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bibliotecamemetica.com

A collection of memes, curated by CJ Trowbridge.

Category: Carole Baskin -> This Meme

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First Seen

2023-05-10T21:03:35+00:00

gemma3-27b-vision

Okay, let's break down this meme, employing the requested theoretical frameworks. This is a complex image, so some sections will be more developed than others. **Please note:** Applying these frameworks to a meme is an exercise in interpretive stretching. The intent here is to demonstrate how these theories *could* be applied, and highlight the layers of meaning (or the absurdity of attempting such application). --- **1. Visual Description** The image is a split meme, juxtaposing two separate photos. * **Left Side:** A distressed woman (identified as Lisa Vanderpump) is looking towards the right, with a fearful expression. Beside her, a man (identified as her husband, Ken Todd) is pointing aggressively to the right, mirroring her gaze. The lighting is somewhat dramatic, highlighting their expressions. * **Right Side:** A close-up shot of a plate of salad on what appears to be a food preparation or buffet counter. Crucially, the head of Joe Exotic (of *Tiger King* fame) has been digitally inserted onto the salad. The lighting is much brighter and more functional. The contrast in composition – distressed faces versus an oddly calm salad topped with a tiger king – generates the humor and tension. --- **2. Foucauldian Genealogical Discourse Analysis** This meme can be interpreted through a Foucaultian lens as a disruption of normalizing discourses. * **Discourse of Reality TV & Celebrity:** The figures of Lisa Vanderpump, Ken Todd, and Joe Exotic are all products of specific discourses around reality television and celebrity culture. Each has constructed a public persona through the media, creating specific expectations about behavior and image. * **Genealogical Disruption:** The meme’s incongruity destabilizes these discourses. By grafting Joe Exotic’s head onto a plate of salad, it severs the expected connections between these figures. It suggests the absurdity of celebrity, the construction of "normal" and "abnormal" behavior, and the artificiality of reality TV. * **Power/Knowledge:** The act of meme-making itself is a form of power/knowledge. The creator is taking existing signs (the images) and re-arranging them, thereby producing a new, potentially subversive meaning. The power lies in the ability to reshape and remix cultural symbols. The meme implicitly critiques the systems that created these celebrities and then commodified them. --- **3. Critical Theory** This meme operates as a form of social commentary, albeit a darkly comedic one. * **Commodification of the Absurd:** The meme exposes the increasing commodification of the absurd within contemporary culture. Joe Exotic, a figure known for eccentric behavior and animal exploitation, has become a cultural icon, his image readily consumed and remixed. This speaks to a broader trend of turning anything into spectacle for profit. * **Critique of Spectacle:** Drawing on Guy Debord's theory of the "Society of the Spectacle," the meme subtly critiques how our culture prioritizes image over substance. The image of Joe Exotic's head on a salad plate is *more* visually arresting than any actual meaning or ethical consideration connected to him. * **Deconstruction of Boundaries:** The image deconstructs boundaries between the "high" and "low," the "serious" and "absurd." It mixes reality TV drama with the mundane (a salad), questioning the hierarchy of value we assign to different forms of culture. --- **4. Marxist Conflict Theory** While a tenuous connection, a Marxist reading could focus on the representation of class and spectacle. * **Commodity Fetishism:** The meme itself is a digital commodity. It is spread, shared, and ultimately contributes to the visibility and economic value of the figures depicted. This reinforces the cycle of commodity fetishism. * **Distraction from Real Issues:** The meme's absurdity could be seen as a form of distraction from genuine class struggles or economic inequality. By focusing on the trivialities of celebrity culture, it obscures the deeper, more pressing issues. * **Consumption of Identity:** The meme represents a form of consuming identity. We are consuming the image of Joe Exotic (and the drama of Vanderpump/Todd) rather than engaging with the underlying social conditions that shape their lives and public personas. --- **5. Postmodernism** This meme is quintessential postmodern. * **Pastiche & Intertextuality:** The meme actively mixes signs and references from different cultural contexts (reality TV, *Tiger King*, food photography). This is a key feature of postmodern pastiche, where meaning is created through the juxtaposition of seemingly unrelated elements. * **Irony & Meta-commentary:** The image is fundamentally ironic. It doesn't offer a straightforward message; instead, it comments on the very act of consuming and remixing cultural images. * **Rejection of Grand Narratives:** The meme actively rejects any grand narrative or unifying truth. It embraces fragmentation, ambiguity, and the playful deconstruction of meaning. --- **6. Queer Feminist Intersectional Analysis** This is the most challenging framework to apply, but possibilities exist. * **Subversion of Gendered Performance:** Joe Exotic, as a hyper-masculine figure who also actively challenges traditional gender roles, presents a complicated figure for analysis. Placing his head on the salad might be interpreted as a subversive act, defamiliarizing and challenging conventional notions of masculinity and “proper” presentation. * **Representation & Exploitation:** The meme could be seen as perpetuating the exploitation of a figure who was already exploited by the media. However, it *could* also be read as reclaiming his image and turning it into a source of ironic empowerment. * **Critique of the "Gaze":** The fearful expression of Lisa Vanderpump and the pointing gesture of Ken Todd, coupled with the absurd placement of Joe Exotic, could be seen as a commentary on the male gaze and power dynamics. --- **Final Thoughts:** Ultimately, the meme’s meaning is fluid and dependent on individual interpretation. Applying these theoretical frameworks allows us to unpack some of the layers of meaning (or, in some cases, to *imagine* layers of meaning) beneath the surface. The image is a surprisingly rich site for complex theoretical exploration, highlighting the potential for even the most seemingly frivolous cultural artifacts to be analyzed through sophisticated lenses.

tesseract-ocr

eta : TF me han Es

llama3.2-vision

This meme is a still image of a woman, likely from a TV show or movie, reacting in shock or horror. In the background, a small image of Joe Exotic, a former zoo owner and reality TV star, is visible, looking equally shocked or angry. The text "I'm not saying it's him, I'm saying it's him" appears to be written above the image.

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