Cat memes went viral 100 years ago

(bbc.com)

131 points | by zdw 4 days ago ago

42 comments

  • shagie a day ago ago
  • delichon a day ago ago

    The jackalope meme is in its nineties. The Kokopelli meme is over a thousand years old and has lately been rehydrated. Venus of Willendorf is around 25k years old. One can play this game for a long time.

  • thierrydamiba a day ago ago

    Cats are fascinating because the best and the worst people in our lives could be described as cat like.

    You know a cool cat. You also know a skittish cat.

    Most animal connotations have a singular meaning, but cats, cats refuse to be boxed in.

    • mrbungie 11 hours ago ago

      Cats refuse to be boxed in figuratively.

      Because literally they do love boxes, both sitting on 2d squares and hiding inside 3d boxes.

      • pixl97 9 hours ago ago

        Until you need to get them in the cat carrier to go to the vet, then they refuse to be boxed again.

    • AStonesThrow a day ago ago

      > cats refuse to be boxed in

      Cats sometimes refuse to be boxed in; other times an empty box is a cat's favorite plaything and habitat. Other times, the boxed-in cat is simultaneously alive and dead until the opening of the box. That's the beauty of cats: you just never know.

      • thierrydamiba 16 hours ago ago

        And yet, a leopard never changes its spots. There’s a python analogy here somewhere…

    • interludead 14 hours ago ago

      It’s like they embody all the contradictions in human nature

  • gniv 17 hours ago ago

    And if you were rich enough you would commission life-sized sculptures: https://x.com/garyniv/status/1802586931395440883

  • DevScout 20 hours ago ago

    Even 100 years ago, people were finding ways to share cute cat content — it really underscores how consistent human behavior is despite evolving technologies. Postcards were like early social media is particularly interesting.

  • bitwize a day ago ago

    The influence of 100-year-old viral memes can still be felt today. We use the terms "foo" and "bar" in programming as standardized nonce words or even variable names; "foo" in particular is traceable at least as far back as the 1930s comic Smokey Stover, whose author Bill Holman was fond of putting nonsensical words, puns, and sight gags in his comics. The main character was a goofy fireman who drove a tiny two-wheeled fire truck actually called the Foomobile. This comic kicked off a sort of foo-mania in popular culture, as exemplified by certain Warner Bros. cartoons, in which for instance Daffy Duck would hold up a sign reading "Silence Is Foo!" "Foo" was related to "phooey" and "faux pas" and carried similar connotations of silliness or stupidity; it would combine with WWII slang "FUBAR" to form "foobar".

    I gave up attempting to grok the appeal of "foo" when I realized it was probably just a 1930s dank meme, and "you had to be there" to fully appreciate it. But recently we're seeing this whole process play out again so we can witness, as it happens, the rise of a new nonsense word into popular culture: "skibidi".

    • thaumasiotes a day ago ago

      > The influence of 100-year-old viral memes can still be felt today. We use the terms "foo" and "bar"

      I think the term "OK" is a better example.

      • ffsm8 a day ago ago

        Not even a little?

        That's just the initials given in quality control, which more and more people began using as synonymous for having good quality. Which is pretty easy to understand: you keep seeing it on the well working cars. So it's an OK car...

        Nothing about it had goofy/silly implications.

        It also predates pretty much everyone on this forum (and the foobar term), so it wouldn't qualify for "you have to experience it for yourself"

        • thaumasiotes a day ago ago

          No, OK is an abbreviation of "oll korrect", one example of a popular fad for cute misspellings... from the early 19th century.

          Did you really believe that one person handled quality control for everything?

    • a day ago ago
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    • AStonesThrow a day ago ago

      Recently President Biden broadcast a campaign ad where he begins with "Let's cut the malarkey", and I recognized that as a possibly Irish-adjacent neologism, so I looked it up, and apparently it was this guy: the great grand-daddy of all turn-of-the-century memes and coinages: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tad_Dorgan

    • drewcoo a day ago ago

      Foo, bar, baz, etc. are more metasyntactic variables than nonces.

      https://jargon-i18n.com/en/M/metasyntactic-variable.html

      I don't think they're related to FUBAR . . . that would be fugazi.

      Nonsense pop terms are not this. They're slang. Blame (mostly) teenaged girls for that stuff, not elite (mostly male) engineers of yore.

  • a day ago ago
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  • wslh a day ago ago

    I don't know how a UK medium such as the BBC forgot to mention the now well-known Louis Wain (an English artist) [1][2]. I share the same surname with him but am not related. My uncle, an antiquarian, gave me an original postcard from him. Before that, I discovered him in a low-quality encyclopedia at a girlfriend's house, in an entry on schizophrenia [3].

    [1] https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Wain

    [2] https://www.imdb.com/title/tt10687506/

    [3] https://www.researchgate.net/figure/Louis-Wain-Pictures-of-c...

  • AStonesThrow a day ago ago

    Didn't Ancient Egypt basically build a civilization and cult of worship based entirely on cat memes, with a particular monument to prove it?

  • TacticalCoder a day ago ago

    I don't know why it's near universal. Ancient egypt had them. Japan loves them.

    My stupid cat was acting crazy tonight and I was wondering: "How comes you still make me laugh you silly cat?". The thing was, as usual, attacking its rear legs and them legs were fighting back, going for the head.

    I just opened the link to another frontpage article "The perils of transition to 64-bit time" and... Sure enough a cat picture greeted me.

    I mean... It never gets old.

    • fiddlerwoaroof a day ago ago
      • a57721 15 hours ago ago

        Could you elaborate? What do you mean by this link?

        • pixl97 9 hours ago ago

          "Crazy cat-lady"edit

          "Crazy cat-lady syndrome" is a term coined by news organizations to describe scientific findings that link the parasite Toxoplasma gondii to several mental disorders and behavioral problems.[96][97] The suspected correlation between cat ownership in childhood and later development of schizophrenia suggested that further studies were needed to determine a risk factor for children;[98] however, later studies showed that T. gondii was not a causative factor in later psychoses.[99] Researchers also found that cat ownership does not strongly increase the risk of a T. gondii infection in pregnant women.[61][100]

          The term crazy cat-lady syndrome draws on both stereotype and popular cultural reference. It was originated as instances of the aforementioned afflictions were noted amongst the populace. A cat lady is a cultural stereotype of a woman who compulsively hoards and dotes upon cats. The biologist Jaroslav Flegr is a proponent of the theory that toxoplasmosis affects human behaviour.[101][102]

  • a day ago ago
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  • TheRealPomax a day ago ago

    Linguistic note: neither "meme" (in the modern sense, not the Dawkins sense) nor "going viral" existed 20 years ago, let alone 100 years. The nature of how culture spread makes both words wildly inapplicable, even if the underlying idea is somewhat similar.

    • eterm a day ago ago

      This is completely false.

      Meme even in the modern internet sense, was used in the 90's, here's Memepool from 1998:

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memepool

      • layer8 a day ago ago

        If you look at the first captures (https://web.archive.org/web/19981205011851/http://www.memepo...), this is not the modern sense of the term “meme” as “funny picture/running gag”. Memes in the modern sense of course already existed much earlier, but usage of the term “meme” in that sense only developed later, sometime in the 2000s. At least that’s how I remember it.

    • richardfontana a day ago ago

      "Going viral" probably existed 20 years ago, though perhaps barely. I don't have access to the OED but several web sources say OED's earliest recorded usage was from 2004.

      • thaumasiotes a day ago ago

        Here's a Wired article dated January 1, 2005 featuring the term "viral video" as something that doesn't need to be explained: https://www.wired.com/2005/01/check-out-this-video-clip/

        So yes, we can be certain that "going viral" existed 20 years ago, to the extent that we think "viral" is the status achieved by "viral videos".

    • jxy 21 hours ago ago

      from OED:

      the modern sense of "meme"

      > 2. An image, video, piece of text, etc., typically humorous in nature, that is copied and spread rapidly by internet users, often with slight variations. Also with modifying word, as internet meme, etc.

      > 1998

      > The next thing you know, his friends have forwarded it [sc. an animation of a dancing baby] on and it's become a net meme.

      > Sci. & Technol. Week (transcript of CNN TV programme) (Nexis) 24 January

      the modern sense of "viral"

      > Chiefly Marketing. Of, designating, or involving the rapid spread of information (esp. about a product or service) amongst customers by word of mouth, e-mail, etc. to go viral: to propagate in such a manner; to (be) spread widely and rapidly.

      > 1989

      > The staff almost unanimously voted with their feet as long waiting lists developed for use of the Macintoshes... ‘It's viral marketing. You get one or two in and they spread throughout the company.’

      > PC User (Nexis) 27 September 31

      Edit: format

    • t-3 a day ago ago

      I don't remember any instances of the term "going viral", but "meme" was definitely around 20 years ago. 4chan launched in 2003.

      • a day ago ago
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    • a day ago ago
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