Here is the English translation:
“Fat kid punching” is not an official, long-standing template name, but rather a derogatory nickname used by some online communities to refer to reaction videos and images of a student (wearing a hoodie) who deadpans “Okay” and then throws a punch at the person filming in a school hallway. The most widely circulated source of this “meme” in February 2026 is a clip related to an incident at Lake Zurich High School (Lake Zurich area), posted by Danny Spud on X and later shared across TikTok, Instagram, Reddit, YouTube, and “formalized” in meme history by Know Your Meme.
In English usage, “fat kid punching” is commonly used as shorthand for the frame of someone raising their fist to punch + the caption “Okay,” conveying tones such as no hesitation, accepting consequences, “choosing violence” in a meme sense, or giving a blunt reaction to a warning. In meme structure (as described by KYM), it typically follows this format: a provoking or disagreeable statement → “Okay” → an image of winding up to punch as a visual punchline.
The accompanying controversies are significant: concerns about promoting school violence, body-shaming (embedded in the name “fat kid”), political speculation tied to immigration enforcement/ICE, the risk of doxxing since the individual may be a minor, and copyright risks due to widespread re-uploads. Local media outlets and Patch noted that they did not name or publish images of the individuals involved because they may be minors, while the school and police have limited the information released.
Origin and earliest documented records
The most clearly documented origin timeline (in meme documentation and local reporting) is as follows: on February 12, 2026, Danny Spud posted a video (approximately 47 seconds long according to local reports) showing him holding a sign reading “I LOVE ICE” in a school hallway during an event or atmosphere involving anti-ICE sentiment. Another student approaches and threatens to punch him; Spud responds, “You’re going to get in trouble,” the other replies “Okay,” and then throws the punch.
A technical detail frequently mentioned across sources about the earliest recording: the video appears to have been filmed using Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses (described that way in local reporting; Patch used the word “apparently”). This contributed to the distinctive POV angle—the punch coming straight into the camera—which later became an ideal frame for extraction as a reaction image.
Regarding the earliest still-image record, Know Your Meme archived a reaction template described precisely as: “A reaction image of a kid winding up to punch someone in first person POV.” This is key, as the meme spread not only as a video but also as a static image.
One important naming note: in major sources, the meme is typically referred to by event-based or dialogue-based names such as “Okay Punch Kid” (on KYM), while “fat kid punching” appears more as a tag (KYM includes the tag “fat kid punching”) and as user-generated shorthand (for example, Reddit discussions using “fat kid punching…”). This indicates that “fat kid punching” functions more as a commentary-laden label than as a neutral template name.

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