In 2006, Will Ferrell and Adam McKay gave us a gift wrapped in a checkered flag: . While it looks like a goofy comedy about fast cars and "Shake and Bake," it’s actually a sharp-witted dissection of American exceptionalism, commercialism, and the fragile ego of the "winner." The Legend of Ricky Bobby

From Ricky's 10-minute prayers to Powerade to the "Fig Newtons" sticker plastered across his windshield, the film perfectly mocks how everything—even faith and vision—can be bought.

Ricky Bobby is a man who "pisses excellence" because he was raised on a single, toxic mantra: "If you ain't first, you're last." The film follows his meteoric rise to the top of NASCAR—fueled by Wonder Bread sponsorships and a refusal to acknowledge any other driver—and his inevitable, spectacular crash.

What makes Talladega Nights a masterpiece isn't just the slapstick (though the "invisible fire" scene is a masterclass in physical comedy); it’s how it holds a mirror up to the culture of the mid-2000s:

Nearly two decades later, the quotes have become part of the lexicon. Whether you’re shouting "Don't you put that evil on me, Ricky Bobby!" or "I’m hockin' a loogie!" the film remains a staple of the "Frat Pack" era of comedy. It managed to celebrate NASCAR culture while simultaneously poking fun at its extremes, proving that you can be both a parody and a tribute at 200 miles per hour.