| aɪ θɪŋk aɪ mɪst ən ˈɛpɪsəʊd|
A phrase often send in class but can be said anywhere which is meant to display complete confusion or misunderstanding of a topic or instruction.
A phrase often send in class but can be said anywhere which is meant to display complete confusion or misunderstanding of a topic or instruction.
Person 1: “ayo what? Guys I think I missed an episode, what’s going on?”
Person 2: “yeah you were ill last week right?”
Person 1: “yeah I did guess I kinda did miss an episode”
Person 2: “yeah you were ill last week right?”
Person 1: “yeah I did guess I kinda did miss an episode”
by British_Anon December 5, 2022
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by .6.9.7.6.ArimorylulA.8.3.0.5. April 20, 2025
Get the Sigourney Sauer Weaver Mississauga City Nickles City Missisauga Weaver Sauer Sigourney mug.by .03.4.3.0.ehayusalulA.3.4.3.0. April 20, 2025
Get the Sigourney Sauer Weaver Mississauga City Nickles City Missisauga Weaver Sauer Sigourney mug.An online term of used by people describing ones own sturdiness/handiness, derived from an attempt at americas 47th U.S. president.
“Thats so stupid. I wouldn’t have missed”
“Shes my favorite character. She wouldn’t have missed”
Or quite simply a “he wouldnt have missed” under any comment section
“Shes my favorite character. She wouldn’t have missed”
Or quite simply a “he wouldnt have missed” under any comment section
by Ame is super cool August 19, 2025
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Get the you won’t be missed mug.The study of how large populations think, feel, and behave in an era defined by social media, information overload, and algorithmic curation. Unlike 20th-century mass psychology, which focused on physical crowds and broadcast media, 21st-century mass psychology must account for people who are simultaneously connected and isolated, scrolling alone together, forming tribes without ever meeting. The key insights: attention is the scarce resource, outrage is the most reliable engagement metric, and identity has become a series of performances for invisible audiences. Mass psychology now explains phenomena like viral misinformation (emotion spreads faster than facts), cancel culture (digital mobs with infinite memory), and political polarization (algorithms that show you what you already believe). It's the psychology of people who are more connected than ever and more lonely than ever, which is exactly what the algorithms want.
Example: "She studied the psychology of the masses in the 21st century and realized her phone was designed to exploit every vulnerability—outrage for engagement, fear for attention, belonging for loyalty. She wasn't using social media; social media was using her. She didn't delete it—knowing isn't the same as escaping—but she started noticing when she was being played."
by Dumu The Void February 16, 2026
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