Openai/696682db-290c-8004-bc1b-3434be97e8d2

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This conversation was exported from ChatGPT[1]

gpt-5-2 edit

User: Why was fall of 2023 a time for memes about being on a government watch list? edit

Why was fall of 2023 a time for memes about being on a government watch list?

Assistant: Fall 2023 became a peak moment for “I’m definitely on a government watch list” memes because several cultural and tech … edit

Fall 2023 became a peak moment for “I’m definitely on a government watch list” memes because several cultural and tech trends collided at once, making the joke feel suddenly relatable instead of abstract.

Here’s what came together:

1. AI Went Mainstream—and Felt Creepy edit

By late summer/fall 2023:

  • ChatGPT, image generators, and voice cloning were everywhere
  • People realized how much data they’d casually fed into AI tools
  • News stories highlighted AI scraping, surveillance, and model training on massive datasets

The joke shifted from “the government is watching” to “everything is watching, and it remembers.”

2. True-Crime + Dark Google Searches Went Viral edit

TikTok and X (Twitter) trends leaned hard into humor about:

  • Googling things like “how long does bleach last on concrete” (for writing or curiosity)
  • Falling down true-crime rabbit holes
  • Writing fiction, D&D campaigns, or DIY projects that sounded suspicious out of context

People joked that their search history alone should earn them a watch-list spot.

3. News Reinforced Surveillance Anxiety edit

Throughout 2023, headlines reminded people that:

  • Governments already do mass metadata collection
  • Tech companies share data (legally or not)
  • Facial recognition and license-plate readers were expanding

So the meme worked because it felt plausible, not paranoid.

4. Gen Z & Millennials Use Humor to Defuse Powerlessness edit

The meme format wasn’t really about fear—it was about:

  • Laughing at lack of control
  • Normalizing anxiety about privacy
  • Turning existential unease into something shareable

The joke became:

“I know I’m not important—but the systems are big and dumb enough that I might still be flagged.”

5. Platform Algorithms Made It Self-Reinforcing edit

Ironically:

  • People joked about being watched
  • The algorithm amplified those jokes
  • Which made people joke more about being watched

That feedback loop made the meme feel confirmed.

In Short edit

Fall 2023 memes about government watch lists worked because they sat at the intersection of:

  • 🧠 AI awareness
  • 🔍 Search-history self-incrimination humor
  • 📰 Real surveillance news
  • 😅 Coping through irony

It wasn’t “the government is watching me” so much as:

“I live in a data panopticon, and all I can do is meme about it.”

If you want, I can show you the specific meme formats that dominated that period or how similar jokes evolved in 2024–2025.

References edit

  1. "Fall 2023 Watchlist Memes". ChatGPT. Retrieved 2026-01-14.