Increase your ROI and get inspired when you attend TNW Conference with your team 🎟 Save up to 40% today when you buy in bulk →

This article was published on September 8, 2018

We used Google Arts & Culture’s selfie app to make the internet’s Shit Museum


We used Google Arts & Culture’s selfie app to make the internet’s Shit Museum

Ever have one of those weeks where you feel like everything is going wrong in the world? Us too.

The planet is melting. There are powerful idiots all over the world with their greasy fingers hovered over big red doom buttons. Our favorite celebrities have dumb opinions we don’t agree with and choose to share them. And again someone finds a severed toe in their Big Mac.

This week seemed especially long, which a lot of people saying stupid things we disagree with, so we decided to round up the worst of the worst. We used the Google Arts & Culture’s Art Selfie app thing everyone’s so into and took photos of the things that bummed us out most.

Welcome to the Internet’s Shit Museum, curated by us.

Elon Musk is still Elon Musk

The <3 of EU tech

The latest rumblings from the EU tech scene, a story from our wise ol' founder Boris, and some questionable AI art. It's free, every week, in your inbox. Sign up now!

Everyone, gather round for the first stop on the Shit Museum tour. This week, as you might have seen, Elon Musk doubled down on some truly heinous, and unsubstantiated, accusations he’s made.

Of course he did. When does Elon not make it onto our shit list these days? For this, he earns a spot in the front foyer of our museum.

Here is the Cusi Chimpo painting. Completed in 1616, it has lived in Los Angeles’s J. Paul Getty Museum for years before it was sent to the Shit Museum via a mini submarine.

But why stop there? He also appeared on Joe Rogan’s podcast this week, wasted a joint by not inhaling when smoking, and, just because we’re extra annoyed at him, gets a second portrait.

Portrait of Nuremberg Merchant Wolfgang Tobias Huth. Painted by Johann Kupetzky, ca. 1735.

Moving on.

Robin Wright was Robin Wrong

Welcome to the second stop of the museum — the “deserves a second chance even though there are multiple allegations against him” east wing.

Don’t you hate it when your faves have different opinions than you? And YES, we know that’s normal as we’re all unique snowflakes with unique snowflake patterns, but we were in a bad mood when curating the museum and don’t care.

Robin Wright and Kevin Spacey both get individual portraits in our Shit Museum.

Swamp-dwellers “punished” Nike for doing something cool

By now, you’ve probably seen that Colin Kaepernick is the face of Nike’s new Just Do It campaign. The activist and NFL football player has been at the forefront of discussions against police brutality in the United States — and a huge thorn in the side of American conservatives.

The announcement brought the lowliest swamp weasels of the internet out to play, many of whom started to destroy their Nike sneakers in protest. It was pretty funny, not only because destroying an already-purchased pair of sneakers does not take money away from the company, but also because it sparked a lot of funny parodies.

This was our favorite:

We tried to make a portrait of this guy’s fake burned foot:

It didn’t work. So, instead, we’ve made a hyper-realistic sculpture of the foot, and have put it on display instead. Please don’t touch.

Bannon, The New Yorker, and Malcolm Gladwell

So, The New Yorker’s Festival of Ideas announced Steve Bannon as one of its headlining speakers. A lot of people were rightfully pissed that they were giving someone who is largely regarded as a member of the far right a platform. Bannon was ultimately dropped, but not before Malcolm Gladwell weighed in:

Luckily we found the perfect representative for him. This wing of the museum requires total silence, something Mr. Gladwell should have paid attention to.

You see? Even his portrait is telling him to hush. Self-referential. Self-reflexive. So avant-garde.

Conclusion

We’ve come to the end of our tour. Wow, this was cathartic or what?

Yes, we know. This museum is full of a lot of flippant, highly subjective opinions. We know none of the subjects of these portraits personally, nor are we representing the full story of each. But isn’t this museum just a reflection of how the internet works? You go online, and flip flop between hysterical laughter and angry tears of frustration.

It’s great. I love being hostage to my own emotions.

Anyway, thanks for visiting the Shit Museum. We hope you come again soon! Please leave a donation on your way out, and yes, the only exit is through the gift shop.

Liked this column? It’s part of our Big Spam daily newsletter. Subscribe down here:


Get the TNW newsletter

Get the most important tech news in your inbox each week.

Also tagged with


Published
Back to top