

On April 18th, fact-checking outlet Snopes then posted a tweet that debunked the notion that the Snickers dick vein was going to be removed, stating, "The candy company Mars, Inc. i need to be alone right now," earning roughly 23,600 likes in the same amount of time (shown below, right). i just bought a snickers (my favorite treat might i add) and it came out completely smooth. Later on the 16th, Twitter user JUNlPER posted another tweet, showing a Snickers bar with no veins and captioning it, "it’s already beginning. On April 16th, 2022, Twitter user JUNlPER posted a tweet that attached a fake news headline stating, "Snickers are officially caving and removing the world renowned dick vein from the candybar." They captioned it, "no fucking way," and earned roughly 202,500 likes over the course of three days (shown below, left). Removing The Snickers Dick Vein / Snopes Article Day ruined." The tweet received roughly 81,500 likes in seven months (shown below). On September 21st, 2021, Twitter user TungusBusko tweeted a photo of a Mars bar with no wrinkles, captioning it, "They forgot to add the throbbing cock vein to my mars bar. A similar version was shared to /r/memes on January 31st, 2020, earning roughly 5,500 upvotes in two years (shown below, right). On December 28th, 2019, Redditor kingofthelol posted a meme to the /r/comedyhomicide subreddit that compared a smaller, white Snickers bar to a longer brown one, captioning it, "ha real funny Snickers," and earning over 110 upvotes in three years (shown below, left). On December 4th, 2019, the tweet was reposted to Instagram by button, which earned roughly 6,800 likes in three years.

Six years later, on July 10th, 2018, Twitter user RedDlicious tweeted about the Snickers dick vein, earning roughly 92,300 likes in four years while helping to popularize the concept (shown below). On December 14th, 2015, Imgur user TheOneThatGotBanned posted a photo of a giant Snickers bar with veins, earning roughly 1,700 upvotes over the course of seven years (shown below, right). On April 12th, 2012, Twitter user mattkoff tweeted, "The one weight loss tip that has ever worked for me: 'imagine that snickers you're about to eat has a dick vein,'" which earned over 30 likes in 10 years (shown below, left). Throughout both 20, the concept continued to be reiterated by Twitter users. They have veins just like a…I'll stop right there." After being posted, the reply received no likes, however, it is the first known utterance of the concept online (shown below). On February 7th, 2009, Twitter user MarieLuv tweeted a reply that stated, "I luv snickers. While many presumed the headline was obviously satirical, some unknowing news outlets thought to debunk it regardless, resulting in the theory going viral online. In 2022, a fake news story surfaced that Snickers was removing the dick vein. The pop culture reference became known in memes on Twitter as early as 2009.

Snickers Dick Vein refers to the chocolate ripples on top of Snickers candy bars that some online think makes it look like a penis with veins. Snickers, vein, dick, penis, nsfw, snope, twitter, article, fake, removing, candy, meme, memes, snickers bar dick veins, snickers dick vein memes, conspiracies, image macros, exploitables, #randycandy, randy candy About Conspiracy Theory, Exploitable, Image Macro, Pop Culture Reference
