Selfies At Funerals
Also known as: Funeral Selfies
Selfies at Funerals is a single-topic Tumblr blog created by journalist Jason Feifer on October 28, 2013, collecting and curating self-portraits people took while attending funeral services2. The blog sparked an instant media firestorm about social media etiquette, generational narcissism, and whether photographing yourself at a funeral crosses a line1. Its brief but intense run peaked when Barack Obama took a selfie at Nelson Mandela's memorial service in December 20133.
TL;DR
Selfies at Funerals is a single-topic Tumblr blog created by journalist Jason Feifer on October 28, 2013, collecting and curating self-portraits people took while attending funeral services.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
Selfies at Funerals was a curated collection, not a participatory meme format. People didn't intentionally create content for it. Instead, Feifer found publicly posted funeral selfies and reposted them to the blog. The "format" is simple: take a selfie at or near a funeral, post it to social media with a caption, and risk becoming internet-famous for all the wrong reasons. Common patterns included bathroom mirror shots at funeral homes, car selfies on the way to services, and posed photos near caskets or headstones.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
The blog's entire active run lasted roughly six weeks, from late October to mid-December 2013, but generated coverage from dozens of major outlets.
One of the most shared examples was a young man named Grant Schofield who posed next to a statue of a breastfeeding woman at his grandfather's funeral and tweeted "killing the selfie game at pop's funeral".
Feifer wrote a longer explanation of the project for The Guardian after the Obama selfie incident.
The Selfies at Serious Places blog once received a self-submission from someone who sent photos of themselves at Treblinka and Majdanek concentration camp museums in Poland, with a note simply saying "Appreciate the site".
"Selfie" was named Oxford Dictionaries' Word of the Year in November 2013, with the dictionary tracing its first known use to an Australian internet forum in 2002.
Derivatives & Variations
Selfies at Serious Places
— Feifer's earlier Tumblr project that collected selfies at concentration camps, memorials, and other inappropriate locations. It was the direct precursor to the funeral-specific blog[3].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (12)
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- 2Selfies at Funeralsarticle
- 3Selfies At Serious Placesarticle
- 4Selfies at Funerals - Know Your Memeencyclopedia
- 5Selfieencyclopedia
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- 7Selfies At Serious Placesarticle
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- 9Selfies at Funeralsarticle
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