
Chloe, seated in a booster seat in the back of a family car, turns her head slightly and delivers a tight, skeptical side-eye. Her mouth tenses, her brows draw together, and the expression sits somewhere between confusion and mild concern. The moment is brief, perfectly framed, and instantly readable — a child trying to make sense of something that doesn’t quite track.
The GIF comes from one of the most recognizable internet clips of the 2010s, where Chloe reacts to news of an unexpected Disneyland trip. Her face captures a precise emotional beat rarely caught so clearly on camera: a small child processing information with uncanny adult-like skepticism.
How It’s Used
- When something makes absolutely no sense
- “Me trying to understand that statement”
- When the vibes are off and you’re not convinced
- When someone explains something badly
- Any reply needing a confused, uncomfortable, or doubtful look
Origin
- Person: Chloe Clem
- Source Video: “Lily’s Disneyland Surprise… AGAIN!”
- Date: September 12, 2013
- Platform: YouTube (posted by the Clem family)
- Context: Chloe reacts to her parents announcing a surprise Disneyland trip. Her sister Lily bursts into tears; Chloe responds with the now-famous side-eye that launched the meme.
- Circulation: The moment was clipped within days of upload, spreading across Tumblr, Twitter, Reddit, and reaction-image blogs as a universal symbol of confusion and suspicion.
Why It Became a Meme
The expression is precise — a tiny, unfiltered human moment that mirrors adult skepticism with perfect comedic timing. Chloe’s side-eye is visually clear at a glance, works in both static and animated formats, and applies to hundreds of social situations. Its versatility helped cement it as one of the defining reaction images of the decade.
Legacy
Chloe has remained a fixture of reaction culture for more than a decade, with the side-eye regularly resurfacing in new formats, edits, and remixes. In 2021, the Clem family auctioned a high-resolution version of the image as an NFT, reinforcing its status as a canonical internet artifact. The GIF continues to be one of the internet’s most recognizable symbols of confusion and reluctant disbelief.