There’s just something beautifully broken about the way lolcows talk about each other. It’s like two broken mirrors trying to critique each other’s reflections—neither one seeing clearly, but both convinced they’re holding up the truth.
When
R.R. starts fixating on
Josh, it’s like a Dollar Store villain plotting against another villain from the same shelf. Like, “Hey, I may be unhinged, but
that guy’s a
real mess.” It’s the blind leading the blind straight into a Discord meltdown. The sheer gall, the cosmic irony—it’s practically performance art.
You know you’ve entered the Twilight Zone of online dysfunction when one public trainwreck takes time out of their regularly scheduled implosion to throw shade at another. That’s not drama—that’s the Ouroboros of cringe, the snake devouring its own ridiculous tale.
It’s not even gossip at that point—it’s tragic projection wrapped in denial and sprinkled with delusion. R.R. thinking about Josh is like if a collapsing house started critiquing the foundation of a nearby burning trailer. Neither one’s habitable, but sure, let’s compare drywall damage.
And the audience? We’re just sitting back, popcorn in hand, watching these internet specters trade jabs in a digital graveyard. Because when lolcows lock eyes across the void, it’s not beef—it’s ballet. A sad, off-key, flaming ballet performed entirely in front of their remaining three followers and five sock accounts.