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We turned our staff’s tweets into beautiful, mesmerizing poetry

We're a bunch of Walt Whitmans over here.

 

Miles Klee

Internet Culture

Posted on Jan 29, 2015   Updated on May 29, 2021, 4:06 pm CDT

I know what you’re thinking: your tweets already are poetry. But with the help of some nimble programming—in the form of a website called Poetweet—those tweets coalesce into a literary masterwork. Check out what the algorithm accomplished by remixing the Daily Dot’s feed:

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Poetweet

Clearly this was something on which we could waste our entire morning. And with three formats to choose from (sonnet, rondel, indriso), there were no limits to this adventure in verse.

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Our politics editor delved into the darkest depths of geekhood.

Poetweet

While our morning editor pivoted from cheeky rhymes to an avant-garde coda.

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Poetweet

Entertainment editor Monica Riese displayed a Céline-like fondness for the ellipsis.

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Poetweet

Staff writer Michelle Jaworski turned in a visceral, spiny little number.

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Poetweet

Our community manager’s piece had an utterly perfect title.

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Poetweet

And our LOL editor explored the interrogative mood.

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Poetweet

Tech editor Molly McHugh had what seemed an ode to existence itself.

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Poetweet

Tech reporter Taylor Hatmaker leans a bit more…technical.

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Poetweet

Sex reporter EJ Dickson proved that art is the best way to settle scores.

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Poetweet

Yes, our illustrator is a creepy stalker best avoided.

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Poetweet

And our fandom expert likes to rage against the status quo.

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Poetweet

Politics writer Kevin Collier went for rugged, Appalachian minimalism.

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Poetweet

Social media editor Evan Weiss wrestled with current events and paternity.

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Poetweet

Contributing writer and Vine wizard Greg Seals got fairly illicit.

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Poetweet

Fellow freelancer Marisa Kabas turned out to be a master of rhythm.

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Poetweet

And politics reporter Aaron Sankin sounded justifiably paranoid.

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Poetweet

I’m comfortable admitting that I’m my own biggest fan.

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Poetweet

We could keep going, of course. We just have to pause in order to print and bind everything we have so far. Library of Congress, here we come!

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Photo by brewbooks/Flickr (CC BY-SA 2.0)

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*First Published: Jan 29, 2015, 2:51 pm CST
 

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