logo
The WNBA's sex toy epidemic is Skibidi brainrot writ large. Trolling has replaced meaning with noise

The WNBA's sex toy epidemic is Skibidi brainrot writ large. Trolling has replaced meaning with noise

The Guardian08-08-2025
The first dildo dropped from the sky like a glitch in the matrix. For anyone tuned in to the 29 July game between the Atlanta Dream and Golden State Valkyries, the initial reaction was disbelief. In a world where feeds are increasingly AI-generated and algorithmically tuned for confusion, the boundaries between real and unreal have softened into clay. Our senses, once reliable, now compete with simulation. What does it mean when dildos become airborne at WNBA games? Not once, not twice, but repeatedly? Protest? Performance art? Or just another malformed blip in the automated dreamscape we scroll through daily?
Two men have been arrested thus far in these grotesque affronts. One was 18, the other 23, part of Gen Z, the prime consumer of debased meme culture. Authorities have not identified suspects in the most recent two dildo-throwing incidents. However, Delbert Carver, a 23-year-old man, was arrested in connection with the first incident during a WNBA game in Atlanta. According to ESPN, Carver may face charges of disorderly conduct, public indecency or indecent exposure and criminal trespass. In an affidavit, he allegedly admitted that the act was 'supposed to be a joke' and intended 'to go viral'.
When dildos become airborne at WNBA games more than once, the meaning shifts. It reveals the collapse of coherence under TikTok's attention economy. These aren't protests or insults that make a point. They're spectacles. The goal is to provoke. In a memetic landscape poisoned by irony, absurdity is the point. The dildo isn't symbolic. Its function is noise.
Philosopher Guy Debord would be shocked at how on the nose we have become. His work argued we live in a 'society of the spectacle,' where life is mediated through image, and authenticity is replaced by performance. Today, women's sports are doubly mediated, first through the lens of athletic competition, then through the social gaze that still questions their legitimacy. Laura Mulvey's theory of the 'male gaze' further sharpens this: Women, particularly in visual media, are often positioned not as agents but as objects. In this context, female athletes are not merely participants in a game. They're props in someone else's viral moment. The dildo becomes mise-en-scène.
But this isn't just theoretical. It's real. So is the disrespect. The dildo is a weaponized farce. It's thrown not just to interrupt but to dominate the narrative, to remind players that their gender, their careers and their stage remain vulnerable to mockery. It stops the game. Hijacks it, even. And reasserts the notion, violent and comical, that women's achievements exist on borrowed time within a culture still conditioned to belittle them.
So far, the suspects in these cases are part of Gen Z, a generation raised in and by the internet. Their actions cannot be dismissed as isolated provocations. They must be contextualized within TikTok's cultural logic, or worse, the absurdist ethos of 'Skibidi Toilet'. If you are a normally functioning adult with a job, you might ask, 'What is Skibidi Toilet?' Skibidi Toilet is a viral animated web series featuring surreal, low-resolution battles between human heads protruding from toilets and humanoid characters with surveillance equipment for heads. Glitchy visuals, overstimulating pacing, and meme loops create a vibe without meaning.
But to understand these trolls' intentions, and see the direction society is headed, we must contextualize them within TikTok's cultural logic. The garish green dildo mirrors the surreal, low-fi, uncanny aesthetic of Skibidi Toilet or any number of algorithm-fueled meme cycles. The dildo is an anti-symbol. Its meaning is its absurdity. Skibidi brainrot encapsulates a generation fluent in irony but starved for meaning. The dildo is funny not because it says something, but because it says nothing. It's the irrational object breaking into a space of rationality.
This kind of hyper-chaotic media serves as both entertainment and an ambient worldview for young men raised online. Their minds normalize prank-as-expression. In this context, throwing a dildo on to the court during a WNBA game isn't just an act of crude rebellion. It sadly mirrors the Skibidi Toilet ethos: low-effort disruption cloaked in irony, where the gesture is meant to be meaningless and provocative at once. As traditional signifiers of rebellion (punk, political protest, counterculture) fade or fragment in the digital noise, young men are absorbing frameworks of meaninglessness, where 'funny = power' and shock is its own reward.
Furthering the chronically online element of all this, in the last two days, a crypto memecoin group has claimed credit for the recent dildo-throwing incidents at WNBA games, reframing what seemed like rogue trolling as a deliberate guerrilla marketing stunt. The group, which openly mocks the league and brags about not watching women's sports, celebrated the act online as a victory. If true, this spectacle is engineered by people who understand that visibility matters more than meaning in an algorithm-driven culture.
This is how meme culture is rotting America: not from the inside, but from online. The internet's lack of regulation is its greatest strength and its most dangerous flaw. It allows once-fringe ideologies and juvenile impulses to scale without resistance. Ideas that would have died in solitude or been challenged in a public square now find shelter in forums and meme loops, rewarded by engagement. In this new economy of attention, even humiliation has utility. We're left with a culture where trolling becomes its own form of marketing.
How did we arrive at this level of collective debasement? Despite living in an era of unprecedented digital access, over half of American adults (54%) read below a sixth-grade level, and 21% are considered illiterate as of 2022. This foundational deficit in literacy undermines a person's ability to evaluate online messages critically. Thus, a generation raised on irony struggles to decode satire, or even manipulation. Back in 2013, 66% of fourth graders couldn't read proficiently. It was a warning sign that today's adults would fail to distinguish viral provocation from genuine meaning. Online, many young people now build identity from meme fragments, unconsciously mimicking behavior they don't fully understand. Lacking media literacy, they become perfect vessels for cultural incoherence.
All of this really boils down to the death of shame within society. And it starts at the top. Donald Trump's most enduring legacy isn't a policy but a persona as the shameless troll who made humiliation a political strategy. His constant provocation and gleeful disdain for norms created a playbook both parties use now. Liberals respond with faux-moral outrage, conservatives with Nietzschean bravado, but the end result is the same: a culture addicted to performance, where shame is no longer a deterrent.
This logic has trickled down into every corner of public life through race, class, gender and especially online culture, where symbolic acts of ressentiment become viral currency. The dildo thrown at a women's basketball game isn't just a crude joke but a memeified act of humiliation. It doesn't challenge power on any level, it just wants attention. And in a culture without shame, the humiliation sticks to the target, not the perpetrator. In this case, the WNBA players themselves.
The fact that these incidents have popped up simultaneously across the country, from New York to Atlanta, shows that the lack of shame is collective, bipartisan and here to stay. This is where we are: everything is bait. We've collapsed the distinction between trolling and activism, and so we land – like the dildo itself – on the bottom of the floor, laughing, recording, retweeting, but never asking what it says about who we've become.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Police make six arrests at protest outside London hotel housing asylum seekers
Police make six arrests at protest outside London hotel housing asylum seekers

The Independent

timea few seconds ago

  • The Independent

Police make six arrests at protest outside London hotel housing asylum seekers

Six people have been arrested following a protest outside a London hotel housing asylum seekers. Demonstrators gathered at the Britannia International Hotel in Canary Wharf on Sunday afternoon, with some seen setting off pink flares and waving England flags. Some demonstrators carried a banner that said: 'We're not far right but we're not far wrong. Don't gamble with our lives. Stop the boats.' The Metropolitan Police said six arrests were made for breaching Section 14 Public Order conditions, possession of Class B drugs, and assaulting an emergency worker. In a post on X, the Metropolitan Police said: 'We have imposed conditions using Section 14 of the Public Order Act to prevent serious disruption at the protests in Canary Wharf. 'The group protesting against the use of the hotel by asylum seekers have been instructed to remain on the pavement opposite the Britannia Hotel.' The hotel has been the site of numerous anti-migrant protests in recent weeks.

PGA Tour star Robert MacIntyre shushes heckler in fiery on-course moment after draining huge putt
PGA Tour star Robert MacIntyre shushes heckler in fiery on-course moment after draining huge putt

Daily Mail​

timea minute ago

  • Daily Mail​

PGA Tour star Robert MacIntyre shushes heckler in fiery on-course moment after draining huge putt

The Ryder Cup is over a month away. But the inevitable collision course set to take place at Bethpage Black at the end of September already has golfers for Team USA and Team Europe in the mood for the rivalry. In the third round of the BMW Championship on Saturday, American Scottie Scheffler and Scotsman Robert MacIntyre were paired together - drumming up some chants about the two eventually meeting on Long Island. At the 14th hole at Caves Valley Golf Club in Maryland, MacIntyre was getting some stick from the American crowd trying to rally around Scheffler. Scheffler buried his par putt - leading to some pro-USA chanting. But there was also a heckler in the crowd trying to get into MacIntyre's head. 'He was just shouting I missed it, he's pushed it,' MacIntyre said. 'Pushed it right in the middle of the hole, I guess.' Despite being further away, MacIntyre buried his putt. Immediately after it fell in the cup, he snapped his head around, stared at the heckler, put his finger to his lips to silence him and then pointed his putter at the fan as he walked away. Things are getting fun @BMWchamps 😏 📺 NBC — PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) August 16, 2025 MacIntyre finished the day with the 54-hole lead - four shots ahead of Scheffler ahead of the final round. But that moment on the 14th was the biggest moment of the day for him - with the jeer interfering with his stroke. 'If you give me crap, I'll give you crap back,' he said. '... if they do it outside the shot, it's fair game, but don't do it within the shot that's going to affect myself or Scottie.' As for his playing partner's point of view, Scheffler said that he wasn't aware of what was being said. 'People have a tendency to say things that are dumb. I can think of a few things that were said to me in the final round in Ireland [during The Open at Royal Portrush] that were very far over the line,' Scheffler said. 'If you're a fan, it's only going to fire the guy up more, and I think just do your best to behave out there. It can be a little bit silly sometimes.' MacIntyre is hoping to seal his first win of the season on Sunday and take home a massive chunk of the $20million purse at the second phase of the FedEx Cup playoffs.

A fisherman spotted an old Buick in the Mississippi River. The human remains inside may have solved a decades-old missing person's case
A fisherman spotted an old Buick in the Mississippi River. The human remains inside may have solved a decades-old missing person's case

The Independent

time30 minutes ago

  • The Independent

A fisherman spotted an old Buick in the Mississippi River. The human remains inside may have solved a decades-old missing person's case

Two Minnesota fishermen may have made an unexpected crack in a decades-old missing persons case. One of the fishermen, Brody Loch, was fishing in the Mississippi River in Sartell, about 75 miles outside Minneapolis, and stumbled upon a 1960s Buick submerged 20 feet underwater. The car was picked up thanks to Loch's sonar after the friend he was fishing with made a catch nearby. He called the police about the suspicious vehicle, and days later, authorities uncovered human remains inside the car. 'It was 100 percent luck,' Loch told WCCO. 'If my buddy wouldn't have caught that walleye, then we would have just kept on floating down and never would have found it.' Authorities processed the vehicle and learned it belonged to Roy Benn, who mysteriously disappeared in 1967 with a large sum of money. On the last night he was seen, Benn dined at the King's Supper Club, north of Sartell and then drove a 1963 metallic blue Buick Electra, according to a missing person bulletin from the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension. He was 59 at the time, according to St. Cloud Daily Times archives viewed by CNN. The human remains found inside the vehicle are believed to belong to Benn, who was declared legally dead in 1975, eight years after he went missing. "Looking back at some of the original case files, there was talk of quarries, there was talk of the Mississippi river, but of course, technology in the 1960s is nowhere near what we have now," said Sartell Police Chief Brandon Silgjord. 'Tons of credit for a fisherman to actually see that and then have the forethought to call the sheriff's office and make that report,' Silgjord said. 'Artifacts, clothing items, different things like that will absolutely help in piecing this whole thing together,' Silgjord said. Silgjord says investigators have received questions about the cash Benn was carrying when he vanished. "I think perspective needs to be offered sometimes, of what a large amount of cash looked like in 1960 versus now," Silgjord said. "Which very well could have been, from reading some of those original reports, several hundreds of dollars." The Benton County Sheriff's Office is leading the investigation for the case, and the remains found in the Buick have been sent to a medical examiner's office for examination.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store