Yes, memes can be journalism. Heres how.

May 2024 · 13 minute read

Hey y’all! Anita here. I’m excited to continue sharing key takeaways from the rockstar guest speakers who recently spoke to my Journalism Innovation class at Ryerson University. This week, I’ll be looking at meme-based journalism through the eyes of Annie Colbert 🚀

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Annie is a Brooklyn-based journalist and the executive editor of Mashable, a global media outlet that specializes in tech, digital culture and entertainment content. It’s where Annie and I met as colleagues nearly a decade ago in 2012; Mashable, which currently has an audience of 60 million people, is where I got my very first post-internship job as weekend editor.

As executive editor, Annie oversees Mashable’s day-to-day editorial and social operations, and manages all the “vertical” or section editors. But when I first met her, she’d just joined the company as editor of Watercooler, which was originally called Viral Content and then later rebranded to Culture. In a 2012 post announcing Annie’s hire and Watercooler’s debut, Mashable described the vertical as “your destination for web culture and what’s trending.”

“It is extreme 2012 internet. If you spent any time on the internet in 2012, the entire announcement post is just all the memes from that year,” Annie said in class. “One of the things that I really liked about working at Mashable [at the time] was that we were going to report on the internet on the internet.”

For the uninitiated, memes are bite-sized, often funny, pieces of media designed for quick consumption. Or as philosopher Daniel Dennett describes it in this 2011 Smithsonian Magazine article, a meme “is an information packet with attitude.”

Annie was ahead of her time as an early adopter of memes, and over the years as internet culture has evolved into mainstream culture, I’ve come to see her as a pioneer in meme-based journalism — someone who incorporated memes into journalism in the late 2000s and early 2010s when few others did. As I witnessed first-hand, she’s also a master at it. As Annie explained it, “Memes have become such a vital part of how we communicate online. If it's a shared experience, we have just sort of this mutual understanding of what these images mean.” 

Below, I’ve highlighted Annie’s best insights, including how she landed her dynamic career, the different ways she uses memes in journalism and how the significance of memes has grown over the years.

Jennifer Grygiel is an assistant professor of communications at Syracuse University whose research focuses on memes. They have a similar perspective to Annie, suggesting in The Conversation that internet memes should be elevated as an “important form of editorializing that’s worthy of appearing alongside the traditional [political] cartoon.” Grygiel argues that memes are technically political cartoons, albeit ones that are more democratically accessible and inclusive given that “the ranks of [political] cartoonists are too white, too old and too male.”

Beyond using memes as political cartoons and as promotional material on social media, Annie and her team at Mashable also cover memes and their broader impact. 

When I left my year-long reporting internship at The Toronto Star for my first permanent job at Mashable, a Star colleague at the time told me that a mutual colleague said Mashable didn’t produce “real journalism.” Times clearly have changed since then, and I’m forever grateful for my foresight to take a risk and leave establishment Canadian media for a then-fledgling digital American media startup. I still see my time at Mashable as one of the seminal moments of my career, and all the skills I learned there are still bearing fruit today. In fact, this knowledge — specifically of data analytics, audience engagement and internet culture — laid the foundation for my current success. It helped me look at journalism in a different way, and more importantly, it helped me understand that journalism can and should evolve.

Congrats to the Canadian Association of Black Journalists and Canadian Journalists of Colour for hosting RISE, their inaugural joint conference this weekend, which was a huge success! Kudos to the fantastic organizers, volunteers, speakers, moderators, artists and wellness facilitators for running a conference that dissected difficult — but important — conversations about equity in Canadian media. I’m also proud of the work I did to help make this a reality, including dreaming up the vision and successfully fundraising for the conference, along with my sponsorship co-lead and CABJ executive director Nadia Stewart.

Thanks so much to Fateema Sayani, the Ottawa Community Foundation’s director of donor engagement, for becoming one of The Other Wave’s monthly paying supporters.

My professional mission has always been to support the global movement towards more thoughtful, impactful news coverage, and all the ways that manifests. If The Other Wave gets you to think even a little differently about journalism, especially in Canada, then I will have accomplished what I set out to do. And if TOW gets you to take action and support Canadian media outlets — especially ones that strive to be innovative and inclusive — I will have exceeded my expectations.

If my values and goals resonate with you, please consider supporting fiercely independent media analysis that fills in gaps in coverage of the Canadian journalism landscape. How? Feel free to provide feedback, pass along resources, donate money or simply share this newsletter with your friends.

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