A while back I found out about a school of sharp satire: pairing “motivational” quotes — often about “fitness” — with images to suggest that they are about alcoholism.
This is several kinds of good, especially as a critique of how sick and hateful a lot of those “inspirational” mottos really are.
On Facebook, Rhett Aultman proposed that this implies a useful critical tool, which I'm dubbing “Rhett's Law”:
If it makes a funny “drunksperation” meme image, it's questionable motivational advice.
He unpacks why this is a useful test.
Update: Over at Weirdly Shaped And Well Photographed, some witty responses to “fitspiration” images.
Nothing tastes as good as skinny feels? Really?
Have you tried ...
- Nutella!
- Cupcakes!
- Ice Cream!
- Framboise!
- Lamb chops!
Update: Via Aultman, an actual real life advertisement which fills the bill:
And the fact that it is easy to build a machine learning inspirational quote generator is instructive.
It's apparently time for me to make another non sequitur.
ReplyDeleteSometimes when I can't sleep I seek out your Twitter feed. I deleted myself from that virtual space even though I love the ideas that stream through it because I needed to eliminate my voice from that of the throng.
I seek the scroll of things you think and read because for a series of moments I find myself in a sparkling world of beautiful ideas in virtual spaces I do not know to visit in which I am not alone, I do not feel like I am committing thought crime, and I am, if only through a mercurial veil, connected to the ideas of other people like me out there, sensing how we are all longing for ways to build a nourishing human world. And I get it: us freaky people aren't as fragmented in our movements as we might seem to be. To coalesce takes time.
Thank you. It's a beautiful thing you offer, and a beautiful feeling to inhabit.
Sleep then becomes possible.