It is hard
to imagine technology in the 21st century having biological
characteristics. It is even harder to imagine the TV, internet, or radio having more biological similarities to a plant than a plastic cup would. In Epic Win For Anonymous,
Cole Stryker explains how popular information travels across the internet. He argues that a meme behaves like “an interactive, living organism,” and
participates in a competitive environment. Like real world organisms, memes also have life spans that are determined by a few factors: longevity, substance,
audience, and most importantly, memorability. Thousands of memes are created on
the daily, yet only a small percentage are continuously circulated throughout
the web. To understand Stryker’s “memetic ecosystem” module, let’s take a look
at the life cycle of this meme.
I found
this meme and shared it on Facebook July 2012. By the end of the day, only five
people from my humble group of 900 friends “liked” the post. The lack of people
“liking” my post made sense: firstly, all five of them are lifeguards and
secondly, the context of the post wouldn’t have been funny to people who have
never lifeguarded. Memes are a form of social currency. Popular memes like ‘Awkward
Penguin’ and ‘Philosoraptor’ cater to a larger audience – they generate a
larger pool of social currency because more people can relate to them. The most
important factor that makes a meme successful is its memorability. Memorable
memes are able to survive in the virtual and real world. A successful meme is
shared through conversation between high school students in a cafeteria. In short,
if you’re meme isn’t talked about, it has reached the end of its lifecycle.
This particular Lifeguarding
meme isn’t popular outside the global circle of lifeguards, but the format of
it is. This meme is popular because of its format and the flexibility it
provides. The pattern is simple: pick a noun and find six pictures that depict stereotypes associated with the group of people (though sometimes it is applicable in other situations) described in the header. Beneath the images, you write what so-and-so thinks you do - it can be what your mother thinks you do, what the president thinks you do, or what Smokey the Bear thinks you do. The point is: it doesn't matter as long as what you write follows this pattern:" starting with "what ___________ thinks I do" for the first five panels and ending with "what I actually do" for the last one. In this example, the meme's layout is what makes it popular and memorable; however, the significance is not entirely there. Like a virus, a meme is able to morph and adapt to the different communities (or in biological terms, "environments") it finds itself in.
According to KnowYourMeme, the "What People Think I Do/What I Really Do Meme" was created in February 2012. The first of it's kind was a meme directed towards science majors; therefore, at the beginning of the meme's life cycle, its social currency was only applicable towards science students. As more versions of this meme were created and shared, its social currency was applicable to a wider range of audiences. A meme grows as a plant does: given the right condition and environment, it is able to grow, thrive, and sustain itself until it dies. While a plant dies from the lack of nutrition or age, a meme dies when it has lost its audience. This analogy relates nicely back to Stryker's explanation of his memetic ecosystem and his point that memes can relate back to biology more so than one would think. Is technology a more complex imitation of biology?
No comments:
Post a Comment