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A collection of memes, curated by CJ Trowbridge.

Category: Plants -> This Meme

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First Seen

2023-06-13T03:54:49+00:00

gemma3-27b-vision

Okay, let's break down this meme featuring a still from *Uncharted* with the text "The houseplants in my kitchen watching me put water in the coffeemaker" through the lenses you've requested. I will only include sections where the framework is applicable and provides meaningful analysis. **Visual Description** The image is a still from the movie *Uncharted* featuring two male actors, (Tom Holland and Mark Wahlberg) standing in a sandy, desert-like environment. They are dressed in tactical, khaki-colored clothing (likely designed for a treasure hunt) and appear to be in a heightened state of alert, looking upward and to the side. They are both armed with some kind of equipment (possibly grappling hooks or climbing gear). The image has a washed-out, slightly desaturated color palette, emphasizing the harshness of the environment. The text overlaid on the image creates a humorous juxtaposition – the serious, action-oriented visual is paired with a mundane, domestic observation. **Foucauldian Genealogical Discourse Analysis** This meme can be fruitfully examined through a Foucauldian lens. The seemingly innocuous act of putting water into a coffeemaker is cast in a new light by imagining the houseplants as the "watchers." This shifts the power dynamic, seemingly elevating the plants to a position of surveillance. Foucault's concept of the *panopticon* is relevant. The panopticon was a prison design where inmates could be watched at all times, without knowing *when* they were being observed. This creates self-discipline, as they internalize the possibility of surveillance. In this meme, the houseplants act as a metaphorical panopticon. The subject (the person making coffee) is not overtly threatened, but is aware of being "watched" by these silent observers. It’s a parody of power relations, suggesting even seemingly inert objects can exert a form of control through observation. The meme doesn't focus on *punishment* as in the panopticon but rather an absurd, internalized anxiety about performing even the most everyday actions under scrutiny. We can trace a genealogy of observation, from literal surveillance to the cultural expectation of performance in modern life. The meme playfully suggests that even our houseplants are judging our daily routines. **Postmodernism** The meme is inherently postmodern. It relies heavily on *irony* and *pastiche*. It combines a high-action movie still with a hyper-mundane observation. This jarring juxtaposition creates humor by subverting expectations. Postmodernism is characterized by the breakdown of grand narratives and a focus on the subjective experience. The meme doesn't tell a story but presents a fragmented image and a playful thought. It embraces the arbitrary association of seemingly unrelated concepts. The meme also exemplifies a *playful skepticism* towards authority and meaning. It suggests that even the most serious scenarios can be punctured by the absurd. The seriousness of the *Uncharted* scene is undercut by the silliness of imagining houseplants as judgmental observers. Let me know if you'd like me to elaborate on any of these points or explore different interpretations.

tesseract-ocr

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llama3.2-vision

The meme features a split-screen image of two characters from the TV show "The 100" ( Clarke and Lexa) looking shocked and concerned. The text on the left side reads: "The 100" and the text on the right side reads: "I just put water in the coffee maker". The meme is likely a humorous take on the characters' dramatic reactions to a mundane situation.

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