Skip to main content

Iffy on the pronunciation of GIF? Jif peanut butter is here to help

Jif and GIF Peanut Butter
Jif

Well, lock me in a zoo and call me a GIF-raffe. The makers of Jif, everyone’s favorite peanut butter, have teamed up with the makers of Giphy, everyone’s favorite Slack function, to release a gif-themed peanut butter jar. Yes, this is real.

“If you’ve ever called a .GIF a Jif, we forgive you,” the makers of both products said in a press release.

Recommended Videos

For those for whom this might be their first day on the internet, GIFs are short, looping videos or animations that are often used to punctuate sentences with emotion, or sometimes even stand in for a sentence itself, when one needs an eye-roll to speak a thousand words.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

But, because this is the digital age and no one actually speaks to each other out loud anymore, there has long been debate over how the word “GIF” is pronounced: Correctly (GIF, with a hard G) or incorrectly (jif, with a soft G). GIF itself comes from the acronym Graphical Interchange Format — note the hard G on “graphical.”

To add to the confusion, Jif has now created a limited run of the jars (just in time for National Peanut Butter Lover’s Day), which will cost $10 and say “GIF” in big letters on them. Because that totally clears everything up.

“We’re teaming up with GIPHY to put a lid on this decade-long debate and prove there is only one Jif. It’s creamy, delicious peanut butter, not a looping picture you can send to make friends and family laugh,” said Rebecca Scheidler, vice president of Marketing of Jif in the press release. “So spread the word like Jif on bread — Jif is peanut butter, GIFs are animations!”

“If you’re a soft G, please visit Jif.com. If you’re a hard G, thank you, we know you’re right,” said Alex Chung, founder and CEO of GIPHY in the release, validating the true heroes of the internet who have long pronounced the word the correct way.

(In other news, did you know that there was a National Peanut Butter Lover’s Day? Well, there is and it’s on March 1. The-more-you-know-dot-GIF!)

Given the internet’s ongoing trench warfare over the pronunciation of “GIF” — even the inventor of GIFs, Steve Wilhite, weighed in several years ago and incorrectly told the internet that it was pronounced “jif” (we all valiantly decided to ignore Mr. Wilhite and forgive him his trespasses) — this is unlikely to change anyone’s mind.

Much like those who use the Oxford comma, those of us who pronounce GIF correctly will not be deterred, dissuaded, or discouraged in spreading our just cause. And now we have not one, but two brands backing us!

Maya Shwayder
I'm a multimedia journalist currently based in New England. I previously worked for DW News/Deutsche Welle as an anchor and…
Microsoft’s new ergonomic keyboard has ‘ultra-responsive’ keys
Microsoft Ergonomic Keyboard

Just when you thought you were done shopping for now, Incase, the manufacturer of the Microsoft accessory line, revealed a new compact yet expensive keyboard on its website. The ergonomic keyboard offers solid specs, but the high price tag might make some potential buyers think twice about getting it.

It offers "ultra-responsive" scissor keys with 1.3mm travel, allowing you to type without pressing the keys too hard. Incase claims you can sync up to three devices to the Microsoft keyboard with Bluetooth 4.0, but you will need two AAA batteries that Incase claims will last 36 months. As a perk, the batteries come bundled with the keyboard, so you won't have to buy them separately.

Read more
Colman Domingo says he doesn’t look like himself at all in the upcoming Michael Jackson biopic
Colman Domingo in The Madness.

Throughout his career to date, Colman Domingo has not been a performer known for transforming himself for roles. If you believe the actor's recent interview with W Magazine, though, that all might be about to change as he takes on the role of Joe Jackson in frequent Denzel Washington collaborator Antoine Fuqua's upcoming Michael Jackson biopic Michael.

In speaking with the magazine, Domingo said that he doesn't "look like myself at all" in the film. He elaborated, explaining all of the prosthetics that were used to make him look like the Jackson family patriarch. "My skin is lighter because Joe was a bit more fair-skinned. I had prosthetics on top of my head above my eye, and my nose is different," he continued.

Read more
Lily-Rose Depp didn’t like how mean everyone was to her dad in Edward Scissorhands
Lily-Rose Depp bleeds from the mouth and eyes in a still from the movie Nosferatu.

Nosferatu star Lily-Rose Depp likely knows a thing or two about which movies traumatize an audience. Her central role in Robert Eggers' latest film is unsettling, to say the least. Which is why it might come as a surprise to some that, in a recent interview with the U.K. version of Harper's Bazaar., she said that one of her most traumatizing childhood watches was Tim Burton's Edward Scissorhands, which stars her father, Johnny Depp, as its central character.

"I was traumatized by it," Depp explained. "Not because I thought he was scary, but because everyone was being so mean to him, and I got really upset."
"I remember being petrified by that," the actress explained, describing a scene where neighbors ask Edward to leave their community, "which is weird because I don't have many memories from when I was that young ... Edward's the good guy and Nosferatu's kind of the bad guy, but there's a part of me that feels a little bit of empathy for Nosferatu. I mean, am I sick for feeling that way?"
She added that she has not returned to the film since she watched it as a child, saying the memory of her watch was "difficult."

Read more