I Can’t Stop Laughing At Boomers Vs The Internet Moments Like These

May 04, 2026 08:00 AM EDT
A comprehensive gallery of the boomers vs the internet phenomenon, showcasing the hilarious friction between older generations and modern UI.
google discoverFollow us on Google Discover

I fell into this boomers vs the internet dump while waiting for my own app to load, and it felt like staring into a funhouse mirror of modern life. Old people vs technology isn’t “haha old people” so much as watching a decent, polite generation get jumped by interface design, autocorrect, and the concept of “public.” This dump leans into Facebook fails, internet fails, and funny screenshots—the holy trio of online chaos where every click is a new plot twist. It’s context collapse, accidental oversharing, and the kind of earnest confusion that somehow becomes performance art.

Facebook profile picture update showing a vertical mirror selfie that has been cropped into a circle. The photo only captures the person from the neck down, showcasing a vibrant pink turtleneck under a purple and magenta knit cardigan. Below the post, the user has commented on their own photo, "Sorry . I will try to get my head in on the next try."

The Headless Horseman of Facebook Marketplace has arrived.

Facebook status post using a dark grey-to-black gradient background. Large white text in the center reads, "What's a good defecated coffee?" The post has over 900 comments and several "laugh" reactions, highlighting the unfortunate autocorrect error for "decaffeinated."

I’ll stick to the regular brew, thanks. I prefer my coffee pre-processed.

A screenshot of a Mariah Carey music video on YouTube showing her in a red soldier-style outfit. Below the video, a comment from a user named Vivian reads, "Hi mariah I'm getting a wheelchair." The comment has one "like" and feels entirely disconnected from the festive holiday content.

Vivian treating the YouTube comment section like a direct line to Mariah’s personal cell phone.

Two consecutive Facebook posts from the same user in a dark mode interface. The first post is a text query asking, "How do delete .facebok post". Directly below it, the second post is a status on a background pattern of fried eggs that reads, "Strip clubs near my house".
A screenshot of a 2-star Google review by "Jeanette." The text of the review says, "Dry. Meat to salty". Below it is a response from the owner stating, "Hi Jeanette, this is a record store."
Facebook Messenger chat history. A user named Lorette asks, "Id like to buy your chairs if you still have them?" The recipient replies, "? I don't have any chair for sale and never did. Sorry." The exchange captures the common confusion of navigating Facebook’s "People You May Know" vs. Marketplace.

Lorette out here manifesting furniture that doesn't exist.

photo of a physical computer screen showing a "Live chat" window. The user has typed, "where did you come from. get off my computter". The support agent, Ethan, replies, "You can close the chat window." The user's final response is just the word "virus".
Facebook status post featuring a bright pink background covered in light pink heart balloons. The white text centered in the middle simply asks, "Who is this". It appears the user is asking the entire internet who "they" are on their own timeline.
photograph of a screen showing a Facebook comment thread. A single user provides a four-part play-by-play of their grocery status: "I did not get the Salmon this time", followed by "I did not get the red onion either.", then "I did get the salmon after all.", and finally "I got the red onion as well".

A four-act tragedy with a triumphant, seafood-based ending.

Facebook Marketplace listing for a "2005 Chevrolet silverado 1500" for $1,000. However, the accompanying photo is not a truck; it is two slices of white bread with several pieces of bologna or ham cut into the shapes of moose and layered on top.
Facebook post where a user writes, "I can't log out of Facebook and don't know why." Below it, another user provides a nonsensical, unsolicited health or cleaning tip in the comments: "Coconut oil."
A Facebook post showing a delicious-looking pan of spam fried rice with the caption "I made spam fried rice for dinner and it was bomb." In a bizarre non-sequitur, a commenter replies in all-caps: "I REALLY DO NOT WANT TO TALK ABOUT IT."

"Sir, this is a fried rice post, not a deposition."

screenshot of a comment thread regarding an Apple TV box. A potential buyer asks in all-caps, "DOES IT GET CHANNEL 16". The seller explains it’s for streaming apps like Netflix and Hulu. The buyer immediately shuts it down with "OK DONT WANT IT."
Facebook Marketplace listing for "Yellow Cow by Franz Marc in acrylic," priced at $100. Instead of the artwork, the featured photo is a close-up, slightly low-angle selfie of an older woman with short grey hair and glasses, looking directly into the camera.
A Marketplace listing for a "Stainless Steel Pig Hog Roaster" for $495. To demonstrate the size or functionality, an older man in a pink shirt and white pants is pictured lying flat inside the metal roasting rack on a lawn.

When the product description says 'fits one large hog' and you take it as a personal challenge.

A photo of an older man holding up a large, ornate gold-framed mirror for sale. Due to the angle of the mirror and his height, his actual head is visible above the frame, while his reflected torso appears inside the frame, creating a disorienting "severed head" visual.
A Facebook status post on a black background asking, "What do you do for leg camps.?" (a misspelling of "cramps"). The first comment suggests a classic folk remedy: "Yellow mustard, pickle juice."
A screenshot of a post to the official Applebee’s Grill & Bar Facebook page. A user named Donna asks, "Is my nephew there? ... his name it Jason." After Applebee’s kindly explains they have 1900 locations, Donna replies the next day, "Thank you Applebee I found him. He was at Chili's."

Applebee's: The world's most polite, yet ineffective, missing persons bureau.

Marketplace listing for "desk top computer accessories" for $50. The photo shows an older man holding a black computer monitor directly in front of his face like a mask, while an older woman stands next to him looking confused.
A mobile chat exchange where a buyer asks, "Hi, are you still selling that Mercedes car". After the seller says "Yeah", the buyer asks for a photo. The seller responds by sending a stern-faced selfie of himself instead of the vehicle.

The first vibe running through these is the “search bar confession.” You can practically see the moment someone thinks they’re whispering to Google, but they’re actually shouting into the town square. Facebook fails hit hardest in that zone because the platform looks like a diary until it suddenly behaves like a megaphone. One typo later, you’ve invented a brand-new beverage category and 900 strangers are watching.

Then you’ve got the customer service dimension, where corporations are treated like relatives. Somebody asks a national chain a deeply personal question, and the brand responds with the patient energy of a kindergarten teacher. Internet fails are at their funniest when the logic is technically sound (“the internet is one place, right?”) but the reality is 1,900 locations and zero idea where Jason is.

And the photos. The photos are the real museum. Marketplace listings that become accidental portraits. “Proof of item” that’s actually just a stern selfie. Product scale demonstrations that feel like an OSHA violation and a Renaissance painting at the same time. Funny screenshots love this because the camera isn’t lying—it’s just being used in a completely different language.

What makes boomers vs the internet so addictive is the sincerity. Nobody is trying to go viral. They’re just trying to buy chairs that may or may not exist, log out of Facebook, or tell Mariah Carey something medically important. It’s wholesome, baffling, and oddly relatable if you’ve ever been one update away from calling something a virus out of pure exhaustion.

If you want more “humanity vs technology” content, try Email Memes For Inbox Survivors, Translation Fails That Sound Like Threats, and Funny Signs That Should Not Exist.

Jake Parker writes like a man who has also typed into the wrong box and prayed nobody saw it.

Jake Parker, known around the web as "Jay," is a digital writer with over 10 years of experience covering internet humor, meme trends, and viral content. Before joining Thunder Dungeon, Jay was the lead editor at MemeWire, where he helped curate memes that broke the internet, including coverage on trends like Distracted Boyfriend, Kombucha Girl, and Bernie Sanders’ Mittens. A self-proclaimed "professional procrastinator," Jay spends his downtime scrolling Reddit and Twitter to stay ahead of what's about to break the internet next.
Read Memes
Get Paid

The only newsletter that pays you to read it.

A daily recap of the trending memes and every week one of our subscribers gets paid. It’s that easy and it could be you.