I think image macros and memes are a form of clever parlor banter. One person says something, another person makes a witty remark, the ladies titter, and we serve the champagne. Glasses clink. The men retire to the drawing-room for cigars and cognac while the ladies head to the veranda for some Eyes Wide Shut.
And that's all nice and well - except where such a thing doesn't happen. The internet has given such cases before. One person repeats an old joke, all laugh, the joke is remembered. The joke is repeated, people laugh - they get the joke, the joke is repeated. Not as many laugh. The joke is repeated. Newcomers laugh. The joke is repeated. Newcomers compensate for their newness by repeating the old joke, joining the knowing of the joke by the old. Some of us were even there, or can call up past experiences of doing such. The magma blitz is hardly the romantic ideal of witty remarks sparking clever banter, nor is the death of /b/ at the hand of memes a shining example of them spurring creativity - I mean it's horrifying to see 5 year old jokes still being repeated as if they were new, by internet standards that's even worse. The narrow confines of macros and rage comics slimmed the level of discourse down into preset formula, confining all conversation to past conversations, reducing its future to be a constant echo of itself.
I also like to feel that little rush of creativity, the low-effort climax when I hit "post" on a silly thing I wrote or linked or image-macro'd, and it gets all over your monitors. And then you might say something about it! It's great.
I would think the same way, up until I realized they were wholly unnecessary and actually lowered the quality of what I had to say. It is not that hard to turn a macro into a coherent sentence without even including any effort; creativity does not come prepackaged in neat colours on memes. Every meme starts with an original bit of information, and when memes become the primary form of communication - no new memes will arise.
In a way, image macros and similar memes are an art of communication with a complex and rigorous formalism.
But not as most would know them. I claim not to know the full intricacies of the neckbeard nor the legbeard, but their ways are a far cry from rage comics and macros as can be.
As long as we have ways to express what we want, I think we'll be fine.
Unless such ways prove to be insufficient in allowing full expression.
Most probably due to how the internet (given that it is the primary method of actually putting memetics in this sence, to work) is very open and free to young minds who cannot exactly discern the implicit difference between what is stated in the idea from what is the correct way of discourse. Exposure and all, without an alternative.
I shudder to think that there would be people who hold the power to command 'correct' discourse, this is just my ramblings. But again, I stress that there is a gulf of difference between how memes are used in the stale lands of 9gag, facebook, reddit and /b/ versus the content creating corners of the internet in the strangest forms of , /tg/, reddit, tumblr and /pol/. In the former where memes have become the primary method of communication - nothing new is made, everything is a clone. In a latter, new memes are created because dialogue comes from discourse first and foremost, or in tumblr's case doodles.
Language is a meme. Your move, LW.
UR MOVE MR LAW MAN
I am of course, in constant moral panic about these things. Panic isn't the right word of course; I fear of these changes as a geriatric man would fear some new trend in hip clothing and of course hope they are as unsounded fears as that.
You must understand how these things go, firstly--why these happen.
Memes are easy, they require little thought to just punch in a statement into a generator and plast it into a well-recognized meme to gather the appropriate response with little regard to the actual content. No individual thought required.
How loud one makes their message is how far it would be heard--I do believe that the lessening or deprecation of quality is at the same rate or a bit higher than years ago and not as quick as it is now, just a lot louder that more people are waking up to it.
Louder, with larger ripples - it started leeching from the internet into meatspace a long while ago and a notable deprecation in quality is evident; just look at media adverts, done by people who spend long chains of 0's in front of ones and dollar signs to find out what captures the attention best of viewers. Hence, epic memes.
...You should mention that this thread is for [this country] or such in the title.
Ah, it's for none in particular; but this thread branched off from an Amurrican story posted in a Ukrainian thread, so there's just that little bit tying in the two conversations.
And for those of whom who cannot understand what I mean, allow me to express the above entirely in memes.
But you stated it concisely! D:
That's the point