#98: You Never Step Into the Same Internet Twice
Did you notice when it suddenly became okay not to say goodbye at the end of a text message conversation? Have you responded to work emails solely using đ? Is ~ this ~ your favorite punctuation mark for conveying exactly just how much you just donât care about something? Welcome, Internet Personâyouâre using a different kind of English from the previous generation. But these conversational norms werenât set on high, and how they evolved over the past decades of Internet usage tells us a lot about how language has always been created: collaboratively. Or, as Internet linguist Gretchen McCulloch puts it, âLanguage is humanityâs most spectacular open source project.â She joins us to analyze the language we use online and offâhow it got this way, where itâs going, and why itâs a good thing that our words are changing so quickly.
Go beyond the episode:
- Gretchen McCullochâs Because Internet
- Read her Resident Linguist column at Wired, formerly at The Toast (you may remember reading about the grammar of doge, perhaps? Much wow) or catch up on the Lingthusiasm Podcast
- Phone calls have been supplanted by text messagesâwill voice texting be next? Or are the people using voice texting pointing out a fundamental lack, in language or keyboard support?
- Inevitably, Godwinâs Law states, âas an online discussion continues, the probability of a reference or comparison to Hitler or Nazis approaches 1.â Read creator Mike Godwinâs explanation for why he created his counter-meme, and why, in the case of actual fascists, calling someone a Nazi is well within the norms of discourse
- Peruse the LOLCat Bible or the Creepypasta Wiki, deemed worthy of archive by the Library of Congress (file under folklore)
- If all these memes confuse you, you can always find your footing at Know Your Meme
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