Harambe: Cincinnati Zoo deletes its Facebook and Twitter accounts after being bombarded by memes

The zoo had tried to use the account to move on from mentions of the gorilla that was killed. It failed

Andrew Griffin
Tuesday 23 August 2016 07:23 EDT
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Visitors walk past the closed main entrance to the Cincinnati Zoo's Gorilla World exhibit days after a 3-year-old boy fell into the moat and officials were forced to kill Harambe
Visitors walk past the closed main entrance to the Cincinnati Zoo's Gorilla World exhibit days after a 3-year-old boy fell into the moat and officials were forced to kill Harambe (John Sommers II/Getty Images)

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Cincinnati Zoo, where Harambe lived until he was killed earlier this year, has been forced to kill its social media accounts.

The account has brought an end to weeks of relentless jokes and memes by fully deleting its account. The zoo had asked people to stop making memes of the dead gorilla – a plea that in fact seemed to spur many people into making new ones.

The deletion might finally have been spurred by an outpouring of anger and attacks in recent days. The zoo’s director Thane Maynard’s account had been hacked, and every single tweet that the official account sent out was greeted by a flood of responses about Harambe.

But it might also have been a response to the relentless memeing that has come in recent weeks, as grieving for Harambe became the internet’s favourite occupation and joke. The zoo said that it wanted those jokes to come to an end – which just led to a new flurry of them, and the account was taken down just hours after.

Petition over gorilla death

The zoo’s director had said that the institution was “not amused by the memes, petitions and signs about Harambe”.

“Our zoo family is still healing, and the constant mention of Harambe makes moving forward more difficult for us,” Maynard had told the . We are honouring Harambe by redoubling our gorilla conservation efforts and encouraging others to join us .”

But deleting the account doesn’t seem to have brought those memes to an end – and has instead just brought on another wave of jokes.

Harambe was killed when a three-year-old fell into his enclosure at the end of May. After an initial outpouring of grief, it seemed that many people had moved on – until the events were revived as a meme in the last few weeks.

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