Dedicated fans have created memes over the years to make us laugh or to otherwise apply anime to everyday life. Your fellow fans will get it, and the naysayers won't. Anime is life in one way or another (sometimes we wish for the dramatic flair with it).
20 Trust No One Memes That’ll Serve As Your Reminder 1 Salt And Sugar 2 Trust No One 3 Nobody Deserves Your Trust 4 I Trust No One 5 With Your Computer Passwords 6 Even Your Mom 7 Not Even Your Father 8 Except God 9 Tell Your Secrets To No One 10 Dear Diary More items...
"Top 10 Anime Betrayals" speaks to anime's tendency to create jarring and impactful narratives as it meets the internet's devotion to Top 10 lists. It's a little meta to categorize a meme that is literally about categorization, but that's the fun thing about meme culture nowadays.
It's a cultural art form that always finds a way to be as post-post- postmodern as possible and tirelessly tries to cannibalize itself which, in a larger sense, is seen in this meme format: "anime betraying" itself.
Lando Calrissian managed to capture, break, and take back hearts, all within the span of a couple of hours. Despite not having anywhere near as much screen time as the trilogy's main cast, Lando Calrissian still remains one of the most well-remembered and impactful characters from Star Wars.
7 For Your Memes. As powerful as memes can be, they can never truly replace the meaningful relationships that make life worth living. Unfortunately, that truth alone is not enough to prevent a few, proud meme lords from trying.
At their core, they're the same meme. They have the same palpable sense of tragedy and confusion and can be connected with almost any grand epiphany across media. The "Anime Betrayal" meme is a much more flexible meme since it's more of a caption than a graphic.
"Trust Nobody, Not Even Yourself" is an exploitable catchphrase associated with a photoshopped image of a teenage boy pointing a gun at a clone of himself that went viral online in September 2014.
Origin. The original image was first posted online by Twitter user @MohamedKamoul on June 8th, 2014, though the tweet was subsequently removed from his feed shortly after it began to take off on the microblogging platform. Prior to its deletion, the post accumulated at least 3,800 retweets and 3,110 favorites.