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  • 2018-06-11 (xsd:date)
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  • Did the 'Distracted Boyfriend' Meme Come From a 1920's Silent Film? (en)
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  • Charlie Chaplin is often described as an actor who was well ahead of his time, but was he so far ahead as to invent memes, as well? In June 2018, an image featuring the famous actor checking out a woman on the street to the clear consternation of his partner was shared (perhaps jokingly) with the claim that Chaplin had invented thedistracted boyfriend meme: It would certainly be difficult to successfully argue that Chaplin was the true inventor of this meme — after all, the moment depicted in these images isn't exactly novel. However, the still truly does come from a 1922 short film called Pay Day: The woman in the foreground is Edna Purviance, who played the foreman's daughter in the movie, and the woman in the background is Phyllis Allen, who played Chaplin's wife. The scene can be glimpsed at the 9:15 in the film. The still was flipped, placing Chaplin's wife on the right side of the image and the second woman on the left, in order to better match up with the Distracted Boyfriend meme: The Charlie Chaplin version of the distracted boyfriend meme may have proved popular because it reflects on the actor's personal life as he was involved in several romantic scandals. His first wife, Mildred Harris, was just sixteen when they married, and Chaplin would eventually leave her for another teenager, Lita Grey. Chaplin reportedly had a number of affairs before that marriage fell apart. The actor then married Paulette Goddard, got divorced again, and then was married one final time to Oona O'Neill. To put it simply, Charlie Chaplin didn't invent the distracted boyfriend meme, but he certainly qualifies to be its poster child. (en)
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