
#dc comics#dc#batman#tim drake#dick grayson#batfam#bruce wayne#batfamily#dc fanart



seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from Sweden

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia

seen from Luxembourg
seen from Yemen
seen from T1

seen from China

seen from United States

seen from Sweden
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from T1
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
Everyone has a whiskey
I need to drink more Tennesse Whiskey, because I just can't quite escape Jack Daniels with this one. (But alas, such a cruel fate is mine- having to drink more whiskey!)
Ein 1Personen Knobelspiel von @thinkfun @ravensburgerglobal bei dem wir als Alien in einem UFO Kühe klauen. Sehr süß. Sehr einfach, aber sehr süß. Invasion of the Cow Snatchwers #magnet #puzzle #knobel #logic #challenge https://www.instagram.com/p/B6oEBlDoVzd/?igshid=spw1w8hy0tha
Die Kugeln fliegen nur so durch die Luft. Ich aktiviere Ventilatoren, Magneten, Bahnen, öffne Behälter, um sie einzufangen, soweit, dass ich sie ins Ziel bringen kann. Dabei muss ich die verschiedenen Mechanismen im Auge behalten und auch aufs Timing achten. Dabei gehen viele Kugeln verloren, aber wichtig ist, dass genügend davon den Weg ins Ziel finden.
Acht mal acht ist tausend - Rätsel von Oscar - Mit Lösung!
For this second creative-making project, I wanted to create a series of memes that demonstrate the characteristics of what makes a "successful" meme, as per Michele Knobel and Colin Lankshear's findings in "Online Memes, Affinities, and Cultural Production."
The first is a rehashing of the familiar "All your base are belong to us" meme, and is meant to demonstrate the first concept of humor. Given how broad and complicated the notion is, I thought it best to demonstrate this idea through the example given by Knobel and Lankshear when describing the subject. Because it is such a well-known and long-lasting joke, it is clear that the humor demonstrated in "All your base are belong to us" (described in the article as "geek kitsch" due to its base in syntactic error and game-based context) is an endurable one. Grammar mistakes and the unintentional ruining of a "serious" moment through them just work, it seems. Through it, however, I also wanted to demonstrate other concepts regarding memes that we've discussed, both through this article and others: the longevity of a meme and the act of "ruining" it through its oversaturation in public consciousness and use in the "mainstream" (as per the "Thanks, Obama!" joke).
The second meme is another familiar face: the "doge" joke. Through it, I wanted to demonstrate the second concept that Knobel and Lankshear discuss: intertextuality. Memes are largely memorable because they do not exist in a vacuum. They are either inspired by recognizable pieces of pop culture, or eventually incorporate other ideas as they evolve and spread. This can lead to an incredible amount of creativity, as a singular joke grows to take on multiple references to current or past events, films, music, or even other memes. As such, this use of "doge" incorporates references to several other memes and alters them to fit the context of its original idea (the bad grammar, the "wow"). I've included the aforementioned "All your base" meme, the "Afro Circus" meme, and the "Me gusta" meme.
The third and final meme is not a pre-existing one, but the use of a GIF to reflect the importance of the juxtaposition that Knobel and Lankshear talk of. In this case, I used a moment from the new Netflix comedy Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, which in and of itself relies upon this idea for much of its humor, and even for its very core idea: a woman who has been forcibly held inside a bunker for fifteen years as part of a religious cult is finally freed, and attempts to move on with her life. This sort of subject would likely make for a dark, intense drama examining PTSD, brainwashing, cultural isolation, and the like, but Kimmy Schmidt instead uses it in a lighthearted, altogether silly manner. Many of its jokes and storylines, in fact, are based off of the main character's difficulty to adjusting to city life. So, the GIF I employed references this and the conflict in implications and tone.
Memes response
Alexandra Thornton
E101
Drobny
10 October 2014
Internet memes are literally everywhere. In my experience, there is almost no where to go online without seeing a meme somewhere. There are even conversations comprised entirely of memes as their mediums of communication. This reading has a lot, if not too much, good research on memes on the internet. This decides that memes can be a great way to convey a message, and memes can hold literary value. I agree. I also liked the comment about how it can be an effective way for teachers to communicate with students, but it later specifies that for this to be effective, the teacher has to know what they're doing and have meme credibility. I find all of this to be very accurate. I have seen many teachers try to do this but be unsuccessful. To analyze memes in the next project, I will be googling them and assessing them on humor, comprehensiveness, effectiveness, and overall message to find the ideal meme for our purposes.
Is it a general consensus that this was unnecessarily long for a paper about memes?
Online Memes, Affinities, and Cultural Production
This piece was a little harder to get something out of, because for the most part, it was statistics. However, I thought it was interesting how they were trying to suggest memes into the modern world of how we live and function in the class room. To suggest that memes online might be the new direction they are going with trying to modernize things with technology in the classrooms.
Now alone with everything else people are trying to make modern, some may believe that education isn't the kind to mess with. You always have those old fashioned people who say, "if it ain't broke, don't fix it". So why do we turn to technology when we think we need to better something? Why do we think that is the answer? We can improve on so many things, but I feel like just turning to technology is avoiding the problem. We have the resources to change things, but people don't have that drive for regular things like they do for technology. If people cared more for other things like they do for technology, there wouldn't be as many things that need fixed.
Why do we turn to technology when we think we need to better something?