Open in App
  • Local
  • U.S.
  • Election
  • Politics
  • Crime
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
  • Education
  • Real Estate
  • Newsletter
  • The Week

    All the Kamala Harris memes explained

    By Theara Coleman, The Week US,

    1 day ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=00RWT9_0uhZzBAh00

    Vice President Kamala Harris has proven to be highly meme-able, a distinction that has helped her sway younger generations online as she pursues the Democrats' nomination for the 2024 presidential election. The meme game surrounding Harris, which runs from coconuts to pop diva nods, is an internet marvel.

    Coconut tree

    An emerging trend among Harris' supporters, dubbed the K-Hive, is the proliferation of coconut and palm tree emojis. The two emojis are plant-based teasers of her fans' support for her taking the helm on the Democratic ticket. The coconut trees refer to a speech the vice president gave last year, in which she quoted her mother talking about younger generations. "You think you just fell out of a coconut tree? You exist in the context of all in which you live and what came before you," Harris said with her signature laugh.

    The clip initially went viral, with some Republicans using it to deride her, inferring that she might be intoxicated. After Biden's disastrous debate performance in June, the clip took on a new light, as supporters claimed to be "coconut-pilled" and all-in on Harris replacing Biden. After he stepped down and endorsed Harris, other Democrats used the emojis to signal their advocacy for her nomination to the ticket. Unfortunately, it is also being used "as a racial slur by some detractors to mean someone who is "brown" on the outside and "white" on the inside," said CNN .

    'Kamala is brat'

    Popular British pop singer Charli XCX led the charge into a " brat summer ," and the Harris campaign is getting in on the fun. After news of Biden's endorsement spread, the singer signaled her support by declaring, " kamala IS brat " on X. Charli XCX's sixth studio album title, "the brat movement," and the album's signature chartreuse hue have taken over the summer. The meaning of "brat" is to be "that girl who is a little messy and likes to party … feels herself but maybe also has a breakdown … is very honest, very blunt, a little bit volatile," Charli said on TikTok. Remixes of Harris speaking and Charli's song " 360 " are being spread all over social media. Harris' campaign seems to have embraced the trend, creating a header image for the new "kamalahq" X account in the album cover's style.

    Venn diagrams

    Another meme the Harris campaign embraces stems from the VP's apparent love of Venn diagrams. "I love Venn diagrams," Harris said during an event in 2022. "There's just something about those three circles and the analysis of where there's the intersection, right?" She is also apparently really fond of good news and yellow school buses. The Republican National Committee posted the Venn diagram clip on YouTube to criticize her, but "many of those commenting on the account's posts expressed their own love for the set theory tool that shows overlapping areas of similarity," The Associated Press said. KamalaHq posted its own Venn diagram on X, showing "holding Trump accountable" as the intersection of both the Biden and Harris campaigns.

    'What can be, unburdened by what has been'

    While many memes are based on one-off statements, one became more of a catchphrase: the iconic "What can be unburdened by what has been?" She repeated the phrase frequently, and it was one of her go-tos during the 2020 presidential primary campaign and into the general election as Biden's running mate. A " Republican Party supercut " of all the times she used the phrase in speeches, interviews and appearances helped the phrase go viral again, Vox said. "Four straight minutes of 'what can be, unburdened by what has been.' It's incredible," one Republican staffer said as he shared the clip after the first presidential debate this year.

    We did it, Joe!

    One of the OG Harris memes comes from a memorable quote from a viral video of her ringing President Joe Biden following their victory in the 2020 Presidential election. On November 7th, 2020, Harris tweeted a video of herself speaking on the phone and saying, "We did it, Joe." The post received more than 44 million views, 3.3 million likes, and 765,000 retweets in less than one week, according to Know Your Meme . Parodies and lip-sync dubs spread on TikTok and Twitter in 2020.

    Honorable mentions

    Kamala is a cop

    "The significance of the passage of time"

    Mamala

    Expand All
    Comments / 0
    Add a Comment
    YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
    Most Popular newsMost Popular

    Comments / 0