A new meme format has graced the internet, and its popularity is a signal to the general mood of the world: funeral.
Today, Bernie Sanders suspended his campaign for the to be the Democratic nominee for president.
When I hopped in the group DM to commiserate, I knew what I would eventually see: a video of the now presumptive nominee Joe Biden saying something incomprehensible which would then smash cut to a video of Ghanaian pallbearers dancing with a casket, set to the EDM song Astronomia by Tony Igy.
#biden2020 pic.twitter.com/rHktgTulyv
— Ed Zitron (@edzitron) April 8, 2020
— dan nolan (@dannolan) April 4, 2020
It's not like a collective interest in the morbid is anything new. The subreddit r/watchpeopledie, now closed, used to have over 300,000 subscribers who just wanted to watch people die. If you know any teenage girls, you'll know that a lot of them go through a phase of fascination with serial killers. Hell, it's already a meme that millennial women are obsessed with true crime podcasts. What differentiates the Ghanaian Pallbearers from all of these is that you are invited to laugh at the tragedy, or at least the implication of one.
The dancing pallbearers can turn some incredibly grim content into meme material. I have seen pallbearers dancing after several news agencies called the election for Trump in 2016, after the second plane hit the towers (the creator deleted the tweet), a woman bungee jumping while the bungee cord is not visibly attached to her person, and a video of UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson saying that he shook hands with COVID-19 patients in a hospital. Someone even did the climactic scene of Parasite. I did not find all these videos funny, but unusually for me, the anticipation of an injurious moment, or a part of human history that is shocking or tragic, made me seek out more of these videos.
Just alerted to an INCREDIBLE new meme format that rivals we got him pic.twitter.com/yLz2onyggn
— dan nolan (@dannolan) April 4, 2020