How is snowclone used in real life?

Although snowclone was created to describe a phenomenon in news writing, snowclones themselves have found a new home in memes with the rise of internet humor. All your X are belong to us is an example of a snowclone that originated as an internet meme rather than in journalism. This meme, which sprung from the poor English translations in the opening dialogue of a game called Zero Wing, went viral in 1998.

Other examples of snowclones include Xy McXFace. In 2016, the British government held a contest to let the public decide the name of a polar research ship worth hundreds of millions of dollars. The public flooded the votes with Boaty McBoatface, which was ultimately given to a small underwater autonomous vehicle rather than the giant ship. Similar names, such as Parsey McParseface, Planey McPlaneface, and Firey McFireface followed.

Another snowclone example is this is your X on Y. It originated from a 1987 television public service announcement from Partnership for a Drug-Free America, which contained the phrase this is your brain on drugs. Formulations have included this is your brain on poetry and this is your premise on drugs.

More examples of snowclone:

New #snowclone: There was a bug in [X] Now, when that bug is fixed and [Y] is not [doing Z workaround anymore], then [Y] breaks. — Gregory Davis (@gregdavisfromnj) February 1, 2016

new snowclone up! there's no crying in X! — Erin O’Connor 🦄 (@kirinqueen) April 22, 2008

“One of the most popular snowclones right now is I’m in ur X, Y-ing ur Z .”

—Paul McFedries, “Snowclone Is The New Cliché,” IEEE Spectrum (February 1, 2008)