Thursday, 3 April 2025

 


The Anxiety Meme: A Viral Dance and a Revival of Iconic TV Moments

The song Anxiety by Doechii was originally released on November 10, 2019, but it was largely forgotten until it experienced a resurgence in early 2025. A remix of the song began circulating on TikTok, where it quickly became the soundtrack to a viral dance trend. Most people are familiar with the first part of the meme: users dancing to this particular track in various creative ways. However, the dance also featured a subtle homage to The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, a beloved 1990s television show.

The key moment referenced was the secret shadow dancer — a figure dancing behind someone else, reminiscent of the famous scene from The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, where Will Smith's character mimics Tatyana Ali’s character in a playful, behind-the-back manner. This gesture of homage, combined with the new music, led to a flood of video variations across social media, blending nostalgia with contemporary sound.

On March 14, 2025, a surprising twist took place. Will Smith, who had been involved in controversy following his actions at the 2022 Oscars, reached out to the creator of the Anxiety remix. Together, they recreated the iconic dance scene from The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, now set to Doechii’s remix. The video was an instant hit, and in many ways, it symbolized Smith’s attempt to rise from the fall of his public image. By partnering with the creator of the remix, Smith’s attempt at a cultural redemption lifted the Anxiety track to even greater heights, intertwining both their stories in a unique moment of viral culture.

In doing so, Will Smith not only paid tribute to his own past but also highlighted the power of the internet to revive and transform cultural touchstones. The combination of old-school dance moves, new viral music, and a popular meme turned into a larger commentary on redemption, both personal and artistic.


Citations:

  1. Entertainment Weekly. "Will Smith and Tatyana Ali Recreate the Iconic 'Fresh Prince' Dance in Viral TikTok." March 14, 2025.

  2. People. "Will Smith Reunites with 'Fresh Prince' Costar Tatyana Ali to Recreate Their Trending 'Anxiety' Dance." March 14, 2025.



The Video That May End MrBeast (largest YouTuber on the Planet)

..Regulation and law are essentially the same; regulations are just laws that specifically govern business practices. For example, it’s illegal to poison people through certain types of food, but not because businesses are inherently barred from selling harmful products—regulation makes it illegal. Otherwise, the principle of caveat emptor (buyer beware) takes over: if you buy it and get sick or die, that’s on you.

Without direct regulation, we rely on indirect regulation—primarily through the tort system, which allows people to sue for harm caused by businesses. If someone sells you food that could kill you, was it a simple accident, or were they so indifferent to your safety that they knowingly caused harm? The legal system sorts that out, but even tort law is a form of regulation, just applied retroactively through court rulings rather than proactive rules. Many harmful business practices remain legal until a legal precedent is set one way or another, meaning you never know for sure whether you’ll get justice.

A good example is Disney’s terms of service for Disney+, where users effectively sign away their right to sue. It’s technically your responsibility to read the fine print, but in reality, nobody does. If enough people challenge this in court, the legal system may eventually overturn such agreements, but until then, businesses use them to shield themselves from liability.

It’s true that businesses generally can’t survive long-term if they keep killing their customers—unless addiction is involved. But not all industries rely on repeat customers. Many operate on a predatory model, profiting from a constant stream of new consumers rather than maintaining a loyal base. These businesses function more like parasites, extracting value from each host before moving on to the next.

A system can sustain a certain number of parasites before it collapses, but without regulation—whether direct or through the courts—that collapse becomes inevitable. Markets don’t self-correct in time to prevent harm when businesses prioritize short-term profit over long-term viability. Regulation isn’t just about fairness—it’s about preventing systemic failure before it’s too late.

 The first time it happens, it’s a fluke. A clerical error. A miscommunication. A single man taken without charge, without trial, and sent elsewhere—somewhere gray and cold where the lights never fully go off. An unfortunate mistake, the government assures us. An isolated incident.

The second time, it’s policy.

At first, no one notices because, let’s be honest, the guy was probably guilty of something. No one wakes up at 6 AM to a raid unless they’ve earned it, right? The headlines are efficient, the language careful: Detained for National Security Concerns. Administrative Transfer. A Matter of Executive Privilege. Fancy ways of saying, Don’t worry about it.

But here’s the thing about due process: It doesn’t just disappear overnight. It dissolves. It erodes. Piece by peace. Peace by piece. Until, one day, you realize it’s gone, and the only thing left is the memory of how things used to work, back when evidence mattered and judges weren’t just rubber stamps.

By the time people notice, it's too late. The rules have changed. The trial isn’t in a courtroom anymore; it’s in an office, a bunker, a dark room where nobody asks the name of the man with the gun. The accused? He isn’t a person now. He’s a problem. A disruption. And in a world without due process, problems don’t get resolved. They get removed.

So tell me—how many people need to disappear before you start to wonder if you’ll be next? And, more importantly, will you say something when they come for your neighbor? Or will you assume, just like they did, that it’s only happening to the guilty?


Are the Conservatives, Are Canadian government's going down this dark path as well?





Context March 2025

Recent events have raised significant concerns about the lack of due process in cases involving individuals transferred to foreign countries under questionable legal circumstances. One such case involves Andry José Hernández Romero, a 31-year-old Venezuelan makeup artist who sought asylum in the United States after facing persecution for being gay. Despite passing an initial asylum screening, he was detained by U.S. officials due to tattoos that were misinterpreted as gang symbols. In March 2025, he was secretly deported to El Salvador under the expanded powers of the Alien Enemies Act, a move that sparked legal and public outcry over the absence of substantial evidence and the failure to provide him with due process (New Yorker, 2025). Similarly, international students involved in pro-Palestinian campus activism have become targets of immigration enforcement, with over 300 students having their visas revoked. Many of these students, despite possessing valid documentation and having no criminal records, were detained or deported, raising concerns over violations of free speech and civil rights (Time, 2025). In another instance, detainees at immigration courts in Louisiana, a region known as “Detention Alley,” faced proceedings without legal representation or interpreters, exacerbating the already dire conditions of detention facilities that lack adequate medical care (Guardian, 2025). Additionally, a federal judge recently criticized the Justice Department for its failure to comply with court orders to halt deportation flights under the Alien Enemies Act, citing grave concerns over due process violations (CBS News, 2025). These cases highlight systemic issues in immigration and deportation practices, emphasizing the urgent need to uphold legal rights and prevent human rights abuses.

Monday, 31 March 2025

Inspired by  Chaplin’s famous speech from The Great Dictator:


We have put machines before men, mistaking efficiency for progress. Self-checkout was promised as an advancement, a liberation—but it is a lie. Once, a single clerk could master their craft, serving thousands with skill and speed. Now, that burden is scattered among the people, each one forced to fumble, to learn, to struggle alone.

What was once the work of one, refined and swift, is now the work of many—slow, frustrating, and impersonal. They tell us this is improvement, but at what cost? The hours saved by corporations are stolen from the people, their time chipped away, their dignity reduced to error messages and beeping machines.

We are not machines! We are human beings! We seek connection, not cold transactions. We are meant to speak, to smile, to share a moment—not to stand in silent frustratio


n before lifeless screens. Efficiency without humanity is no progress at all.

Let us not be fooled by their numbers, by their profits. The true measure of progress is not in what is saved, but in what is lost.







Friday, 28 March 2025

Why We Can't Stop Thinking About Memes... Or Emails We’ll Never Send

 

Why We Can't Stop Thinking About Memes... Or Emails We’ll Never Send

Memes used to be the digital equivalent of a quick snack. A harmless, empty calorie fix for bored kids. Now? They’re the soul-searching equivalent of staring into an abyss. A dark abyss that looks strangely like a YouTube comment section.
Remember the Roman Empire meme? That thing crept up on us like a Shakespearean twist — asking, “How often do you think about the Roman Empire?” Simple, right? No. It was an emotional grenade. Suddenly, men everywhere were admitting they had a shrine to Caesar and a secret fantasy about being gladiators. It was like Rome was this hidden, collective wound we didn’t know we had until someone prodded it. And when that grenade went off, we all realized we’d been thinking about Rome... a lot.


Here’s the deal: The Roman Empire meme was philosophy in disguise. It wasn’t just about history; it was about us. It took the kind of deep introspection you’d get in a therapy session and wrapped it in a meme that people could share at a party. Men weren’t just confessing to a fascination with an ancient empire; they were confessing to an obsession with legacypower, and gladiatorial bloodlust. Suddenly, every guy was the star of his own historical epic. What was Rome but the story of an empire, now crumbled, built on ambition, conquest, and questionable leadership? In other words, it was us — building our empires, only to have them burn down later. We all felt that.

It’s funny because, in the end, Roman Empire wasn’t about Rome. It was about us staring at our own fragmented, crumbling self-awareness. People were no longer saying, “I like history.” They were admitting, “I think about the downfall of everything.” That’s powerful. And that’s what memes like these do. They give us something ridiculous to laugh at, but by the time we’re done, we’ve been punched in the gut with an uncomfortable truth.


But here’s the kicker: after Roman Empire, there was this gaping hole in the meme world. Like a pothole that opened up on the freeway of internet culture and no one could fill it. We’ve had our fair share of could-you-survive-the-apocalypse and how-many-5th-graders-would-you-fight memes, and don’t get me wrong, they’re fun, but they’re like shooting fish in a barrel. Easy, surface-level entertainment. We’re back in the kiddie pool, folks.
What’s missing? A philosophical reckoning. A meme that doesn’t just ask a simple question — but one that makes you question everything. A meme that doesn’t just flick your forehead; it slaps you across the face and says, “You need to think about your life for a second.” But where’s that meme? No one’s made it. Yet.


Enter Sabrina Carpenter. Now, I know what you’re thinking: “Wait, the girl who did the ‘Skin’ drama? The pop star?” Yes, her. Don’t roll your eyes just yet. Sabrina Carpenter has managed to craft something deeper than a TikTok trend. She’s somehow become the emotional architect for the next meme rebirth. You see, her song emails i can’t send is more than just pop music. It’s an unflinching look at the mess we all keep hidden in our drafts folder — the unsent emails, the unsaid things. It’s about unfinished conversations that never quite made it out of our fingers and into the ether. You ever write an email, get halfway through, and realize you’re about to destroy someone’s life? Yeah, me neither. But Sabrina’s basically telling us all, “That’s okay. We all have those moments.”

And let me tell you, she’s got the perfect storm brewing. Emails i can’t send is the emotional Roman Empire we never saw coming. Think about it: we all have that one email — the thing we wanted to say but couldn’t. It’s like a forgotten manuscript sitting there in your inbox, full of rage, regret, and untold truths. What if Sabrina turned this into a philosophical question that we could ask ourselves — a meme that forces us to confront our unfinished business? Not the emails we were too scared to send, but the real questions we avoid.

“How often do you think about the emails you didn’t send?”
It’s not just a question; it’s an existential mirror. And, god, it’s beautiful.


Here’s the thing: Sabrina Carpenter is essentially playing the role of the pop culture philosopher we didn’t know we needed. She’s this trickster, half-muse, half-emotional wrecking ball. In the same way that the Roman Empire was an empire of expansion and eventual collapse, Sabrina is an artist working within the tension of emotional growth and personal destruction. She’s not just here to make you dance; she’s here to make you feel. In the space between ‘Feather’ and ‘emails i can’t send’, she’s built a realm of fractured selves, those pieces of you that you don’t want anyone to see — not even yourself.

So, if we were to ask:

“How often do you think about the emails you didn’t send?”
It’s a meme with teeth. It’s an open wound we all walk around with, and she’s the one handing us the band-aid. And once that band-aid comes off, you’re going to have a lot of things to deal with.
Now, that’s what I call art.


In the end, we’re all just waiting for the next big meme — one that makes us confront our own flaws, our hidden truths, and the unspoken things we’re too scared to deal with. Roman Empire was just the beginning. It forced us to admit that we’re all obsessed with things we don’t really understand, and maybe we’re all living in the ruins of our own empires. But memes are cyclical. They evolve. They grow up. And when they grow up, they hit you in the gut. They make you stop scrolling and wonder about the emails you’ve never sent.

So, Sabrina Carpenter? Maybe she’s the next great philosophical meme we need. Because let’s face it — the Roman Empire wasn’t about Rome. It was about us. And her unsent emails? Well, they’re about all of us too.

Canada's Next Prime Minister | Pierre Poilievre | EP 511