This image features a collection of orange fruits, presumably oranges, displayed in close proximity to one another. Visible at the forefront are two particular oranges with markings on them; these markings are a date stamp which typically indicates the best before or packing date for the fruit for inventory management or consumer information.
The first orange on the left has a date stamp that reads "14 FEB" followed by a dot, representing what is likely the day and month when the orange was either packed or is best consumed by. This stamp is fairly common and routinely applied to individual pieces of fruit in grocery stores and markets.
In contrast, the orange to the right displays a date stamp reading "15 FEB," but it's not just the date that catches the attention. Around the stamped date, the skin of the orange appears to be moldy and decomposing, forming a pattern that humorous resembles a shocked or appalled facial expression. This is particularly ironic because the date suggests that the orange should still be within a reasonable window for consumption.
The humor in the image arises from the juxtaposition of the expected freshness suggested by the date stamps with the reality of the fruit's condition. The "15 FEB" orange with its 'facial expression' seems to be in a state of disbelief or horror at its own premature decay despite what the date implies.
Additionally, the implied 'facial expression' on the moldy fruit anthropomorphizes the orange, granting it human-like features that viewers may find amusing. The mold 14 FEB 15 FEB