Cover photo, January 2018 | |
Type of site | Facebook group |
---|---|
Available in | English |
Owners | Juliet Eldred[1][2][3] Emily Orenstein[1][2][3] Jonathan Marty[1][2][3] |
Created by | Juliet Eldred[4][1][5] |
Commercial | No |
Users | ~100,000[1] |
Launched | March 14, 2017[2][3][5] |
Current status | Online |
New Urbanist Memes for Transit-Oriented Teens, also known as NUMTOT[2][3][4] or Numtots[1] and variations by its members, is a Facebook group dedicated to discussion, Internet memes, and general discourse surrounding New Urbanism and public transport. (As of July 2018), the group has about 100,000 members.[4]
The group was created in March 2017 as "New Urbanist Shitposting", and was intended as a spin-off to another Facebook group, dedicated to maps and cartographic jokes. Reception of New Urbanist Memes for Transit-Oriented Teens is generally positive, with mentions that the group has inspired its members to take urban planning courses and apply for internships and jobs. The group's members have created about 20 to 50 spin-off groups related to the original.
Originally titled "New Urbanist Shitposting",[4][5] the group was co-founded by Juliet Eldred, then a college senior at the University of Chicago; Emily Orenstein, a junior classmate; and Jonathan Marty of New York University; on March 14, 2017, during their Winter Quarter final exams. It was a spin-off of another Facebook group "I Feel Personally Attacked by this Relatable Map," run by Eldred and Orenstein, which concerned GIS and mapping humor.[2][3][4][5] Its formation was spurred by a discussion of the National Interstate and Defense Highways Act of 1956.[1]
The group's content is user-submitted. As of March 2018, each post requires moderator approval.[5] Posts include either Internet memes, links, news articles, and popular culture references. Internet memes have been related to Amtrak, Dungeons & Dragons, urbanist Jane Jacobs; New York City planner Robert Moses, and Thomas the Tank Engine.[1][2][3][4][5] Its web address or URL is "What would Jane Jacobs do?"[1]
Forum administrators and moderators include Emily Orenstein, Jonathan Marty, and Juliet Eldred.[1][2][3] Chicago noted that the group has a strong left-wing political orientation, "imploring for public funds dedicated to transit, at a high cost to the rich."[2][3]
(As of July 2018), forum administrator Juliet Eldred estimates there are 300 posts per day.[1] Orenstein notes 40% of the membership is 18-25 years-old, while 25% work in transit-related fields.[2][3][6] The Guardian stated it was "predominantly millennials."[1] Since the CityLab coverage, moderator Orenstein reported there was an "uptick in 'market urbanist types'."[1] As of March 2018, its cover photo is a member-designed satirical map wherein each station is labelled with a reference to the group's myriad in-jokes.[2][3]
Reception for the group has been generally positive. Angles from the CPJ described New Urbanist Memes for Transit-Oriented Teens as "a Facebook group to provide for the dearth of urbanist memes of the internet."[7] Chicago said its "most hilarious moments happen when these streams converge, applying elbow-patched academic remove to nonexistent objects of pop-culture speculation."[2][3] CityLab called the group "a place to get engaged with matters of profound importance to local communities."[4][1]
The student newspaper The Heights remarked that the co-founder of spin-off group Boston College Memes for Jesuit Tweens "enjoys the content posted in [the group]."[8] Montana Kaimin mentioned the group in an opinion piece for Neo-Luddism.[9] The Spectrum included NUMTOT among "part of a rise in niche Facebook groups that are often light-hearted" with Cone Spotting and Dogspotting.[10] Chicago StreetsBlog noted that "[the group] has U. of C. (University of Chicago) roots."[11]
In Autumn 2017, Eldred requested group members to compensate the moderation for emotional labor via Venmo which was met with a critical reception. Eldred said "There have been times where it's like we're being asked to moderate the Israeli–Palestinian conflict in a group about, you know, trains."[4]
The group has inspired a number of actions. Members have been inspired to take urban planning courses, apply for internships and jobs for city halls and United States Department of Transportation, and organize local meetups to discuss discourse.[4] Eldred recruited members to her Democratic Socialists of America local chapter.[4]
Eldred says there are between 20 to 50 spin-offs as "Columbian Memes for Congressionally Disenfranchised Teens" (for Washington, D.C.), "Form and Function Memes for Architectural Teens," "Old Urbanist Memes for Chariot Riding Teens", "Pre-Columbian Memes for Maize-Cultivating Teens," and "Two-Wheeled Memes for Bicycled-Oriented Teens."[2][3]
'subwaysubway', a subreddit on Reddit where the participants create rapid transit systems based on the location of Subway restaurant franchises, was inspired by a NUMTOT group discussion.[5][12]