Twitter’s white boy of the month has deep roots in Twilight actor Robert Pattinson, who was the pinnacle of romance and attraction during the heyday of Stephenie Meyer’s vampire fantasy series. However, Twitter’s white boy of the month also has the essential internet component to it they are selected in part because of the interest that snowballs on a social network like Twitter. As Twitter user points out, “Due to their privilege and social capital, white men have had mostly unfettered access to entertainment.” White men in Hollywood have been thirsted after since the days of Marlon Brando and James Dean, and even before that. Google search data also shows that just the term “white boy of the month” had high search interest in January 2019 and bubbles up every month.īut the lineage of Twitter’s white boy of the month has history even before the likes of Timothée Chalamet. Twitter’s white boy of the month appears to have caught more momentum during early 2018 Madison noted she first heard about it sometime during summer 2018. It didn’t pop up on Urban Dictionary until December 2018, and Know Your Meme, another reliable source for indexing all things internet, doesn’t even have an entry at this point in time. It’s unclear exactly when the term was technically created, but there’s evidence to show that it’s been used over the past couple of years, also called “stan Twitter’s white boy of the month” before the more generalized one. I’m not sure how it got so obsessive but I guess that’s just the power of stan Twitter and the media.” “Twitter has become obsessed with the tall, skinny, pale, curly-haired white guy recently and Timothée fit the stereotype perfectly, so I think he started it but then it just grew and expanded.
![gay twitter memes gay twitter memes](https://ruinmyweek.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/17-memes-that-are-equal-parts-gay-and-hilarious-1.jpg)
![gay twitter memes gay twitter memes](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Do77raXW4AI3Nop.jpg)
#Gay twitter memes tv
“I think with white culture in movies and TV shows being shoved down our throats since the start of TVs, it has made us just normally think the famous star is an attractive white guy when growing up,” Madison tells Teen Vogue.