
As a result, there’s a generational gap between how I learn about and perceive the news, and how my teenage sons learn about and react to the same events. When I learned (on Facebook) that an American drone attack killed Maj. Gen. Qassim Suleimani, the powerful Iranian commander, my stomach dropped. Having been married to a Marine deployed in the gulf war in the 1990s, I know that war is no joke. Our sons came home from school that day laughing at World War III memes claiming their generation is ready for war because they’ve been “training” in the video games Fortnite and Call of Duty.
My first impulse was to lecture my sons about the seriousness of war. But lectures almost never change teenagers’ behavior, so I dug deep into meme culture instead. What I found: kids use memes to express and channel all kinds of emotions, including fear. Many are harmless but some coronavirus memes risk spreading both misinformation and racist attitudes.
Jennifer L.W. Fink, The New York Times. February, 8,2020. Adaptado
No texto, um exemplo de notícia que viralizou através de memes é