I can’t imagine a world where Facebook is not on every single homepage.
But if you’re a news junkie, the company has an opportunity to become the world’s biggest advertising company.
That’s the message in a new ad campaign that Facebook is launching that uses a “meme-powered” storytelling system to showcase how its news and information platform, News Feed, can be used to help users discover new and interesting content.
The ads are an experiment in how News Feed can be leveraged for its purpose, and how its content can be curated by its users.
The idea is that a user will be able to browse the site’s content, and then be able directly to find and connect with content from other users around the world.
That is how Facebook’s algorithms and partnerships with social networks such as Twitter and YouTube can work, and the way the ads are supposed to work.
It’s not the first time the ads have been created using the meme-powered storytelling system.
In December, the campaign was designed to showcase a “bronze” version of the story of a young woman who had her baby while pregnant.
The ad featured the photo of a woman in her early twenties and said she was going through a “rough time” but was doing well.
“I had a little baby and the baby came out beautiful,” the ad read.
The woman’s story also featured a montage of viral images of a smiling woman with a baby in her arms.
It was a very specific picture and could have been edited out.
“This is a very special photo,” the narrator said, “and it’s so rare to see it.”
That ad was the most viral and shared of the three, and Facebook was able to turn it into a viral video.
But there were plenty of other variations of the video, including one featuring a group of friends watching a “pregnant woman and baby.”
The campaign’s viral success inspired Facebook to create another one in October.
The two ads have since been shared thousands of times, but it’s important to note that they aren’t “authentic.”
There’s no video of the woman being told that she was pregnant or a montaged video of a group sitting together watching a video of an older woman who is not pregnant.
And while there are videos of other people who have had babies, the women in the two ads are not the people featured in the first ad.
That’s not to say the content of the videos isn’t authentic.
There are several videos that are narrated by the same person who was featured in Facebook’s first ad and who was the narrator in the second ad.
That person also shared a photo of her daughter and her husband who is also pregnant.
But the way Facebook has used memes in its ads isn’t the way most news organizations have used memes.
It’s the way many news organizations use memes in their content.
The ads are the first of their kind that Facebook has created, and it’s an experiment.
But it’s also an opportunity for Facebook to learn from the success of its viral marketing efforts.
This article has been updated to include comment from Facebook.