Post your rare CIAs
>>55070269
>Post your rare CIAs
Fuck off with this reddit meme you dumb hothead. Don't taint baneposting with r/4chan cancer.
uh u dun git to bwing fwends
>>55070511
HOTHEAD ALERT
>>55070526
>>55070511
you're a hothead if you think baneposting doesn't belong to everyone
>>55070511
>being this reddit
>>55070762
You're breaking my plane
>>55070511
You're so reddit you don't even know when people are being reddit
>>55070988
Coop, I'm NASA
>>55071035
>not Dr. Brand, I'm TARS
>>55071089
I don't have that meme yet, I'm still working on it
>>55071030
>not the one where the picture on the phone is also edited
you tried
>>55071298
fucking retard
>>55070619
CIA anime when?
>>55071318
>inb4 reddit pls go
>>55071298
Perfection.
If dubs pepe > cia
>>55071486
roll for pepe
>>55071318
reddit pls go
?Donde esta el tipo grande con la mascara? El Baño
>>55071486
Dumb frogposter
>>55071486
>>55071498
PEPE FAGS B T F O
>>55071486
>>55071486
If dubs, pepe is dead
>>55071418
>>55070341
top lel
everytime i see this, i have a good 10 mionute laugh
>>55070269
The Hidden Biases of Internet Memes: "Of memes that show people...men appear twice as often. And nearly 45 percent of all the people in memes are Caucasian"
https://archive.today/GAdn1
>researchers, who are interested in how ideas morph and branch as they move across the Internet, did analyze what they call the 50 most popular English-language meme “families,” which include the original meme (think: the very first illustration of David Silverman, captioned “are you serious?”) and its most widely circulated derivatives (all the “Seriously Guys” that came after).
>To wit: Of memes that show people, versus dinosaurs or cartoons or cats, men appear twice as often. And nearly 45 percent of all the people in memes are Caucasian; Hispanic subjects make up a fifth of one percent, by comparison.
>“These findings corroborate many of the observations made in [past] qualitative studies,” the researchers sum up, “in which the memetic sphere was described as dominated by young, white men.”
>even if these conclusions seem intuitive, they express a great deal not only about inclusion and diversity in online spaces, but about power and information in them: who the gatekeepers are, who determines what’s cool, whose instincts and interests are considered most “fit,” in the Darwinian sense of the term.
>The Internet, despite its more utopian goals, replicates biases and social structures that exist offline.
>Of course, the Internet is a complicated place, and further research will be needed to get into all that; it might be worth exploring, for instance, memes that subvert mainstream biases or promote minority identities and issues, like “Successful Black Man” or 2012′s “Binders Full of Women.”
>Still, one thing has become pretty clear already: Memes, counter their rep, should be taken seriously.
Does anybody have any female or POC CIAs?
Singles and baneposting continues
>>55071652
Tell me, why does he wear the mask???
>>55071695
It's the ducks!
>>55071596
He's already dead
>>55070489
>>55070619
>>55071035
More CIA looky-likeys please
>>55070341
>not posting all of them separately in high res
Dr. Emmerich, I'm CIA
>>55071030
>>55071175
>>55070341
I just realized no country for old men and Drive used the exact same tagline of "There are no clean getaways". Bravo Refn!!
BUNN?
>>55071705
OPEN THE GOD DAMN DOOR