We Read the Funny Conspiracy Theories Floating Around the Internet and Honestly, Some of Them Track

Apr 29, 2026 01:00 AM EDT
Detective board with red string connecting hot dogs, elevator buttons, and funny conspiracy theory photos.
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Somebody on Twitter is genuinely asking whether airplane mode is a hoax, and I’m sitting here wondering when the last time was that turning my phone off actually mattered to a Boeing 737. That’s where these funny conspiracy theories live. Not in QAnon territory, not in chemtrail country, just in the small, suspicious corner of the brain that watches you press a “close door” button on an elevator and quietly wonders whether anything you do matters at all. The hot dog math is in here. The Costco fake car theory is in here. Pour something. Let’s get suspicious.

Disney’s Hall of Presidents Trump animatronic looking like Hillary.

They just swapped the hair and hoped no one would notice. Genius.

iPhone screenshot of tweet questioning if airplane mode is a hoax.

If my texting will bring down the plane, we have bigger problems

Twitter post describing a theory about Costco parking fake cars.

This person has clearly cracked the code of the Kirkland Signature.

Tweet calculation for syncing 10 hot dogs with 8 buns.
Tweet about pumped-in squeaking noises at basketball games.

I can never unhear this. Thanks, I hate it.

Tweet falsely claiming ducks at the park are free to take.
A funny take on the real reason British people have accents.
Screenshot of a tweet suspecting the 2016 clown panic was a social media experiment.

I'm sure this had absolutely nothing to do with a certain movie release. Nothing.

A user's suspicion that their local elevator "close doors" button is a placebo.
A screenshot of a tweet about Walmart overcharging customers at the register.

Funny conspiracy theories

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The hot dog one keeps me up at night, and I don’t even like hot dogs. Ten franks in a pack, eight buns in a pack, and somebody, somewhere, decided that this should be the arrangement forever. There is no committee meeting fixing this. There is no consumer revolt. We just keep buying both and absorbing the surplus into nothing. That’s not a coincidence anymore. That’s strategy. The everyday conspiracy theories that catch on are the ones where you’ve already noticed the weirdness and just hadn’t named it yet.

Then the elevator button. The most calloused finger in any office building belongs to the person who has been mashing the close-door button for years, fully aware that nothing is happening on the other end of that wire. It’s a placebo. It’s a stress ball with an LED. The harmless conspiracy theories thrive in this exact territory, where the lie is too small to fight and too pleasant to give up.

The pumped-in basketball squeak noises one is the one that genuinely changed me. I will never watch another game without imagining a guy in a sound booth with two damp balloons. That tweet ruined a perfectly good viewing experience and I love it. The lighthearted conspiracies are at their best when they introduce a doubt you cannot un-introduce. The squeak is now suspicious. Forever. Nothing else needed.

What this whole gallery is really doing, when you sit back and look at it, is giving people permission to notice the things they already noticed. Nobody actually thinks the FAA is hiding something terrible about airplane mode. Nobody is genuinely organizing a takedown of Big Hot Dog. The whole appeal is the small, shared experience of going, “wait, has anybody else also wondered about this,” and finding out that yes, three thousand strangers have wondered about it too, and there is some comfort in that even if there is no answer.

The mundane is so consistently weird that we’ve stopped registering it. A grocery store has the same model of silver minivan parked in seventeen identical spots. A rental scooter app charges you twice for the same ride. A Walmart receipt has a phantom penny on it. None of it matters. All of it is true. The brain wants a reason. The brain settles for a joke instead, and the joke gets retweeted, and somebody captions a meme about it, and now we are all in on a conspiracy that nobody is actually committing.

That’s the trick, and it works every single time. The world is, in fact, a little bit rigged. It just happens to be rigged in extremely petty ways.

If suspicious overthinking is now your personality, relatable internet humor is right there with the same energy, weird Twitter threads carry this exact “wait but really” vibe, and observational comedy galleries are where this kind of low-stakes paranoia thrives. Welcome to the watchlist.

Michael Hartley, or just "Mike," is an editor and seasoned meme historian whose articles have traced the evolution of meme humor from early Impact-font classics to today’s TikTok sensations. With nearly a decade spent as senior editor at ViralHype and as a regular contributor to Cheezburger, Mike has dissected the rise of meme legends such as Bad Luck Brian, Success Kid, and Doge. When he's not hunting down meme gold for Thunder Dungeon, Mike teaches workshops on meme marketing and the psychology behind shareable content.
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