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Lindsay Joy (Spokane Newscaster Covering the Cuogs)

What the hell is that (the TV crew man (woman?) in the middle eating a burger)?

https://twitter.com/SWXLindsayJoy

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    HuskyJWHuskyJW Guest, Member Posts: 14,188
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    What am I missing on the Crying Jordan thing?
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    RaceBannonRaceBannon Member, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 101,727
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    Swaye's Wigwam
    Villanova won the National Championship?
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    HuskyJWHuskyJW Guest, Member Posts: 14,188
    First Anniversary First Comment 5 Up Votes 5 Awesomes

    Crying Jordan

    The original Associated Press photograph
    Crying Jordan, Crying MJ, or Crying Michael Jordan is an Internet meme that first became popular on Twitter and other social media platforms in 2014.[1] The source photo of the meme, taken by Associated Press photographer Stephan Savoia, depicts the retired NBA player Michael Jordan crying during his speech at his Basketball Hall of Fame induction ceremony on September 11, 2009.[2]

    The meme is often deployed by social media users by using Photoshop or other photo editing programs to superimpose Jordan's crying face on the faces, or occasionally other appendages, of people both in and outside the world of sports who have suffered misfortune.

    "Crying Jordan" began to attract mainstream media attention in late 2015 and early 2016.[1][3][4] The meme began to spark a backlash in the sports media in early 2016, as some sports media figures complained that the meme was unoriginal or had become overused.[5]

    Outside the Internet world, the meme has been referenced in interviews by various athletes and public figures, such as basketball player Draymond Green and professional golfer Jordan Spieth.[6] In June 2016, the rapper Schoolboy Q released the album cover for his upcoming album Blank Face LP, which prominently featured a Crying Jordan image with the facial features removed. However this cover turned out to be a joke, and he later released the official version of the album cover. The meme was also heavily used after North Carolina lost to Villanova in the National Championship during which Jordan was in attendance.[7]

    An open-source [8] mobile app [9] called "The Crying Jordan Meme Generator" has been created to make it easier to use this meme on the go and has gotten a lot of traction in the media. The app allows the user to add the Crying Jordan meme to all of the faces on a specific photo and to edit them. The app, which was created by David Okun, was downloaded by tens of thousands of people within a few weeks of publishing, and was mentioned by a few major media sources. [10] [11] [12]

    References

    External links

    Last edited 1 month ago by an anonymous user
    Wikipedia®

    Content is available under CC BY-SA 3.0 unless otherwise noted.
    Terms of UsePrivacyDesktop

    Still not seeing it.

    Maybe if the Crying Jordan meme makes its way to the Hitler video clip....that just might make me end it all.
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    rodmansragerodmansrage Member Posts: 6,031
    5 Up Votes First Anniversary First Comment 5 Awesomes

    Crying Jordan

    The original Associated Press photograph
    Crying Jordan, Crying MJ, or Crying Michael Jordan is an Internet meme that first became popular on Twitter and other social media platforms in 2014.[1] The source photo of the meme, taken by Associated Press photographer Stephan Savoia, depicts the retired NBA player Michael Jordan crying during his speech at his Basketball Hall of Fame induction ceremony on September 11, 2009.[2]

    The meme is often deployed by social media users by using Photoshop or other photo editing programs to superimpose Jordan's crying face on the faces, or occasionally other appendages, of people both in and outside the world of sports who have suffered misfortune.

    "Crying Jordan" began to attract mainstream media attention in late 2015 and early 2016.[1][3][4] The meme began to spark a backlash in the sports media in early 2016, as some sports media figures complained that the meme was unoriginal or had become overused.[5]

    Outside the Internet world, the meme has been referenced in interviews by various athletes and public figures, such as basketball player Draymond Green and professional golfer Jordan Spieth.[6] In June 2016, the rapper Schoolboy Q released the album cover for his upcoming album Blank Face LP, which prominently featured a Crying Jordan image with the facial features removed. However this cover turned out to be a joke, and he later released the official version of the album cover. The meme was also heavily used after North Carolina lost to Villanova in the National Championship during which Jordan was in attendance.[7]

    An open-source [8] mobile app [9] called "The Crying Jordan Meme Generator" has been created to make it easier to use this meme on the go and has gotten a lot of traction in the media. The app allows the user to add the Crying Jordan meme to all of the faces on a specific photo and to edit them. The app, which was created by David Okun, was downloaded by tens of thousands of people within a few weeks of publishing, and was mentioned by a few major media sources. [10] [11] [12]

    References

    External links

    Last edited 1 month ago by an anonymous user
    Wikipedia®

    Content is available under CC BY-SA 3.0 unless otherwise noted.
    Terms of UsePrivacyDesktop

    image
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    BasemanBaseman Member Posts: 12,365
    First Anniversary First Comment 5 Up Votes Combo Breaker
    image
    HuskyJW said:

    Crying Jordan

    The original Associated Press photograph
    Crying Jordan, Crying MJ, or Crying Michael Jordan is an Internet meme that first became popular on Twitter and other social media platforms in 2014.[1] The source photo of the meme, taken by Associated Press photographer Stephan Savoia, depicts the retired NBA player Michael Jordan crying during his speech at his Basketball Hall of Fame induction ceremony on September 11, 2009.[2]

    The meme is often deployed by social media users by using Photoshop or other photo editing programs to superimpose Jordan's crying face on the faces, or occasionally other appendages, of people both in and outside the world of sports who have suffered misfortune.

    "Crying Jordan" began to attract mainstream media attention in late 2015 and early 2016.[1][3][4] The meme began to spark a backlash in the sports media in early 2016, as some sports media figures complained that the meme was unoriginal or had become overused.[5]

    Outside the Internet world, the meme has been referenced in interviews by various athletes and public figures, such as basketball player Draymond Green and professional golfer Jordan Spieth.[6] In June 2016, the rapper Schoolboy Q released the album cover for his upcoming album Blank Face LP, which prominently featured a Crying Jordan image with the facial features removed. However this cover turned out to be a joke, and he later released the official version of the album cover. The meme was also heavily used after North Carolina lost to Villanova in the National Championship during which Jordan was in attendance.[7]

    An open-source [8] mobile app [9] called "The Crying Jordan Meme Generator" has been created to make it easier to use this meme on the go and has gotten a lot of traction in the media. The app allows the user to add the Crying Jordan meme to all of the faces on a specific photo and to edit them. The app, which was created by David Okun, was downloaded by tens of thousands of people within a few weeks of publishing, and was mentioned by a few major media sources. [10] [11] [12]

    References

    External links

    Last edited 1 month ago by an anonymous user
    Wikipedia®

    Content is available under CC BY-SA 3.0 unless otherwise noted.
    Terms of UsePrivacyDesktop

    Still not seeing it.

    Maybe if the Crying Jordan meme makes its way to the Hitler video clip....that just might make me end it all.
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