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Lifestyle
Ilona Baliūnaitė

50 Times The Internet Got Way Too Funny This October

Crafting a good social media post is harder than it might seem. Just browse your feed, you’ll quickly come to the realization that most of the things people put out there for millions to see are, at best, drafts and, at worst, should have never seen the light of day.

There are a lot of very good reasons to not go on Twitter (now called X, one of those reasons), so we’ve gone to the effort of finding some of the best, most hilarious posts of October from there. Get comfortable as you scroll through, upvote your favorites and be sure to share your own thoughts in the comment section down below.

#1

Image credits: Demeter_Erinia

#2

Image credits: catsbeingweirds

#3

Image credits: Iamivy05

In 2006, a group of podcasting company employees had a revolutionary idea. What if we created a platform where people could broadcast their mundane thoughts to the entire world, but, and, here's the kicker, with a strict character limit that would make being eloquent nearly impossible?

Out of this novel idea, Twitter was born, initially as a side project at a company called Odeo. Jack Dorsey, sketched out the concept of a service where you could share short "status updates" with groups of people. The first tweet, sent by Dorsey himself on March 21, 2006, read "just setting up my twttr."

#4

Image credits: hoesluvzaheer

#5

Image credits: lushtrae

#6

Image credits: kkiciato

The name "Twitter" came from the idea of phones buzzing and vibrating with short bursts of information, like birds chirping. It was meant to be trivial, fleeting, and inconsequential. Mission accomplished, some might say. Initially, users were unsure about how to approach it. The platform asked one deceptively simple question: "What are you doing?" This prompted millions of people to share riveting updates like "eating a sandwich" and "watching TV."

#7

Image credits: asharoraa

#8

Image credits: BigPenny_

#9

Image credits: Arealmfngl

First, there was the 140-character limit, a constraint borrowed from SMS text messaging standards. This limitation turned out to be secretly genius. It forced people to be concise, made the platform accessible, and created an addictive challenge: How can I be clever, funny, or profound using fewer characters than it takes to order a complicated Starbucks drink?

#10

Image credits: AmberRayz

#11

Image credits: hieireen

#12

Image credits: autisticsidon

Second, Twitter tapped into humanity's eternal question: "Does anyone care what I think?" The answer, it turned out, was "Not really, but we'll follow you anyway." The follow/follower dynamic created a beautiful delusion where everyone could pretend they had an audience eager to hear their hot takes on everything from politics to what they had for breakfast.

#13

Image credits: cessonmute

#14

Image credits: hoeitskia

#15

Image credits: reallygordon

The platform really gained momentum during major events. The 2007 South by Southwest festival put Twitter on the map when conference attendees used it to coordinate meetups. Then came disasters, elections, and celebrity meltdowns, Twitter became the place where news broke before traditional media could even find their cameras. Suddenly, everyone from your neighbor to the President of the United States could broadcast unfiltered thoughts directly to millions.

#16

Image credits: kristabellerina

#17

Image credits: Lerin_OG

#18

Image credits: hoodfarquaad

Celebrities and brands realized they could "engage" with fans without actually having to engage with them. Politicians discovered they could bypass journalists entirely and communicate directly with voters, a development that would later make everyone question whether this was actually a good idea.

#19

Image credits: sillystu4u

#20

Image credits: allholls

#21

Image credits: magic__aura

Perhaps Twitter's greatest achievement was democratizing the ability to shout into the void. Previously, if you wanted to yell your opinions at strangers, you had to write a letter to the editor or stand on a street corner with a sign. Now you could do it from your couch, in your pajamas, at 3 AM, and somehow convince yourself this was meaningful discourse.

#22

Image credits: TotallyAllen

#23

Image credits: jonathanbfine

#24

Image credits: sidefeta

The platform created entirely new forms of communication: the hashtag, the retweet, the ratio (that unfortunate moment when your tweet gets more replies than likes). It gave us Twitter threads, where people could write essays despite the character limit, because humans are remarkably stubborn when it comes to working around arbitrary constraints.

#25

Image credits: aubreystrobel

#26

Image credits: materealgowrl

#27

Image credits: quesadaaa_

In the end, Twitter became popular because it perfectly captured something essentially human: the desire to be heard, combined with the attention span of a goldfish. It was narcissism meets brevity, and the internet couldn't get enough.

#28

Image credits: amore_orless

#29

Image credits: harryallsac2

#30

Image credits: humanxmaybe

#31

Image credits: glutenfreeperc

#32

Image credits: rlycuteguy

#33

Image credits: dieworkwear

#34

Image credits: ThomasonTown

#35

Image credits: KylePlantEmoji

#36

Image credits: hexprax

#37

Image credits: Dexerto

#38

Image credits: sumivibesss

#39

Image credits: el__presidente0

#40

Image credits: ira_xu

#41

Image credits: _Gottalovezik

#42

Image credits: MattieTimmer

#43

Image credits: IceTitan80

#44

Image credits: jestermaxxing

#45

Image credits: deloisivete

#46

Image credits: deeore5

#47

Image credits: MelonGod77e

#48

Image credits: quesadaaa_

#49

Image credits: FishFryShawty

#50

Image credits: naiiboxd

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