Putting the LOLcat Back in the Bag: #TCOT Founders Do Battle. Does Anyone Care?
BY Nancy Scola | Friday, May 1 2009
Barely containing his glee, Talking Points Memo's Brian Beutler reports on the rift that has developed between the two co-founders of the Top Conservatives on Twitter, or #TCOT, movement. Michael Patrick Leahy and Rob Neppell (perhaps better known online as N.Z. Bear) are bickering over control of the...well, what exactly? It seems that Leahy and Neppell have been unable to develop a good working relationship over the details of their parts of the #TCOT project. In particular, the sticking point seems to be a handful of websites built around the Top Conservatives on Twitter theme.
The story has evolved since Beutler last checked in. Like so often happens in situations where political impasse demands careful diplomacy, Leahy and Neppell are turning to mediators to resolve matters. You're forgiven if this strikes you a lot like how traditional politics takes place, not how Internet memes function. There are shades of the recent split of UNITE HERE into two unions in this recent update to topconservativesontwitter.org:
Good news ! We're back.
TCOT founders @michaelpleahy and @rneppell have agreed to cede control of TCOT as an organization to a third party, thereby ensuring that TCOT can be guided by an independent group and not be beholden to or controlled by any one (or two) individuals.
Details will be worked out by four TCOT members, two appointed by Leahy and two appointed by Neppell. These four will present their recommendations for Leahy and Neppell to review, modify, and accept.
Naturally, they're working out the terms of the mediation on, that's right, Twitter. Neppell extends an olive branch:
@michaelpleahy: thk u for agreeing to term that we will step away + hand off to 3rd party by re-enabling #tcot domain.
Leahy makes a move, and calls on Neppell to respond:
@rneppell I am naming @jamesdickey as 1 of my 2 #tcot member "negotiators". Who are you naming ?
The question has to be asked, though: Can you really put a LOLcat back in the bag? #TCOT has developed into a successful Twitter meme that -- make fun of it all you want -- has becomes a rallying point for conservatives at varying points on the right side of the political spectrum. Use of the #TCOT tag continues unabated this morning. And I suspect that few of the folks using it know or particularly care that its founders are at war.
Related: ROFLCon's Tim Hwang explains the birthing and caring for of Internet memes.