The world is filled with gendered images that shape and echo society’s ideas on what is feminine, reinforce the ideologies about how a woman should look and act, and are hidden under the guise of humor. This humor shames women who step out of their place, and encourages them to step back into the gender “box” defined by the culture industry. In the modern, mediated world, this plays out in advertising as well as “humorous” pictures, called Internet memes, which are shared by individuals on social media websites. The term meme first appeared in “The Selfish Gene” by Richard Dawkins in 1976. He defines a meme as “small cultural unites analogous to genes, which spread from person to person by imitation” (as cited in Shifman, 2009, p. 1). An Internet meme, therefore, is an idea that spreads (or “goes viral”) through imitation in cyberspace. To understand how women are invited into certain feminine subjectivities, this paper performs a semiotic analysis of memes related to gender “codes” that define what is feminine through the use of humor. Building off the work of Erving Goffman(1969, 1979), Sut Jhally (2009) defines the traits (passive, childlike, and submissive) that are commonly associated with being feminine, and argues that these traits are considered subordinate to masculine traits. The Internet memes examined in this paper are selected from popular social media websites and deal with body image, behavior, dress, and a woman’s “place.” The role of advertising in society has been discussed extensively; however, there is less discussion of the role of Internet memes related to gender. This presentation fills that gap and brings to the conversation a view on a form of ideological reinforcement that is unique and increasingly widespread.