Boomer Memer Judy Larson Forbids Quote-Tweeting And Is Immediately Ratioed, But May Not Be Real

May 31st, 2022 - 1:17 PM EDT by Aidan Walker

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A meme of Judy Larson, showing a profile picture of the poster and a quote tweet text beside her.

A Twitter user posting under the name “Judy Larson” has one simple rule: don’t “get hits” by quote-tweeting her. So far, over 30,000 people have broken that rule already, causing Judy’s name to trend on the platform and bringing a lot of attention to Judy’s memes and political commentary.


Despite Larson's threat that anyone going against her Twitter wishes would "be unfollowed and possibly blocked," those who quote-tweeted Judy against her wishes at least seemed apologetic.


Others called on people to be more generous and considerate of Judy’s feelings amid her rise to the trending section of Twitter.


Judy Larson, who tweets under the handle @JudyLar74152347 appears to be an older American woman, perhaps associated with a town called Hiawatha, and a fervent Trump supporter. Judy has posted on Twitter for four months and rapidly gained a following of over 4,000. The majority of her content might be classified as Boomer humor, much of it targeted against the people she assumes are in the Twitter “control room.” Her memes center on animals, toilet jokes and conservative politics.


Larson was deemed a Karen by many Twitter users on the platform, who looked at her posting history and came to similar conclusions about her character — assuming she is a real person and not a parody or gimmick account.


Tweets from Judy like today’s, which is full of typos that Judy blames on Twitter rather than herself or autocorrect, tend to perform best. But the account has also tweeted posts that seem more proofread, perhaps to prove a point.


A TinEye reverse image search of the account’s profile picture yields only a deleted profile from the online dating website PlentyofFish.com, last updated on September 27th, 2013. The majority of the account's tweets seem to be retweets of itself, suggesting Judy might be savvier about using the platform than her content itself would suggest. May 31st's viral tweet about quote-tweets was originally published on May 29th but was later retweeted by Judy (along with dozens of memes posted over the last several weeks). Many online speculated about Judy’s identity, wondering whether the account is really what it seems to be.


Larson, in her official response to going viral, put out a statement addressed "To All Tweeters" and then cryptically bid her goodbye to the platform.




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