The bots' more popular posts come when the
Times uses more lively slang words, such as "
shooketh", "
deadass", and "
gaytriarchy"; words related to social trends, such as portmanteaus of "
influencer"; and words related to current political events, such as "
shithole". , "shithole", which
stemmed from comments made by then-President
Donald Trump, was @NYT_first_said's most liked post, followed by "deadass"; the former tweet caused the account to go from having 300 followers to 30,000. The bot's tweet of "
gobshite" in June 2020, printed in the
Times as an excerpt of
Roddy Doyle's
Love, was met with significant reaction on Irish Twitter and became the bot's most-liked Tweet of that month. Bittker speculated that these "naughty" words were more popular because they contrasted against the
Times reputation, that reputation being the reason Bittker chose that paper in the first place. While political and current events make up some of the bot's more popular posts, the Food and Style sections account for most of the bot's new posts. Alexandra Symonds of the
Times and Max Norman of
The New Yorker note that a word being used in the
Times, especially as it pertains to gender and sexuality, can mark a milestone in an idea being noticed by the mainstream. Norman elaborates that @NYT_first_said serves as a sort of record, an important mark of the push and pull of the
Times on the English language and vice versa. While Norman lightly criticized the bot for distilling the sum of the work of
The New York Times into a feed that can be posted mildly unseriously by a Twitter bot, he also wrote that the bot serves as a reminder of the joy that can be found in exploring language anew. == References ==