This was my favorite generated comic. I went on to generate twenty some odd alternatives to look at the consistency or inconsistency of the generated genre of weird, confusing comics. The hilarity lies within the randomness that created a genre of three panels and two awkward characters. Most of the quotes included in the formula to create the short dialogue are interchangeable in that they are independent statements—most of the time—and require minimal context for their humor to be displayed. The facial expressions or actions of Simon and Finlay are all random and make for unexpected turns in the story conveyed, such as Finlay shooting himself through the bottom of his head. The genre of these comics is characterized by goofy senselessness, but, in the first few goes at the “generate” button, repeats already surfaced, showing the lack of depth in selection pool for the website, but as advertised on the site, the tens of thousands of possible outcomes are impressive when evaluating the assumed lack of funding or manpower for Pandyland. The audience is probably varied for such a genre generator, as comics are funny to almost anybody, as long as the content is demographically appropriate. For example, it would be difficult to expect a kindergarten student to laugh a joke about Ann Coulter.
As far as the meme generator goes, the function of the site was a bit confusing and I didn’t fully understand its purpose. It provided pages of viral memes such as Bad Luck Brian and the Buzz Lightyear image. These pictures have been on every website on the Internet. Twice. And this website possibly was created to allow people to post new, random memes to their Twitters and Facebooks. Nearly all of the memes were simple square pictures captioned with a basic phrase on the top, and the punchline at the bottom. The punchlines vary in topic; some are social commentaries and some are just short non-contextual jokes. Regardless, memes took over the web in recent years and it is no surprise that the genre has expanded as virally as it has due to the simplicity of most of the jokes and the fact that they are contained to about ten words total for each meme. The site allows people to explore the inner workings of the genre such as selecting a picture and adding text as well as simplifying the process to a simple input with an immediate end product.
The last genre generator created a research paper you input a name for the author of the article. The “Abstract” section explicitly states the purpose of the essay or technological discovery. The “Table of Contents” is oddly followed by the separate sections, rather than a list of titles and identifiers (such as page numbers) for the sections, which is the expectation of a reader when they see the words “Table of Contents” at the beginning of any work. The generator works independently of the user input (the author’s name), so the genre is already created, but for a few phrases strung together to form a semi-cohesive paper. The genre also uses highly academic or specialized vocabulary throughout the product, because an audience of a research paper will usually be fellow researchers who fully understand what is being said. But for an eighteen year-old, the selected vocabulary is highly confusing, and if one of the researchers were a professor as well, they would sometimes have to dilute the thoughts presented in their professional publications in order to explain the content in a way that an undergraduate student can absorb what is being presented.

Ryan Burns,
ReplyDeleteYour bio:
A potentially-aspiring photographer, huh? And only kind of normal? Join the club.
PB1A:
I really liked how you noticed this specific detail: “The headline usually contains the two teams’ names and an interesting action verb intended to draw in readers scrolling through all of their search results.” In Writing 2, we’re trying to train you to become super-observant so that you can get down to the nittiest of details and adhere (if that’s what you want to do!) to an audience’s expectations.
(PS: I’m an avid reader of the Philly.com sports page/blog, so I couldn’t agree with you more about this: “As exemplified in any big story’s comment section, soccer fans have a balance between humor and knowledge, and there are plenty of readings in the post-story text that are worth the time for a good laugh or an impressive bit of input or opinion.”)
PB1B:
Thanks for embedding the picture in your blog. I’m a big fan of that—why not max out the tech-y blog affordances, right? It helps bring this stuff to life a bit more for your reader (at least it does for me).
It seems to me like you got the basic gist of the meme generator site. What we’re shooting for here is the detection of patterns.
This was very well put: “The genre also uses highly academic or specialized vocabulary throughout the product, because an audience of a research paper will usually be fellow researchers who fully understand what is being said.”
Nice work, Burns. Check plus.