a friend&#;s wedding, the original poster (OP) couldn&#;t assist but question if this was a good idea.

Something his girlfriend didn&#;t be grateful one bit.

Worried that he might hold overstepped, the OP took to the subReddit &#;Am I The A**hole&#; (AITA), where he asked fellow Redditors:

&#;AITA for not letting my girlfriend wear her “unique” dress to a wedding?&#;

The OP explained why his girlfriend&#;s choice of wedding attire was the o

No couple wants to be upstaged at their wedding, especially not by someone with a “unique” sense of style. Although it’s important to express yourself and wear outfits that make you happy, it’s probably not a good idea to go all out on someone else’s exceptional day.

This caused a big issue between a couple when the man’s girlfriend wanted to wear a very flashy and inappropriate outfit to his gay friend’s wedding. Just hearing about her dress choice will make you ask the question ‘how much is too much’.

More info: Reddit

Meme-loving woman thinks it’s a great idea to wear an outfit inspired by a “gay rat wedding” trend to an actual gay person’s wedding, her lover is horrified

Image credits: Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures (not the actual photo)

The poster explained that his year-old girlfriend Nat had a weird sense of design and that she’d often incorporate memes into the outfits she’d wear

Image credits: (not the actual photo)

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He invited Nat as a pl

A wedding guest has been urged to reconsider her choice of outfit for the upcoming nuptials after the details of what she plans to wear went viral.

In a display shared to Reddit's "Am I The A**hole?" subreddit, which has earned over 28, upvotes, a guy writing under the username harleygfproblem explained that his girlfriend Nat has a "very particular sense of style."

"Sometimes she likes to incorporate memes into her clothes," he wrote. "No problem. It's cute." The issues only arose when he learned she was planning on wearing a dress inspired by the meme "gay rat wedding" to an actual male lover wedding.

According to Daily Dot, the "gay rat wedding" meme related back to a episode of the PBS kids' television present Arthur, in which the eponymous character's teacher, Mr. Ratburn, married his boyfriend.

It was subsequently reported that TV stations in Alabama would not be airing the "gay rat wedding" episode in a progress that prompted a deluge of viral memes on the topic.

Nearly three years on, internet enthusiast Nat "wants to wear a dress inspired by the meme"—and it sounds eye