First Seen
2023-05-16T00:18:12+00:00
simple-description (llama3.2-vision_11b)
The meme is a humorous comparison between the shocking discovery of high levels of cocaine in freshwater fish (specifically, a type of fish called "drunk" or "drunken" fish) and the similarly shocking discovery of cocaine in a certain type of fish. The image is likely a joke about the absurdity of finding cocaine in a fish that's known for being "drunk" or "drunken". The text "I'm not saying I've been drinking but I've been drinking" is likely a humorous reference to the idea that the fish is somehow getting drunk.
detailed-analysis (gemma3-27b-vision)
Okay, let's break down this meme through the lenses of various theoretical frameworks. It's a rather bizarre image, so some frameworks will be more applicable than others.
Visual Description
The meme combines text reporting a finding about cocaine levels in freshwater shrimp with an image of a heavily photoshopped/altered human face unnaturally imposed onto the body of a shrimp. The human face is unsettling, with intense red eyes, a sneering expression, and overall exaggerated features. It evokes a sense of mania, corruption, and something deeply "wrong." The shrimp body, though present, is secondary to the unsettling human head. The image has a high level of absurdity. The watermark "@alreadybored.jpg" suggests a source of intentionally absurd or ironic content.
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Foucauldian Genealogical Discourse Analysis
This meme invites a Foucauldian analysis by demonstrating how the "truth" about freshwater shrimp (and their surprising cocaine content) is constructed through discourse. The "discovery" isn't inherent; it’s a product of scientific inquiry, interpretation, and reporting.
- Power/Knowledge: The scientific study itself is a site of power/knowledge. The scientists define what is "shocking" and "newsworthy." The meme then re-circulates this knowledge, but in a highly distorted and ironic way. This re-circulation highlights the social construction of “shock” and “danger.” What is deemed shocking is never neutral; it's tied to specific cultural anxieties.
- Discursive Formation: The discourse surrounding drug use, environmental contamination, and even shrimp are all intertwined. The meme actively disrupts this traditional discourse by associating shrimp with hard drugs, creating a nonsensical but attention-grabbing connection.
- Genealogy: Examining the historical evolution of drug narratives, scientific authority, and our perception of "nature" (represented by the shrimp) would be part of a genealogical approach. How did we come to define “natural” vs. “contaminated?” What social forces shape drug categorization?
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Critical Theory
This meme engages with critical theory, particularly around the themes of commodification and the spectacle.
- Culture Industry: The meme itself is a product of the “culture industry” – a quick, easily-digestible piece of content designed for consumption and sharing. It prioritizes shock value over nuanced understanding.
- Spectacle: The meme is inherently spectacular. The absurd image of a drugged-up shrimp-person immediately grabs attention and creates a distorted reality. It prioritizes visual stimulation and emotional impact over substantive information.
- Alienation: The meme can be interpreted as a comment on a sense of alienation. The distorted image represents a breakdown of natural order, a loss of connection to the real, and a perversion of the expected.
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Marxist Conflict Theory
While not central, a Marxist reading is possible.
- Commodification of Nature: The meme indirectly touches on the commodification of nature. The shrimp's cocaine content can be seen as a symptom of larger systemic issues – pollution, environmental degradation, and the exploitation of natural resources linked to the drug trade.
- Control of Information: The reporting of the scientific discovery and its subsequent meme-ification can be viewed through a lens of control. Who benefits from drawing attention to this issue? Does it distract from more significant environmental or social problems?
- Class: While not explicit, the association of drugs with environmental contamination could indirectly suggest the ways in which marginalized communities disproportionately bear the brunt of environmental harm.
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Postmodernism
This meme is very strongly aligned with postmodernism.
- Pastiche and Irony: The meme's core relies on absurd juxtaposition and irony. It deliberately combines unrelated elements (scientific report + bizarre image) to create a nonsensical, intentionally jarring effect.
- Deconstruction of Meaning: It actively destroys any straightforward meaning. The meme isn’t about providing information; it’s about disrupting expectations and questioning the very possibility of objective truth.
- Simulacra and Simulation: The meme can be viewed as a "simulacrum" – a copy without an original. It references the scientific report, but it's more about the image and the ironic commentary than about the actual findings. The image simulates shock and absurdity.
- Meta-Commentary: The meme is also a meta-commentary on meme culture itself – the tendency to take serious issues and reduce them to bite-sized, ironic content.
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Queer Feminist Intersectional Analysis
This is the least applicable of the frameworks, but some connections can be drawn.
- Disruption of Norms: The image deliberately disrupts conventional notions of "natural" and "normal." The grotesque fusion of human and animal is a rejection of established boundaries. This disruption can resonate with queer and feminist challenges to normative structures.
- The Grotesque Body: Feminist theorists (like Mary Douglas) have explored the cultural significance of the grotesque body. This meme engages with the grotesque, but in a way that feels more chaotic and ironic than critically subversive.
- Environmental Justice: The issue of environmental contamination (linked to the cocaine presence in the shrimp) can connect to intersectional concerns around environmental justice. Disproportionate environmental harm often impacts marginalized communities. However, this connection is relatively weak in the meme itself.
Disclaimer: These are interpretations, and the meaning of a meme is always open to debate. The meme’s strength lies in its ambiguity and ability to provoke different readings.
simple-description (llama3.2-vision)
This meme is a humorous comparison between the high levels of cocaine and other drugs found in freshwater shrimp, often referred to as "fish food" in a sarcastic tone. The image depicts a character from the Star Wars franchise, specifically Jabba the Hutt, with a caption that reads: "Scientists have discovered the shocking truth about your fish food."
tesseract-ocr
“Scientists have discovered shockingly high levels of cocaine and other drugs in freshwater shrimp” Freshwater shrimp: Cd ol fw ‘ rN : om et