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Twitch

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About

Twitch is an online live-streaming site where users can host and watch e-sports events and other video game-related feeds.

History

Justin.tv

On March 19th, 2007, the streaming video website Justin.tv was launched by co-founders Justin Kan, Emmett Shear, Michael Seibel and Kyle Vogt based in San Francisco, California. The site was originally a single channel for Kan’s personal video feed but was relaunched that summer with more than 60 different channels.



Twitch Launch

On June 6th, 2011, Justin.tv launched a public beta for the website Twitch for video game-related feeds. In July, Twitch launched a “Partner Program,” allowing gamers to share revenue with Twitch off ads viewed on their respective live-streams. In September 2012, Twitch raised a $15 million investment from Bessemer Venture Partners to expand e-sports broadcasts.[3] On October 31st, 2013, Twitch announced that live-streamers on the platform had raised more than $8 million for charity donation drives.[2] On February 10th, 2014, Twitch.tv and Justin.tv were rebranded as Twitch Interactive.

Rumors of Google Acquisition

On May 18th, 2014, Variety[6] reported that Google’s YouTube has reached an acquisition deal with the video game streaming service for an all-cash offer of $1 billion, citing unnamed “sources familiar” with the process. In the following hours, the unconfirmed report quickly spread across the tech news blogosphere and financial news sites, with the Wall Street Journal[7] casting some doubts over the finalization of the deal and adding that the company may be exploring other channels of revenue that wouldn’t entail selling the company. As of afternoon on May 19th, neither companies have released any statement surrounding the rumor.

Amazon Acquisition

On August 5th, 2014, Justin.tv was closed by the company in order to divert resources to Twitch, further fueling rumors of an imminent acquisition.[9] On August 25th, Twitch announced that the service had been acquired by Amazon for $970 million. In a blog post published on the site, CEO Emmett Shear thanked the Twitch community for the company’s success.[8]

Dear Twitch Community,

It’s almost unbelievable that slightly more than 3 years ago, Twitch didn’t exist. The moment we launched, we knew we had stumbled across something special. But what followed surprised us as much as anyone else, and the impact it’s had on both the community and us has been truly profound.

Your talent, your passion, your dedication to gaming, your memes, your brilliance – these have made Twitch what it is today. Every day, we strive to live up to the standard set by you, the community. We want to create the very best place to share your gaming and life online, and that mission continues to guide us.


Together with you, we’ve found new ways of connecting developers and publishers with their fans. We’ve created a whole new kind of career that lets people make a living sharing their love of games. We’ve brought billions of hours of entertainment, laughter, joy and the occasional ragequit. I think we can all call that a pretty good start.

Today, I’m pleased to announce we’ve been acquired by Amazon. We chose Amazon because they believe in our community, they share our values and long-term vision, and they want to help us get there faster. We’re keeping most everything the same: our office, our employees, our brand, and most importantly our independence. But with Amazon’s support we’ll have the resources to bring you an even better Twitch.

I personally want to thank you, each and every member of the Twitch community, for what you’ve created. Thank you for putting your faith in us. Thank you for sticking with us through growing pains and stumbles. Thank you for bringing your very best to us and sharing it with the world. Thank you, from a group of gamers who never dreamed they’d get to help shape the face of the industry that we love so much.

It’s dangerous to go alone. On behalf of myself and everyone else at Twitch, thank you for coming with us.

Emmett Shear, CEO


The following day, Forbes[10] published an article claiming sources revealed Google backed away from the deal due to concerns over antitrust issues that may have arisen due to the company’s ownership of YouTube.

Highlights

EVE Online: Battle of Asakai

The Battle of Asakai refers to a major multiplayer battle that occurred in the MMORPGEVE Online[8] in late January 2013, which was broadcast live by Twitch streamer ShigsTV.



Twitch Plays Pokemon

Twitch Plays Pokemon was a live-streamed event that began on Twitch in February 2014 in which any member of the site can participate in a massively multiplayer online co-op version of Nintendo’s 1996 role-playing video game Pokémon Red by inputting various commands in chat. After 16 days, 7 hours, 45 minutes, and 30 seconds of continuous play, the game was beaten, having reached over 100,000 viewers at its peak. Several spin-off feeds were subsequently created for other games, including Pokémon Red and Tetris, The Legend of Zelda, Super Mario Bros, QWOP, Pacman and DOOM.



Fish Plays Pokemon

Fish Plays Pokemon is an ongoing live-stream event on Twitch in which a pet fish named Grayson Hopper assumes the role of Red, the protagonist of Pokemon Red/Blue, and the task of completing the game by swimming in a custom-designed tank sectioned into a 3×3 square grid and equipped with a motion sensor detector. Created by two college students[35], Catherine Moresco[38] and Patrick Facheris, [39] for the HackNY summer fellowship program, the channel has gained more than 4.5 million views and over 60,000 likes in less than three weeks.

4chan Cup

4chan Cup is a series of e-sport tournaments in which 16 teams representing various boards on 4chan compete against each others in the Japanese football video game Pro Evolution Soccer. Each tournament match is webcast in real-time on the video game streaming platform Twitch.

Traffic

On June 5th, 2013, Tech Crunch[1] reported that Twitch.tv was receiving more than 35 million unique visitors per month. On December 10th, Twitch announced they had gained over 100,000 new streamers using PlayStation 4 integration, bringing the total broadcasters to over 700,000.[4] As of February 2014, Twitch has a Quantcast[5] US ranking of 322.

Related Memes

FrankerZ

FrankerZ is a dog face emoticon used to convey sarcasm or playfulness on Twitch and is sometimes spammed in forums and chat rooms during raids.



Raise Your Dongers

Raise your dongers is a catchphrase coined by the League of Legends (LoL) Twitch streamer Michael Santana, better known by his online handle Imaqtipie, that is associated with the champion character Heimerdinger. Although its precise meaning is unclear, the phrase has since been adopted by his fans on Twitch, along with its emoticon form “ヽ༼ຈل͜ຈ༽ノ raise your dongers ヽ༼ຈل͜ຈ༽ノ.”

Search Interest

External References


Akinator

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About

Akinator is a website[1] and mobile app that features a cartoon genie who asks several questions before attempting to guess the fictional or real character the player is thinking of. The was inspired by the game “20 questions”[2], and was created by French programmers Jeff Deleau and Arnaud Olivi in 2007.

Gameplay

The genie will ask up to 20 yes or no questions before guessing what character the playing is thinking of. If Akinator guesses incorrectly, it will proceed to ask several more questions before guessing again. If it is unable to guess correctly 3 times, it will prompt the player to enter the actual character’s name.

The database covers a wide variety of characters and will even show you pictures of the ones he guesses.

Traffic

In April 2011 it was published as a mobile game and cost $1.99 from the iTunes store[3], and $2.27 from the Android market[4], and have received 4/5 starts on each platform.

As of June 2011, akinator.com has an Alexa[5] rank of 8,856, and a Compete[6] rank of 28,414.


Search


Search queries for “akinator” saw their first spike in January of 2010, and again in June of 2012.

Highlights

Meme Characters

Since Akinator is able to learn from players that manage to stump the AI, it frequently has Internet memes added to it’s database.



External References

[1]Akinator.com

[2]Wikipedia – 20 Questions / added 6-17-11

[3]iTunes – Akinator app / added 6-17-11

[4]Android Market – Akinator

[5]Alexa – akinator.com

[6]Compete – akinator.com

IGN

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About

IGN is a website containing video game-related news, cheats, reviews and media.

History

In September 1996, the Imagine Games Network was founded by Jonathan Simpson-Bint for the gaming websites PSXPower, Next-Generation, Saturnworld, Ultra Game Players Online and N64.com. In 1998, many of the sites consolidated to become channels at IGN.com.[2]



Acquisition & Sales

In 1999, IGN purchased the role-playing video game website Vault Network.[1] In 2005, Australian businessman Rupert Murdoch’s multimedia business empire News Corporation acquired IGN for $650 million. In 2011, News Corporation’s IGN Entertainment acquired its rival network UGO Entertainment, the parent company of 1UP.com, from Hearst Corporation, for an undisclosed amount in cash and stock with a plan to re-launch the website into a standalone, spin-off video game review site. On May 25th, 2011, IGN’s online game store Direct2Drive was sold to the video game rental service GameFly. In February 2013, News Corporation sold IGN to the publishing company Ziff Davis.

Localization

In 2006, IGN began launching regional variations of the website and licensed publishers in other countries under the IGN brand. If a user visits the IGN website from supported area, the website automatically redirects to that the custom regional version of the site. As of June 2014, there are 17 total supported regions on IGN World[7] (shown below).



April Fools Pranks

IGN has participated in several notable April Fool’s Day pranks over the years. In 2008, they released a fake trailer featuring a live-action film for The Legend of Zelda franchise (shown below, left). In 2010, IGN posted a fake trailer for a Halo-themed Bollywood musical film (shown below, right).



In 2011, the IGN YouTube channel released a fake trailer for a Harry Potter-themed television show titled “The Aurors” (shown below, left). In 2012, the site posted a mock trailer for a Mass Effect-themed Saturday morning cartoon series (shown below, right).



In 2013, IGN released a parody advertisement for a fake Apple video game console called the “iPlay,” which is only capable of playing the game Angry Birds (shown below, left). In 2014, the site featured a mock trailer promoting a Transformers-themed DLC package for the battle game Titanfall (shown below, right).



Features

IGN contains video game news, information, podcasts and videos for a variety of platforms, including PlayStaion, Xbox, PC and Nintendo. In addition, the site contains sections for movies and television entertainment. The IGN Forums provide community boards for video games and other entertainment media discussions.

Scoring System

The original IGN scoring system gave games a score between .1 and 10.0 based on its performance in a variety of categories, including graphics, sound and gameplay. In August 2010, the scoring system was revised to increments of .5. In September 2012, IGN reverted back to a 100-point scale from .1 to 10.0 in .1 decimal increments. In 2014, a new policy was introducing allowing review scores to be revised in light of game updates and fixes.

Perfect Score Reviews

  • The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time (Nintendo 64, 1998)
  • Pokémon Red and Blue (Game Boy, 1999)
  • Checkered Flag (Atari Lynx, 1999)
  • Joust (Atari Lynx, 1999)
  • Shanghai (Atari Lynx, 1999)
  • Super Mario Bros. Deluxe (Game Boy Color, 1999)
  • The Legend of Zelda: Link’s Awakening DX (Game Boy Color, 1999)
  • Soulcalibur (Dreamcast, 1999)
  • Mario Golf (Game Boy Color, 1999)
  • Pokémon Yellow (Game Boy, 1999)
  • Sonic the Hedgehog Pocket Adventure (NeoGeo Pocket Color, 1999)
  • SNK vs. Capcom: The Match of the Millennium (Neo Geo Pocket Color, 2000)
  • Magical Tetris Challenge (Game Boy Color, 2000)
  • Metal Gear Solid (Game Boy Color, 2000)
  • Pokémon Gold and Silver (Game Boy Color, 2000)
  • The Legend of Zelda: Oracle of Seasons and Oracle of Ages (Game Boy Color, 2001)
  • Dragon Warrior III (Game Boy Color, 2001)
  • Tornado Mania! (Mobile phone, 2006)
  • Grand Theft Auto IV (PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360, 2008)
  • Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots (PlayStation 3, 2008)
  • Super Mario Galaxy 2 (Wii, 2010)
  • Red Dead Redemption: Undead Nightmare (PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360, 2010)
  • Pac-Man Championship Edition DX (PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360, 2010)
  • Chrono Trigger (Wii Virtual Console, 2011)
  • Uncharted 3: Drake’s Deception (PlayStation 3, 2011)
  • The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword (Wii, 2011)
  • Infinity Blade II (iOS, 2011)
  • The Last of Us (PlayStation 3, 2013)
  • Grand Theft Auto V (PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360, 2013)

Highlights

Gaijin 4koma

Gaijin 4koma (Japanese: 外人四こま, “4-frame foreigners”) is a series of four-paned comics based on two photographs of IGN employees reacting to Nintendo’s announcement of new titles at the E3 conference in 2003 and 2004 respectively. The multi-pane set up is typically used to express one’s disappointment and excitement over two separate things, in similar vein to the “At first I was like X, but then I was like Y” snowclone.

Operation Rainfall

Operation Rainfall was an online campaign orchestrated by gamers on the IGN Forums urging Nintendo to release North American versions of the games Xenoblade, The Last Story and Pandora’s Tower.

Didn’t Read LOL

"Didn’t Read, LOL” is an expression commonly used to taunt others online by announcing their comments and posts have been ignored. The first known GIF featuring the phrase surfaced on the IGN Forums in July 2008.



Criticisms

Video Game Scoring

IGN video game review scores, which rank games on a scale from 1-10, are often mocked online for being overly generous in light of the actual review commentary. On February 6th, 2012, the gaming blog Twenty Sided[5] published an article criticizing IGN, which accused the site of “review-score prostitution.” On December 25th, an anonymous 4chan user replied to an illustration of a phallus with the comment “8/10 it’s okay – IGN,” mocking the lackluster reviews accompanied by above-average scores on the site. On October 16th, 2013, IGN reviews editor Dan Stapleton participated in an “ask me anything” (AMA) post on the /r/Games[4] subreddit. In the comments section Redditor recklessfred pointed out that many people perceived IGN reviews being on a 7-10 scale rather than the stated 0-10 scale. On November 17th, a post was submitted to the /r/OutOfTheLoop[3] subreddit about IGN scoring jokes. On December 5th, Redditor cyanghost109- submitted an infographic accusing IGN of giving unfair favorable reviews to games in the Call of Duty franchise, gaining over 2,300 upvotes and 300 comments prior to being archived (shown below).



Traffic

In June 2005, IGN reported that the website was receiving 24 million unique visitors per month, with 4.8 million registered users participating across different sections of the site. As of June 2014, IGN has a global rank of 312 and United States rank of 167 on the traffic analytics site Alexa.[6]

Search Interest

External References

[1]Vault Network – Vault Network

[2]IGNIGN

[3]Reddit – 1010 its OK IGN

[4]Reddit – I am IGN Reviews Editor AMA

[5]Shamus Young – IGN

[6]Alexa – IGN

[7]IGNIGN World

Keemstar

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About

DJ Keemstar (also known as Killer Keemstar) is the online handle of video blogger Daniel Keem, who is best known for his YouTube news web series DramaAlert.[1][2] Within the vlogging community on YouTube, Keemstar is considered a highly divisive figure due to his history of frequent feuds and hostile exchanges with other YouTube content producers.

Online History

Keem was first featured in a video recorded and uploaded by his friend, YouTuber DERANKER, on January 21st, 2009. In the video, Keem is heard talking trash and trolling strangers while playing in Halo 3’s multiplayer mode under the nickname DJ Keemstar. Within the first year of upload, the video garnered more than 100,000 views, ultimately serving as the first breakout moment for Keem.



DramaAlert

DramaAlert is the online news show hosted by Keemstar with a new video being uploaded on a nearly daily basis. The show covers topics and drama surrounding online personalities, many of whom are YouTubers with a large fanbase or following. DramaAlert’s most viewed video involves gameplay commentator Leafyishere and a woman who is best known for fucking her dog (shown below).



New Host

On June 7th, 2016, Keem tweeted an announcement revealing that a new vlogger would be brought on board to replace him as the host of DramaAlert (shown below).




On June 15th, 2016, a new host by the name of TyBlueNews[3] was temporarily brought on to host DramaAlert (shown below, left), however it was announced on June 19th that TyBlue would stay on as the permanent host of DramaAlert (shown below, right).



Feuds with YouTube Personalities

Starting in May 2016, a number of influential YouTube personalities began posting videos directly aimed at “exposing” Keemstar in a critical light, something that other and lesser known YouTubers had done before. On May 5th, 2016, YouTuber iDubbbzTV uploaded a video titled “Content Cop – KEEMSTAR” in which iDubbbz talks about his issues with Keem (shown below).



On June 6th, 2016, Keem uploaded a video to his Twitter account to declare that a fellow YouTuber and friend had ""betrayed" him and that “no one is real!” (shown below).




On June 9th, YouTuber Pyrocynical uploaded his own video to share his opinions about Keemstar (shown below, left). On June 13th, 2016, YouTuber LeafyisHere uploaded a video titled “THEKEEMSTARANDDRAMAALERTRANT” (shown below, right).



On June 29th, 2016, Keem uploaded a nearly hour long video to the DramaAlert channel titled “KEEMSTAREXPOSEDRESPONSE!” (shown below) in which he responds to the various allegations placed against him



Battle for the Channel

In the aftermath of being “betrayed” Keem announced on Twitter that he would start a new show on YouTube with a tweet on June 22nd, 2016 (shown below). The tweet linked out to a new channel titled “Battle for the Channel”.[4]




Reputation

Keemstar has become widely popular online in the last few years, most notably due to his personality as well as his internet news show DramaAlert. Keemstar has also gathered a substantial amount of criticism from various people online, most notably on YouTube. On October 14th, 2015, YouTuber Chosen uploaded a video titled “Keemstar – Hypocrite, Racist, Psychopath.” (shown below, left). Keemstar has responded to these claims several times including making a video titled “KEEMSTAREXPOSED– Response” in which he responds to the various videos criticizing him (shown below, right).



Related Memes

“Alex is a Stupid Nigger”

Alex is a Stupid Nigger is a phrase that was uttered by Keem on a livestream in which he berates a man named Alex and calls for his viewers to type “Alex is a stupid nigger” in the stream’s chat. This has become notorious for being used against Keem, especially in “Keemstar Exposed” type videos.


Code KEEM

Code KEEM refers to various promotions done by Keemstar for various sites in which inputting the code “KEEM” on a purchase will result in a discount for said purchase. The phrase has also become an in-joke between Keem and his fans. It has also become a way to make fun of Keem by those who do not care for him


Gnomestar

Gnomestar (or simply gnome) is a pejorative nickname given to Keem based on his pointy beard. The term gained popularity after iDubbbz’s video on Keem, in which he’s despicted destroying several lawn gnomes.



Fuck The Fans

“Fuck The Fans” is a quote uttered by Keem on one of his streams, claiming that he streams for the money and hates his fanbase and saying he was joking afterwards. In similar vein to the “Alex is a stupid nigger” quote, this quote has been used in “Keemstar Exposed” type videos.



“Let’s Get Right Into The News”

“Let’s Get Right Into The News” is the memorable introductory line from DramaAlert, which has been often mocked by Keem critics and parodied. One of the most common variations include the phrase “let’s get right into the noose”.



Search Interest

External References

Reggie Fils-Aime

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About

Reggie Fils-Aime is the president of Nintendo[1] of America, and a regular speaker at the E3 Entertainment Expo[2]. Most of his popularity has spawned from notable lines he has said during his E3 conferences, as well as unpopularity from fans of the video game series Mother.

Online History

Reggie first became popular after his opening line at his first E3 in 2004, where he introduced himself by saying: “My name is Reggie, I’m about kickin’ ass, I’m about takin’ names, and we’re about makin’ games”. Reggie soon became popular with the online audience, with fans dubbing him “The Regginator”. Many fans dubbed his arrival as “the Reggielution”, due to many people believing that Reggie played a part in boosting Nintendo’s popularity in America. Reggie’s popularity grew after E3 2007, where he said “My Body is Ready” (see below).



Reputation

Reggie has received mainly positive feedback from both the gaming community, and the online community as a whole, with his own Facebook fan page[3], his own tumblr fan page[4], as well as his own fan site.[citation needed] However, Reggie has received a lot of hate and criticism from fans of the video game series Mother. This came about after Reggie said that he wouldn’t have Nintendo release Mother 3 in the U.S. Reggie soon started receiving hate mail from angry Mother fans, who complained that there was no valid reason for mother 3 not to be released. Despite this, Reggie has said in different interviews that he is a big Mother fan himself, and would love to see the game released in the U.S.[5]



Related Memes

My Body is Ready

At E3 2007, while showcasing Nintendo’s new fitness game, Wii Fit[6], Reggie spoke the phrase “My body is ready”. The phrase gained attention in 2010, and has since become a popular caption, used to express excitement at an upcoming or imminent event. It is one of the most commonly used captions on the internet.



I Feel Just Like a Purple Pikmin

“I feel just like a purple pikmin” is a phrase spoken by Reggie during E3 2012, while announcing the game Pikmin 3. It gained spread through IGN and other gaming-related sites, and has become a mini-Photoshop meme.



Search Interest

Search interest in Reggie peaked around the time of E3 in 2004, and then again in 2007 surrounding the “My Body is Ready” meme.

External References

[1]Wikipedia – Nintendo

[2]Wikipedia – E3

[3]Facebook – Reggie Fils-Aime

[4]tumblr – Official Reggie Fils-Aime blog

[5]EarthBound Central – Reggie Talks Some More MOTHER 3

[6]Wikpedia – Wii Fit

Edward Snowden

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About

Edward Snowden is an American system administrator and a former employee of Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) who worked as a contractor for the National Security Agency (NSA) before leaking highly classified information on the agency’s top-secret PRISM surveillance program to the British newspaper The Guardian in June 2013.

Online History

Career

This account is based on profile articles and interviews published by The Guardian[15]:

In May 2004, Snowden enlisted in the United States Army as a special forces recruit but was discharged in September after suffering injuries on both of his legs while training. He then worked as a security guard for the National Security Agency’s covert facility at the University of Maryland, before joining the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) as an IT security personnel. In 2007, Snowden was dispatched to Geneva, Switzerland, where he worked as a network security administrator with diplomatic cover. In 2009, he left the agency for a private contractor company and worked inside an NSA facility on a U.S. military base in Japan. Little is known is about Snowden’s whereabouts thereafter, but sometime between late March and early April 2013, he began working for U.S. defense contractor Booz Allen Hamilton as a system administrator inside an NSA facility in Hawaii. In May 2013, Snowden took a temporary medical leave from his position. According to the real estate agents, Snowden and his girlfriend moved out of their home on May 1st.

2013 NSAPRISM Scandal

In January 2013, Snowden made contact with Laura Poitras, a Freedom of the Press board member and documentary filmmaker who previously reported on the NSA official William Binney’s whistleblowing for the New York Times in 2001, according to Poitras. In February, Snowden began working with The Guardian‘s Glenn Greenwald, followed by first direct contact with The Washington Post’s Barton Gellman in May. According to the journalists, Snowden communicated using encrypted mail under the codename “Verax,” Latin for “truth-teller,” and requested not to be quoted at length to safeguard identification by semantic analysis.



The Guardian Interview

On June 8th, three days after The Guardan published the story about NSA surveillance programs, Snowden revealed his identity to the public’s eye in an interview with the UK newspaper. In the video, Snowden provides a brief description of the agency’s data-mining infrastructure and its capabilities, such as intercepting e-mails, phone calls, passwords and credit cards.



“Now increasingly we see that [clandestine intelligence gathering is] happening domestically and to do that they, the NSA specifically, targets the communications of everyone. It ingests them by default. It collects them in its system and it filters them and it analyses them and it measures them and it stores them for periods of time simply because that’s the easiest, most efficient, and most valuable way to achieve these ends. So while they may be intending to target someone associated with a foreign government or someone they suspect of terrorism, they’re collecting you’re communications to do so.”


The Guardian also reported that Snowden first thought about exposing government surveillance in 2007, but Barack Obama’s election in 2008 gave him a sense of hope. However, Snowden became disenchanted after Obama “ultimately advanced the surveillance policies rather than reforming them.” When asked about the motive behind his whistleblowing, Snowden told The Washington Post that he wanted to raise public awareness of “surveillance state” that the country was becoming so they could decide.

Online Reactions




Petitions

On June 9th, an online petition titled “Pardon Edward Snowden” was submitted to the White House[3], demanding the Obama administration to “issue a full, free and absolute pardon for any crimes he has committed or may have committed related to blowing the whistle on secret NSA surveillance programs.” The petition was quickly picked up by the news media and blogospher, reaching more than half of its signature goal of 100,000 in the first 48 hours. On June 10th, after The Guardian reported that Snowden may be seeking asylum in Iceland, a petition was submitted to Change.org[5] requesting the Icelandic government to grant asylum to Snowden. That same day, a crowdfunding campaign seeking to thank Snowden with a reward was launched on Crowdtilt.[10]



On October 29th, a website called FreeSnowden was launched by the Journalistic Source Protection Defence Fund (JSPDF), a newly founded UK organization with close affiliation to WikiLeaks, to raise money for Snowden’s legal defense. According to the website, the JSPDF is the only fundraiser campaign endorsed by WikiLeaks and Snowden himself and its accounting is administered by Derek Rothera & Company LLP, which also handles the legal defense fund for Julian Assange. Donations can be made by credit card, bank transfer, PayPal and WePay, as well as virtual curriences Bitcoin and Litecoin.

Post-PRISM Leaks

Regional Activities

  • U.S. Spying in China & Hong Kong: On June 14th, the South China Morning Post[28] published an interview with Snowden in which he revealed that the United States government had been hacking into computers in Hong Kong and on the Chinese mainland since 2009.
  • British Surveillance Program: On June 16th, The Guardian[29] reported that the British Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) had intercepted communications of foreign politicians and envoys during the London G20 summit meetings in 2009, citing documents leaked by Snowden. On August 1st, The Guardian[35] published an article about additional documents leaked by Snowden claiming that the US government gave the GCHQ£100 million in funding to maintain its influence over the surveillance programs overseas.
  • U.S. Spying in Germany: On June 30th, the German news site Spiegel[32] reported that the NSA spies on 500 million data connections in Germany every day. On July 8th, Spiegel[33] published an interview with Snowden, in which he claims the NSA is “in bed together with the Germans” and the German intelligence agencies had contributed to the NSA’s XKeyscore data collection network.
  • U.S. Domestic Surveillance: On June 27th, The Guardian[31] reported that the Obama administration allowed the NSA to continue the “Stellar Wind” program started under President George W. Bush, which collected vast amounts of records detailing email and Internet usage of Americans. On September 28th, the New York Times[45] published an article revealing that the NSA had used American phone and Internet data to create a map of social connections.
  • U.S. Spying in the Middle East: On August 23rd, The Independent[36] reported that Snowden provided leaked documents revealing a secret data-gathering base located in the Middle East. The article was subsequently disputed by Greenwald,[37] who quoted Snowden claiming he had never “provided any journalistic materials to The Independent.” On August 31st, Spiegel[40] published an article about documents leaked by Snowden showing that the Arab news broadcaster Al Jazeera had been spied on by the NSA. On September 2nd, The Washington Post[41] reported that Snowden had provided documents showing that US intelligence had focused as intensely on Pakistan as they had on non-ally countries Iran and North Korea. * On September 11th, The Guardian[44] reported on a new secret document leaked by Snowden, outlining how the NSA shares intelligence data with Israel prior to removing information about US citizens.
  • U.S. Spying in Brazil: On September 1st, the Brazilian news site Fantástico[42] published an interview with Greenwald, who claimed to have seen documents provided by Snowden indicating that the NSA had spied on Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff.

Surveillance Programs

  • Skype’s Project Chess: On June 19th, The New York Times[30] published an article on additional documents leaked by Snowden, which revealed that the Internet communications company Skype had test-launched a secret surveillance program called Project Chess in 2008 to assist government intelligence agencies and law enforcement.
  • XKeyscore Program: On July 31st, The Guardian[34] reported on the XKeyscore program, which is reportedly capable of collecting every aspect of an Internet user’s activities, including the content of personal emails, web search history and browsing patterns, as well as their metadata.
  • NSA’s Encryption-Cracking Capability: On September 5th, The Guardian[43] published an article revealing that the NSA had cracked various encryption methods used to secure various online communications, some of which may have been stolen.
  • Other NSA Projects: On June 28th, Greenwald claimed to have knowledge of an unpublished leaked document delivered by Snowden describing a new NSA technology that records 1 billion cell phone calls a day during his keynote speech at the Socialism 2013 conference. On August 29th, the Washington Post[39] reported on a United States spy agency “black budget” leaked by Snowden, exposing a $52.6 billion intelligence agency proposal.

Snowden Joins Twitter

On September 29th, 2015, Edward Snowden joined Twitter using the handle @Snowden. He followed only the official account for the National Security Agency, @NSA, and was immediately verified.[49] According to the Los Angeles Times, his attorney, Ben Wizner of the American Civil Liberties Union, also confirmed that Snowden personally controlled the account from his home in Russia.[50]



According to The Intercept, Snowden decided to join Twitter after astrophysicist Neil Degrasse Tyson asked him why he didn’t belong to the social network during an interview in the week prior to his joining. The whistleblower answered that he would like to, and that he would like the handle @Snowden, which was being squatted on by an unknown user. After a request was put in to Twitter, the squatter was removed and Snowden gained access.[51]

11 hours after his first tweet, Snowden had gained over 771,000 followers. Many celebrities responded to his initial tweet by welcoming him to Twitter, including Degrasse Tyson and Jack Dorsey, the CEO of Twitter.



Personal Life

Online Life Revealed

On June 11th, details about Snowden’s personal life and digital footprints were revealed by Reuters, including his pseudonymous handle “TheTrueHOOHA” that he used on an anime forum and Ars Technica, several headshots of younger looking Snowden as an aspring model, as well as images of the girlfriend Lindsay Mills and her personal blog, which was lasted updated on June 9th (shown below):

My world has opened and closed all at once. Leaving me lost at sea without a compass. Surely there will be villainous pirates, distracting mermaids, and tides of change in this new open water chapter of my journey. But at the moment all I can feel is alone.

Other emerging details about Snowden’s online posts described as an agnostic, a video gamer who offered a review of Max Payne 2: The Fall of Max Payne and once an aspiring model who had some headshots taken. According to Anthony DeRosa and Joe Mullin of Ars Technica, TheTrueHOOHA posted a joke about how one user’s Xbox 360 is "NSA’s new surveillance program sometime in 2006.

Live Q&A Session

At 11 a.m. (EST) on June 17th, The Guardian launched an exclusive real-time Q&A session[21] with Edward Snowden, calling on its readers to submit their questions via its live blog or Twitter using the hashtag #AskSnowden.[24] By 12:43 p.m., Snowden had provided his answers to a total of 17 questions asked by journalists as well as readers of The Guardian. In his responses, Snowden addressed his reason behind choosing Hong Kong as his first destination, conflicting reports surrounding his claimed annual salary and accusations of his defection to China in exchange for classified intelligence. In the following hours, the highlights of Snowden’s responses were summarized and compiled into articles by The Daily Beast[22] and Salon.[23]




Nobel Peace Prize Nomination

On July 13th, 2013, Swedish sociology professor Stefan Svallfors tweeted a screenshot of a letter he was going to submit to the Norwegian Nobel Prize committee nominated Edward Snowden for the Nobel Peace Prize. In the letter, Svallfors lauds Snowden for sacrificing so much of his personal life for the greater good. The letter also asserted that awarding the prize to Snowden would “help to save the Nobel Peace Prize from … disrepute” after the committee award the prize to Barack Obama 10 months into his presidency. According to Russia Today[26], a member of the International Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO) confirmed that all of this year’s deadlines for nominations have passed and it is unlikely he will make the shortlist. Despite the nomination, Russian official Alexei Pushkov tweeted[27] that it is unlikely the U.S. would allow the Prize to be given to Snowden.




NBC News Interview

On March 28th, 2014, NBC News broadcast an exclusive interview with Snowden by anchor Brian Williams (shown below). During the interview, Snowden claimed he was trained as a spy, refuting President Barack Obama’s description of him as a “hacker” and others claiming he was a low-ranking analyst. He went on to reveal that he had initially planned to go to Cuba and Latin America but he was stranded in Moscow after his passport was revoked by the State Department, and that he hopes to return to the United States someday. Additionally, he claimed he did not have any contact with the Russian government and did not disclose any information to them.



Last Week With John Oliver Interview

Snowden was the surprise guest on the April 5th, 2015 episode of Last Week With John Oliver, a comedy news show on American cable network HBO. During the interview, Snowden explained his knowledge of the expanse of the United States government’s institutionalized spying programs by explaining exactly what circumstances were required for the government to gain access to a picture of a penis that a user might try to send electronically. Within three days of airing, the episode had over 3,000,000 views online.



On April 6th, 2015, developer Olivier Lacan created the web site Cantheyseemydick.com[46] detailing the specifics of the spying programs in the same language used in the interview.

Edward Snowden Bust Installation Prank

On April 6th, 2015, several New York City artists collaborated to secretly enter Fort Greene Park, in Brooklyn, New York, and adhere a bust-style statue of Edward Snowden to a previously existing war monument.[47] The artists, speaking on condition of anonymity to news blog Animal New York, stated: “We have updated this monument to highlight those who sacrifice their safety in the fight against modern-day tyrannies.”



The piece was removed later that day by the New York City Parks Department. That night, protest group The Illuminator projected a hologram image of the bust on to the same monument for the duration of the night.[48]



Extradition Rumor

On January 15th, 2017, former CIA acting director Michael Morell wrote an opinion column suggesting that Vladimir Putin deliver Snowden to Trump as “the perfect inauguration gift.”[55] On February 8th, Snowden tweeted criticism of a Russian anti-terror law, referring to it with the hashtag “#BigBrotherLaw” (shown below).[52]



On February 10th, CNBC[53] reported that Russia was considering extraditing Snowden to the United States as a “gift” to President Donald Trump. That day, Snowden tweeted that the rumor was “irrefutable evidence” that he did not never cooperate with Russian intelligence.[56] On February 11th, Snowden tweeted that he would not stop criticizing Russia’s oppressive “Big Brother” law and that he was not afraid of extradition (shown below).[54]



Search Interest

External References

[1]The Guardian – NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden: ‘I don’t want to live in a society that does these sort of things’ – video

[2]The Guardian – NSA collecting phone records of millions of Verizon customers daily

[3]We The People – Pardon Edward Snowden

[4]Reddit – [AMAREQUEST] NSA Whistleblower Edward Snowden

[5]Change.org – Iceland : Grant asylum to NSA whistle blower Edward Snowden.

[6]Reddit – Edward Snowden: the whistleblower behind revelations of NSA surveillance

[7]The Guardian – Edward Snowden: experts divided over extradition of NSA whistleblower

[8]BBC News – US spy leaker Edward Snowden ‘missing’ in Hong Kong

[9]Facebook – #IStandWithEdwardSnowden

[10]Crowdtilt – Reward Edward Snowden for courageously leaking NSA docs

[11]BoingBoing – Sweden Smearing Begins

[12]Gawker – The Vain Media Cynics of the NSA Story

[13]International Herald Tribune – The Solitary Leaker&

[14]LA Times – Edward Snowden fired, Booz Allen Hamilton says

[15]The Guardian – Edward Snowden

[16]Reuters – While working for spies, Snowden was secretly prolific online

[17]Slate – Snowden Wrote 700-Plus Posts on Chat Boards About Everything From Government to Girls

[18]BuzzFeed – Edward Snowden’s Online Past Revealed

[19]Ars Technica – NSA leaker Ed Snowden’s life on Ars Technica

[20]BoingBoing – NSA whistleblower was a frequent, long-time Ars Technica message-board commenter

[21]The Guardian – Edward Snowden Q and A: NSA whistleblower answers your questions

[22]Daily Beast – The Best Bits From Edward Snowden’s Live Q&A Session

[23]Salon – Five major takeaways from Edward Snowden Q&A

[24]Twitter – Tweet Results for #AskSnowden

[25]The Daily Dot – 6 key takeaways from Edward Snowden’s Q&A

[26]Russia Today – ‘Heroic effort at great personal cost’: Edward Snowden nominated for Nobel Peace Prize

[27]Twitter – @Alexey_Pushkov’s Tweet

[28]South China Morning Post – Edward Snowden – US Government has been hacking Hong Kong and China for years

[29]The Guardian – GCHQ intercepted foreign politicians’ communications at G20 summits

[30]New York Times – Webs Reach Binds NSA and Silicon Valley Leaders

[31]The Guardian – NSA collected US email records in bulk

[32]Spiegel – NSA Snoops on 500 Million German Data Connections

[33]Spigel – Edward Snowden Interview The NSA and Its Willing Helpers

[34]The Guardian – XKeyscore NSA tool collects nearly everything a user does on the Internet

[35]The Guardian – NSA pays 100m in secret funding

[36]The Independent – UKs secret mid east internet surveillance base

[37]The Guardian – UK government now leaking documents about itself

[38]Washington Post – US spy network sucessess and failures

[39]Washington Post – US spy networks successes failures and objectives

[40]Spiegel – Snow Document – NSA Spied on Al Jazeera

[41]Washington Post – Top-secret US Intelligence files show new levels of distrust of Pakistan

[42]Globo – Documentos revelam esquema de agência dos EUA para espionar Dilma

[43]The Guardian – how US and UK spy agencies defeat internet privacy and security

[44]The Guardian – NSA shares raw intelligence including Americans’ data with Israel

[45]The New York Times – NSA Gathers Data on Social Connections of U.S. Citizens

[46]Can They See My Dick – website

[47]AnimalNY – There’s a Massive, Illicit Bust of Edward Snowden Stuck to a War Memorial in Brooklyn

[48]New York Daily News – Edward Snowden bust on Brooklyn park war memorial replaced with hologram image

[49]Twitter – @Snowden

[50]Los Angeles Times – Edward Snowden joins Twitter, immediately gets more followers than NSA

[51]The Intercept – Edward Snowden Is On Twitter: @Snowden

[52]Twitter – @Snowden

[53]CNBCRussia Considers Returning Snowden to US

[54]Twitter – @Snowden

[55]The Cipher Brief – Putins Perfect Gift

[56]Twitter – @Snowden

John Oliver

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About

John Oliver is an English actor and comedian best known for his time as a correspondent on the comedic news show The Daily Show and host of the HBO weekly comedic news show Last Week Tonight with John Oliver.

Acting Career

Oliver made his acting debut on the mini-series Masterpiece Theatre: Bleak House in 1985. He gained a few more TV roles in the early 2000s, making his feature film debut in the 2008 film The Love Guru. He acted as a voice actor in a few television shows including Gravity Falls (2012) and The Simpsons (2014), and has a recurring role in Community (2009-2014).

The Daily Show

John Oliver first appeared on The Daily Show on July 31st, 2006. He remained a recurring correspondent until leaving the show for his own HBO show Last Week Tonight with John Oliver on December 19th, 2013. He acted as the show’s host for 32 episodes from June 10th, 2013, through August 15th, 2013. The same day The Hollywood Reporter[9] published a piece titled “John Oliver’s Last ‘Daily Show’ as Host: 5 Best Moments.”



Accolades

Oliver shared six Emmy nominations for Outstanding Writing for a Variety, Music or Comedy Series with the writers of The Daily Show winning three in 2009, 2011 and 2012. He was also shared six Writers Guild Awards nominations for Comedy/Variety Series winning one in 2010.

Online History

Social Media Presence

As of August 2014, Oliver’s Facebook page[2] has gained over 50,000 likes and his Twitter account[3] has gained over 470,000 followers.

Last Week Tonight Night With John Oliver

Last Week Tonight With John Oliver,[5] a half hour comedic news program hosted by Oliver premiered on HBO on April 27th, 2014. The show’s YouTube channel posted its first clip the same day, as of August 2014, the clip has gained over 460,000 views. As of August 2014, the most viewed clip on channel is titled “FIFA and the World Cup,” which was posted on June 8th, and has gained over 7.6 million views. The channel has gained over 570,000 subscribers.



As of August 2014, the show’s Facebook page[6] has gained over 270,000 views and its Twitter account[7] has gained over 130,000 followers. Its Instagram account[8] has gained over 8,000 followers.



Search Interest

External References

Confused Travolta

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About

Confused Travolta is an animated GIF series featuring a cutout of actor John Travolta in the 1994 black comedy crime film Pulp Fiction edited into other base images of various contexts.

Origin

On November 17th, 2012, Imgur[5] user karmafrappuccino posted a reactionGIF of the Pulp Fiction character Vincent Vega (played by John Travolta) looking around a room while being spoken to over an intercom by the character Mia Wallace (shown below).



On November 6th, Imgur[2] user ILikeToWonkaMyWilly uploaded a Confused Travolta GIF in a supermarket toy aisle (shown below). Within ten days, the post gained over 2.8 million views, 12,600 points and 370 comments.



Spread

The following day, ILikeToWonkaMyWilly posted a tutorial for making Confused Travolta GIFs using Sony Vegas Pro software and provided a GIF of Travolta in front of a green background (shown below).[4]



Also on November 7th, Imgur user danoone submitted a GIF titled “MRW no one tells me the class is canceled,” in which the Travolta GIF is edited into a photograph of an empty classroom (shown below). In the first nine days, the GIF received upwards of 870,000 views and 10,500 points.



On November 8th, the /r/ConfusedTravolta[1] subreddit was launched for notable examples from the GIF series. The following day, YouTuber Burt Rutherford uploaded a video titled “Return of the Confused Travolta,” featuring the Confused Travolta animation and a clip from the Shia LaBeouf motivational video edited into a scene from the 1983 science fiction film Star Wars: Return of the Jedi (shown below).



On November 10th, Imgur[3] published a blog post about the animated GIF series, featuring several notable examples uploaded to the image-sharing site. In the coming days, the news sites The Daily Star[6] and Brilio[7] posted articles about the Confused Travlota GIFs.

Search Interest

Not available.

External References


Bronyspeak

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About

Bronyspeak is the Internet Slang used by the fans of the popular animated Tv-series My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic. These fans, a.k.a. Bronies, have developed their own vocabulary of slang phrases. Many of the words and phrases are taken directly from dialogue in the show, while others are completely fan-created and reference tropes found throughout the series.

Notable Examples

Ponify

Ponify is the act of turning everyday words into their pony equivalents. It is the most common feature of Bronyspeak found in discussions and on threads. This originated directly from the show, where for example the word “everybody” is changed into “everypony”.



This has spread to a variety of words used in the show, such as insults or greetings. But fans also gave their own twist to words, commonly just being small changes. Various Brony Dictionaries have also been made by fans and are shared through sites like DeviantArt[2] and Google Docs[3]. A complete extension for Firefox and Google Chrome has also been made, which changes simple words found on the web to their pony equivalents.[4]



The Royal Canterlot Voice / CANTERLOCK

The Royal Canterlot Voice originates from Season 2, Episode 4, “Luna Eclipsed”.[8] Because of various situations in the show, the character Luna has not been around others for a thousand years. This caused her to still talk like inhabitants did a thousand years ago, using a different form of pronunciation and speaking in a higher volume.



A similar way of typing is sometimes used amongst fans. Creating a similar effect as using an excessive amount of Caps Lock. Because of their similarities, this has been given the nickname CANTERLOCK.



Whining!

Whining originated from a scene in the episode 19th episode of the first season, “A Dog and Pony Show”.[9] This particular type of whining is used by bronies on threads as a counter to hatefull responses or as a form of brony trolling. Bronies respond to the trolls in various, over emotional, ways similar to Rarity. In many cases the poster will replace the word whining with a different verb.



Notable Catchphrases

Various catchphrases have become popular on the web. While some of these are taken directly from the show, others are completely fan-created.

For other, more detailed, descriptions of various phrases and terms, see: Wingboner / Clopping, Flutterrage / Flutterbitch, Friendship Arsenal and FOREEEEVER!.

Confound These Ponies


“Confound these ponies” originally started in a series of image macros on /co/, and later spread to the viewers of Yaridovich’s Pony Synchtube.[1] It comes from an episode of Chuck Jones’ The Dover Boys of Pimento University where the villain proclaims, “Confound these Dover boys! They drive me to drink!”. The verb “drink” has been turned into a variety of words in fanworks, mainly for matching purposes.


Welcome to the Herd

After an individual gets hooked on the show, other fans often formally welcome them by saying “Welcome to the herd”. This is commonly combined with an image macro featuring the character Pinkie Pie with hypnotic swirly eyes. Other variations of welcoming have also been created along with various catchphrases. A popular derivative of this is “You shall be assimilated”.



Brohoof

The phrase Brohoof is often used to express approval towards another brony, and comes from the term bro fist. This can be used in an image macro, or by typing. It is also commonly used as a greeting towards fellow bronies. Other words and gestures that feature a hand in some way have also been changed to their hoof equivalents. So is the Facehoof a derivative of the facepalm, commonly used as a reaction to something silly or senseless.



Don’t feed the Parasprites / Paraspriting


“Don’t feed the parasprites” is a catchphrase inspired by the trolling bronies receive in pony threads. “Parasprite” is commonly used in place of “troll”. The parasprite was first introduced in episode 10 of the first season, “Swarm of the Century”.[11] Parasprites are small bug like creatures with a never ending hunger, creating a link with constant trolling bronies have to put up with.

Love and Tolerate


“Love and tolerate” was created to deal with trolling and hatred in pony related threads, while staying true to the show’s message of friendship and kindness. Love and tolerate is commonly used in place of violent terms in an attempt to stay non-confrontational. It is often used in image macros to express contempt in a joking, light-hearted manner.

Forever!

Forever! is a line which was spoken by Pinkie Pie in the episode “Green Isn’t your Color”. It is used in the form of an image macro, with Pinkie Pie being edited into various situations.


20% Cooler

The line “It needs to be about 20% cooler” was spoken by the character Rainbow Dash during episode 14, “Suited For Success”.[12] It is occasionally used as an insult or as simple advice towards something, claiming it needs to be improved. But it is also used to express approval towards something. 20% Cooler can also often be found back in fanworks as a sign of improvement or as a factor for one’s opinion.



10 Seconds Flat


The phrase “Ten Seconds Flat” was spoken by the character Rainbow Dash during her first appearance in the series[13] when she claims that she can “clear every cloud from the sky in ten seconds flat”. It is most often used when describing the ability to perform a task quickly.

Oatmeal? Are You Crazy?


In episode 3 of the first season, “The Ticket Master”,[14] the character Pinkie Pie randomly blurts out the phrase “Oatmeal? Are you crazy?”. The phrase grew in popularity on Ponychan’s oatmeal board. The /oat/ board[5] was created for more random pony content and gained its name in honor of Pinkie Pie’s random nature.

And That’s How Equestria Was Made


In episode 23, “The Cutie Mark Chronicles”,[10] Pinkie Pie explains how she got her cutie mark. She ends the story by saying, “And that’s how Equestria was made”. The phrase is commonly used in forum boards as a substitute for "tl;dr" and as a reply to off-topic comments.

I Watch It For the Plot

The word “plot” has become synonymous with the pony posterior as a result of a viral image seen on the left below, resulting in the sarcastic phrase I Watch It for the Plot. Combinations with “Dat Ass” have become a common variation, creating results such as “Dat Plot”, “Dat Flank”, etc.



Other Popular Phrases

While most of the above phrases are derived from the show, they are used often in an exploitable format or in fanworks. Various other phrases have been taken directly from the show and are commonly used in the same purpose as they were used in the show. They can be most commonly found back in image macros or through videos. Certain scenes and phrases in the show have also evolved into popular Pony Reaction Faces.

A popular place to find these is through the Youtube account of user Kyrospawn[6], who has also uploaded various soundboards to his DeviantArt account[7].

Big Macintosh – Eeyup | Spike – Nooooooo! | Lilly – The horror, the horror
Pinkie Pie – Okey Dokey Lokey | Rainbow Dash – Ohmygosh | Fluttershy – Yay
Luna – The fun has been Doubled! | Rarity – Worst Possible Thing! | Big Macintosh – Nope


External Links

[1]Synchtube – Yaridovich

[2]DeviantArt – Brony Dictionary

[3]Mareiam-Websteed – Brony Dictionary

[4]Pterocorn – Ponify

[5]Ponychan – /oat/ board

[6]Youtube – Kyrospawn’s Channal

[7]Deviantart – Soundboard by Kyrospawn

[8]MLP:FiM Wiki – Luna Eclipsed

[9]MLP:FiM Wiki – A Dog and Pony Show

[10]MLP:FiM Wiki – The Cutie Mark Chronicles

[11]MLP:FiM Wiki – Swarm of the Century

[12]MLP:FiM Wiki – Suited for Success

[13]MLP:FiM Wiki – Friendship is Magic, Part 1

[14]MLP:FiM Wiki – The Ticket Master

Pepperidge Farm Remembers

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Pepperidge Farm Remembers is an image macro series based on a tagline used in an advertisement for the commercial bakery Pepperidge Farm. The series features a still-shot from a parody of the commercial as seen in the animated television series Family Guy and captions reminiscing about outdated relics and practices from the past decades.

Origin

In the early 1980s, Pepperidge Farm began airing a commercial featuring an elderly man reminiscing about raisin bread that his grandmother used to make with the tagline “Pepperidge Farm remembers” (shown below, left). Online interest in the commercial resurged more than a decade later with a Family Guy parody in Season 5 Episode 3 “Hell Comes to Quahod,” in which an old man blackmails the audience into buying Milano cookies. The episode was originally aired on September 24th, 2006.




On June 4th, 2012, Redditor redherpbluederp submitted a post to the /r/funny[6] subreddit titled “God dammit, YouTube commentator!”, which included a screenshot of a YouTube comment referencing the Pepperidge Farm commercial (shown below). Within four months, the post received over 12,725 up votes and 190 comments.



Spread

On June 6th, the Tumblr[2] blog “Pepperidge Farm Remembers” was launched with two image macros referencing Ja Rule and MTV, though it has been most likely abandoned since. On June 27th, 2012, Redditor holuh submitted a post titled “Pepperidge Farm,”[7] featuring an image macro using the company logo with the caption “Remember a time when Reddit had witty and original content / Pepperidge Farm remembers” (shown below). Within three months, the post received over 6,100 up votes and 145 comments.



On August 8th, Redditor cystalbyb submitted an image macro to the /r/memes[8] subreddit featuring the caption “Remember when Cartoon Netowork only played cartoons? / Pepperidge Farm remembers” (shown below, left). On October 1st, Redditor Trollsamabinlolin submitted an image macro to the /r/AdviceAnimals[7]subreddit with the caption “Remember when being polite wasn’t flirting? / Pepperidge Farm remembers” (shown below, right). With 24 hours, the post reached the front page with over 7,400 up votes and 275 comments.



As of October 2012, a Facebook[4] page for “Pepperidge Farm Remembers” has accrued 90 likes and the “Pepperidge Farm Remembers” Quickmeme[1] page has accumulated 206 submissions. The image macros have continued to spread on Tumblr[5] under the tag “#pepperidge farm remembers.”

Notable Examples



Search Interest

External References

Trash Doves

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About

Trash Doves is a set of Facebook stickers featuring a large-eyed purple pigeon in various situations, the most notable of which is an animated sprite of the bird vigorously thrashing its head up and down. Shortly after its debut on Facebook in January 2016, the purple dove sticker set quickly became a viral subject of photoshopped parodies and image macros on the social media.

Origin

Florida artist and Adobe creative resident Syd Weller’s “Trash Doves” sticker set officially made its Facebook debut[1][2] on January 31st, 2017, which included an animated emoji of a headbanging pigeon (shown below).





As early as on February 7th, the sticker suddenly went viral in Thailand, beginning with a music video posted on the Facebook page สัตว์โลกอมตีน[4] (Animals With Paws), where it garnered more than 3.7 million views within five days.



Spread

Throughout the week, the purple dove stickers continued to gain momentum on Facebook Thailand, which was then picked up by several Thai internet news outlets[5][6][7] in the following days. By February 11th, the “purple dove” sensation had reached the English-speaking Facebook, prompting a flood of spam comments featuring the headbanging sticker on the social networking site, as well as a growing volume of image macros and photoshopped videos based on the same image on Facebook[9][10], YouTube[11] and Reddit[12][13], among others.

Pek

On February 12th, 2017, a campaign urging internet users to depict the trash dove as a symbol of white supremacy named “Pek” began circulating on 4chan’s /pol/ and various Facebook pages, including Pinochet’s Dank Meme Stash. Shortly afters, posts began appearing on left-wing pages accusing the bird of being a Nazi symbol (shown below, right).



On February 13th, a Medium post titled “Right Wing Dove Squad: How Trash Doves Became The Symbole of The Alt-Right” was posted on Medium, which included Nazi-themed photoshops of the trash dove (shown below, left). On February 14th, a screenshot of a Feminists United Facebook page calling the trash dove a “symbol for neo nazis” was submitted to 4chan’s /pol/ board (shown below, right).[18] On February 15th, The Daily Dot[19] published an article titled “A meme war is raging over the future of Trash Dove.”



Examples



GIFs


Search Interest

External References

Vaporwave

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About

Vaporwave is a musical genre inspired by electronic dance music (EDM), New Age music and the indie dance genres chillwave and seapunk. Vaporwave is known for its use of Japanese characters in song titles, 80’s smooth jazz and Muzak samples that have been pitch shifted and time stretched with music editing software. The genre has often been described as a satire of corporate and consumerist culture and modern capitalism, specifically as a critique of mainstream EDM.

History

According to an article in the Chicago Reader,[1] the vaporwave genre emerged on July 1st, 2011 with the release of the album New Dreams LTD. by Laserdisc Visions, which was later dubbed “vaporwave” by Texas producer Will Burnett.



The earliest known use of the term was printed in a review for the album Surfs Pure Hearts by Girlhood in the music blog Weed Temple[7] on October 13th. 2011.

Precursor

There have been a number of albums described by many in the vaporwave community to be catalysts of sorts for the genre or “proto-vaporwave”. These albums include a release from Daniel Lopatin (also known as Oneohtrix Point Never) under Chuck Person titled Chuck Person’s Eccojams Vol. 1 (shown below, left) and James Ferraro’s album Far Side Virtual (shown below, right). Eccojams’ music consists of what Lopatin termed “echo jams,” where forms of popular music, usually originating from the 80s, are slowed down and sometimes looped repeatedly, similar to that of chopped-and-screwed. Ferraro’s Far Side Virtual’s themes and style are similar to that of vaporwave, with globalization, internet culture, and a critique of modern consumerist culture along with a music style reminiscent to that of elevator music.

Reception

In December 2012, the music blog /mu/essentials[3], run by members of 4chan’s music board, posted a graphic for “Essential Vaporwave” (shown below).



On December 7th, the music blog Dummy[8] published an article about vaporwave, which described it as a satire of capitalism. On January 24th, 2013, the Tumblr[5] blog “Vaporwave Album Covers” was launched, which highlights album art from notable vaporwave artists (shown below).



On March 4th, a vaporwave thread was submitted to the /mu/ (music) board on 4chan,[6] where many users recommended their favorite vaporwave albums. On March 19th, the music blog Another County Heard[4] published an article titled “The Verdict on Vaporwave,” which noted how many Internet commenters had declared vaporwave to be “over.” On December 27th, Vice[2] published an article comparing vaporwave to seapunk, quoting several forum commenter descriptions of the genre as “chillwave for Marxists,” “post-elevator music” and “corporate smooth jazz Windows 95 pop.”

In January of 2015, 2814, the collaborative project of Hong Kong Express and t e l e p a t h テレパシー能力者, released their second album 新しい日の誕生 (English: Birth of a New Day, shown above) on Dream Catalogue. Described as being one of the first vaporwave albums to use original instrumentation unlike other vaporwave albums, which use sampling of older songs, it has been well received by both critics and fans as well, with Tiny Mix Tapes giving it a 4/5[9], a RateYourMusic rating of 3.46/5[10], and Rolling Stone featuring 2814 on their “10 New Artists You Need to Know” list for November 2015[11].

Impact

Notable Videos



Search Interest

External References

Kitty0706

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About

Colin Wyckoff, better known by his YouTube handle Kitty0706, was a Garry’s Mod animator who gained much online notoriety for his comedic machinima videos featuring characters from the online first-person shooter game Team Fortress 2. In late January 2015, Wyckoff died at the age of 20 due to complications from leukemia.

History

On April 14th, 2007, Wyckoff launched the Kitty0706 YouTube channel. On September 14th, the first video was uploaded titled “True Crime: Criminal Justice: Part 1,” which featured footage from the 2005 action sandbox game True Crime: New York City using the game’s debug mode (shown below, left). On June 25th, 2009, Colin uploaded a video featuring the Team Fortress 2 Heavy ordering an Xbox 360 from Amazon (shown below, right), gaining more than 3.6 million views and 18,500 comments over six years.



On August 21st, Wyckoff released the video “Team Fortress 2: Moments with Heavy – Heavy Goes Bowling,” featuring several different Team Fortress 2 characters competing at a bowling alley (shown below, left). Within six years, the video gained over 4.6 million views and 15,700 comments. On December 5th, 2010, the video “Moments with Heavy – Heavy’s Retarded Holiday” was uploaded, in which the Heavy character is sucked into a Valve game (shown below, right). Within five years, the video garnered upwards of 4.1 million views and 27,500 comments.



On September 22nd, 2011, the Kitty0706 channel featured the video “Mass Defect”, featuring Garry’s Mod characters interacting with the protagonist Commander Shepard from the video game Mass Effect (shown below, left). Over four years, the video received more than 3.4 million views and 21,000 comments. On February 22nd, 2012, Wyckoff released his most popular video titled “Team Fabulous 2,” featuring Team Fortress 2 characters battle each other on a Mario Kart race track (shown below, right). In the first three years, the video gained over 14 million views and 80,000 comments.



On February 21st, 2013, Wyckoff released the video “Ass’s Creed: Enter the Anus,” in which the Assassin’s Creed character Desmond Miles is terrorized by a Team Fortress 2 Medic (shown below, left). On November 13th, 2014, Wyckoff uploaded his last video, containing highlights from his livestream of the 2010 survival horror game Alan Wake (shown below, right).



Death

On January 25th, 2015, Wyckoff died due to complications from leukemia. The following day, FacePunch Forums[1] member SirDavid255 announced Wyckoff’s death in a thread which gathered upwards of 390 responses in two weeks. Also on January 26th, Redditor wickedplayer494 posted the news on the /r/tf2[2] subreddit, where it accumulated more than 4,000 votes (94% upvoted) and 1,000 comments, with many expressing their appreciation for Wyckoff’s work and sorrow for his passing. On February 4th, YouTuber DasBo Schitt uploaded a Wyckoff tribute video (shown below).



Notable Videos

Search Interest

External References

If a Dog Wore Pants

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About

If a Dog Wore Pants is an illustration of a dog wearing pants on all four legs juxtaposed with the same dog wearing pants on his hind quarters, asking viewers which style would be correct. The image was widely circulated across a variety of social media platforms in late December 2015.

Origin

On December 28th, 2015, the Utopian Raspberry – Modern Oasis Machine Facebook[1] page posted two illustrations of a dog wearing pants with the caption “If a dog wore pants would he wear them like this or like this?” (shown below). Within 48 hours, the post gained over 4,800 shares, 1,500 likes and 400 comments.



Spread

That evening, Jared Keller, deputy editor of the men’s interest publication Maxim, posted the image on Twitter.[6] In two days, the tweet garnered more than 35,900 likes and 31,000 retweets. That evening, Keller revealed that 81% of Twitter responses voted that the dog should wear the pants on two legs (shown below).[7]



The following day, Redditor boobsareforever reposted the image to the /r/funny[2] subreddit, where it received upwards of 5,300 votes (94% upvoted) and 1,800 comments in the first 24 hours. Also on December 29th, Redditor flooid submitted an edited version of the image titled “If a man wore pants,” featuring a human substituted for the dog in the illustration (shown below). In less 24 hours, the post gained over 4,000 votes (82% upvoted) and 900 comments on /r/funny.[8] In the coming days, several news sites published articles about the meme, including the Washington Post,[3] Business Insider[4] and the IBI Times.[5]



If Pants Wore Pants

On April 5th, 2017, Twitter user @bobby[9] revived the debate by asking “If pants wore pants, would they wear them like this, or like this?” His tweet, shown below, gained over 3,000 retweets.



His tweet generated dozens of responses as people argued over the proper way pants would wear pants. The tweets made Twitter Moments[10] and Mashable[11] that day.



Search Interest

External References

2014 Tumblr-4chan Raids

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Overview

2014 4chan-Tumblr Raids were a series of back-and-forth spamming and other hostile acts carried out by sites Tumblr and 4chan against each other in early July 2014.

Background

On June 9th, 2014, Tumblr blog shutdown4chan[1] posted a slide outlining a plan to carry out a raid on 4chan during the American Independence Day on the 4th of July. The post condemned the image board community as “racist, misogynistic and pure evil” and revealed that the goal of the mission was to shut down the site. It has been since rumored that the blog post might have been originally created by 4chan’s /pol/ board to trigger the war in the first place.



During the raid day, several posts attributed to the social justice blogosphere on Tumblr were made on 4chan’s boards, which accused the authors of their own prejudice and injustice. After that, users of 4chan retaliated by flooding a wide range of Tumblr tags related to feminism, social justice, and popular fandoms with gore and other unrelated shock images. Tumblr counter-acted by burying those posts with with their own posts of cute things, blocking the spammers, and advising other users to stay away from the tags until things clear up.


Notable Developments

Following the initial exchange, several petitions were created with the goal of shutting down 4chan[2][3]. In retaliation, 4chan users launched a counter-petition to label users of Tumblr as “mentally handicapped landwhales”[4].



On July 5th, the day after the raid, YouTuber InternetAristocrat uploaded a video featuring a sarcastic commentary of the events that transpired that day. In less than 24 hours, the video already gained 13,200 views and 1,645 thumbs up.




Notable Examples



External References


History of Japan

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About

“History of Japan” is a viral video created by Internet musician and video blogger Bill Wurtz in which he narrates an abridged summary of Japan’s history in irreverent and humorous manners, set to an animated infographic video made in the style of 80s-retro aesthetics. Because of Wurtz’ narration which shifts from toneless speaking to cheerful chanting, its memorable quotes, as well as the frequent psychedelic and colorful video effects, the video has been highly noted online.

Origin

The video was posted to YouTube on February 2, 2016. Prior to making it, Wurtz has made many short videos about odd themes, which he claimed were used to experiment and to practice montage.[1] The video gives an abridged explanation of Japan’s geographical, sociopolitical and cultural history from 40,000 BC to present day. In the following month, the video gained more than eight million views and over 180,000 likes, which has resulted in an increase of search interest for “history of Japan” and media coverage of his works.


Spread

Shortly after the release of the video, many Tumblr users started sharing GIFs of various graphics and quotes featured in the video as reaction images under the hashtag #history of japan.[2] One of the most notable instances in circulation is “How ’bout I do anyway?” (shown below, left), which is “said” in the video by Japan in response to the League of Nations urging them not to invade China in 1937.



Various Examples




Search Interest

External References

Miss Kobayashi's Dragon Maid

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About

Miss Kobayashi’s Dragon Maid (Japanese 小林さんちのメイドラゴン or Kobayashi-san Chi no Maid Dragon) is a manga series written and illustrated by Japanese author CoolKyoushinsha, and later adapted into an Anime series by Kyoto Animation. The story centers around the character Miss Kobayashi, an average office worker who finds herself living alongside a dragon from another world named Tohru who works as her house maid. The story follows their everyday adventures as Tohru learns how to live alongside humans and become a proper maid for Kobayashi.

History

The original manga was first published on Futabasha’s Monthly Action Magazine in May 25th, 2013. Seven Seas Entertainment licensed the series for North America with the first volume being published in October, 2016. A spin-off series titled Miss Kobayashi’s Dragon Maid: Kanna’s Everyday Life Began serialization on Monthly Action Magazine in December 24th, 2016.


The manga was adapted into an animated series by Kyoto Animation with the first episode premiering in Japan on January 11th, 2017. Funimation premiered the english dub version of the anime on their streaming service on February 1st, 2017[1]. The anime ran for a total of a 13 episodes with the finale airing on April 5th, 2017.



Fandom

On October 7th, 2016, a page for the anime series was created on TV Tropes.[3] On December 18th, the /r/DragonMaid[6] subreddit was launched for discussions about the series. On January 11th, 2017, YouTuber Dario99 uploaded an anime music video featuring scenes from Miss Kobayashi’s Dragon Maid accompanied by the song “Can’t Get Enough” by Blockheads (shown below).



On February 11th, Redditor KiwiSkis submitted several chat stickers based on the show to /r/anime, where they gathered upwards of 2,500 votes (98% upvoted) and 130 comments within five days. On Tumblr,[2] GIFs screen captures and animated GIFs from the anime are often posted under the keywords “kobayashi-san chi no maid dragon.”[2] On Facebook, a fan page dedicated to the series gathered over 10.000 likes and followers.[8]


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Fanart

Fanart featuring the series can be primarily found on the Japanese art sharing site pixiv where using the keyword “小林さんちのメイドラゴン” would yield more than 2.500 results.[7]


Reception

As of April 2017, the anime series has a score of 7.5/10 on IMDB[4] and a 8.27/10 on MyAnimeList.[5] The manga received a score of 7.91/10 on MyAnimeList.[11]

Related Memes

MILF Coded

MILF Coded is a fictional term given to describe the character Quetzalcoatl or Lucoa. The term was coined by Tumblr user excusemethatsnotcanon, who used it as part of their criticism of the series’s sexual themes,[9] and later picked up by fans to mock its nonexistent meaning.



Ravioli Ravioli Don’t Fuck the Dragon Loli

“Ravioli Ravioli Don’t Fuck the Dragon Loli” or “Ravioli Ravioli Don’t Lewd the Dragon Loli” is a catchphrase adopted by fans of the series that is used to mock sexualized depictions of the character Kanna Kamui due to being canonically underage. A variation of Ravioli Ravioli Give Me the Formuoli, the catchphrase was coined by Twitter user @Krxnos in a tweet that was posted on February 9th, 2017.[10]


Kanna Eating

Kanna Eating refers to a number of memorable scenes of the character Kanna Kamui eating various delicacies throughout the anime. These scenes became popular with fans, inspiring various edits and remixes.



Search Interest

External References

Alex Jones

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About

Alex Jones is an American talk show host of the syndicated radio program The Alex Jones Show and founder of conservative news website Infowars. Online, Jones has earned a reputation as a vocal libertarian and right-wing conspiracy theorist after accusing the United States government of secret involvement in historical events and human-made disasters.

History

In the 1990s, Jones hosted the talk show The Final Edition on the radio station KJFK in Austin, Texas. In 1996, Jones launched the libertarian political news site Infowars.com,[1] which often features articles about conspiracy theories and government corruption.[3] In the 2001 drama film Waking Life, Jones appears as a rotoscoped animation ranting about the corporate control of government while driving a car with a public address system attached to the hood (shown below).



On February 11th, 2008, the Alex Jones YouTube[4] channel was launched, which gathered upwards of 557 million views and 1.1 million subscribers in the next eight years. On September 10th, 2009, the channel posted a video message from Charlie Sheen directed toward United States President Barack Obama regarding questions about the official account of the September 11th, 2001 attacks (shown below). In the next six years, the video gained over 3.9 million views and 60,300 comments.



On May 9th, 2013, the YouTube channel uploaded footage of a 12-year-old boy confronting a police officer for parking illegally on a sidewalk (shown below). Within three years, the video received upwards of 8.1 million views and 15,500 comments.



Social Media Presence

As of April 2017, Jones has over 1.5 million Facebook[5] likes and 607,000 followers on Twitter.[3]

2017 Child Custody Hearing

In Jones’ April 2017 child-custody trial, Jones’ attorney Randall Wilhite argued that the court should not to consider Jones’ public persona when evaluating his fitness as a parent of his three children with ex-wife Kelly. “He’s playing a character,” said Wihite. “He is a performance artist.”[6]

Jones’ ex-wife, however, claimed that he was not a stable person, citing violent comments he’s made toward various public figures. “He says he wants to break Alec Baldwin’s neck,” she said. “He wants J-Lo to get raped.”

“I’m concerned that he is engaged in felonious behavior, threatening a member of Congress,” she said, referring to comments about Democratic Representative Adam Schiff. “He broadcasts from home. The children are there, watching him broadcast.”[7]

Stephen Colbert spoofed Jones’ “performance artist” defense on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert.



On April 18th, Twitter user @JTiloveTX[8][9] tweeted “Newman says that in deposition, Alex Jones said he couldn’t recall basic facts about kids, because, ‘I had a big bowl of chili for lunch.’” Within the first 12 hours the tweet received more than 1,500 retweets and 2,900 likes.



Reputation

Jones has gained a reputation for promoting a variety of conspiracy theories, many of which have been criticized for being based on flimsy or anecdotal evidence. He has accused the United States government of being involved in the Oklahoma City bombing, the September 11th attacks and for staging NASA’s Apollo program moon landings. Additionally, Jones made several hotly-debated statements against gun control in the aftermath of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting (shown below).



Search Interest

External References

Yuri!!! on Ice

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About

Yuri!!! on Ice is a Japanese sports anime series about figure skating.[1] It follows the life of Japanese figure skater Yuri Katsuki who draws the attention of his idol, Russian figure skater Victor Nikiforov, after a secretly-recorded video of Katsuki doing one of Nikiforov’s routines is posted to the internet. Nikiforov decides to coach Katsuki as Katsuki takes on his rival, Yuri Plisetsky. The series is notable for its queer subtext in the homosexual undertones in the relationship between Nikiforov and Katsuki. The series is produced by MAPPA and directed by Sayo Yamomoto. It simulcasts on Crunchyroll as it airs in Japan.

History

The first trailer for Yuri!!! on Ice, shown below, appeared on Youtube on March 26th, 2016. The first episode of Yuri!!! on Ice aired October 5th, 2016. Currently, the show is in its first season. As of November 21st, 2016, seven episodes have been broadcast.



Online Presence

Yuri!!! on Ice quickly became popular in the anime community. On Twitter, @yurionice_pr[2] has over 174,000 followers. Two devoted Facebook fan accounts, “Yuri On Ice Anime”[3] and “Yuri On Ice Fans”[4] have over 74,000 and 24,000 likes, respectively.

Reception

Yuri!!! on Ice is extremely well reviewed. It currently has a rating of 4.9/5 on Crunchyroll,[5] where fans praise its accuracy with regard to competitive figure skating. This is due to the fact the show’s ice-skating routines are choreographed by retired ice dancer Kenji Miyamoto. Kotaku[6] credited the show’s popularity to the tender male relationship between the Nikiforov and Katsuki.

Search Interest

External References

Adolf Hitler

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Editor’s Note: Please do not use the comments section to debate about WWII and/or the Holocaust.




About

Adolf Hitler was an Austrian-born German politician who served as the leader of the National Socialist German Workers Party (Nazi Party) and the dictator of Nazi Germany from 1934 to 1945. Mainly known for his central involvement in several acts of atrocities against humanity, including Nazism, World War II and the Holocaust, Hitler is often regarded as one of the most universally despicable public figures in the history of mankind. Online, Hitler has been a popular subject of satires and parodies due to the historical notoriety and taboos surrounding his name.

Online History

Since the early days of the Internet, Adolf Hitler has been a regular subject of online discussions and jokes. In 1990, Mike Godwin introduced the “Godwin’s Law”[1] which he coined as a “natural law of Usenet.” During the first half of the 2000s, Hitler was a subject of several YTMND parodies with the earliest instance submitted in 2006[2]. Later that same year, the release of the 2004 German war epic film Downfall, which recounts the last ten days of Hitler’s life and eventual suicide in his Berlin underground bunker, gave birth to Hitler Reaction Videos, one of the most well-known Hitler-themed internet memes to date.

Online Presence

Satires of Adolf Hitler exists in many different forms across a wide range of Internet humor sites and communities, most notably on 4chan, Tumblr, Reddit, among others.

Reputation

Given his exceptionally unfavorable reputation and public image, various aspects of Hitler’s personal life have been subject to countless posthumous myths, speculations and rumors, including his medical conditions, religious beliefs, sexual identity and ethnic heritage.

Genital Deformities

On December 18th, 2015, German historian and university professor Peter Fleischmann released a report asserting that Hitler indeed had only one testicle, a decades-old rumor which had been partly inspired by the lyrics of a World War II-era British playground song, based on the analysis of his medical examination records from November 12th, 1923, shortly after Hitler was arrested for his unsuccessful coup attempt in the Munich Beer Hall Putsch. According to the document as logged by the Landsberg prison doctor Josef Steiner Brin, Hitler was deemed to be “healthy and strong” aside from his “right-side cryptorchidism.” On February 22nd, 2016, The Telegraph ran an article titled “Hitler ‘had tiny deformed penis’ as well as just one testicle,” which underscored another claim based on medical records that Hitler had suffered from a rare condition known as hypospadias, which left him with an abnormally small penis, as asserted by German historians Jonathan Mayo and Emma Craigie in their 2015 book Hitler’s Last Day: Minute by Minute. In the following days, the story about “Hitler’s micropenis” was picked up by dozens of news sites and online publications in many different languages.

Related Memes

Godwin’s Law

Godwin’s Law is an internet adage that is derived from one of the earliest bits of Usenet wisdoms, which goes “if you mention Adolf Hitler or Nazis within a discussion thread, you’ve automatically ended whatever discussion you were taking part in.”



“When You Ride Alone, You Ride With Hitler”

When You Ride Alone, You Ride with Hitler is an anti-Nazi propaganda poster created and widely distributed by the United States government during the World War II to encourage carpooling among American citizens to conserve gasoline for the war (shown below, far left). Due to its relevance to the Godwin’s Law, the image has inspired various propaganda parodies online.



Downfall Hitler Rant Parodies

Downfall also known as “Hitler Finds Out…” or “Hitler Reacts To…” is a series of parody-subtitled videos based on a pinnacle scene from Der Untergang (2004), a German WWII drama revisiting the last ten days of Adolf Hitler’s life and eventual suicide in his Berlin underground bunker. Due to the film’s international success and Bruno Ganz’ portrayal of the Nazi dictator, numerous segments from the movie soon fell fodder to parodies on YouTube, spawning hundreds of anachronistically subtitled videos of Hitler getting upset over topical events and trivial gossip.



Hipster Hitler

Hipster Hitler (also known as “Adolf Hipster”) is a series of comics and image macros of a Hipster version of Adolf Hitler. The images typically dress the former German dictator in skinny jeans and hipster glasses with a side-swept hairstyle.



Hitler House

Hitler House is the nickname given to a two-story townhouse in Swansea, Wales that is said to resemble the face of Hitler. The photograph of the house facade was taken by a 22-year-old British youth worker and posted via Twitter, which has been since viewed hundreds of thousands of times.



Kitler

“Kitler” is a nickname used to describe white cats with black markings under their noses that resemble Adolf Hitler’s toothbrush mustache. Cats with these coats were popularized in June 2006 by the single topic site Cats that Look Like Hitler.



Ignore Hitler

Ignore Hitler refers to a series of user-submitted artworks on the mobile gaming app Draw Something that incorporate caricatures of Adolf Hitler regardless of its contextual relevance. The images gained significant attention after its creator launched a single topic blog in April 2012.



“Hitler Did Nothing Wrong”

Hitler Did Nothing Wrong is an incendiary statement used for trolling purposes to deny that the acts Adolf Hitler was responsible for during his reign were morally wrong. Over time the phrase become widely used as a snowclone “X did nothing wrong”.



“Literally Hitler”

“Literally Hitler” is a hyperbolic expression that can be used to denounce an individual or group as being worse than Hitler. On the social networking site Reddit, the phrase is also used to mock circle jerk discussions that ultimately manifest into examples of Godwin’s Law.



Kung Fury

Kung Fury is a 2015 martial arts comedy short film about the adventures of a 1980s Miami renegade cop who seeks to revenge his friend’s death by traveling back in time to assassinate Adolf Hitler, the dictator of Nazi Germany and martial arts master known as “Kung Führer.” Written, directed by, and starring David Sandberg, the film instantly went viral upon its YouTube debut.



Would You Kill Baby Hitler?

Would You Kill Baby Hitler? is a thought experiment which ponders the ethics of traveling back in time to kill Adolf Hitler as an infant in order to prevent the holocaust.



Search Interest

External References

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