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Elon Musk Asking for Twitter's 'Dankest Memes' Was an Incredible Self-Own

"You are 47 years old."
Drew Schwartz
Brooklyn, US
A choice Elon Musk meme
Meme via RabidRabbies / Twitter

Elon Musk is a man who seems like he needs a little help. He's spent the past few months bouncing from bad move to worse move, and all that dicking around has ultimately turned him into a living, breathing meme. On Thursday, ostensibly hoping to shift some of the attention off of himself, Musk put out a call asking Twitter to send him the "dankest memes"—stipulating only that they be "not moths tho," which, come on. Those are the best.

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Unfortunately for Musk, his 23 million followers responded to the seemingly earnest task by sending memes that perfectly called out the absurdity of the original ask itself:

As the hours rolled by, the memes began to mutate, evolving into a heightened form both more artful and more painfully accurate than the ones that came before them.

There were John Wick memes:

There were

Simpsons

memes:

There was this, whatever this is:

At a certain point, it seemed as if Musk began to wilt under the pressure of all those memes, especially considering so many of them made him look like a dingus:

And yet the horde of Musk detractors out there only got more savage, as the responses to his tweet snowballed from actual memes into just—well, stuff like this:

Well, what can you do—another day, another failed experiment from the closest thing this world has to a real-life James Bond villain. At least it seems like he's learned his lesson here.

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