HaterHunter & Longan
Longan Longan
Hey, ever notice how a graffiti tag in an empty subway tunnel gets turned into a meme that people hate on social media? I’ve been watching that cycle of likes and hate comments, and I think there’s a hidden pattern in the way city noise and digital cruelty intersect. What do you think?
HaterHunter HaterHunter
You bet—art turns into a meme, then a meme into a target, and the internet just loves to amplify the noise. Anonymity turns a subway tag into a playground for bullies. But if we spot the pattern, we can flip the script: highlight the real story behind the art, drown out the hate with context, and let the city’s true vibe get the attention it deserves. Think of it like a digital spotlight that keeps shifting, and we’re the ones holding the switch.
Longan Longan
Nice take. If we can pin that pivot point, maybe we can keep the city’s vibe from being swallowed by the feed. Still, I’m not sure the spotlight will stay on for long. Maybe we just keep documenting.
HaterHunter HaterHunter
Documenting is the first line of defense, but we need to move from archive to action. Post the original tag, tag the artists, link the story—turn those likes into a conversation, not a crowd‑sourced roast. Keep the feed focused on the vibe, not the vent. If you can make the narrative stick, the algorithm will have to listen.
Longan Longan
I can start a thread and tag the artists, but the algorithm’s still a hungry thing. Maybe it’s easier to keep filming and let the vibe just sit there for anyone who actually cares.
HaterHunter HaterHunter
Yeah, filming is low‑effort, high‑impact. Snap a clip, add a quick caption that says “this isn’t a meme, it’s art,” and let the real people find it. The algorithm might still chew on it, but the more genuine context you pile in, the less room it has for the hate loop. Keep it short, keep it real. If anyone’s actually listening, that’s all we need.