What percentage of every meme, joke, and trend of note in the internet comes from us?
The only people who can even be said to “make culture” are people doing it for free, without the oversight of management - ergo, the only real culture being created is in places like this.
How many of our memes have gone from 15-man group chats to being parroted by KFC’s social media roasties in the span of 3 years?
How many unknown, unappreciated memetic heroes have written posts, published stories that resonated more than every ‘hit’ movie made for the last 20 years?
They say “culture”, but they only see that which is approved and dated with a trademark. Just like white culture, it seems invisible to them because it’s ubiquitous.
But sure, prove me wrong and show me a black meme that’s made its way up to replace ours. Instead, we get black-ified shit like the negro wojaks, imitation masquerading as creation
@WashedOutGundamPilot
It's so hilarious to see, that when someone created a personification of negative depressing average person, these women identify with it to such an extent.
I get it, but the irony is blindingly obvious.
@LukeAlmighty Dudes who post frogs as a selfie are far more likely to look better than the ones who post the…whatever the hell on the right
@theorytoe @LukeAlmighty IDK, from the frogs I’ve met IRL….they’re better looking than the average. Maybe it’s a mark of security, where they don’t have to play pretend and look good, because they already do IRL
@LukeAlmighty That’s what I love about the apu meme. There’s something so humble and grounded about it to see all these guys willingly representing themselves as this sorta retarded, sad, helpless little creature.
Where others online represent themselves via filters, artificially charitable caricatures, and carefully selected lucky photos, we portray ourselves as a humble little creature like him. It’s so pure.