how to lose the internet in few hours
in an age of infinite content, simple stories are existential.
gemini 2.5 was supposed to be google’s chatgpt moment. smarter reasoning. faster context. tighter multimodal fusion. years of infrastructure bets finally lining up.
and yet, the internet said: look at this meme in a studio ghibli filter.
ghibli core won the day. the memes outshined the model. and in the attention economy, that’s not just a PR miss—it’s an existential failure.
how did google fumble this? simple: they don’t know how to tell stories anymore. worse, they don’t even realize that matters.
there’s no one inside google whose name is on the line. no one whose reputation depends on whether the world cares. no one whose livelihood is staked to the outcome. it’s just another product release, another slide in a perf packet. they can afford to shrug.
meanwhile, the rest of the world moves on. nobody remembers the specs. everyone remembers the meme.
what makes this particularly tragic is that gemini 2.5 might actually be good. but being good isn’t enough. attention is brittle. narrative is everything. and if you’re not actively shaping it, you’re at its mercy.
google is still one of the few companies on earth with the talent, compute, and distribution to change the game. but they’re behaving like a mismanaged empire: brilliant engineers, soulless launches. incredible tech, zero vibe.
the longer they fail to fix this, the more they’ll be known not for what they build, but for what they squander.
meanwhile, the best memes win.
It’s just noise. Nobody cares. Google is soo big. Every time I check my mails, every time I hop on a meeting with someone, every time I type something in my calendar.. I see the big google logo. Watch Google buy OpenAI within the next 5 years.
did openai actually engineer the ghibli meme tho? it could be a symptom of just having a more dank user base => higher probability ur product is behind the meme generation