history-4
Explanation
This comic shows two characters discussing social media and historical content. One says: "Oh my, can you believe the latest gossip to Facebook?" and "You don't have to read a bunch of gunk on your timeline -- you just fill your feed with history and art posts!"
The other character responds: "Look at this stuff! Van Gogh's 'Starry Night'! You'll probably see it in my computer!" The first character then says: "I'm looking online and I found some great historical reports. They are so sneaky."
The joke plays on the common social media behavior where people proudly announce that they've curated their feeds to show only "intellectual" content like history and art, as if this makes their social media use more virtuous or productive. The comic gently mocks this self-congratulatory attitude by showing that consuming historical factoids and art reproductions on Facebook is still just scrolling through a feed -- it's not meaningfully different from consuming any other type of social media content. The characters treat sharing well-known artworks and historical tidbits as if they've discovered something profound, when in reality they're engaging in the same dopamine-driven content consumption as everyone else, just with a veneer of intellectualism. The word "sneaky" at the end adds humor by applying tabloid-level excitement to historical facts.