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This meme celebrates what the deceased would have loved or hated

RIP, would have loved

Part of the beauty and frailty of human life comes with the knowledge that, for each and every one of us, someday it will all be over. There's a certain poignancy in coming to terms with the fact that our mere existences are finite. But at the same time, it's also a huge bummer knowing that there are milestones, historical events, and people that we'll never have a chance to know or experience—which can currently be summarized by the "RIP, they would have loved" meme on Twitter.

Though it's unclear where it originated, the "RIP, they would have loved" (alternately, "would’ve loved") meme began popping up on the platform in mid-March. The format is simple, as a user names a historical figure, celebrity, or fictional character that has passed away, along with something or someone they "would have loved" if they were still alive today.

Examples of the 'RIP, they would have loved' meme

Many variations of the meme tend to run on the snarky side. As such, some of the earlier examples focused on Princess Diana.

"RIP princess Diana you would’ve loved Gone Girl," tweeted user @biglttlefleabag on March 23, referring to the 2014 David Fincher thriller starring Ben Affleck as a husband suspected in the disappearance of his wife whom he was cheating on.

Other uses of the meme were much more absurd and irreverent, focusing on puns—such as the popular example below that claimed Edgar Allen Poe would have loved the Disney Channel sitcom That's So Raven. In just three short days, the tweet received nearly a half-million likes.

https://twitter.com/mygfreal/status/1374135370246352897

Other "RIP, they would have loved" tweets quipped about Ronald Reagan, F. Scott Fitzgerald (with a tongue-in-cheek green light reference), Icarus from Greek mythology, Henry VIII of England, Charles Darwin, and so on.

https://twitter.com/LicensedT0Ill/status/1374736629978566657
https://twitter.com/meeracleshappen/status/1374202564451971072
https://twitter.com/chardonyay/status/1374417851696615432
https://twitter.com/dunwaIl/status/1373341007052480515
https://twitter.com/musomoon/status/1374271573289484290
https://twitter.com/adamgreattweet/status/1374346397986738179
https://twitter.com/whispers_finest/status/1371217946157064195

'RIP, would've hated' memes

Similarly, others evoked things that the dead would have hated. These examples definitely skewed a bit more acerbic, as you can see from some of the examples below that riff on Lin-Manuel Miranda, Marilyn Monroe, Serbian-American inventor Nikola Tesla, and others.

https://twitter.com/angnickelodeon/status/1374188261325815809
https://twitter.com/meganhilty/status/1374794977386012673
https://twitter.com/gaygetarlton/status/1374903577697783808
https://twitter.com/takeiteasyjack/status/1374442664959959050
https://twitter.com/skinnylilbih/status/1374795467335286793

And then there's the following example of the "RIP, would have loved" meme that got extremely meta with a Schrödinger's cat reference.

https://twitter.com/FeelingEuphoric/status/1374518220669906950

We bet the theoretical cat would have absolutely loved TikTok, though.

More essential culture reads on Daily Dot:

Which woman from pop culture would you ‘come out to’?

How ‘Crying Boo’ from ‘Monsters Inc.’ became a reaction meme for your most anxious moments

This ‘dream blunt rotation’ meme is a ‘dream dinner party’ for potheads

The post This meme celebrates what the deceased would have loved or hated appeared first on The Daily Dot.

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