First Seen
2023-05-10T21:03:35+00:00
gemma3-27b-vision
Okay, here's an analysis of the meme, broken down into the requested sections. I'll include a heading only if the topic is actually relevant to the meme’s interpretation. **Visual Description** The meme is a multi-panel image, using stills from the Spanish television series *Elite*. It features the character of Anibal Tuñón, a professor. The meme’s layout is typical of the "Distracted Boyfriend" meme template. * **Panel 1 (Top):** Anibal is seated on a swing in a playground, looking dejected and lost in thought. He's wearing a blue shirt and appears to be in a state of pensive sadness. * **Panel 2 (Middle):** Anibal leans against a desk in a dimly lit office, appearing to be brooding. A cup of coffee and papers are visible on the desk. * **Panel 3 (Bottom):** Anibal is walking alone in a concrete courtyard, with a tennis court in the background, looking forlorn and distant. Text overlays the image: "WHEN YOU HAVE TO WAIT OVER A YEAR FOR NEW EPISODES OF GAME OF THRONES." **Critical Theory** The meme operates as a commentary on the relationship between consumption (of media) and desire. The core idea of Critical Theory – examining how power structures create and maintain systems of domination – can be applied here. The show *Game of Thrones* held a significant cultural power. The fans became reliant on it for entertainment, meaning they were powerless when there was no new material. * The long wait creates a "lack" or frustration. This frustration, while seemingly trivial, mirrors broader experiences of consumer dissatisfaction and dependence. The meme exposes the way media producers can control access to cultural content, creating a dynamic of desire and withholding. * The meme subtly critiques the capitalist system that governs media production. Producers intentionally create cliffhangers and delays to maintain audience engagement and generate hype, maximizing profits. The audience's emotional investment is commodified. **Postmodernism** The meme demonstrates several key characteristics of postmodernism. * **Intertextuality:** The meme relies on the viewer's knowledge of both *Elite* (the source of the imagery) and *Game of Thrones*. The meaning is created through the *combination* of these two separate cultural references. * **Pastiche/Irony:** The use of the “Distracted Boyfriend” meme template is itself an act of referencing and repurposing a pre-existing cultural form. It's ironic in that the "distraction" isn't a person but a television show, highlighting the absurd ways we invest emotional energy into media. * **Loss of Grand Narratives:** The meme's focus on a seemingly trivial subject ("waiting for a TV show") reflects a postmodern skepticism towards "grand narratives" or universal truths. Instead of focusing on profound issues, it addresses the everyday anxieties of a consumer culture. Let me know if you'd like me to elaborate on any of these points or explore other analytical frameworks!
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llama3.2-vision
This meme is a humorous commentary on the frustration of waiting for new episodes of Game of Thrones. The image shows a character from the show, Jaime Lannister, sitting in a chair, looking bored and uninterested. The text above the image reads "When you have to wait a year for new episodes" and the text below reads "But when you finally get them, it's all worth it".
