Tub Vine — Two Guys In A Hot

Vine, heteronormativity, homosocial space, queer panic, meme theory, proximity, irony. 1. Introduction In May 2014, user @dickard uploaded a six-second looping video. The frame shows two young men—torsos visible, submerged to the chest in a hot tub. The audio, delivered in a flat, explanatory tone, states: “Two guys in a hot tub. Five feet apart. ‘Cause they’re not gay.”

A. Scholar Affiliation: Department of Internet Studies, University of Meme Theory Journal: Journal of Digital Culture & Micro-Trends (Volume 9, Issue 4) Abstract This paper analyzes the 2014 Vine video “two guys in a hot tub five feet apart ‘cause they’re not gay” as a pivotal text in understanding post-2010 digital masculinity. At only six seconds long, the video encapsulates a dense field of semiotic tension: intimacy, denial, homosocial bonding, and the performance of heterosexuality. We argue that the “five feet apart” metric functions as a quantifiable defense mechanism against the perceived threat of homosexual recognition. By comparing the Vine to classical sociological theories of male homosociality (Sedgwick, 1985) and modern memetic propagation (Shifman, 2014), this paper concludes that the video’s humor derives precisely from the cognitive dissonance between the setting (a traditionally intimate, warm, nude-adjacent space) and the stated rule (enforced distance). The meme survives not as a mockery of gay men, but as a parody of fragile straight masculinity. two guys in a hot tub vine

This is an unusual request, as "Two Guys in a Hot Tub" is a 5-second Vine video (by user dickard , featuring the soundbite “two guys in a hot tub five feet apart ‘cause they’re not gay”). It doesn’t naturally lend itself to a traditional academic paper. However, I’ve generated a that treats the Vine as a serious cultural artifact. You can use this as a template, a joke, or a creative deconstruction. Title: Five Feet Apart: Heteronormativity, Homosocial Space, and the Memetic Compression of Queer Panic in the 2014 Vine “Two Guys in a Hot Tub” The frame shows two young men—torsos visible, submerged

At the time, Vine was a platform defined by extreme brevity. However, this particular loop achieved viral permanence, spawning thousands of remixes, reaction videos, and re-enactments. Why? This paper posits that the Vine functions as a ritualized anxiety dream of straight male friendship. The hot tub represents a zone of compulsory intimacy; the five-foot rule represents a frantic redrawing of boundaries. The punchline is not the denial—it is the unspoken awareness that the denial was necessary at all. 2.1 Homosociality and Panic Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick (1985) famously argued that male homosocial desire exists on a continuum with homosexuality, separated not by essence but by cultural prohibition. The “five feet apart” rule is a physical instantiation of what Sedgwick calls homosexual panic —the fear that affective or physical closeness between straight men will be misread as erotic. 2.2 Memetic Compression Limor Shifman (2014) notes that successful memes reduce complex social scripts into replicable, ironic snippets. The Vine compresses an entire chapter of gender studies into six seconds: the setting (hot tub → vulnerable, warm, wet), the actors (two males), the distance (five feet → measurable, absurdly specific), and the justification (“cause they’re not gay” → defensive, unprompted). 3. Analysis: The Semiotics of Five Feet 3.1 Why a Hot Tub? Public discourse rarely questions why the two guys are in a hot tub at all. The hot tub is a liminal space: neither fully private (it can be shared) nor fully public (clothing is optional/minimal). It invites relaxation, sweating, and close conversation. In a heterosexual context, a hot tub is romantic. In a homosocial context, it is a minefield. The Vine’s humor arises because the speakers have chosen the most dangerously intimate venue and then attempted to retroactively sanitize it with a tape measure. 3.2 The Numerical Specificity “Five feet” is not a standard social distance (which is 1.5–4 feet for personal space, per Hall, 1966). Five feet is just beyond arm’s reach. It is a distance that requires active maintenance in a small hot tub. The specificity parodies clinical safety rules (e.g., “six feet apart for COVID-19”), substituting viral safety for sexual safety. The message: Proximity = contamination. The contaminant is the gay. 3.3 “Cause they’re not gay” The phrase is performative denial in its purest form. No one asked. No accusation was leveled. The speaker preemptively testifies. This mirrors what linguists call protest too much rhetoric—the more explicit the denial, the more the audience suspects the opposite. The meme’s endurance is not a celebration of homophobia but an ironic recognition that the denial is funnier than any actual gay content would be. 4. Memetic Afterlife By 2016, the audio had been remixed into EDM tracks, Minecraft skits, and political parodies (e.g., “Two senators in a hot tub… ‘cause they’re not passing bills”). Each remix retains the structure: [Two X in intimate setting] + [measured distance] + [denial of implied Y]. The meme became a template for exposing any performative distance—political, racial, or gendered. In this sense, the original Vine evolved from a joke about gay panic into a meta-joke about any anxious boundary-drawing. 5. Conclusion “Two guys in a hot tub” is not a homophobic artifact so much as a document of homosocial fragility. The five feet are not real inches—they are psychic armor. The hot tub is not a hot tub; it is the straight male subconscious. And the punchline, six seconds long, continues to echo because the anxiety it parodies has not gone away—it has simply learned to measure itself. ‘Cause they’re not gay