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spaceship earth and degg are my two most favorites at the moment. wood Everyone I've mentioned so far has certainly influenced Of course loved I he was a big early influence so smart but not formulaic. And we must not forget the immortal I could go on for a very long Partial list: 1. It was then that i realized the potential for this new : I think it was because I had on Facebook because of music stuff and he auto-posted his tweets The first few people I followed that are the best: (formerly Those are all FYAD : and deserve mention too, as big gateway drugs in themselves who in turn exposed me to other amazing people. I read through him about how people like Jon Hendren used Iranian Revolution hashtags to Goatse over a million people.
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I started tweeting about my dumb life in August of 2007 and I never really stopped, I : I started taking Twitter seriously after the green revolution in iran. I picked the screen name "A GENTLE BREES" because I believe all data is a breeze of I found out about twitter through some coworkers of mine that were giant nerds. WHO LET YOU IN? AND WHO'S STILL THE : who let me in i think chuck (defunct): I joined twitter in 2010 as a place to talk about yelling swear words. Another good reason to show up is if you want to hang out with friends. "Take it easy" was the FYAD motto, for example, that's how laid back it was there. In FYAD you could just chill and do whatever and totally relax. You could find most of the cool people there. He said he "Lurked FYAD for five years" before he FYAD was the cool place to hang out.
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It was a cool content control : One day fart gave me a free pass and I tried to post on FYAD but I started posting in FYAD back before Twitter.
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If you sucked, you were shit on over and over again and the mods of that subforum deleted your posts in some cases, so no one saw how shitty you were. We were very strict about booting people who just weren't In FYAD you'd have the regular posters, the "accepted posters" and you had people who would lurk and make a funny post once in awhile.
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So to be heard you had to kinda post a lot and in a lot of In the end those groups too were more about camaraderie than humor, unlike FYAD which sorta remained humor-focused. Like there were people with 10-20k posts in FYAD. And a preemptive mega - many of these quotes are presented as they were FYAD was always more conversational, while Twitter was more just "shouting your dumb joke In a forum, it's not like you have follower counts so you could just post whatever. Interviews conducted over Gchat or email. So BuzzFeed gathered as many of the best representatives as we could of Weird Twitter as we see it, as well as a few people who, without a doubt, were instrumental in creating it. It is to Twitter what people used to imagine 4Chan was to the rest of the internet: its best, and most powerful, creative engine. It's a meritocratic place where genders, ages, backgrounds, and jobs are either absent or distorted beyond recognition. Quite the contrary: This is where the language of Twitter gets created, where its funniest jokes come from, and where its worst tendencies are isolated, rebroadcast, and sometimes destroyed. Styles of tweeting and types of jokes that originated among its small sects have bled out into the mainstream: Even to comedians, these are some of the funniest people on Twitter.īut this isn't to say there isn't a core, or that Weird Twitter is incoherently broad, or that it doesn't have a history, or that it isn't important. Some of its best writers have a few hundred followers, while others have tens of thousands. Weird Twitter has a small core of members who all follow and interact with one another, making it as much a social circle as just a style of humor. Weird Twitter is vast and amorphous what it looks like depends hugely on whom you follow, when you followed them, and what you find funny. If you consider yourself a part of "Weird Twitter," or think you have a sense of what it is, then you probably hate these descriptions - none of them are wrong, but none are totally right, either.