My vote for meme of the year has got to be for feral hogs, mainly because I love pigs (hogs, whatever) and live for some rural chaos. But while Miles Klee honored another extremely popular shitpost with the title of Meme of the Decade, he agreed that it wouldn’t be right if, for 2019, he didn’t call special attention to those hogs — and what’s turned out to be a meme with a significant political undercurrent.
Must Read
How Adult Babies and Diaper Lovers Raise Babies of Their Own
An Actually Good Year-End List
From the Service Dept.
How Sick Does My Significant Other Have to Be for Me to Take the Day Off?
Tweet of the Week: We <3 You, Kesha
┏┓
┃┃╱╲ in
┃╱╱╲╲ this
╱╱╭╮╲╲ house
▔▏┗┛▕▔ we
╱▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔╲
stan @KeshaRose
╱╱┏┳┓╭╮┏┳┓ ╲╲
▔▏┗┻┛┃┃┗┻┛▕https://t.co/UQRUGhoNjc— MEL Magazine (@WeAreMel) December 27, 2019
Everything Else That Was Cool
‘Akira’ Is Still Our Most Vivid Portrait of Adolescent Male Rage
How ‘Parasite’ Created the Most Influential Food Porn of the Year
But Don’t Just Take Our Word For It…
This is a fantastic story about how the entire tradition of wearing silly New Years glasses started with two stoner musicians in Seattle in 1990, who hustled their asses off to make their napkin sketch idea become a cultural staple: https://t.co/h3uvz8zF2u
— Rob Sheridan, holiday enjoyer (@rob_sheridan) December 27, 2019
This is my dark horse choice for Story Of The Yearhttps://t.co/xj5M3o8eD5
— Mike Baker (@ByMikeBaker) December 22, 2019
I'm normally grumpy about prognostication content, but what @alanalevinson and @WeAreMel are doing in brand-backed media isn't a prediction, but an example.
Also a good lesson for all the businesses flailing about with bad, boring content marketing https://t.co/i54lrRXhtD
— James daSilva (@James_daSilva) December 23, 2019