First Seen
2024-03-12T02:49:10+00:00
simple-description (qwen3.5_2b-q8_0)
The image features a person in a museum setting wearing a long black habit and a black hooded coat, styled to resemble a non-binary or gender-bender persona. The caption reads, "thought they were giving non-binary slay but it was actually just a priest." This humorously suggests that the person was attempting a "slay"—a look of attractiveness often associated with gender-bent or cross-dressing fashion—but the crowd mistakenly interpreted their outfit as a standard priest's habit. This plays on the post-structuralist concept that gender and religious roles are performative identities; here, the "non-binary slay" is a performance of gender that gets casually conflated with a simple religious role, highlighting the fluidity and ambiguity of how identity is enacted in public space.
simple-description (llama3.2-vision_11b)
The meme is a humorous critique of the idea of "non-binary" or "queer" identity being used as a way to "slay" or be seen as a "cool" or "trendy" thing. The image shows a priest (a religious figure) looking at a painting of a religious scene, which is a bit ironic given the context of the text. The text itself is a play on the phrase "slaying" (a slang term for being successful or impressive), but in this case, it's used in a way that's ironic and self-deprecating, suggesting that the idea of "non-binary" or "queer" identity is being used as a way to "slay" or be seen as a "cool" or "trendy" thing, but is actually just a priest (a religious figure) looking at a painting of a religious scene.