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BRODYQUEST

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About

BRODYQUEST is an animated music video featuring an exploitable image of actor Adrien Brody going about his normal day set to catchy music. Throughout the video, Brody continually walks from the left of the screen to the right of it while the scenery behind him changes in repeated cycle. The video became immensely popular on YouTube for its catchy tunes and psychedelic visuals, spawning a series of parodies and derivatives titled (X) Quest.

Origin

The original song and the music video was produced by Neil Cicierega[1], the creator of “Harry Putter Puppet Pals” and “Ultimate Showdown of Ultimate Destiny.” He uploaded the video via YouTube on June 1st, 2010 with the description “the best day of Adrien Brody’s life.”



The video recounts a day in the life of Adrien Brody. Brody is shown waking up early in the morning and starting his journey from home and then to park. He then travels to the ocean where he is joined by starfish in his journey. He then travels past numerous famous landmarks. He then travels to the outer space where Brody becomes a intergalactic rock n’ roll star, and uses his new-found power to create a world that revolves around him.

Spread

The video became popular primarily in the United States and Canada, where the online buzz generated over one million views, at least 10,000 comments and 20,000 likes on YouTube. Numerous derivatives soon followed as response videos, featuring similar themes and the same soundtrack with different celebrities and well-known characters.

Notable Examples



Creator’s Response

On June 22nd, 2010, an interview article with Cicierega was posted on Screened[2], in which he discussed his reaction to the viral success of Brodyquest. In the interview, he explained that the video was made to fit into the theme of his redesigned Youtube Channel and that the catchy word “Brodyquest” inspired him to make the video.

Months later on May 26th, 2011, Cicierega released the sequel to his original BRODYQUEST video through a separate YouTube account 2Neil2Cicierega. For this video, Cicierega used footage of Adrien Brody receiving his first Oscar for Best Actor in 2003, and replaced the background orchestra with the BRODYQUEST theme.



The Actor

Adrien Brody was born April 14th, 1973 in Woodhaven, Queens. He is an Oscar-winning actor who is known for his roles in numerous movies including King Kong, The Pianist, and Midnight in Paris. In 2003, he won the Academy Award for Best Actor at the age of 23, the youngest actor to receive the honor. During the award ceremony, he kissed American actress Halle Berry, which was sampled in BRODYQUEST 2.

Search Interest



External References

[1] YouTube – User Profile: Neil Cicerega

[2] Screened – Interview with Neil Cicierega, The Man Behind Brodyquest

[3] YouTube – User Profile: 2Neil2Cicierega


Toei Spider-Man / Spy Darma

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About

Toei Spider-Man (often referred to as Japanese Spider-Man and sometimes called Supaidā-Man or Spy-Darma) is the Japanese tokusatsu television series loosely based on the Marvel Comics character, Spider-Man. In this version, Spider-Man is portrayed as a live-action hero equipped with a giant mecha and cheesy, over-the-top entrances. Due to the drastic changes made to the storyline and character settings, the series was eventually rediscovered by the Japanese internet users, opening up the door for memetic mutation.



Origin

Spider-Man (スパイダーマン, Supaidāman) is a Japanese superhero television series produced by Toei Company in 1978, based on Marvel’s popular Spider-Man character. While Toei’s version of Spider-Man’s costume was based on the original, the overall plot and storyline had little to do with the Marvel character in the original canon. Producers Tōru Hirayama and Susumu Yoshikawa initially sought to make the series faithful to the famous web-slinger’s origins, but Japanese toy manufacturer Bandai, one of the sponsors, told the studio to include a giant robot for the hero (as giant robots where becoming extremely popular at the time). Hirayama and Yoshikawa met their demand with complete incredulity, reluctantly rewriting Spider-Man’s origins for the show.



Many things about the show were considered by several people quite strange, such as the gigantic monster enemies, Spiderman’s aircraft “Marveller” that can transform into a giant mecha robot “Leopardon” and his car called the “Spider-Machine GP7”, as well as his need to yell out his name (“Spy Darma!”) and freeze in awkward poses (often using strangely placed jumpcuts) during his entrance scenes. In addition, there are many misheard lines found in serious scenes of the series.



The series had a major impact on other Japanese live-action superhero shows by popularizing the use of piloted giant robots to destroy giant monsters. This series also introduced the formula of featuring monster battles on two scales in the same episode. This formula would latter become a staple of the Super Sentai series (which would latter be adapted in North America as the Power Rangers series with major success), starting with its third entry, Battle Fever J, which was originally planned as a tokusatsu version for another Marvel Comics character, Captain America.



Etymology

“Spy Darma,” the well known nickname of Toei Spider-Man, comes from Spiderman’s bad pronunciation. Viewers in Japan have a hard time understaning the way Toei Spider-Man shouts his name. With a lack of pronouncing the “n” sound, it sounds like he is shouting, “Spy Darma!”(スパイダーマッ!)



Spread

Toei Spider-Man rose to resurgence on the Japanese video-sharing site Nico Nico Douga in April 2007, weeks prior to the theater release of the Hollywood live-action blockbuster Spiderman 3. To distinguish the Toei incarnation with the modern version portrayed by Tobey McGuire, the Japanese referred to the former by its old nickname “Spy Darma.”



MADs

The majority of Toei’s Spiderman-related MAD videos can be found on Nico Nico Douga (NND); however, numerous media uploads that fall under the category have been deleted due to copyright claims by Toei. As a result of takedowns, there is no definitive tag associated with Toei Spiderman MADs.







M.U.G.E.N

Toei Spider-Man was also introduced as a playable character in the freeware fighting game engine M.U.G.E.N on October 9, 2008 by M.U.G.E.N artist fu-lin. An A.I. patch for fu-lin’s creation was released by Kokekoko. In this video, Spider-man goes up against Donald McDonald (Ran Ran Ru) in a stage based on the popular Japanese version of the American board game Battle Dome (バトルドーム), which also became a meme:



Another M.U.G.E.N contributor ju created a character name “Nico,” a teenage girl who performs moves previously portrayed through numerous MAD videos on NND, including the gestures of Toei Spiderman:



Another M.U.G.E.N contributor name YU-TOHARU created the vocaloid Miku Hatsune on April 13, 2008, that features some singing moves. Some of them are based on Japanese memes, including Toei Spider-Man (who appears at 9:25). His ability allows him to swap the health of the fighters.



Appeal Outside of Japan

Many viewers outside of Japan have criticized this version of the Marvel Comics character for being so different compared to the original canon, most noticeably for having his own vehicles, especially his giant mecha “Leopardon.” Even a short clip of the show was featured in one episode of Late Night with Conan O’Brien for comedic purposes.

In an episode of the online show Movie Buzz uploaded on May 15, 2009, the host Peter Ballis expressed his appreciation for the show because he considered it to be “so funny because it’s so bad”. This opinion is similar to the fandom of Kuso games.

Despite its criticism by fans, the staff at Marvel Comics, including original Spider-Man co-creator Stan Lee, praised the show for its special effects and stunt work, especially the spider-like movement of the character himself. In a video interview with Stan Lee featured in the Japanese DVD release of the series, Stan Lee comments that the show did a excellent job of adapting Spider-Man’s abilities into live-action at a time when there was no CG effects.

The series is currently available to watch for free on the Marvel website.

YouTube Poop

There are a variety of YouTube Poop videos that have used Toei’s Spider-man series as the source material.





External References

Teabonics

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About

Teabonics refers to spelling and grammatical errors associated with members of the Tea Party movement, particularly the picket signs displayed during various Tea Party demonstrations.

Origin

The American conservative / libertarian populist political movement known as the Tea Party began holding demonstrations as early as March 6th, 2009.[1] On March 28th, 2010, Flickr user Pargon[2] uploaded a set of photos under the tag “Teabonics.” The photos featured signs and banners with incorrect spelling and grammar from various Tea Party protests around the country, and were accompanied by the following description:

These are signs seen primarily at Tea Party Protests.

They all feature “creative” spelling or grammar.

This new dialect of the English language shall be known as “Teabonics.”

Spread

Much of the initial spread occurred on March 30th, 2011 after the Flickr page was posted to the Balloon Juice[3] blog. The single topic blog Tea Bag Fail[5], and the first Urban Dictionary[4] submission were created the same day. The political blog Little Green Footballs[6] began featuring a teabonics “sign of the day” on April 9th, 2010. Pargon’s Flickr page has been featured in The New York Daily News[7], Seattle Weekly[8], The Guardian[9], Boing Boing[10] and Gawker.[11] A Facebook[15] fan page has accumulated 847 likes, and the original Flickr set has received over 1 million views as of October 12th, 2011.

Notable Images



Pargon’s Reaction

Pargon has commented on the spread of Teabonics, clarifying how it began and spread so rapidly.

The first indication I got that this was gonna be big came the afternoon of Tuesday, March 30 when I started to get emails from Flickr that people were following me. Just a few, then more and more. I also received a direct message from a Flickr user letting me know they found my Teabonics collection because of a posting on Bob Cesca’s blog. Bob Cesca attributed this to John Cole, who linked to the Flickr collection on the Balloon Juice blog[3], which, as far as I know, is the first source of publicity.

It was even a trending Twitter topic for awhile. (Even Roger Ebert tweeted about it, which made my day!)
Within a couple days I had received a number of solicitations from literary agents asking if I’d be interested in turning the set into a book. (As I said, I didn’t shoot the photos, so I certainly wasn’t going to try and profit from someone else’s work or let it be falsely attributed.)

It was by no means expected or even hoped for, but was awesome to see nonetheless.

Controversy

The images became controversial among Tea Party members, who claimed that a few signs with misspelled words painted an over-generalized picture that the protesters were uneducated and clueless. They pointed out that many of the signs were being carried by children or senior citizens, who may have had a harder time spelling. They also responded with several images of pro-Obama and teachers union rallies featuring grammatically incorrect signs. Many Tea Party candidates and leaders, including radio host Rush Limbaugh[16], claimed that the rallies were being infiltrated by Democrats with misspelled and racist signs, in an attempt to make the movement look bad.

#Shakespalin

On July 18th, 2010, Tea Party member and former governor of Alaska Sarah Palin tweeted a comment regarding a planned Cordoba House project, also known as the “Ground Zero Mosque”, in New York City. Followers began to notice that Palin had invented the word “refudiate” in the tweet, for which there was no known definition. The tweet was quickly taken down, but screenshots of the tweet were subsequently posted on various sites around the web. The next day, Palin sent out another tweet embracing the newly coined word, going as far as to compare herself to William Shakespeare.




This inspired the creation of a new hashtag on Twitter, #shakespalin, #bardofwasilla and #cariboubardbie that would take famous quotes from Shakespeare’s plays and comedically intertwine them with quotes from Sarah Palin or comments on her personality. The refudiate controversy and #shakespalin were featured on various sites including Huffington Post[17], The Washington Times[18], The New Yorker[19], The New York Times[20], and Pundit Kitchen.[21] On November 15th, 2010 “refudiate” was named one of Oxford English Dictionary’s ‘Top Words of 2010’.[22]



Videos

Search

Search queries for “teabonics” spiked in April of 2010, the month after Pargon’s Flickr page was created.

External References

[1] Deseret News – Anti tax and spend group throws tea party

[2] Flickr – Pargon

[3] Balloon Juice – Teabonics Open Thread

[4] Urban Dictionary – teabonics

[5] Tea Bag Fail – Tea Bag Fails

[6] Little Green Footballs – Teabonics Sign of the Day

[7] NY Daily News – Teabonics the Flawed Language of Protest

[8] Seattle Weekly – Funniest Teabonics Signs

[9] The Guardian – Teabonics Tea Party Protest Signs

[10] Boing Boing – Teabonics

[11] Gawker – The Illustrated Tea Party Dictionary

[12] Wonkette – The Teabonics Flickr Thing is Funny

[13] Joe My God – Teabonics

[14] The Daily Dish – #shakespalin, Ctd

[15] Facebook – Teabonics

[16] Rush Limbaugh – Democrats Infiltrate Tea Parties, Seek Imposters to Pose as Racists

[17] The Huffington Post – Sarah Palin Refudiate

[18] The Washington Times – Palin Invents Words

[19] The New Yorker – Meme Watch Shakespalin

[20] The New York Times – Shakespalin

[21] Pundit Kitchen – Political Pictures Shakespalin

[22] Oxford University Press Blog – OUP USA 2010 Word of the Year: Refudiate

Dolan

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About

Dolan is an MS Paint web comic series featuring a variety of poorly drawn Disney cartoon characters. The main character Dolan, based on Donald Duck, is often portrayed as a psychotic killer and sex addict.

Origin

According to Uncle Dolan[2], the comics were originally created during the summer of 2010 by artist Sakolut[1] on the Finnish image board Kuvalauta. Titled “Aku Ankka” (Finnish for “Donald Duck”), the comics featured :poorly drawn":http://bit.ly/JAMTfK MS Paint characters and misspelled captions in speech bubbles. Following the repeated use of “Dolan” to refer to the character of Donald Duck, the comics eventually became known as “Dolan” comics.



Precursor: Spurdo Spärde

Dolan has many resemblances to Spurdo Spärde, another Finnish webcomic character from Kvalauta that is meant to represent a poorly drawn version of Pedobear. The character was conceived in a mocking response to the sudden influx of teenage newcomers in June 2009. Aside from their imperfectionist style of drawing, both comics also share similarities in dialogue captions; Spurdo comics often end with the message “t. Spurdo” (Finnish: “regards, Spurdo”) as Dolan comics do with “regards, Dolan.”



Spread

The earliest archived instance in English-language comes from a You Laugh, You Lose thread on 4chan[4] posted on August 12th, 2010. The /r/dolan[7] subreddit was created two days later on August 14th, 2010.



In August 2011, YouTuber SweederLander[16] launched a web series titled “The Uncle Dolan Show,” using various images of comics found on 4chan and text-to-speech narrations of the dialogues. One of the episodes was posted onto eBaumsworld[20] in January 2012.



Through the rest of 2011 and early 2012, Dolan comics continued to surface on 4chan’s /b/ and reblogged through personal blogs on occasions, but the meme stayed mostly dormant. However, beginning in early March 2012, the comics saw a significant resurgence in popularity with a slew of threads popping up on 4chan[5][6], the /r/4chan[8][9] subreddit and Tumblr under the tag #Dolan.[10]



Single topic blogs like Dolan-Duck[18] and Fuck Yeah Dolan[19] were launched to cater to the rising demand of comics while those who were puzzled by its nonsensical humor began inquiring about its origin and meaning via Yahoo Answers[21] and Reddit. The meme also gained a large following on the BodyBuilding forum, leading to dozens of Dolan-related threads on the site. As of May 2012, the Memegenerator[11] page for Uncle Dolan has more than 3,500 image macro instances, the /r/Dolan subreddit[7] has 21,989 readers and the Facebook page[12] has 47,000 likes.

Notable Examples


    

    

Related Characters

The Disney character Goofy also became a popular subject of MS Paint-style characters, such as the highly suspicious Ferrari Goofy who has elusive interactions with Dolan, as well as “Gooby,” who has also appeared in several comics. The /r/gooby[3] subreddit was created on March 14th, 2012 and YouTuber SweederLander of “The Uncle Dolan Show” launched a spin-off series titled “A Gooby Story” in April.


    

     "

Other characters include poorly drawn variations of Mickey Mouse, Daffy Duck, Porky Pig and Bugs Bunny.



Everything Went Better Than Expected

A recurring theme in the comic series involves variations of the phrase “everything went better than expected”, based on the rage comic character.

    

Search Interest

Search query volume for “dolan comics” rose significantly in early 2012 following the resurgence in popularity on Reddit, 4chan and Tumblr.



External References

[1] Naurunappula -Sakolut Gallery

[2] UncleDolan.org – Fuck Yeah! Uncle Dolan!

[3] Reddit – /r/gooby

[4] Chanarchive – Laugh and Lose. Hard Mode

[5] Chanarchive – hello 4khan

[6] Chanarchive – these comics make my dick hard

[7] Reddit – /r/dolan

[8] Reddit – christians 1 atheists 0

[9] Reddit – k uncol you can stop now

[10] Tumblr – dolan

[11] Memegenerator – Uncle Dolan

[12] Facebook – Dolan Duck

[13] Memebase – Archive for the ‘dolan’ Category

[14] Quickmeme – Uncle Dolan

[15] DeviantART – Uncle Dolan SKIN

[16] YouTube – SweederLander’s Channel

[17] Bodybuilding Forum – Gooby and dolan meme lol

[18] Dolan-Duck – Dolan the Duck

[19] Tumblr – Fuck Yeah Dolan

[20] eBaumsworld – The Uncle Dolan Show

[21] Yahoo Answers – Search Results for Dolan

Fresh Prince of X

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About

Fresh Prince of X is a series of mash-ups based on various songs set to the vocal track from the theme to the American sitcom series The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, as performed by Will Smith. The remix song series is derived from the bait-and-switch copypasta Bel-Air which initially became widespread through 4chan’s /b/ as early as in 2004.

Origin

Airing from 1990 to 1996 on NBC, The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air starred the then rapper Will Smith as a fictional version of himself who is made to move to Bel Air after getting in one little fight, scaring his mom. The famous theme song written by Will Smith himself and QD3, recounts the backstory behind the series in musical form, and is also a popular subject for bait and switch copypastas.



On October 10th, 2006, “Fresh Prince of The Death Star” was uploaded to YTMND by State-of-mind[1]. Featuring a mash up of “The Imperial March” by John Williams from the Star Wars series and Smith’s vocals from the Fresh Prince theme song, the site essentially set the standard for other mashup YTMNDs that followed afterwards.



Spread

In January 2007, YTMND user LazyTown4 uploaded “Fresh Prince of LazyTown,” a mashup song which combines the tune of “Cooking by the Book” and the vocal track from the original theme. In the following month, “Fresh Prince of Six Flag” was uploaded on February 4th, 2007, set to Vengaboy’s eurodance track “We Like to Party” originally featured in a Six Flags commercial.



After the launch of YouTube, numerous YTMND derivative sites were transplanted into the video-sharing site and many new original creations were uploaded as well. One of the first notable YouTube uploads was titled “The Daft Prince of Punk-Air,” uploaded on July 5th, 2008 and set to Daft Punk’s 2001 hit single “Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger.”



In the following years, hundreds of additional remixes surfaced on YouTube, some of the most popular examples including The Fresh Prince of the Mushroom Kingdom[3], The Fresh Prince of the Matrix[4], Fresh Prince Roll’d [5] and Thomas the Tank Engine vs. Fresh Prince of Bel-Air [6].



Notable Examples

The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air theme song has been set to a wide range of pop music hits and classic video game tunes. The series is usually recognizable through the album covers which feature Will Smith’s face.



Search Interest

Due to the high volume of search queries for the 1980s sitcom series with a similar name, it is difficult to isolate the level of online interest in the remix phenomenon apart from the TV show.



External References

Move Your Feet

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About

“Move Your Feet” is a 2003 pop song by the Danish duo Junior Senior that became most well-known for its pixel art-influenced music video on the web. Since its YouTube upload in early 2008, the music video has inspired a series of handcut GIF animations on Something Awful, DeviantART and elsewhere online.

Origin

The pixel art for the “Move Your Feet” music video[1] was originally drawn by art collective Shynola[2] using its signature style of low-resolution pixel art with the bitmap graphics editor Deluxe Paint.[3] The song was recorded sometime in 2002 and the earliest known instance of the music video available for download was featured in a blog article[4] posted on August 5th, 2002.



Upon its commercial release in 2003, the song became Junior Senior’s biggest hit, reaching #3 in the United Kingdom and #20 in Australia, and played at dance clubs all over the world. The song was also featured in numerous promotional clips for various TV programs, such as the Australian version of “So You Think You Can Dance,” as well as comedy films like White Chicks and Forgetting Sarah Marshall among others. The game was also incorporated into the dance arcade games Dance Dance Revolution and Phineas and Ferb.

Spread

In 2003, the QuickTime movie version of the music video quickly spread through other internet humor forums like Ebaumsworld and Albino Blacksheep; However, many of the early copies were removed due to copyright infringement. In April 2004, The Metal Box[6] released three Flash-based mini games based on various segments from the original music video. On March 31st, 2005, the first YTMND[5] version of “Move Your Feet” was uploaded with the GIF animation of a bread jumping up an down from a toaster. Numerous duplicate sites based on the same GIF soon followed.



On March 25th, 2006, YouTuber Sundaysworstenemy uploaded the original music video, rekindling online interest in the song. On January 3rd, 2008, a game version of the music video uploaded onto Newgrounds.[7] On March 7th that year, the same game was reuploaded onto DeviantART.



But the GIF-making fad didn’t begin until July 21st, 2008, when SomethingAwful user Squirrels2Nuts started a discussion thread dedicated to “Move Your Feet” animations. Titled “move your feet.gif,” the thread went on to spawn several dozens of animated GIFs on Something Awful as well as on DeviantART.

Notable Examples

The artworks became widely adopted as personal avatars and profile page decorations; the dancing robot GIF became one of the most recognizable instances to this date.




Notable Videos



Search Interest



External References

[1] Wikipedia – Move Your Feet

[2] Wikipedia – Shynola

[3] Wikipedia – Deluxe Paint:

[4] Antville – Move Your Feet

[5]YTMNDSearch Results for Move Your Feet

[6] The Metal Box – Move Your Feet – Game C and C.

[7] Newgrounds – Move Your Feet

[8] DeviantART – Move Your Feet Returns

[9] SomethingAwful – moveyourfeet.gif

[10] DeviantART – Search Results for Move Your Feet

[11] DeviantART – MOVE YOUR FEET

[12] DeviantART – Move Your Feet

[13] DeviantART – D-d-don’t Stop the Beat

[14] DeviantART – Move Your Feet

[15] DeviantART – Move Your Feet V

Hurr Durr

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About

Hurr or Hurr Durr is an interjection used to criticize a post that is considered subpar or unentertaining, or alternatively, to express sarcastic laughter. Similar to the image macro application of “Derp,” this expression is often paired with images in which the subjects are gaping awkwardly or looking unflattering.

Origin

Before it became paired with “durr,” the word “hurr” appeared alone on sites like the Something Awful forums where it was used in similar vein to the sarcastic laughter “har har”[3] in responding to a dumb joke. This usage of “hurr” has been noted as early as March 27th, 2003 in a Something Awful thread[5] about 1970’s adult films. Hurr was first defined on Urban Dictionary[4] as a caricature of “a dumb sounding laugh” on June 28th, 2003. By July 2006[6], hurr had been implemented as an emoticon[7] on the site.



One of the earliest archived mentions of “hurr durr” also took place on the Something Awful Forums. On August 17th, 2007, the phrase appeared as commentary[1] on dialogue used in the dating sim game Sakura Wars: Atsuki Chishio ni[2] in a Let’s Play thread.



Spread

“Hurr durr” was defined on Urban Dictionary[8] on June 20th, 2008:

“Hurr durr” is the sound of laughter coming from someone with half a brain. Mostly it is used to point out when someone has made an idiotic claim, though, surprisingly, idiot males will attempt to make thier laugh as deep as possible to make them sound more manly, when all it really does is make them sound like idiots.

Since 2009, captioned photos with the phrase have appeared on the single-topic blog Image Macros.[14] Collections of these have been shared on Urlesque[17] in April 2010 and the Chive[18] in April 2011. The phrase has also appeared in over 20 archived 4chan threads[15], including one plotting equations[16] from a hurr durr chart that took place on the /sci/ (science and math) board on March 27th, 2010.



On September 16th, 2009, the domain for the single serving site hurr-durr.com[9] was registered, which displays a GIF animation of a pug shaking around with the gibberish chorus from “Chacarron Macarron”. The site uses Javascript to keep the window or tab open while triggering pop up windows so the user cannot exit the page. The site has been used as a bait and switch on Yahoo! Answers[11] to draw visits from the curious readers. Hurr-durr.com has been parodied on Newgrounds[12] and also has nearly 1000 likes on Facebook.[13]



Notable Examples




Search Interest

Peaks for just the word “hurr” have appeared nearly every year in August or September, with the exception of June 2010. The search volume may be affected by the other defition of “hurr” as slang for “hair,”[10] which began in 2008. Search for “hurr durr” began to pick up in September 2008 and reached an all-time high in May 2011.



External References

I Fucking Love Cocaine / Cocaine Bear

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About

“I Fucking Love Cocaine” is a catchphrase often used in image macros where the subject has a powdery white substance on the face, usually snow or flour, that is meant to appear as if he or she snorted massive amounts of the drug.

Origin

The most notable image to be associated with the “I fucking love cocaine” caption shows a grizzly bear roaring while covered in snow, which first appeared on Memegenerator[1] (date unknown) as an iteration of the “More Bear” series. One of the earliest known postings of the original photograph of the bear was in a photodump post on the Russian copypast.ru[7] website on July 18th, 2009.




Precursors in Pop Culture

Prior to Cocaine Bear, the “white-dusted face” trope has been commonly associated with cocaine binges portrayed in popular fictions and films. One of the earliest examples of this comes from a scene in the 1983 film Scar Face[4] where Al Pacino’s character, Tony Montana, is sitting at his desk with a white dusted face after inhaling large amounts of the substance.



In early 2003, comedian Dave Chappelle introduced his fictional character Tyrone Biggums, a crack/cocaine addict who wears the white substance on his mouth as a sign of helpless drug abuse.

In the SNL Digital Short “Great Day” aired in May 2010, Andy Samberg sings a musical tribute as an unemployed cocaine addict whose face gets gradually covered in white substance throughout the song:

Spread

The Cocaine Bear image was submitted to Ebaumsworld[13] on July 19th, 2010. An interactive flash Cocaine Bear poster was published on the sports blog Tauntr[5] in December of 2010. A round-up of cocaine animal images was published on the viral content site BuzzFeed[6] on January 21st, 2011. In early 2011, actor Charlie Sheen’s public meltdown also became a popular subject of “white-dusted face” comedy trope, with some vertical comics combining Charlie Sheen with the Cocaine Bear. The meme has since spread to FunnyJunk[11], Reddit[12] and Tumblr under the tages “cocaine bear”[9] and “i fucking love cocaine.”[10] The “I Fucking Love Cocaine”[8] Facebook page has 1,542 likes as of February 2nd, 2012.

Notable Examples




Search Interest

Searh queries for both “I fucking love cocaine” and “cocaine bear” rose significantly in July of 2010.

External Links

[1] MemeGenerator – More Bear

[2] Pixadus – by fotomia

[3] Pixadus Profile – artemis

[4] Internet Movie Database – Scar Face

[5] Tauntr – Cocaine Bear Interactive Poster

[6] BuzzFeed – Cocaine Animals

[7] Copypast.ru – See here

[8] Facebook – Cocaine Bear

[9] Tumblr – cocaine bear

[10] Tumblr – i fucking love cocaine

[11] FunnyJunk – I fucking love cocaine

[12] Reddit – I fucking love cocaine

[13] Ebaumsworld – I fucking love cocaine


It's a Fake!

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About

“It’s a fake” is an exploitable catchphrase stemming from the strange delivery of the line by Romulan Senator Vreenak in an episode of Star Trek: DS9. While typically used in forums in response to anything that is believed to be forged, the memorable quote has also spawned a lasting series of photoshopped images, animated GIFs and video mash-ups.

Origin

The phrase originates from a scene in the Star Trek: Deep Space 9 episode titled “In the Pale Moonlight”, which first aired on April 15, 1998. In the scene, Vreenak (played by Stephen McHattie) summons and confronts Captain Sisko (played by Avery Brooks) for handing him a forged optolythic data rod, before uttering the iconic line in a strange, hissy voice:



Shortly after its broadcast in 1998, the memorable quote soon became adopted as a common text response to Trek-related posts on Usenet.[1] The phrase continued to live on as a form of copypasta on Usenet as well as Star Trek forums and chatrooms for years, as documented in a Usenet thread archived in October 2000.[2]

Spread

The phrase didn’t evolve into its present form in videos and animated GIFs until July 2005, when the first YTMND instance of Vreenak with the accompanying sound clip was uploaded by user IzzyDS.[3] The GIF-sharing community quickly became a breeding ground for Star Trek-related media, as seen through other YTMND memes inspired by the Star Trek series such as Khan! and Jean-Luc Picard among others.



In 2006, the same scene became the subject of a photoshop contest on SomethingAwful[4], producing over 6 pages of variations. Since then, It’s a fake has spread at a modest pace, but has branched out into a limited number of video mashups and image macros.

Notable Examples





Video Remixes



External References

[1]DS9: Waltz spoilers – alt.tv.star-trek.ds9 Usenet / 7-8-1998

[2] Google Groups- uk.media.tv.sf.startrek on Usenet / 10-11-2000

[3]YTMNDIt’s a fake! / 7-16-2005

[4] SomethingAwful Forum – Let’s give Vreenak something new to whine about [56k blown up by Garak] – Something Awful thread / 11-5-2006

[5] Memory Alpha – Vreenak

Majora's Mask Creepypasta (BEN DROWNED)

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About

Majora’s Mask Creepypasta, also known as “Ben Drowned”, is an online legend about a haunted The Legend of Zelda: Majora’s Mask cartridge for the Nintendo 64 video game console. It is often associated with the phrase “You shouldn’t have done that” and is popular among users of 4chan’s /x/ paranormal board.

Origin

On September 7th, 2010, 4chan[6] user Jadusable posted a thread about his experiences with a haunted Majora’s Mask cartridge for the N64. He explained that after receiving a suspicious looking Majora’s Mask cartridge from an old man, he went to his dorm-room to play it and noticed it had a save file named “BEN” on it. He decided to ignore it and created a new file, but during the course of the game characters would refer to him as “BEN” at various moments. Figuring it would help the problem, Jadusable deleted the “BEN” save file, but this caused characters to not refer to his name at all. He then attempted to perform the “4th day glitch”, a hack that allows players to get an entire extra day to the game, and was ported to the Majora boss battle at the end of the game. He noticed that text was being displayed incorrectly, and the music being played was a reversed version of the game’s “Song of Healing” before being ported back to Clock Town. At Clocktown he discovered that the textures were missing, the music was distorted and the town was empty of the normal characters. He began posting links to YouTube videos he claims to have recorded while playing.

Free.wmv and TheTruth.txt

In the description of the fourth video in the series, a person claiming to be Jadusable’s roommmate claimed that Jadusable was moved out of his dorm but gave him a flash drive containing the final video “free.wmv” and a text document titled “TheTruth.txt.” He was told not to release these videos until September 15th, 2010, at 23:04 PM. The text file was released on Mediafire[8] that contained Jadusable’s notes taken during all his experiences. He claimed that Ben started haunting his computer and would communicate with him through Cleverbot. He warned that no one should believe anything coming from his YouTube account after September 12th, 2010. Shortly after, Jadusable’s YouTube channel began to change with his profile image turned into an Elegy of Emptiness Statue painting, and his location became “Now I am everywhere.”

Spread

A video outlining some of the methods used to create the “Ben Drowned” videos was uploaded to YouTube by HolyHeeroYui on September 12th, 2010.

The entire creepypasta was posted to the Within Hubris[7] forums on February 21st, 2011. The story has been posted on Joystiq, Kotaku, Xugo Gaming, FunnyJunk and Inu’s Creepy Stuff. Facebook[5] fan page with 6,270 likes as of October 27th, 2011.

Catchphrases

Several catchphrases were popularized by the creepypasta including “You shouldn’t have done that…”, “You’ve met with a terrible fate, haven’t you?”, “YOUR TURN” and “YOU’RE NEXT.”



Arc 2

On September 17, 2010, a comment was posted to Jadusable’s YouTube channel that linked to the now defunct youshouldnthavedonethat.net. According to Jadusable Wiki[1], the website was for some sort of cult known as the “Moon Children”.

“At first, it seemed like an innocent cultist site (well, as innocent as a cultist website could be). It was a simple layout with seven tabs: Theories, The Truth, About, Contact Us (with a subpage called Press Room), Creed, Search, and Home. Past this point, viewers reportedly started to see things: references.”

On September 20, 2010, Jadusable revealed that the website was fake, and the entire story was something he came up with in college.



Alex Hall, also known as Jadusable. [2]

“I have a ridiculous amount of mail right now, but rest assured I will get to each and every one of your letters. Thank you for your interest in this story and thank you for supporting it. Just so everyone is clear – the story is not over yet, but it is paused for now. Check the menu bar for new links being put up of the Archive/Stories/Q&A, these are all coming tomorrow.”

Fanart

Several pages worth of fanart can be found on deviantArt under the tag “#majoras mask creepy.”[17]



Several songs were posted on YouTube as honor to the Creepypasta:

Ohm 423’s “Hey I’m Ben” has received over 20,000 views.

Hubris Arc

A forum board known as Within Hubris was launched on February 17, 2011.[3] Strange occurrences started happening within the site’s few days of existence. Users started noticing strange events occurring inside the protected forum known as Wayward Horizon. Although they were able to see posts being made, they were not able to read them due to a password keeping them out. A password was finally discovered, but changed after a couple of days. Nevertheless, Guide, the Forum’s main admin, revealed an upcoming trailer to a game that was being released as the “Third Arc” of the story. Several months later, on July 15th, 2011, Jadusable placed the game on an indefinite hold. [4]

Videos

Search Interest

Search queries for both “majoras mask creepypasta” and “ben drowned” picked up in September of 2010, the same month it was first posted to 4chan’s /x/ board.

External References

[1] Jadusable Wiki – Arc 2 Page / Oct 1 2010

[2] Alex Hall’s Twitter – Twitter Page

[3] Within Hubris – Within Hubris main page

[4] Within Hubris – Hubris Project Put on Hold / Jul 15 2011

[5] Facebook – Jadusable’s Haunted Majora’s Mask Cartridge

[6] Chanarchive – Marjora’s Mask OC Part 1

[7] Within Hubris – THE HAUNTED CARTRIDGETHE COMPLETE STORY

[8] Mediafire – TheTruth.txt

[9] Joystiq – Haunted Majoras Mask Cartridge

[10] Kotaku – The Haunting of Majora’s Mask Cartridge

[11] Xugo Gaming – Majoras Mask Creepypasta will ruin your childhood

[12] FunnyJunk – Majoras Mask Creepypasta

[13] Inu’s Creepy Stuff – Majora

[14] - Within Hubris – Userful Sites and Pages

[15] Within Hubris – A Comprehensive Guide to the Story

[16] - Jadusable Wiki – Jadusable Wiki

[17] deviantArt – #majoras mask creepy

The Grifter

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About

The Grifter is an Internet urban legend about a horrifying and disturbing video which psychologically traumatizes the viewer. Grifter threads are often considered to be a trolling technique by the original poster to spark debates about the video’s existence.

Origin

On August 10th, 2009, 4chan user the_solipist posted a thread on /x/ (paranormal) board about a video that was so disturbing, it would cause viewers to experience nausea, nightmares and could make them commit suicide.



In the thread, the_solipist shared several dark screen captures of an infant he claimed were taken from the video.



Creepypasta

According to the Asashic Records[6] wiki, a creepypasta about the video appeared in a followup thread but it is unknown whether they were written by the_solipist himself.

It was posted back in 2007-8 under some foreign link, the OP basically posted the link stating how fucked up it was. It was real grainy, from what i remember it showed strange images, like a bathtub full of writhing maggots, haunting paintings from old times melting, random forests,flashing colours, text in a different language (from what i remember) all while a strange voice played which sounded like a strange murmrer, if you’ve seen the ‘there is nothing’ video, it was like that voice but more indistinguishable.

Then the graininess lifted a little, and there was a video of a small puppy being held up by it’s neck, it was moving like in pain but it’s cries where like a human childs, it then cut to a nursery with lots of craddles all the children where still in the cots, presumed dead, it walked over to one of the cots, and one of the newborns raised up a little, began to cry, and bled from the eyes and mouth. then another shot of a basement (like the original picture) with a malformed hand disapearing into it blood stained.

Lastly it showed more text (someone ‘stated’ it said ’you’re race is one that is dying’) with an image of a plant rotting very quickly, close ups of corpses. and what i can only describe as ‘real’ cases of exorcism and demonic posession, which clearly have never been seen outside the said country of origin. while this seen plays, the voice that was talking fairly calmly, breaks out into screams of intense pain and suffering, which is just as deeply chilling as the initial shock.

Hoax

According to the Disturbing Wiki[8], the screenshots the_solipist provided were identified as footage from the 2000 Czech film Little Otik[7], a comedy about a childless couple who pretends that a root taken from their backyard is a real child. The Asashic Records[6] wiki claims that the_solipist confirmed the Grifter story was a work of fiction on August 21st, 2009:

“the grifter is, indeed, my work of fiction. i started a thread about it after remembering the name from that “tales from the darkside” episode about a creature called “the grither” that i saw when i was little. i samefagged in the original thread a few times, but it really caught on like wildfire; piquing the curiosity of those who wanted to see it. along with the hive-minded trolls (from /b/?) that acting in the interest of my efforts by making their own claims to having had seen it. yes, i hate to lie, so i’ll admit… i made the edited screencaps ripped from little otik. i was surprised it took you guys as long as it did to identify them. i was actually talking to a film major student from my school about shooting a video for the grifter this weekend, but i had intended to splice in the scenes from little otik.. kinda ruined my plans when you guys caught on, though"

Spread

On August 15th, 2009, the first Yahoo Answers[9] question was posted which asked for a link to the Grifter video. The top voted answer claimed that Grifter threads were used as a trolling technique to aggravate other /x/ board members by sparking a debate about the video’s authenticity.



On September 8th, 2009, YouTuber jojacob666 uploaded a short video titled “the grifter”[10], which featured dark footage of a hallway with creepy audio playing in the background. On September 17th, 2009, a Grifter thread was posted to 4chan’s /x/ board in which the first reply begs the original poster to stop posting about the video.



On March 2nd, 2010, YouTuber shirtfag uploaded a video titled “The Grifter (REAL)”, which claimed to be an authentic copy of the infamous video. It used similar footage to the jojacob666 video, including clips from the film Little Otik.

On April 26th, an Urban Dictionary[4] definition for the video was submitted by user Tenestra, who described it as “the most disturbing video on the Internet.” On June 10th, a thread was created on the comic book fan forums SuperheroHype[12] by user Mr. Wooden Alligator, who requested a link to the actual video. On April 19th, 2011, a thread was created on 4chan’s /x/[11] board asking for users to post the the creepiest movies they had even seen, with the exception of “The Grifter.” Nearly all of the replies to the post consisted of movie titles that had been changed to include the word “Grifter.”



Search Interest

Search query volume for “the grifter” increased rapidly in August of 2009, the same month the original thread was submitted to the /x/ paranormal board.

External References

[1] Creepypasta Wiki – The Grifter

[2] Encyclopedia Dramatica – The Grifter

[3] Zoklet – The Grifter

[4] Urban Dictionary – grifter

[5] Chanarchive – Creepy Videos

[6] Prelucid – The Grifter

[7] YouTube – Little Otik Trailer

[8] Disturbing Wiki – The Grifter

[9] Yahoo Answers – Wtf is a grifter video on 4chan /x/?

[10] YouTube – the grifter

[11] Chanarchive – Grifter Movies

[12] Superherohype – The Grifter video?

Handsome Face

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About

Handsome Face is an exploitable cartoon character based on a still-shot of an effeminate-looking Superman. Many iterations of the series are also accompanied by an irresolute phrase “X(subject addressed), I…” (See also fsjal, Draw Yourself, X Grab My Y).

Origin

The face comes from the DC Comics animated film Superman/Batman: Apocalypse[1] that was released in 2010. It can be seen in the following clip where Superman introduces his cousin to Batman:



Spread

Still images from the cartoon are often found on 4chan’s /co/ (comics and cartoons) board. The images were altered and began being accompanied with the fragmented phrasal template, “X, I…” Since its emergence on 4chan’s imageboards, the drawing fad has spread over to various hubsites like FunnyJunk[2], DeviantArt[3], Tumblr[4] and MemeGenerator.[5]

Derivatives



Templates

External Links

[1]IMDBSuperman/Batman Apocalypse

[2] Funny Junk – handsome face

[3] Google – deviantart handsome face

[4] Tumblr – #handsome face

[5] Memegenerator – Handsome Guy

Lavender Town Syndrome Creepypasta

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About

Lavender Town Syndrome, also known as The Lavender Town Conspiracy, The Lavender Town Tone, or The Lavender Town Suicides, is a series of creepypasta stories and videos that detail a conspiracy to cover up mass child suicides. These suicides were allegedly caused by listening to the first version of the Lavender Town Theme in the Japanese version of the Pokemon Red and Green games.

Origin

Introduced in Pokemon Red and Green[24], Lavender Town is the designated graveyard for deceased monsters and is known for its ghost sightings. The first edition of these games was released in Japan in February 1996. By the time the games were released in the United States two years later, the original music for Lavender Town, composed by Junichi Masuda[23] had been changed.[5] Since the ambience of the town was that of a graveyard, the music was relatively creepy, with players on gaming message boards Serebii[2] and NintendoWorlds.net[3] discussing this in 2008 and 2009. A remix[4] of the song appeared in early 2010, attempting to intensify its spookiness.



The first version of the creepypasta story was uploaded to Pastebin[1] on February 21st, 2010. It stated that after the first few days after the release of Pokemon Red and Green in Japan, there were over 100 suicides among children ages 10-15. During the investigation, the detective concluded that the music that played in Lavender Town, thanks to a secret code included in 104 of the original cartridges, was driving children to kill themselves.



During the first few days of the release of Pokemon Red and Green in Japan, back in February 27, 1996, a peak of deaths appeared in the age group of 10-15.

The children were usually found dead through suicide, usually by hanging or jumping from heights. However, some were more odd. A few cases recorded children who had began sawing off their limbs, others sticking their faces inside the oven, and chocked themselves on their own fist, shoving their own arms down their throat.

The few children who were saved before killing themselves showed sporadic behavior. When asked why they were going to hurt themselves they only answered in chaotic screams and scratched at their own eyes. When showed what seemed to be the connection to this attitude, the gameboy, they had no response, but when combined with either Pokemon Red or Green, the screams would continue, and they would do their best to leave the room it was located in.

This confirmed the authorities suspicion that the games, somehow, had a connection to these children and the deaths. It was a strange case, because many children who had the same games did not show this behavior, but only a few. The police had no choice but to pursue this, since they had no other leads.

Collecting all the cartridges these children had purchased, they kept them sealed away as strong evidence to look over later. They decided the first thing to do was to talk to the programmers themselves. The first person they met was the director of the original games, Satoshi Tajiri. When told about the deaths surrounding his games, he seemed slightly uneasy, but admitted nothing. He lead them to the main programmers of the game, the people responsible for the actual content.

The detectives met Takenori Oota, one of the main programmers of the game. Unlike Satoshi, he did not seem uneasy, but very kept. Explaining that it was impossible to use something like a game to cause such deaths, and also bringing up the point that not all the children were affected, he brushed it off as some kind of odd coincidence or mass hysteria. It seemed like he was hiding something, but he wasn’t giving way. Finally, he did say something interesting.

Takenori had heard a rumor going around that the music for Lavender Town, one of the locations in the game, had caused some children to go ill. It was only a rumor, and had no real definite back up, but it was still something to look into.

He directed the detectives to Junichi Masuda, the music composer of the series. Masuda had also heard of these rumors, but again said they had no evidence that his music was the cause. Even to prove a point he played the exact song from the game completely through with no effects to anyone, the detectives nor Masuda himself, feeling anything different or odd. Although they still had their suspicions of Masuda and the music of Lavender town, it seemed they had reached another dead end.

Going back to the cartridges they had seized from the homes of the children, they decided to take a slightly more direct look at the games. They knew that it was these games that gave the children the ill effects, so they took extreme caution. Popping in the cartridge and turning the console on, the game screen booted. The title screen appeared, and the option to continue or create a new game appeared.

When they chose to continue the game, stats of that game appeared. They saw the names of the children who had played, usually “Red” or another simple name. However, the interesting thing was the time played and the number of Pokemon they owned. On every game, the time was very low, and all of them had only a single Pokemon in their inventory. They came to the stunning reality that it could not have been the music from Lavender town that had caused such ill effects in the children, since it was impossible to reach that part of the game in such small amount of time and with only one Pokemon in their inventory. This brought them to the conclusion that something early on in the game had to be the cause.

If it wasn’t the music, nor the title screen, it had to be something within the first few minutes of the game itself. They had no choice but to turn off the game now and go back to the programmers. Asking for a list of all the programmers from Takenori, they found, surprisingly, that one of the programmers had committed suicide shortly after the game was released. His name was Chiro Miura, a very obscure programmer who had provided very little for the game. Even more interestingly, he had requested his name did not appear in the credits of the game, and so it was not.

Looking over the evidence found at Chiro’s apartment, they found many notes written in bold marker. Most of it was crumbled, or marked out, making it very difficult to read. They few words they could find in the mess was “Do not enter”., “Watch out” and “COME FOLLOW ME” in bold. The detectives were unsure what these meant, but knew they had to have a connection. Further searching, they discovered Chiro was good friends with one of the map designers, Kohji Nisino, and this was probably the only reason Chiro had given a part in making the game.

Kohji Nisino, since the release of the game, had locked himself in his apartment, barely leaving in the dark of night to fetch anything he might need. He told his friends and family he was mourning for his dear friend Chiro, but they didn’t believe this, since Nisino had locked himself up the day the game was put in stores, a few days before Chiro had killed himself.

It was troubling, but the authorities finally persuaded Nisnino to sit down and speak with them. He looked as if he hadn’t slept in days, dark rings under his eyes. He stunk, his nails had grown black and his hair was greasy, sticking to his forehead and neck. He spoke in stutters and murmurs, but at least he had something to say.

When asked if he knew anything about the children who had died after exposure of the game and if it had any connection to the game, he answered them seemingly carefully, choosing his words thoughtfully before answering. He told them that his friend Chiro had an interesting idea with the game, something he had wanted to try since he heard the project was starting. Nisino himself knew Takenori, the director and main programmer, for a long time, so he could easily get a mediocre programmer in on the project with a little persuasion. It seemed Chiro had convinced Nisino to get him in on the project, and it had worked.

The detectives knew they were on to something. This unknown obscure programmer, Chiro, had to have something to do with it, something… They asked what Chiro’s idea was, why he wanted so badly to have a part in making this children’s game. Nisino told them that Chiro never told him much about it, other than a few details every now and then. He wanted to insert a special Pokemon in the game, one completely different from all the others. It would serve as an extra, a kind of out of place thrill for the player. It wasn’t, however, Missing No. It couldn’t be. With the gameplay time recorded on the cartridges, it was impossible for the children to have time to meet that Pokemon.

Nisino, throughout the entire conversation, seemed to break down even more with every question. The detectives pushed him more and more, searching through his mind for any and every scrap of knowledge this man had no game and Chiro… and Chiro’s intentions…

It was when they asked about the notes found in Chiro’s home that he snapped. From under the couch Nisino was sitting on he whipped out a pistol, pointing it straight at the police while backing away a few steps. Then, just as quickly, he brought the pistol to his face.

“Don’t follow me…” muttered Nisino as he stuck the pistol in his mouth and pulled the trigger. It was too quick for the police to react. It was done. Nisino had killed himself, repeating slightly differently what was written on one of Chiro’s papers…

It seemed all leads had finally died. The team who had created this original game were splitting up, becoming harder to find. It was as if they were keeping a secret. When the police finally managed to talk with anyone who had parts in the game, even the obscure character designers or monster designers, it seemed they had nothing of interest to say. Most of them didn’t even know Chiro, and the few who did only seen him once or twice working on the game itself. Throughout all of this the only confirmation they had was that Chiro was indeed the one who had worked on the very early parts of the game.

It had been a couple of months after the original children suicides and the death rate had dropped dramatically. It seemed that the game was no longer giving any ill effects to any children. The call back of the games that was planned was canceled, since it seemed the game was no longer harming any children. They had began to think that maybe Takenori was right and it was all just a very odd coincidence or mass hysteria… Until they received the letter.

It was given to one of the detectives himself, quite directly out on the street. It was a woman who gave him the note, a very frail, thin, sick looking thing. She gave him the letter quickly, telling him it was something he needed to see, and without waiting for a response or another word, she disappeared into the crowd. The detective brought it to his office, and calling the others in, he brought it out and read it aloud.

It was a letter written by Chiro himself, but it wasn’t one found at his apartment. They had throughly searched and cleared out the place, so wherever this letter had come from, it wasn’t kept at his home. It was signed to be given to Nisino. It started off quite formal, a hello, how are you, regards to the family, and such. After one or two of these normal paragraphs, they reached a section that requested Nisino to get him into the game team, to get him a programming position in Pokemon Red and Green.

As the letter continued, the handwriting seemed to grow more jittery. He talked about a glorious idea he had, a way to program something unseen in any game before. He said it would certainly revolutionize not only the gaming industry, but everyone. He went on to say that it was a very simple procedure to program this idea into the game. He did not even have to add any foreign programming, but could use what was already given in the game itself. This would, the detectives agreed, make it impossible to notice any obscurities in the programming itself. It was a perfect way to hide whatever this was.

The letter ended abruptly. There was no goodbye, no say hi to the family, no write back, or thank you. Nothing like that. It was just his name, written hard in the letter where the paper almost broke through. It was only his name. “Chiro Miura.”

This was the nail in the coffin for the detectives. They had no more suspicion about the cause. Chiro had programmed something into the early parts of the game, something maddening. To further increase this streak of success, they discovered that the programming team had worked in pairs, even Chiro himself. He had worked with another programmer, Sousuke Tamada.

If anyone knew what the secret in this game was, Sousuke Tamada would be the man. This was their final hope of unraveling this mystery once and for all.

They learned Sousuke had provided a lot of programming to the game, and seemed to be an average, good guy and worker. They were easily allowed into his home, a fair place, and they entered his living room where they sat. Sousuke did not sit, however. He stood by the window of the second story floor, looking out onto the busy street. He was smiling a little.

There is no direct witnesses to the events that followed. The only thing from this conversation that remained was found on a voice recorder sitting on the table in front of the two detectives assigned to talk to Sousuke. What follows is the unedited recording:

“Sousuke Tamada, what part did you have in the games Pokemon Red and Green?” asked the first detective.

“I was a programmer.” His voice was light, friendly, almost too friendly. “That’s all.”

“Am I right in knowing that the programmers working on the game worked in teams?” asked the detective.

One could hear the voice of feet moving on the floor slightly. “You would be right,” said Sousuke after a moment of silence.

“And your partner, his name was--” The detective was quickly cut off by Sousuke eerie voice.

“Chiro Miura… That was his name. Chiro Miura.”

Another silence. It seemed the detectives were a little uneasy about this man. “Could you tell us if Muira ever acted strange at all? Any particular behaviors you observed while working with him at all?”

Sousuke answered them. “I don’t know him that well, really. We didn’t meet up frequently, only every once in a while to trade data, or when the entire group was called up for a meeting… That’s the only times I really ever saw him. He acted normal, as far as I could tell. He was a short man, and I think this affected his consciousness.. He acted weaker than any other man I met. He was willing to do a lot of work to gain recognition, this I do know. I think…”

Silence. “Yes?” asked the detective, pushing for him to continue. “You think what?”

“I think he was a very weak man. I think he wanted to prove himself regardless of this point… I think he wanted to make himself known for something special, something that would make people forget about the way he looked and pay attention to the powerful mind that lay inside his skull.. Unfortunately for him, however.. heheh.. He didn’t have much of a mind to back up that reasoning.”

“Why do you say that?” asked the second detective.

“Well it’s the simple truth,” answered Sousuke quickly. His feet could be heard moving across the tiled floor. “He was nothing special, even if he wanted to believe so. You can’t become greatness, even if you believe it. It’s impossible… Somehow, I think Chiro knew this himself, somewhere deep in there, he knew it.”

The detectives were silent again, not sure how to steer the conversation. After a moment, they continued. “Can you tell us what Chiro’s part of the game was? What did he work on exactly?”

Sousuke answered more quickly than before. “Nothing… I mean, nothing important. He worked on some obscure parts of the beginning of the game.” A pause, then a little more information. “It was Oak’s part to be exact. He worked on some of Oak’s parts… When he’s seen first, you see..”

“What else?” pushed the police. They could hear it in Sousuke’s voice. He knew something. “We know you know about the children and the deaths. We know it was Chiro who did it. He programmed something in the game.”

“What are you implying?” asked Sousuke. It sounded like he was trying to maintain his voice.

“We’re implying that since your his partner, if you’re hiding something from us then you could just as much be responsible for those children’s deaths as Chiro is himself!”

“You can’t prove anything!” Sousuke shouted.

“Tell us what Chiro did to the game!” they shouted back.

WHAT I TOLD HIM TO.”

Silence. Complete silence.

“You want to know, huh?” asked Sousuke finally, breaking the eerie silence, but replacing it with his voice. “You want to know what is this all about? Chiro was an idiot. He’d do anything for a bit of attention, anything at all. He couldn’t program worth a shit either. The one thing he could do, however, was be manipulated. You could tell him what to do, and he’d do it. He wouldn’t even question it, he’d do it. Just to hear that ‘thank you’ when you received the finish product, that was his reasons. That’s all he wanted.”

Two clicks from the detective’s guns could heard.

“I could control his flawlessly. He’s a lot like Takenori… Of course none of you knew this, but I was the one who brought up the idea of the game, the idea of the entire operation. I just told the fellow what to do, and he followed me without doubt. He knows nothing, just like Chiro.”

A sound of a window opening could be heard, follow by the detectives.

“Don’t move or we’ll shoot!”

“Let me tell you about a mechanic in the game,” continued Sousuke. His voice was more rushed, but it still held that slyness. “Consider it a hint, alright? If you walk around in grassy areas enough a Pokemon will appear, and you’ll have the chance to go into battle with it. It’s a necessary part of the game overall, you see?”

“Step away from the window! We won’t warn you again!”

“At the start of the game you have to walk into the grassy area before Oak appears and you receive your first Pokemon, understand me? Under normal circumstances, it was programmed that even though you’re in a grassy area, no Pokemon will spawn… I made it different. I manipulated that Chiro, told him what to put in the program, gave him all the instructions on how to do it, and he did it flawlessly. It’s rare, but it can happen.. Stepping into that grass, one can spawn…”

“Sousuke, we don’t want to shoot!”

“Shoot me?” asked Souske, laughing at the same time. “Shoot ME? You’re as dumb as Chiro was! Once he found out the truth, he had to end it! It was his fault after all! He shot himself because of it! If you’re so determined to finish that case of yours, if you want to know, play the damn game for yourself! Roll the wheel, and who knows? Maybe you’ll learn the secret for yourself!”

A shot could be heard, loud enough to distort the audio. Sounds of screaming, murmuring could be heard. The table the recorder was on crashed. Ear shattering distortions. Silence. Then laughing. Sousuke was laughing, and then words. “Come follow me… Come follow me…” And then nothing.

The recorder continued to record until the tape ran out. There was nothing else on it. The police arrived on the scene quickly, and to their horror they discovered Sousuke and the two detectives dead. They had all been shot, but not after struggling. The detectives had been shot multiple times, at least ten each, before dying after being shot in between their eyes. Sousuke himself had clearly died of two shots to his chest, straight through the heart.

This game was causing a massacre. At least a hundred children were dead. Nisino, the unexpecting friend, dead. Chiro, the manipulated toy, dead. The two detectives, dead. And now, even the creator, the cause of this atrocity, Sousuke, dead. This game was stretching far over it’s original intentions. It was killing anyone and everyone who got involved.

The lead detective had decided to put this case away. He man who committed the crime was dead, so there was no longer any reason to continue the case. All evidence, all the cartridges, all the notes, all the letters, they were locked away, kept in the darkness where they belonged. There were talks about the entire thing, small conversations every now and then, but over the years even these began to fade away. Eventually, the case was only a memory in the minds of those who experienced it first hand.

Ten years passed. February 27, 2006 was the date. The lead detective, the man who locked away the original evidence ten years previous, was reminded of the awful event that occurred. Although he was no longer in the force, he still had access to files and was helped when he could. The reminder of the event caused him to look back, to open the sealed container that held all the evidence collected.

He read through the letters and the notes. He remembered the woman who had appeared to him on the street that one day and handed him that letter that lead to the change of the entire case. He wondered who she was, and where she had come from. Perhaps she was Chiro’s mother… or maybe Sousuke’s. It was far too late to pursue any of this. Far too late..

Sealing the container again, he saw a second one directly behind it. Pulling it out, he read the note on top of it. “Evidence #2104A” He opened it up, and looked inside. Filling the container were exactly 104 Pokemon Red and Green cartridges, each one in perfect condition, untouched since the day they had last checked them ten years ago.

He reached in and pulled one out, Pokemon Red. He hadn’t seen one in a long time. He didn’t know what he thought next, but he reached in his desk and pulled out an old Gameboy. He received it a long time ago, but it still worked. It was his son’s, but he had died a few years ago. His wife was gone too. That was then though. Popping in the cartridge in the back of the Gameboy he turned on the system.

The title screen. Then the option to continue or start a new game. “Tanaka.” That was the child’s name, the one who played it first. He was probably dead, along with all the others. He pressed New Game, and started a new game. It was normal, average. He walked around, talked to his mother, went outside. He started walking towards the grass.

In his head, he could still hear Sousuke’s words. Even though he was not there, even though he had never seen the man in his life, he could still see him, hear him. “Come follow me.”

He was getting closer and closer, only a step or two away.

“Roll the wheel, and who knows? Maybe you’ll learn the secret for yourself!”

He entered the grass. The screen did nothing at first. Nothing at all. It just sat there, and so did the detective, completely frozen, as if time had stopped just for them. The screen went black. and then lit up again, the iconic green background with black text appearing.

The lead detectives weary eyes grew wide. He couldn’t help but read out what was there in front of him.

“Come follow me, come follow me, come follow me. I miss you dad, I miss you my husband, I miss you so much.”

Tears formed in his eyes, falling down his cheeks. Screens and screens of text appeared and he rapidly clicked the A button to continue it. It was his wife and his child. They were speaking to him, calling to him, crying with him. They wanted to see him, they loved him, he loved them.

“I love you too,” muttered the man in a hoarse, scratching voice.

“Come follow me, become new again. We want to see you and hold you, and be with you forever and ever and ever and ever.”

AND EVER AND EVER…”

“Don’t stay away. You can see us too.. We miss you.. Come follow me. We love yo--”

A black screen. The detectives eyes grew wide, his jaw dropping. The screen lit back up, and Oak was leading him out of the grass. “Come follow me,” said Oak.

“NO!” shouted the man, dropping the game onto the floor. He quickly fell forward, reaching for it, bringing the screen back to his face. “Bring them back, bring them back to me!” The game continued on as usual, not responding to the detective at all. “My wife, my child, listen to me! Bring them back to me, I said!”

Voices… He heard voices, hundreds of voices. He turned around from his seat, looking behind him, and standing in his small room were children, many children. Some had no eyes, some had rings around their throats, some were burned all across their body. They were screaming, reaching towards him.

“Bring back my mommy, bring back my daddy, bring back my pet!” they all screamed out, reaching for the game, their mouths agape with horror and pain. “I don’t want them to go away, bring them back to me, bring them back to me!”

“No!” shouted the detective. “It’s mine! My family is here, don’t touch it!” Horror was across his face.

“Come follow me…” said a voice. The lead detective looked over, and in the corner of his room, next to an old desk, was Sousuke. He stood in the corner, tall, handsome, clean. A smile was on his face, stretching across his face. “Come follow me…”

The lead detective jumped up, stepping back, trying to force away the children crawling towards him, reaching out for the game held tightly within his hands. “Wh-what’s going on here!? What’s going on!? Where is my family!?”

Sousuke smiled generously. “I’ll show you. I’ll help you get away from them, you see? Just follow me.” Sousuke reached down, and opened a drawer on the old desk. The lead detective, pushing through the crowd of children, trying to get away, looked inside.

Siting there, covered with dust, was his old gun from when he was on the force. He had not used that gun in many years and had put it away, not wanting to remember the things he had to do with it. But right now he didn’t see it as something that caused pain or that killed. It was shining, it was light. It was something that could set him free.

“Just follow me,” said Sousuke, picking up the gun and putting it in the lead detectives hand. He formed his hand to hold the gun, then brought it up to his temple. “Just pull the trigger. That’s all.”

The lead detective turned around. The children were crawling at him, grabbing his legs and pulling at him. They reached for the game. He turned back towards Sousuke, and smiled.

“My family… I’ll follow you.” He pulled the trigger. Bang. His brains spread the wall as he fell to the ground, dead.

It was a few days before the body was discovered. It lay on the floor, blood everywhere. In one hand held an empty gun, and in the other was a classic Gameboy with Pokemon Red on the back. The battery had long died, and only an empty, black screen was left.

This was the final murder that the remaining authorities would allow. The last detective who was ever a part of this case personally carried all 104 cartridges away, and burned them all, making sure not a single one survived. There would taunt no more.

However, this is not the end of the story. The code was said to have survived, and was even passed on to other language versions of the games. If you have an old Pokemon game, you can place the cartridge in the back of the classic Gameboy, turn on the system, and roll the wheel who knows? Maybe you’ll learn the secret for yourself.


Spread

This version was mentioned on 4chan’s /x/ (paranormal) board[6] as early as March 3rd, 2010, with a shorter, modified version posted to /x/[7] a week later. Several other versions of the original pasta were uploaded to ImageShack[8], personal blogs[9], pop culture blog Rickey[10], and Pastebin[11][21] between April and July 2010. The other versions range from scientific studies pulled from a textbook[8] to an interview with the art director of the games who claimed Satoshi Tajiri asked designers to only include the song in the Red version.[11]

Through 2010, the copypasta was discussed on Pokemopolis[22], multiple video game forums including the MarioKart Wii Forums[14], iOGaming Community[15] and Gamespot[12], music forum AbsolutePunk[13] and was defined on Urban Dictionary.[16] In 2011, a version of the story was added to the Creepypasta Index.[17] The story continues to be inquired about on Yahoo! Answers[18], with over 20 questions about it asked since April 2010, and on Tumblr.[19][20]

Notable Examples


Search Interest

Search for the variations on Lavender Town Syndrome began in June 2010 and have recently been on the rise.



External References

Western Show

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About

“Western Show on Super Mario World” (Japanese: スーパーマリオでウエスタンショー), or simply known as “Western Show,” is a popular vocal remix song inspired by the Overworld Theme featured in Nitendo’s 1990 video game Super Mario World.[1] In between 2008 and 2009, this user-generated song rose to popularity on the Japanese video-sharing site Nico Nico Douga (NND) and spawned many fanart illustrations as well as hand-drawn animation videos.

Origin

The original remix of Super Mario World’s Overworld Theme was created by the famous NND user Hyadain who is also known as the Japanese composer Kenichi Maeyamada. The song was directly posted to NND on February 8th, 2008.[2]



Lyrics

The lyrics of “Western Show” illustrates a love triangle story between Mario and Bowser over Princess Peach, set to the uplifting Overworld Theme from Super Mario World and sung in three different voices.

First Verse & Interlude

Hey, Koopa, you’re such a stubborn fellow / Why don’t you give up on Peach? / Well, I regret to inform you that’s unacceptable. / I’m her destiny no doubt about it! / Won’t the two of you stop it? / Just look at the mirror… / Well, you don’t have to say such a thing… / Men compete with their heart!

Nice job / Ah, nice job / How are things lately? / Doing excellent, you know / The DS and Wii stuff is all sold out / Isn’t that nice? No time to slow down. / Oh, cut it out, Koopa. / Ah, second verse is starting.

Second Verse & Interlude

My sweetest Peach girl, I’m in love with you / If you can’t understand that, I’ll have to kidnap and seal you away again / I’ll steal you back risking my life / But I can’t steal your heart. / Cut it out, both of you / Are you listening to me at all? / The tsundere in you is also charming / And men compete with their heart!

I love you (x3) / love you a lot

Third Verse & Ending

Wait a minute! Aren’t you forgetting someone? / Luigi! Entering the stage! Thanks for waiting! / Wait? What? Excuse me? / KY! KY! Try to understand the atmosphere here / If you get carried away I’ll really kick the hell outta you! / One mushroom eater is enough for me / Quite insolent for a stand-in / By looks we’d only pass medium/low class / Well, men compete with their heart / Men compete with their heart / Men compete with their face

Ah, it’s finally over / I’m exhausted / So let’s get the night life rolling / Ah, sorry, I got….this and that for today / Ah, you fiend, next time won’t you introduce her to me / Wait, is the mic still on? / Is it? My bad!

Spread

In the following month of Hyadain’s upload, the video caught on with Super Mario video game fans, many of whom responded by reposting the song onto the site. However, “Western Show” reached a new height in popularity when a hand-drawn animation video set to the remix was posted on April 28th, 2008.[3] Both the original video on NND and the English-subbed version on YouTube have been watched over millions of times since being uploaded online.



The fan-made music video fad continued on NND[5] as well as YouTube[4] and Newgrounds[9], leading to several hundreds of derivative music videos centered around a variety of anime characters outside of Super Mario Bros franchise, including characters from Death Note and One Piece to Sonic the Hedgehog and Legend of Zelda among others. For more videos, check out the videos section in this entry.

Notable Examples



Derivatives



Fujoshi Fandom

Similar to other collaborative efforts of hand-drawn animation videos on NND, many Fujoshi[6], or female Otakus associated with Yaoi fandom, jumped in on the bandwagon and produced a notable collection of music videos depicting homoerotic relationships among various male video game characters. As of November 2011, there are about 300 Yaoi-influenced renditions of “Western Show” music videos hosted on Nico Nico Douga.[7]



Search Interest

As Google Insights graph suggests, search queries for the Japanese title “ウェスタンショー” began to increase since as early as March 2008 and English search queries for “Hyadain” and “Western Show” registered a visible spike following its spread onto YouTube in May 2008:



External References

Editor’s Note: Registration is needed to browse the original videos listed in this section.

[1] Wikipedia – Super Mario World

[2] Nico Nico Douga – スーパーマリオワールドで、ウエスタンショー 【ヒャダイン】 / Posted on 02-08-2008

[3] Nico Nico Douga – スーパーマリオでウエスタンショーに絵を付けてみた / Posted on 04-26-2008

[4] YouTube – Search results for super mario hyadain

[5] Nico Nico Douga – Search results for ウエスタンショー

[6] Wikipedia – Yaoi fandom # Fujoshi

[7] Nico Nico Douga – Search results for ウエスタンショー【BL】リンク

[8] Nico Nico Douga – 【腐向け】タケシ受け/でウ/ェ/ス/タ/ン/シ/ョ/ー / Posted on 09-30-2008

[9] Newgrounds – Super Mario Hyadain by Scott Falco / Posted on 06-06-2008

5 Second Movies

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About

5 Second Movies is a video blog series that offers reviews and commentaries on popular films by compressing the storyline into five-second clips that can be seen as the essence of the said films. Following its launch in April 2008, the series became quite well-known for its humorous editing of full-length films into rather short and often exploitable clips. In addition, the popularity of these videos lead to other YouTube users creating their own 5 Second Movies.

Origin

The web series was originally launched by film reviewer Doug Walker, also known as “That Guy with the Glasses”, via YouTube channel FiveSecondMovies[1] in early 2007. According to Walker[2], the series was inspired while discussing Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan with his brother Rob and making fun of the line KHAN.” Walker’s original five-second long movies included titles like Star Wars, The Lord of the Rings and Batman films; the most popular instance to date is the 5 second version of James Cameron’s 1997 disaster film Titanic, which was uploaded on February 19th, 2007.



Spread

The series was well-received on YouTube and spread quickly through other forums, introducing Walker’s YouTube comedy channel to a broader audience for the first time. Throughout 2007, 5 second movies became a widespread genre of user-generated videos on the site and a playlist[2] of notable selection was compiled by YouTuber IberiaSumergida. In November 2007, The Guardian[6] wrote an article about the series, reporting on its online popularity as well as the debate over their copyright status on YouTube. In May 2008, The Times posted an article titled “Microtrends: Hyperediting”[8] highlighting Walker’s series as the trendsetter of quick-paced and frequent editing.

Notable Examples



YouTube Takedown

Despite the popularity of the videos, they were frequently removed from YouTube for copyright infringement, which led Walker to break away and set up his own website ThatGuyWithTheGlasses.com[3] in April 2008. In response to the takedowns on YouTube, Walker published a video parodying Chris Crocker’s “Leave Britney Alone!” titled “Leave 5 Second Movies Alone!”



Suspension

Following the release of the 101st episode in June 2008, Walker announced the suspension of the series, stating his concerns about the show growing stale and that he will only make more episodes when there is a good idea. In late 2008, Walker hosted a community contest called “Users in 5 Seconds,” calling on his audience members to send in 5 Second Movies of themselves. As of February 2012, there are a total of 131 episodes hosted on his website.

Derivatives

Although Walker stopped producing the series in 2007, numerous contributors on his website TheGuywiththeGlasses have started their own versions of 5 second movies, most notably by Suede and Film Brain among others. In addition, contributor Benzaie went on to launch 5 Second Games, Linkara began posting 5 Panel Comics and CR branched off with 5 Second Character Analysis.

Search Interest



External References


I Throw My Hands Up In The Air Sometimes Saying Ayo

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About

I Throw My Hands Up In The Air Sometimes Saying Ayo is a lyric from the 2010 pop song “Dynamite” by singer-songwriter Taio Cruz. Since its release in May 2010, the chorus line from the song has spawned the snowclone “I (X) My Hands Up in the Air Sometimes, Saying (Y).”

Origin

The single “Dynamite” by Taio Cruz was released on May 30th, 2010, and it managed to reach the #1 spot on the UK Singles Chart and Canadian Hot 100 and #2 on the US Billboard Hot 100[1] by August that year. Rhyming variations of the original lyric began appearing online as early as in July 2010 with over 20 versions collected in a Yahoo! Answers thread.[5]



Spread

In September 2010, the first video parody of the original song was posted to YouTube. That month, several dozens of Facebook groups[7] were created as parodies of the phrase; the most popular instance “Throw My Homework in the Air Sometimes, Saying Ayoo, I’ll Take a Zeroo” has more than 41,000 likes.



In October, a thread was posted on the Body Building Forums[6] titled “I Throw My ___ In the Air Sometimes, Saying Ayooo ____,” that garnered 130 responses with rhyming derivatives. Over the next several months, this type of thread appeared on the Seventeen Magazine’s Q&A Forums[9], Aion Online game Forum[10], Bungie.net gaming forum[11] and the My Little Pony Forums.[12] On July 21st, 2011, humor site Smosh[13] featured a gallery of image macros made featuring the snowclone. Images as well as text posts referencing the song’s lyric continue to be shared on Tumblr[2], deviantArt[3] and Facebook.[4]

Notable Videos

On YouTube, video parodies of the original song have been uploaded since September 2010. They often change all of the lyrics to the song, tailoring it to topics such as Donkey Kong, Minecraft, Harry Potter and Pokemon. As of May 2012, there are more than 2500 results[14] for the search term “dynamite taio cruz parody" and 72 more for “I Throw My Hands Up in the Air Parody.”[15]




Notable Images





Search Interest



External Links

Happy Keanu

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About

Happy Keanu is a photoshop meme based on a paparazzi photo of the Hollywood actor Keanu Reeves skipping cheerfully with a camera in his hand on the set of the 2012 indie drama film Generation Um. It is considered to be the third installment in the Keanu Reeves exploitable series.

Origin

Keanu Reeves initially earned his internet fame in June 2010 through a paparazzi photo of the actor sullenly eating a sandwich on a park bench, which spawned an extensive series of photoshopped images known as Sad Keanu. Meanwhile, fans of Sad Keanu and the actor on Facebook took the joke to the next level by celebrating the “Cheer Up Keanu Day”[10] on June 15th, 2010. Within the first week of launch, more than 14,000 Facebook users joined the group.



The “Happy Keanu” meme first emerged in October 2010, shortly after the rise of the first Sad Keanu spin-off series “Sad Keanu in a Helmet” in late July. The photograph[1] was taken by on October 6th, 2010 in New York City’s East Village neighborhood, where Reeves was working on a running scene for the 2012 film Generation Um.

Spread

On the following day of October 7th, the photograph of Keanu Reeves was published online by The Daily Mail[2] in an article titled “Happy Keanu strikes AGAIN: Things are looking up as Reeves keeps on smiling” and subsequently picked up by several news sites and celebrity blogs including Washington Post[3] and Jezebel.[4] That same day on Tumblr, the single topic blog Happy Keanu[5] was launched to curate the photoshopped images. Throughout the month of October 2010, a number of Happy Keanu variations were featured on MemeBase[11] and FunnyJunk.[12]

Notable Examples




Mashup Images

The development of Happy Keanu images was also influenced by other similar photoshop memes, such as the Chubby Bubbles Girl and Strutting Leo.




Search Interest

The Google Insights cross-comparison of Sad Keanu spin-offs (Sad Keanu in a Helmet, Happy Keanu, Tai Chi Keanu) shows that Happy Keanu generated the highest volume of search interest in 2010.



External References

Oh Crap / OMG Rage Face

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About

The Oh Crap or OMG Face refers to an exploitable image used in rage comics to express an array of feelings including astonishment, revelation, or sheer rage. It is often paired with red or white text, summing up the character’s thoughts. It is also used to represent a Gropaga[7], or follower of Inglip.

Origin

While the artist behind the face is still unknown, the first instance of it appeared in a rage comic, depicting a conversation about the character’s wife going to her boss’ house to test Sony Playstation 3 games. After his friend explains that the console does not have any games, the face is used to express the realization that he had been fooled. The comic was posted online as early as October 1st, 2009 on the Studio Kat forums[1] in a thread to share absurd images.



Spread

The face was used in another comic to express disappointment over chocolate chip cookies actually containing raisins. it was posted to FunnyJunk[8] on May 23rd, 2010, receiving 2086 funny votes and over 61,000 views. This comic dubbed the face “raisin face,” a tag still used on Memebase[9], Tumblr[10] and Quickmeme.[11]



The face evolved from shock and surprise to anger and frustration in August 2010 on Reddit[2], with a rage comic about a birthday party. Due to the juxtaposition of the name Ashraf next to the reaction image, it was referred to as the “Ashraf face” (below left) in comments on the rage comics subreddit[3] and in their official rage face timeline.[4] During 2011, both versions of the face were applied to several other rage comic tropes, expressing surprised awareness in She Wants My Cock (below center) and a frustrating realization about one’s ethnic background in Being an X (below right).



Notable Examples





Fanart

In July 2011, illustrator Sam Spratt[5] created a photorealistic interpretation of this face. On Reddit[6], the photo received 2418 upvotes and 401 points overall.



Search Interest



External References

Kobe Bryant "White Hot" Cover Photo

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About

Kobe Bryant’s “White Hot” refers to a photoshop meme based on a magazine cover photo of NBA superstar Kobe Bryant posing in an all-white designer suit. Published in May 2010 by the LA Times Magazine, Bryant’s cover photo led to an outpouring of criticism from online sports communities and a slew of photoshopped images featuring Bryant’s “white hot” look.

Origin

The photo spread titled “White Hot” was published in the May 2010 issue of the L.A. Times Magazine.



Styled by James Valerie, the white clothing in the spread was supposedly meant to represent his unbelievable and unimaginable good fortune throughout his life. Bryant himself commented on the clothing during a pre-photo shoot interview with LA Times writer Tom Murray:

Tom Murray: I have to ask, when you’re in that chopper, do you ever look down on the city, pinch yourself and say--

Kobe Bryant: How the hell did this happen? Absolutely--every time. Like I’m sitting here right now. [Nods toward the two ladies primping him.] You know what I mean? This is dream s--t. Wardrobe that’s all white? This just doesn’t happen. Not for me. This is crazy.

Spread

The publication of “White Hot” spread was met by puzzled reactions from Bryant’s fans, sports blogs and hip hop forums alike, many of whom thought his all-white attire came off as a gaffe for the athlete’s public image. The buzz continued throughout the first week of May: HipHop Crunch wrote that the outfit made Bryant look like “a gay pretzel” and Yahoo Sports! called it “bizarre” and “very weird.” Sports blog The Tickr labeled the photo shoot “Amish” and Bleach Report listed the “White Hot” photo shoot in the article “Kobe Bryant’s 5 Ballsiest Career Moves.”

Photoshop Contest

On May 4th, Deadspin launched a photoshop contest using an exploitable images of Bryant from the fashion spread. The compilation was posted on the following day featuring a variety pack of photoshopped images, ranging from Kobe’s face on the Quaker Oats cereal box to his face on the cover of National Geographic, imitating the famous “Afghan Girl” photo cover.



External References

Minecraft

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About

Minecraft is an indie Java video game created by Markus Persson (aka “Notch”). It is a sandbox mining/building game where you gather resources to create new objects by combining them in various ways. It has developed a significant following online with popular player-run servers, YouTube videos, and image derivatives. The full version of the game was released during the MineCon 2011.
(See also: Minecraft Creeper, Herobrine, Punching Trees Gives Me Wood)

History

Alpha

The first version, Minecraft Alpha, was released on May 17th, 2009. This version of the game does not have dangers, and the player has an infinite amount of blocks at their disposable to build what they wish. The official software for the Alpha server is not updated and can be downloaded on the Minecraft website, but there are also several custom servers created by users that have added functionality.

Beta

Minecraft Beta was released on December 20th, 2010 and has been continuously updated. In this version, the player is thrown into a randomly generated game world where they start with no items and must build everything from scratch. Typically a player will scramble to make some sort of shelter before the sun goes down, and dangerous enemies will come out and attempt to kill the player. Players call this gameplay style “Survival” Mode.

Adventure Update

On September 14th, 2011, Minecraft 1.8, also known as the “Adventure Update”, was released by Team Mojang with several new features including a food system, experience bars, sprinting, and the Slenderman inspired Enderman mob.

Notch has confirmed that this update is only Part 1 on the adventure update. They have said “Part 2” is to be released as Minecraft 1.9 (Which eventually released as Minecraft 1.0).

Creative Mode

Creative mode was released as a part of the Minecraft 1.8 Adventure update. Players may choose this mode when creating a new world, instead of the default “Survival” mode talked about above. In this mode, players can fly by double tapping their jump key, have unlimited materials to build with, and can break any block instantly.

Hardcore Mode

Hardcore mode was released in the Minecraft 1.9 update. Players may choose this game mode while creating a new world. Hardcore mode is the same thing is survival mode, except for one detail. If the player dies, then the player’s world file gets deleted, and he/she can not recover it.

Full Release (Version 1.0)

[work in progress]

On November 18th, 2011 in Las Vegas, Minecon 2011 concluded with Notch pulling a life-size lever (Identical to the in-game switch) releasing Minecraft 1.0 for players to update.

Minecraft 1.0 has many of the features promised in the 1.8 update but not released with 1.8 due to time constraints. Some of the major updates include:

  • A new realm named “The End”.
  • Additions to “The Nether” including buildings and new mob types.
  • A working scoring system.
  • A “Hardcore” game mode, where the player is forced to delete their world once they die.
  • Brewing Stands, which can be used to create potions.
  • Cauldrons, which were originally going to serve the purpose of a Brewing Stand.
  • Enchantment Table, where a player can enchant Weapons, Items or Amour.
  • Six new mobs: Enderdragons, Snow Golems, Mooshroom Cows, Villager Mobs, Magma Cubes and Blaze.
  • Item Repair

Reception

The game has seen overwhelmingly positive reviews from PC Gamer[1], Good Game[2], Gamasutra[3], and Rock, Paper, Shotgun.[4] The Smithsonian American Art Museum’s “The Art of Video Games”[5] exhibit opening on March 16th, 2012, will be displaying Minecraft as one of the 80 games that were selected for the exhibit.

Sales

According to Wikipedia, Minecraft sales began to soar in September of 2010:

In September 2010, after an impromptu “free to play” weekend, the game had a spike in sales of over 25,000 purchases in 24 hours. On January 12, 2011, Minecraft passed 1,000,000 purchases, less than a month after reaching Beta. At the same time, the game had no publisher backing and has never been commercially advertised except through word of mouth. By April 2011, Persson estimated that Minecraft had made €23 million (US$33 million) in revenue, with 800,000 sales of the alpha version of the game at €9.95, and over 1 million sales of the beta version at €14.95. On the 11th of November, 2011 it was revealed that Minecraft had sold 4 million copies and had 16 million registered users [17].

Enderman

On July 26th, 2011, Notch posted an update on Google+[6] saying “The new mob I’ve been working on is a bit creepy..” with an attached Minecraft screenshot showing several creepy dark characters off in the distance.



When the image was posted to Reddit[4] the same day, Notch replied to the thread saying he would be officially naming them “Endermen”, referencing the mythical Slenderman creature.
In a blog post[5], Notch revealed that the mob would have some interesting AI mechanics:

I made the Endermen freeze and turn towards you when you look at them. As long as you look straight at them, they stand perfectly still and look straight at you. As soon as you look away, they will run (very fast) towards you.

And they teleport. If they’re too far away to reach you in a short period of time, they will teleport about once per second. They try to make sure they always teleport to somewhere you can see, as I don’t want to confuse the player as to what is happening.

Endermen have since been released as part of the Minecraft 1.8 adventure update.

MineCon


Mojang AB announced that MineCon, a convention for all Minecraft players, would be held on the 18th and 19th of November at Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada. The official website[17] for event announced that they would be celebrating the official launch of the game:

Celebrate the official launch of Minecraft with your friends from around the world and the Mojang Team. Get ready for a fun weekend of everything Minecraft. The first MineCon is sure to blow away all of your expectations. Set in the fantastic city of Las Vegas, we are ready to have the ultimate “block” party.

Minecraft in Education

To celebrate the opening of a Learning Commons inside their library in October 2011, Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia created an exact replica in Minecraft.[14][15]



Also that month, a group called TeacherGaming LLC announced MinecraftEdu[16], a custom mod of the game built specifically for teachers to use in the classroom. Working with Mojang, they have secured educational discounts on the game and organized workshops for teachers to learn how to use the game in their classroom. The project was spearheaded by New York teacher Joel Levin[17] who runs a YouTube channel[18] featuring Minecraft instructional videos, which receives about 1700 views a day.

Derivatives

3D Recreations ad pixelart

One common practice in Minecraft the building of 3D versions of objects and character sprites using different colored blocks. Internet memes have often been the subject of these recreations:



Fan Art



Machinima

For more, browse the Minecraft machinima video gallery.

Virtual Engineering

For more, browse the Minecraft virtual engineering video gallery.

Parodies

More can be found in the minecraft parody video gallery.

Let’s Play

More can be found in the minecraft let’s play video gallery.

Search

Search queries for “minecraft” saw a significant increase around the same time as the “free to play” weekend of September 2010, which also marked a significant increase in sales. As of June 2011, search queries still appear to be rising in volume.

External Links

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