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Nowadays, memes are a whole language of their own. My own group chats have fewer conversations than reactions and inside jokes told entirely through screenshots and Spongebob stills with funny captions. Back in the early internet era of the late 200s and eatrly 2010s, memes lived on 9GAG, iFunny, and Reddit. You could spend hours scrolling through advice animals, rage comics, and troll faces searching for the perfect meme.
Back then memes were distinguished by Impact font, black frames, and punchlines that could make you augh, cry, or make you spiral exisentially. Memes weren't yet branded or algorithm-optimized; they were weird, a little clunky, and deeploy communal. Instead of making memes on Canva, you could hop on a number of dedicated websites with tools to generate memes in the most popular formats of the time: Socially Awkward Penguin, Bad Luck Brian, or Philosoraptor.
These old-school gems remind us of a time when the internet still felt like the wild west, and humor was as simple as a badly cropped photo of a cat with a caption about cheeseburgers.