The 16 Celebrity GIFs People Used To Express Themselves In 2016
As per your keyboard.
GIFs aren't just contained in Tumblr posts anymore. Thanks to GIF keyboards that you can download right onto your phone, you don&039;t have to tell someone you want to #party — you can show them with a RuPaul GIF.
That can lead to some fun insights. Tenor, the company that makes the GIF keyboard for some of the world’s most popular messaging apps — iMessage, Facebook Messenger, Kik, Twitter, Google Gboard, and the Android’s Touchpal and Kika keyboards — has compiled data on how people used celebrity GIFs to express themselves in 2016.
According to the company, people search for GIFs on their keyboards 200,000,000 million times every day. Half of the company&039;s user base, according to CEO David McIntosh, is in North America, around a quarter is in Europe, and the remainder can be found in Latin America, the Middle East, and Asia.
Most GIFs in Tenor&039;s database use emotions or emotional actions as a primary tag — “sad,” “#smile,” “ewww” — so using a celebrity GIF usually has a tag that indicates the tone. You can, for instance, search “Steph Curry nervous” for a GIF of the basketball player biting his nails.
McIntosh told BuzzFeed News, “The world is voting with what they search for and share on how the world perceives these [celebrities].”
Here are the celebrities people turned to most in 2016 to express their emotions when words failed and only a GIF would do:
Kobe Bryant: Smile
This GIF is also tagged with “really,” “deal with it,” and “forreal.”
Tenor / Via tenor.co
LeBron James: #Eww
Gross.
Tenor / Via tenor.co
RuPaul: Party
San Diego searches for this tag more than any other city every night of the week, according to Tenor.
Tenor / Via tenor.co
Quelle: <a href="The 16 Celebrity GIFs People Used To Express Themselves In 2016“>BuzzFeed