Itâs a weird gen Z thing. The original point of the âno oneâ meme was to make jokes about people responding to things nobody has ever said. Subverting the punchline is a way to increase humor because itâs not expected. Misusing the meme phrase entirely sets you up to think the meme is going in a direction youâre familiar with only to be a completely different meme, thus increasing the humor. However the âno oneâ meme has been used this way so often that misusing it became the default use of it instead. Now the humor from it comes from the opposite, in that itâs basically a universal buildup that works for any joke. More or less itâs a beat phrase that sets up a brief moment of suspense for the punchline, similar to how comics will have dialogueless beat panels to increase the humor of the punchline.
Gen Z grew up with this kind of humor, which is why they think itâs so much funnier than older people do. Equally, gen alpha will likely have completely different humor gen Z doesnât understand.
SatansMaggotyCumFart@lemmy.world âš9â© âšmonthsâ© ago
Thatâs because itâs not âhowâ itâs âno one:â.
Varyk@sh.itjust.works âš9â© âšmonthsâ© ago
You being less funny doesnât make that phrase funnier
SatansMaggotyCumFart@lemmy.world âš9â© âšmonthsâ© ago
No one:
This person being mean:
Varyk@sh.itjust.works âš9â© âšmonthsâ© ago
No one:
Caring
yuriy@lemmy.world âš9â© âšmonthsâ© ago
if we wanna be semantic, it does make it funnier by comparison to this new, absolute-funny-zero
Varyk@sh.itjust.works âš9â© âšmonthsâ© ago
Really?
Iâm not asking this facetiously, can you explain how?
I find the cropped version funnier.