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#Funeral is the realest hashtag on Instagram

RIP.

 

Kelsey Lawrence

Internet Culture

Posted on Oct 25, 2015   Updated on May 27, 2021, 6:22 pm CDT

Too much time spent on social media makes the world seem like a tempestuously strange place that exists somewhere between Weird Twitter and the blurry Facebook memes your aunt posts. Instagram in particular is a branded purgatory, with a smattering of your friends’ FOMO-bait photos amid accounts you followed and don’t care enough to unfollow. 

But when you search beyond that, there’s a warm, human side to Instagram—perhaps the best archive we’ve got of the human experience in 2015.

Hashtags provide an actual function, and are a basic Internet thing I mostly forget about and never use. Luckily, a lot of folks do, and what’s resulted is an accidentally beautiful, endless grid of the more candid, genuine side of society. We’ll seek to explore these unappreciated nooks and crannies with a series we’re calling “The Realest Hashtag On Instagram”—starting with the seasonally-appropriate #funeral.

At face value, #funeral really isn’t that different from #LasVegas. Less debauchery, but similar vibe, you know? Searching #funeral brings up a lot of threatening quote overlays (“I wear all black to remind you not to mess with me, because I’m already dressed for your funeral.”) In cases like these, #funeral is taken as a metaphorical hashtag. 

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It’s also good hashtag to cruise to visit if you’re feeling nostalgic for your high school emo self. Like mall goths, scene kids will never totally go away. User _itsaprincessthing_  is “#stillanemoatheart.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/8x7J3YO0_6/

This is a selfie taken by a young Nashville woman training to be a funeral director. Her other hashtag, “#allblackeverything,” was very good, and I want to hear the stories she has to tell. 

There was recently a quietly devastating New York Times article about dying alone. In comparison, #funeral seems like a real CELEBRATION OF LIFE. If your funeral somehow made a cameo on Instagram, that means you definitely haven’t died alone. Far from it! You have relatives and friends there that knew you and probably cared, but weren’t emotionally wrecked enough to not have the presence of mind to take a quick photo.

In fact, it sees the deceased featured in #funeral posts probably had a lot of friends. A tribute photo for someone named Coxy tells me that he was the life of the party, mostly because he got this BMW license plate tribute

Then again, perhaps this meme saying “Nobody loves you till your preacher is holding a bible and everyone is dressed in black [100 emoji]” holds some dark truth. 

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See what I mean? No matter which way you come at this, #funeral remains unflinchingly raw. That is why #funeral is the realest hashtag on Instagram. 

Photo via Stephan Ridgway/Flickr (CC BY 2.0)

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*First Published: Oct 25, 2015, 11:00 am CDT