“You know it’s peak Canadian dream when you pay for your coffee with a meme of Justin Trudeau in hockey gear.”
It’s -25°C, the icy wind from the Red River pelts my face, but I’m grinning like a fool in front of the Meme Brew Café window. On the door, a sign reads: “We accept memes, dad jokes, and awkward apologies. No cash.”
Inside, the smell of roasted coffee and hot poutine fills the air along with bursts of laughter. At the counter, a student in a pink parka negotiates her latte: “I’ve got a meme of Céline Dion singing while shoveling snow… Is that worth a slice of sugar pie?”
Welcome to the most 2025 place you can imagine: a café where memes are currency, servers rate your humor, and the motto is “If you didn’t laugh today, you didn’t pay.”
The Crazy Idea of a Former French Teacher Turned “Meme Trader”
It all started with Jean-François Leduc, 42, a former French teacher tired of grading essays about Molière.
“One day, I saw a student trade a La Petite Vie meme for a bag of chips. That’s when I had my lightbulb moment: what if we could monetize internet culture?”
In 2024, he converted his stamp shop into Meme Brew Café, with three simple rules:
- No cash, just memes (or jokes).
- Servers judge the humor value.
- Excessive politeness is rewarded (this is Canada, after all).
The concept? Turn humor into local currency. “In Winnipeg, we laugh six months a year to survive winter. Let’s make it official!”

How Does It Work? A Survival Guide for Newbies
Hungry? Here’s the protocol:
- Choose your menu item (poutine, coffee, Gen Z desserts).
- Show a meme saved on your phone or improvise one on the spot.
- A server evaluates it in “LOLs” (the café’s currency).
- Score high enough? You eat. If not, you shovel snow outside.
Example prices:
- Americano: 1 “Bonjour-Hi” meme or 2 Fransaskois jokes.
- “Déglingué” Poutine: 1 viral meme (e.g., Trudeau dabbing in Question Period) + 1 embarrassing story.
- Timbits: 1 dad joke (“Why do Canadians love maple syrup? Because it’s their liquid gold, eh!”)
“The tricky part is not undervaluing boomer memes,” explains Sophie, a server and former TikTok influencer.
“Last week, a guy paid for his dinner with a Les Boys meme… I laughed so hard he got free chicken wings.”
The Menu: From Quebec to Vancouver, with a Dash of Internet
The menu is a memetic-culinary road trip:
- “Ceci N’Est Pas Une Poutine” Poutine: Cheese curds, “drama” sauce (BBQ-syrup blend), and maple leaf-shaped fries. Price: 1 “Ça peut tu être correct” meme.
- “Sorry” Latte: Cappuccino with “sorry” spelled in cinnamon. Accepts memes of cats in tutus.
- “Too Much Manitoba” Burger: Bison steak, bacon, and… grilled marshmallow. Payable with a “Prairie Vibes” meme.
The highlight? Daily “Meme Challenges.”
Today’s challenge: “Turn the Manitoba flag into a meme. Winner gets a beaver tail.”
Why Does It Work? Because Canada Is a Meme Goldmine
Meme Brew Café taps into the Canadian collective unconscious:
- Classics: “To Be Fair…” memes, Saskatchewan Roughriders gags.
- Local jokes: Winnipeg potholes, Northern mosquitoes, “Friendly Manitoba” (sarcasm intended).
- Politics: A whole wall dedicated to Jagmeet Singh memes.
“We have a very diverse clientele,” says Jean-François. “Teens snapping pics of their meals, grandmas sharing Heartland memes, even politicians testing their viral IQ.”
The Dark Side: When Memes Become Weapons
Of course, not everything’s rosy.
In March 2025, a scuffle broke out when a customer tried to pay with an “Alberta Exit” meme.
“The server, a Calgarian transplant, almost kicked him out,” laughs Sophie. “We had to create a neutral zone for political memes.”
Other issues:
- Meme theft: One customer copied another’s meme—right in front of him. Fight ensued, complete with “tabarnak” shouts.
- NSFW memes: “We once received a meme of Justin Bieber in… a compromising position. We accepted it, but framed it in the bathroom,” confesses Jean-François.
- LOL inflation: Overused memes (like “It’s already Wednesday my dudes”) have lost 80% of their value.
Rush Hour: When TikTokers Take Over
At 3 PM, Meme Brew turns into a live studio.
Influencers from Montreal, Toronto, and even a duo from Edmonton show up to “farm content.”
Surreal scene: a creator from Quebec delivers a monologue on “How to survive a date with a hockey fan”—in exchange for nachos.
“I have 500,000 followers, but here, you gotta be funny to eat,” she giggles.
The café becomes a live stage:
- Improv sets with memes projected in the background.
- Joke battles (“chiac” vs “joual”).
- Even a flash wedding where vows were memes (divorced in 48h, but “it made a great Reels”).

And What About Tourists? “We Had an Aussie Try a Kangaroo Meme… Total Fail”
Meme Brew also draws curious tourists.
Problem: Canadian humor is a niche market.
- A German tried a beer meme—deemed “too literal.”
- A French tourist dropped a Jacques Cartier meme: “Too old, too colonial,” a server judged.
- A Japanese tourist nailed it with a GIF of Totoro in a toque: “10/10, he got a massive poutine tip.”
“Context is key,” explains Jean-François. “A good Canadian meme needs cold, politeness, or Tim Hortons references.”
The Future? Meme NFTs and a Collaboration with the Habs
Next steps for Meme Brew:
- Launch its own crypto: LoonieCoin (1 Loonie = 1000 LOLs).
- Open franchises: Edmonton, Halifax… maybe even Detroit (“Just to roast the neighbors,” jokes Jean-François).
- Collaborate with the NHL: “We dream of official Canadiens memes… but hey, one step at a time.”
And if it fails? “We’ll turn it into a meme museum. Or a rehab for Reddit addicts.”
Last Laugh
Leaving Meme Brew Café, I realize Winnipeg might just have invented the future of commerce:
A place where currency is worthless—unless it connects us.
And if everything collapses?
At least, as one customer put it: “We’ll have memes to laugh about it.”
Ready to give it a shot? Bring your best memes… and your tolerance for server sarcasm.



