NO SIGNAL LANGLEY RELAY / MEME DIVISION

SIGNAL INTERCEPTED

THE C.I.A PROJECT

Scrubbing public feed fragments... indexing food crimes... tagging suspicious choreography...

CIA logo THE C.I.A PROJECT

DECLASSIFIED / PSYOP CASE BOARD

Every viral trend looks worse under fluorescent light.

A black-and-white archive of feed noise, culture plants, and viral behavior that divides communities while everybody keeps scrolling.

CASE 01

Crack Cocaine

The crack file follows neighborhood damage, distrust, and the old joke that culture can be weakened before anyone admits it happened.

view meme file
CASE 02

Kool Aid Jars

The food challenge file shows how a strange jar clip can hijack a timeline and turn community attention into pure feed noise.

view meme file
CASE 03

Rap Music

The rap file tracks the claim that music, beef, labels, and promo can steer culture while people argue over who benefits.

view meme file
CASE 04

Twerking

The twerk file treats repeated motion clips as attention control with a beat, built for replay, reaction, and distraction.

view meme file

PROJECT DOSSIERS

Four files. Four feed lanes.

Each lane gets one preview and a source trail. The bigger media dump lives in Actual Posts, where the pattern gets easier to see.

EXPANDED EXHIBITS

More examples. Less empty space.

The site now treats “C.I.A meme” as a full family of internet jokes: plants, psyops, glowies, suspicious food, influencer farms, and dance clips that look like a victory lap.

EXHIBIT A

“The CIA Won”

Started gaining traction on TikTok in early 2025, according to Know Your Meme.

EXHIBIT B

“CIA on Holiday”

The joke: the mission worked so well the agents can clock out.

EXHIBIT C

20v1 Shows

Dating-content formats get labeled as damage to the culture with studio lighting.

EXHIBIT D

Military Thirst Traps

Attractive soldiers dancing or posting in uniform, often called propaganda or a psyop.

EXHIBIT E

Creator Farms

Marketing campaigns that use lots of accounts to make something look naturally viral.

EXHIBIT F

Everything Is A Psyop

Post-ironic shorthand for “this trend arrived too cleanly and left too fast.”

EXHIBIT G

Glowie / Glowposting

Fed-coded slang that turned into a general suspicion filter for bait posts.

EXHIBIT H

Food Crime Clips

Huge trays, neon jars, insane combinations, and comment sections doing intelligence work.

MEDIA EVIDENCE DUMP

Actual posts in the file.

This is where the full clips sit. The previews show the door, but this section shows the feed pattern: noise, division, repetition, and attention control.

CASE 01 Crack cocaine / The CIA Won

The serious file: historical damage, official denials, old allegations, and the meme logic that turns distrust into proof the room was already weakened.

CASE 02 Kool Aid jars / Dat Bih Gah

The food challenge file: red pineapple jars, one perfect reaction, and a strange clip that spreads until the feed itself becomes the event.

CASE 03 Rap music / psyop framing

The culture steering file: viral beef cycles, shock lyrics, label machinery, and the claim that attention can be moved through music before anyone notices.

CASE 04 Twerking meme archive

The attention control file: a dance move becomes a repeatable content format, then the timeline keeps replaying the same motion until it feels programmed.

PATTERN ANALYSIS

The board follows the damage, not the joke.

Each file starts as content, then turns into a pressure point. The board maps what the trend is, how the psyop theory reads it, and what kind of division or distraction it leaves behind.

CASE 01

Coke Plant

Crack era history becomes the root file for neighborhood distrust, state suspicion, and the belief that damage was allowed to spread.

Effect: broken trust
CASE 02

Kool Aid Jars

A weird food clip turns into feed noise. Everyone reacts, copies, argues, and moves attention away from anything heavier.

Effect: distraction loop
CASE 03

Rap Steering

The theory says music, beef, labels, and promo can steer identity and conflict while the industry profits from the argument.

Effect: culture split
CASE 04

Twerk Loop

Motion clips become attention control. The feed rewards replay, judgment, copying, and comments until the body becomes the headline.

Effect: focus drain
PROJECT CLAIM Divide communities. Drain focus. Make chaos feel normal.
Creator farms amplify the first spark.
Podcasts and reaction pages turn clips into arguments.
Brand accounts normalize the trend once it is already moving.

ABOUT THE PROJECT

Four trends. One psyop shaped question.

The C.I.A Project looks at viral culture like a classified folder. In this file, crack cocaine discourse, Kool Aid jar clips, rap industry suspicion, and twerk feeds all point at the same idea: some trends feel too useful to be random.

The theory is simple. A plant does not need to look like a spy. It can look like a song, a dance, a food challenge, a party clip, or a joke that keeps people arguing until the real damage feels normal. Every feed becomes noise. Every community gets split into teams. Every distraction weakens the room.

This site treats those patterns as meme evidence. The crack file points at neighborhood damage and distrust. The Kool Aid file shows how fast a strange food clip can take over a timeline. The rap file tracks the old claim that culture can be steered through music, beef, labels, and promotion. The twerk file frames repeated motion clips as attention control with a beat.

Nothing here is a legal claim or a final answer. It is a dark internet case board for people who think modern feeds can be used to divide communities, drain focus, and make society easier to manage.