Not one specific post, but I did like bean memes going around for a while. It was right around a reddit migration so people were just coming in and having no idea wtf was going on.
Someone made a meme post about they're currently hyperfixated on go and I liked that one because I can't seem to find an active community to talk about go yet.
And it's fun to see people learning the game I like.
No, no, we changed it to STOY! You get $200 if you land on STOY!, and you pay $50 to bribe the guard if you go past STOY!. Please try to keep up, comrade.
Another brick in the SEO wall that makes it more difficult to search for communities and resources on playing go. I switched to using the Korean name, baduk, for a while, just to reduce confusion, but fewer people in the US seem to know it by that name.
At the time, I was looking for a way to make movie theater tasting popcorn at home. The microwave ones that claim to taste like it are terrible. I saw this, tried it and it is amazing. I make it for everyone I know and they all agree that it’s the best homemade popcorn they’ve ever had. Ghee is the way to go!
I forgot to save it but someone mentioned how posting memes to social media platforms is counter to the essence of memes and I've thought a lot about it ever since. And I think I agree
The natural flow of ideas isn't from group to group anymore - it's broadcast to the world. With most memes nowadays, it's a rush to copy a template into as many topics as possible and sent to "everyone"
People don't really "find" memes anymore and share them with their friends. It's like "finding" a new TV show on cable. They went from in-jokes to content.
That was my interpretation of the commenter's half thought, anyway