If Trump Were Santa Hashtag: Best of Twitter Funnies

 

 

Naughty Toy Elf Sparks Complaints: Have We Lost Our Sense of Humor?

 

When UK’s discount retailer Poundland started an advent calendar/advertising campaign on social media, including Twitter and Facebook, complaints that the “Elf Behaving Bad” daily post was offensive began to surface. Apparently, complaints of the naughty elf have now been lodged with the UK’s advertising standards bureau, but most find the elf pretty funny. Apparently, one naughty elf photo caused a stir when the toy elf “teabagged” a toy doll, causing #MeToo activists to complain as well as Twinings Tea Company. Check out @Poundland on Twitter to see if you are horrified or amused.


Poundland Sparks Fury with Christmas Campaign Featuring Elf in Bizarre Sexual Positions:

https://www.standard.co.uk/news/uk/poundland-sparks-fury-with-christmas-campaign-featuring-elf-in-bizarre-sexual-positions-a3725491.html

 

Rosie vs Ben Shapiro: Twitter Celebrity Death Match Blow by Blow

UPDATE 12.23.17

UPDATE 12.22.17

——————–

DECEMBER 19… THE STORY BEGINS…

It all started when Rosie offered a cool four million to settle the GOP tax debate:

 

Then Ben Shapiro jumped in suggesting bribery.

Which caused Rosie to request that Shapiro “suck her dick.”

And this simply resulted in pushing Ben Shapiro to over one million followers. Here another look at the timeline:

Twitter users then declared Ben Shapiro the winner of today’s Twitter battle.

Twitter’s Year in Review 2017

Photo: BTS, Courtesy Twitter.

 

Atheist Xmas Traditions Funnies from Twitter

Roy Moore’s Horse Twitter Account Gains 20K-Plus Followers in 24 Hours

Roy Moore’s Horse

@RoyMooresHorse

I did not ask for this. I am just a horse. I had no choice in the matter. My name is “Sassy.” For real.

Under Roy Moore, Alabama
Joined December 2017

 

Political Irony & Sarcasm on Twitter: New Study Finds it Appeals to Followers of India’s ‘Twitter-in-chief’

“We try and explain what makes him popular,” said Joyojeet Pal, U-M assistant professor of information. “Modi’s irony provides a form of political spectacle and resonated on social media as shown by high retweeting of his sarcastically worded messages.”

India’s ‘Twitter-in-chief’: Decoding Modi’s social media brand

ANN ARBOR—With 36 million followers on Twitter, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi is the world’s No. 2 most popular politician in the Twittersphere after Donald Trump.

The way Modi uses sarcasm against his opponents is the focus of a new University of Michigan School of Information study that analyzed more than 9,000 tweets by Modi over a six-year period.

“We try and explain what makes him popular,” said Joyojeet Pal, U-M assistant professor of information. “Modi’s irony provides a form of political spectacle and resonated on social media as shown by high retweeting of his sarcastically worded messages.”

Published in the International Journal of Communication, the study examined the Twitter account of Narendra Modi (@narendramodi) to show how he used political irony and sarcasm to become broadly appealing and refashion his political style.

The researchers coded the tweets into nine broad themes: cricket, Rahul Gandhi (opposition leader), entertainment, sarcasm, corruption, development, foreign affairs, Hinduism, and science and technology.

After coding, they found that sarcastic tweets were closely concentrated around election and campaigning cycles.”

In many of Modi’s tweets during national elections, he referred to the main opposition party as corrupt and Ghandi, its rising leader who also has a huge Twitter following, as “Rahul Baba” or “Shahzada (prince).”

By using humor and sarcasm, he was signaling that the party was not in touch with its roots and letting his own followers get the inside joke, the researchers said.

Here is an example of a Modi tweet, which garnered 2,545 retweets: “The way Rahul Baba is making statements with a dash of comedy in them, I think the TV show of Kapil Sharma may soon have to shut shop.”

According to the U-M researchers, Modi’s use of sarcasm builds on a longer tradition of slogan humor during political rallies.

“There are plenty of attacks, rhetoric, cleverly worded jibes and jokes,” Pal said.

Although social media did not reach many of the traditional rural and peri-urban upper caste Hindu voters of Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party, they extended the prime minister’s appeal to a new young urban constituency.

“After the election, the sarcasm and mention of Gandhi disappears,” Pal said. “Instead, the celebrity mentions and tweets about foreign policy increase dramatically.”

According to the researchers, the sarcasm helped separate Hindutva-oriented content, which is traditionally more divisive than the pan-Indian patriotic rhetoric of “India First,” through which Modi has gained a more secular standing.

“The power of Modi’s message is in the juxtaposition of his past as a train station tea-seller alongside his present as a selfie-clicking leader of a strong aspirational but fundamentally nationalist state,” Pal said. “Sarcasm is as much a message from Modi as it is a message about him.”

Full study:

http://ijoc.org/index.php/ijoc/article/view/6705/2163