Today, the internet as we know it holds many
important functions for us, including business and entertainment purposes. As
we browse our favorite social platforms on the internet, such as Facebook,
Twitter, or Reddit, we can’t help but love and become a part of the recent
trend of “memes.” These are images that are generated and shared about specific
topics or cultures, usually taking on a humorous role. Memes can be seen as a
form of modern rhetorical artifacts; therefore I will be taking a closer look
at a specific meme and analyzing it, discussing its contribution to the world
of rhetorical theory.
The meme I am deciding to analyze is the “Foul
Bachelor Frog,” which is a part of the “Advice Animal” family of internet
memes. These memes are centralized images of animals, with a specific color
wheel behind them. Text is then inserted at both the top and bottom of the
overall image to complete the creation of this artifact. The Foul Bachelor Frog
specifically contains the image of a rather unamused frog face, with a green
color wheel behind him. He emerged in the relatively early popularization of
memes, and has since lost popularity.
This particular meme encompasses the lifestyle of a typical young single male living on his own. Specifically, some of the foul tendencies this demographic seems to have, including many aspects of everyday lifestyle decisions. Some notable examples are dietary choices, personal hygiene decisions, and social situations. Thousands of these images exist online, and it’s obvious that they depict arguably true and unfavorable ways that young men treat themselves while living alone.
These memes certainly are viewed in drastically
different ways, depending on who they are shown to. The crude subject matter
they often contain is undoubtedly offensive to many different types of people.
For example, elderly women, such as grandmothers would be disgusted at the
thought of their grandsons performing some of these acts. They are obviously
not intended for children to see them, as they contain almost entirely adult-based
themes.
However, the group whom this meme is created for, young single men, certainly adored this frog during his tenure of popularity. It allowed them to share their own personal preferences in the field of frowned-upon lifestyle choices in complete anonymity through social platforms such as 4chan, and laugh and discuss them with others. It served as a medium through which men could share their dirty secrets in a light-hearted manner.
OK, good start here - perhaps you might want to take a look at the broader family (animal advice) of memes? These are pretty gross, lol. I guess they are funny - mostly in a "Boy-wouldn't-it-be-great-if-I-didn't-have-to-worry-about-that-stuff" way. You said these have waned in popularity? Has the same theme been taken up by a new "foul bachelor" mascot? Is there a basic market for this brand of humor?
ReplyDeleteIf the frog is captioned with the "foul bachelor" theme every time, perhaps the question might be: why that frog? You described the face as "rather unamused" but what do you mean? Do "foul bachelors" often look rather unamused? It's an actual frog, so how else could it look? I've seen other animal pictures that seem to show emotions (I'm thinking of the epic hamster), but what I've seen most is using animals simply BECAUSE they don't care about behavior like humans do (now I'm thinking of the honey badger).
Why the color-wheel background? Are all the animal-advice memes placed on a similar design? What is the point of taking an image out of it's natural surroundings like this?
Take your time unpacking the elements here. People create memes everyday and some of them hit it big on the open market - there has to be a reason why. Consider the entire genre (animal advice) again; what are the commonalities between them?
Good start. Keep working.