The “Karen” has become a ubiquitous figure of internet infamy: a middle-aged white woman, often bearing a asymmetrical bob haircut, who weaponizes her perceived social status to demand unreasonable compliance from service workers, neighbors, or strangers. While the meme exploded on social media platforms like Reddit and TikTok in the late 2010s, its behavioral DNA was coded long before the name existed. Television—particularly reality TV, sitcoms, and prestige drama—served as the primary incubator and model for the “Karen” persona. Through the construction of the entitled female consumer, the neurotic suburban mother, and the “concerned citizen,” television did not merely reflect a social type; it actively modeled and mainstreamed a script of performative victimhood and petty authoritarianism that viewers would eventually recognize, name, and condemn as “Karen.”

The Small Screen Harpy: How Television Modeled the “Karen” Archetype

In conclusion, the “Karen” is not a spontaneous internet invention but a carefully modeled television product. Through sitcom entitlement, reality-TV confrontation, suburban surveillance dramas, and news-infotainment fearmongering, television provided the scripts, the haircuts, the vocal inflections, and the escalation tactics that millions would recognize as a “Karen.” The small screen taught audiences both how to perform a Karen and how to identify one. Today, when a video goes viral of a woman demanding a manager or calling police on a child’s lemonade stand, viewers are witnessing not a novel phenomenon but the latest episode in a long-running series—one first broadcast in syndication. Understanding the Karen requires understanding television as her modeling agency, her rehearsal space, and her original sin.

The most dangerous modeling, however, occurred in . Shows like America’s Most Wanted , Dateline NBC , and local news segments about “neighborhood watch” frequently featured white women calling police on Black individuals engaged in mundane activities (jogging, barbecuing, entering their own apartment buildings). Long before the infamous Central Park birdwatching incident of 2020, television news replayed footage of white women pointing, dialing 911, and weeping about “suspicious persons.” These segments were often framed as cautionary or helpful—concerned citizens keeping communities safe. In doing so, television modeled the racialized core of the Karen archetype: the weaponization of white femininity and state power against Black and brown bodies. The 2018 Philadelphia Starbucks incident, in which two Black men were arrested after a white manager called police, was a direct enactment of a script television had been running for decades. Television modeled the Karen not merely as annoying, but as dangerous.