Vine006 Archivesdead.
SEE ALSO: Vine's last tweet may have told us the end was nearTwitter in the coming months will shut down the mobile app that immortalised our politicians’ silly gaffes and awkward moments and played them on an infinite loop.
However, while the internet mourns the loss of its beloved Vine, British politicians everywhere will be breathing one rather substantial sigh of relief.
Theresa May’s sinister sneers. George Osborne licking his lips. Ed Miliband being hideously awkward. Michael Gove falling over.
These are the Vines that have brought the British electorate joy ad infinitum.
RIP, Vine. Don’t expect these politicians at the wake, though.
Topics Vine
Donald Trump and Eric Trump both peeped on their wives' ballotsTrump's website had a glitch that would make it say whatever you'd likePhoto of girl sleeping with Hillary Clinton action figure will melt your frozen heartAmerica, we need to fix those voting machines ASAPWoman goes into labor and still takes time to vote before giving birthMeet the women who've waited 96 years or more to vote for a female president5 people we think should play young Dumbledore in 'Fantastic Beasts'Trump administration wants to build a wall around Burning ManWoman goes into labor and still takes time to vote before giving birthPowerful photo shows how women are leading Sudanese protestsTrump gets confused by difference between 'county' and 'country'Boeing to fix deadly 737 Max software, but is that enough for passengers?Airline makes a sarcastic dig at Trump on Election DayBoeing to fix deadly 737 Max software, but is that enough for passengers?A nation starved for details on Taylor Swift's ballot turns to GooglePinterest scales back IPO price in hopes to raise $1.5 billion9 relaxing live streams to soothe your Election Day anxietyScammers use taxFacebook and Google head back to Congress for hearing on white nationalismFAFSA's saucy reply to a high schooler's luxurious prom video has students stressed Alice Neel and the Art of Self Searching for Derek Walcott Origin Story: The Myth of Little John High Fade: Bryan Washington on the Intimacy of a Haircut “I Want to Go a Little Hotel…and Work at What Only Pleases Me” Getting Out Alive: Rethinking the End of “Goodbye, Columbus” Staff Picks: Marianna Rothen, Olivier Assayas, Chimimanda Ngozi Adichie Kiki Smith: “Portraits, Celestial Bodies, and Fairy Tales” Whiting Awards 2017: Francisco Cantú, Nonfiction Mike Powell: Why I Live Where I Live Reimagining Elena Ferrante’s “My Brilliant Friend” As a Building Whiting Awards 2017: James Ijames, Drama “Between Blossoms”: Elusive Photographs by Shen Wei Our New Spring Issue: Walter Mosley, Elias Khoury, and More Whiting Awards 2017: Clare Barron, Drama Daylight Saving Hell: One Woman Vs. the Clock in Her Subaru Pizza Complex Las Vegas: At the International Pizza Expo Best Android Smartphone Battery Life Whiting Awards 2017: Tony Tulathimutte, Fiction Revisited: Robert Lowell’s “Beyond the Alps”
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