[Placeholder for https://www.facebook.com/dailydot/posts/1038300222907631 embed.]

[Placeholder for https://www.facebook.com/dailydot/posts/602764663225907 embed.]

[Placeholder for https://www.facebook.com/chuck.ross.5203/posts/1078241428901141 embed.]

Some people even went so far as to personally message me on Facebook, telling me, “you just had to kill dat boi,” and “stop killing memes please.” It was clear I had sullied something sacred before it could truly blossom.

Facebook

I should note, however, that a small minority claimed dat boi had been run into the ground long before the Daily Dot picked it up; they still considered my coverage the final nail in the coffin, but they celebrated his demise. This was probably due to confusion over the meme’s lifespan: Those who had become familiar with dat boi in the past week, when he truly went viral, were more upset than those who knew that he’d been around for months and/or found the meme to be “forced,” which is to say uninspiring and less than malleable. These hardliners hate anything with the whiff of formula.

Facebook

Does it surprise you that actual human beings would vent such anguish and grief over where on the Internet a specific cartoon frog appears? Or that within this supposedly underground and monolithic meme microculture—which by cruel necessity must exist in the public, unprotected space of social media—there are fine ideological divisions and internecine feuds?

Memes cannot die. They are only ever reborn.

It shouldn’t. This particular hive mind is operating through countless layers of performative irony. At the risk of enraging these memesters further, I would argue that taking memes too seriously is part of the joke. In fact, it may be the entire joke. I don’t believe that anyone who lobbed the insult “normalcuck” at me (itself an epithet bred from the vernacular of Donald Trump‘s Twitter boosters, because the meme life is about nothing if not appropriation, which accounts for revulsion when a company follows suit) really meant it. I don’t believe that the guy who messaged me to say: “stop the ruining of memes! u are’ a one lousy mothfucker for doing this. there is will be revolt mister” really envisions a revolt against meme ruiners.

That’s not to disregard the evident passion of the highest meme cabals. They are caught in the same punishing churn of phenomenon-and-backlash as anyone else who invests time and effort in digital properties. They recognize the life cycle of a meme, and scrutiny from someone like me—for a website like this—can only hasten a meme’s demise. Yet even in that period of lament, the meme’s resilience often shines through.

That is to say: Memes cannot die. They are only ever reborn.

Facebook

And whether or not you take the meme scene at face value—again, a mistake they’ll surely exploit for further fun—I have to insist that they are making dangerous claims about the ownership of fluid, evolving concepts that hinge on essentially stolen artifacts. They’re frustrated that the very mechanism of virality makes it impossible to hoard premium memes.

Here’s what the meme elite—the meme percent, if you will—won’t admit: Memes belong to whoever uses them.

In that sense, it’s perfectly understandable that I’m seen as a pillaging invader who washed up on their remote shores to sack an unassuming country, hauling off whatever I found. But this supposes that memes belong to whoever initially fosters them, and that these individuals are selfless, benevolent creators. You could just as easily argue that I’m a Robin Hood or Bernie Sanders figure, liberating content from an ivory tower. “The redistribution of memes” sounds a lot better than “meme killer.”

Here’s what the meme elite—the meme percent, if you will—won’t admit: Memes belong to whoever uses them. To the extent that some particular meme conveys an emotion, action, or state of being, it is a language in which anyone may become fluent. Who are these shadowy Internet addicts to say that the masses are not allowed access? Wasn’t the Web meant to put an end to gatekeepers? The people roasting me for shedding light on dat boi aspire to a form of control as evil as it is nonsensical.

I killed dat boi. Long live dat boi. But most importantly:

I do believe I am dat boi — jordan (@thereadyset) May 3, 2016

Miles Klee is the LOL editor of the Daily Dot.

Share this article





Miles Klee Miles Klee is a novelist and web culture reporter. The former editor of the Daily Dot’s Unclick section, Klee’s essays, satire, and fiction have appeared in Lapham’s Quarterly, Vanity Fair, 3:AM, Salon, the Awl, the New York Observer, the Millions, and the Village Voice. He's the author of two odd books of fiction, 'Ivyland' and 'True False.'