Why do people share political memes? It’s not always about changing anyone’s point of view An exclusive new poll finds more than half of Americans have shared a political meme in the last ...
JD Vance has become a meme representing political polarisation, with varying interpretations from the left and right. Expert explains the phenomenon.
Political cartoons have always been a bridge to express hot-button issues to all generations, not just retirement home ...
There’s been a pattern of late: liberals tend to criticize the 4th as a form of socio-political commentary ... and clever Fourth of July memes, in true American camaraderie?
There’s a new project in the line called $GOHOME. Despite being much younger, it has already surpassed the $TRUMP price.
Above is the real U.S. Vice President JD Vance. But online, Vance's face has become meme fodder. BRANDON BELL via Getty Images If you are online right now, the JD Vance you are likely seeing is ...
A new survey explains why 55% of Americans have shared a political meme in the past three months. A survey conducted by Harris Poll on over a thousand American adults, shows that 90% have shared ...
Instagram isn't a platform exclusively for political memes. As Pew Research found in 2024, the platform is primarily for entertainment and connecting, not politics — an opinion temporarily ...
There is probably no single vehicle more suited to performative politics than the humble political meme. Such memes are fun—often hilarious. They allow us to mock those folks on the other side.
JD Vance has become a meme representing political polarisation ... that the Ukrainian leader thank President Donald Trump and American taxpayers for their support.