
seen from Malaysia
seen from Taiwan

seen from Australia

seen from United States
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from South Korea
seen from Macao SAR China
seen from Tunisia
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Argentina
seen from China
seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from China
The meme’s success is just this: its reach and its rarity; its ability to snake through the underground only to re-emerge and mutate; its continued operations of hiding, incubating, and exposing black cultural elements. As object lesson, the meme teaches a queer body politic, an Afropessimistic, black accelerationist approach to rendering oneself and rendering and rendering and rendering and rendering and rendering. (I use the word 'accelerationist' with caution.) We have long been digital, 'compressed, reproduced, ripped, remixed' across time and space. For blackness, the meme could be a way of further figuring an existence that spills over the bounds of the body, a homecoming into our homelessness.
Aria Dean, “Poor Meme, Rich Meme” on Real Life
A good chocolate, or a place/object loaded with history: rich (affectionate)
Billionaires: rich (derogatory)
I'm getting paid like $500 tomorrow