This post was quickly deleted, but screenshots circulated on Twitter (X) under the hashtag #PutaLocuraMisterio. The trailing four periods after “SPANISH” are deliberate. In file-naming linguistics, ellipses indicate continued content , as if the complete title were cut off. This invites the listener to complete it mentally: "SPANISH.... [Resistance]" or "SPANISH.... [Soul]" or "SPANISH.... [Fucking Crazy]" .
The pattern is clear: [Emotion][CompoundWord].[Date].[Artist1].[Conjunction].[Artist2].[LANGUAGE].... PutaLocura.23.09.06.Meraki.And.Emejota.SPANISH....
However, given the structure, it reads like a common in underground digital art, netlabel music (e.g., electronic, ambient, or experimental), private tracker uploads, or crypto-art (NFT) metadata. The components suggest a date, a creative collective, and a linguistic-cultural marker. This post was quickly deleted, but screenshots circulated
The thematic core: . The title itself is a battle cry against formulaic art. “Puta locura” is not an insult but a badge of honour – the necessary insanity to make something true. 3. The Meraki–Emejota Hypothesis: A Theory of Two Ghosts Who are Meraki and Emejota? No clear digital footprint exists. However, in late 2023, several Spanish-speaking micro-blogs (e.g., RuidoRomano , NeoChingón ) mentioned an anonymous duo uploading raw audio dumps to archive.org under the label “Meraki+Emejota.” The files were then deleted. This invites the listener to complete it mentally: "SPANISH
A Reddit user (u/demoniomeraki) claimed: "Meraki is me. Emejota is my dead sister. The date is when I finished the EP for her. I uploaded it to a private tracker, then wiped my computer. The file name is the only thing that survived. I don't want fame. I just wanted to leave a tombstone in metadata."
Article last updated: May 2026 License: Creative Commons – Attribution, Non-Commercial, ShareAlike 4.0 International