
onigiri.
I’m too drunk to understand this. What, you’re scared to live jn a world where you’re the only white guy? Bitch I lived in Baltimore that shit is waaaaay better than living with only white people around you. White people can’t cook for one.It’s clearly about egg shortages and grocery inflation. The white eggs are being removed because they’re more expensive and harder to find, while brown eggs are replacing them due to supply shifts. The last white egg under the spotlight represents the final “premium” egg left before shortages fully take over.
That’s exactly why the poster works as horror. Brown eggs being perceived as “premium” is part of the consumer psychology the image is commenting on. During shortages, grocery stores constantly reshuffle what counts as affordable, available, or desirable. In some places brown eggs cost more, in others white eggs disappear first because they’re the cheaper staple people panic-buy.
That’s the point. White eggs are the cheap, familiar “default” grocery item people expect to always be there. The horror isn’t “premium eggs are disappearing,” it’s “the ordinary staple is suddenly gone or being substituted.” The image is tapping into inflation anxiety and empty-shelf psychology, not making a literal statement about poultry economics. Horror posters exaggerate everyday fears all the time.