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Flowers around a bronze statue of a gorilla and her baby at Cincinnati zoo in memory of Harambe.
Flowers around a bronze statue of a gorilla and her baby at Cincinnati zoo in memory of Harambe. Photograph: William Philpott/Reuters
Flowers around a bronze statue of a gorilla and her baby at Cincinnati zoo in memory of Harambe. Photograph: William Philpott/Reuters

Cincinnati zoo deletes Twitter and Facebook accounts over Harambe jokes

This article is more than 7 years old

The death of the gorilla has turned into a meme, but the zoo is ‘not amused’ by the onslaught of jokes on social media

Cincinnati zoo has deactivated its social accounts after it asked the public to stop making memes about Harambe the gorilla.

The animal was shot dead this year after a three-year-old child climbed into his enclosure. Since then, Harambe has turned into a source of humorous content online.

Jokes about his memory have spread on all corners of the internet – including the mentions of Cincinnati’s zoo official social media accounts.

In the past few months, their Twitter mentions have been filled with the following:

I see Cincinnati Zoo has gone and tweeted again pic.twitter.com/Buv1EXmSPT

— Alan White (@aljwhite) August 21, 2016

. @CincinnatiZoo 's mentions are nothing but Harambe. #RIPHarambe pic.twitter.com/78EYBGjqrW

— Allie Hausfeld (@AllieWTOL) August 14, 2016

There comes a time when you just have to feel bad for whoever manages @CincinnatiZoo pic.twitter.com/VV4WnEggjL

— Alex Kolodziej (@AKolodziejFRS) August 13, 2016

Its Facebook page faced similar issues. This week, both were deactivated after Cincinnati zoo pleaded for the memes to stop.

The zoo’s director, Thane Maynard, told the Associated Press: “We are 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. We are honoring Harambe by redoubling our gorilla conservation efforts and encouraging others to join us.”

Maynard’s account was hacked this month and taken over by messages dedicated to Harambe.

There has been much theorising about why Harambe has become the meme of the summer. Some believe mimicking over-the-top displays of grief appeals to the internet’s sense of humour. Others believe it comes from a genuine place of anger about what happened to Harambe.

Whatever the case, it remains to be seen whether deleting the accounts will stop the jokes.

@CincinnatiZoo deleted their Twitter just like they deleted Harambe

— josh (@Joshhpointto) August 23, 2016

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