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Banana For Scale

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About

“Banana for Scale” is an expression indicating that a banana has been placed in the frame of a photograph to reveal the true-to-life size of another object on display in relative scale.

Origin

On March 30th, 2005, a photo of a banana placed against a TV set was posted on the blog Rockdogdesigns[7] with a description explaining the TV was for sale:

“I don’t know how big the screen is, we’re moving and I can’t find the tape measurer. But I do have a banana. For scale. Oh wait, my husband says it’s 19inches. Oh well, I’ll leave the banana for interest. Please be interested.




Spread

On August 30th, 2010, blogger Andy Herald posted a photograph of a safe to Facebook with a banana laying next to it for scale (shown below), to which several of his friends commented with jokes about the fruit.[1]



On August 24th, 2012, Herald published an infographic for using a banana as a unit of measurement (shown below) to the parenting humor blog HowToBeADad.[1]



On June 11th, 2013, Imgur[2] user KingOPancakes submitted a photo album titled “How to win a bet when you lose a bet,” which contained photographs of a complicated prank lock box containing a $15 Dunkin Donuts card. In two of the photographs, a banana is shown for scale (shown below).



On November 13th, Imgur user TwoBiteBrownie posted an image gallery containing several photographs of a hidden staircase discovered behind a bookshelf (shown below). In one of the photographs, several objects and candy wrappers are shown next to a banana peel, which he explains was put there “for scale” (shown below).



On November 26th, Reddit r0bbE submitted a photograph of a large banana placed next to a keyboard and a smaller banana “for scale” (shown below, left) to the /r/pics[3 subreddit. In the first 21 days, the post gained over 11,300 up votes and 530 comments. The subreddit /r/BananasForScale[6] was created on November 29th. As of April 2014, the subreddit has over 400 redditors. On December 8th, Reddit ASharkToof submitted a photograph of himself with actor Tom Hanks looking perplexed at a large banana being held “for scale” (shown below, right) to the /r/pics[4] subreddit. Within nine days, the post garnered upwards of 25,700 up votes and 490 comments. On December 17th, 2013, the Internet news blog The Daily Dot[5] published an article about the spread of the banana photo fad on the web.



Guitar for Temperature

On January 15th, 2013, Redditor ExtraAnchovies submitted a photograph of his frozen pool in Phoenix, Arizona with an acoustic guitar resting on the ice to the /r/pics[20] subreddit. On the Imgur[19] page for the photograph, user Moonkey replied with the comment “Banana for scale, guitar for temperature. Got it,” which became the post’s highest-voted comment. On April 20th, Imgur user Beltoraze reposted the frozen pool image with the title “Guitar for Temperature.” On March 8th, Imgur[21] user DagnyWasHere submitted a post titled “Ever wondered about the origin of Imgur inside jokes?”, which listed the frozen pool picture as the origin of the “guitar for scale” joke.



Search Interest

External References


Kim Kardashian's Paper Magazine Cover

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About

Kim Kardashian’s Paper Magazine Cover refers to a photograph of the American reality TV star posing naked for the 2014 winter issue of New York-based indie fashion magazine Paper. Upon its publication, Kardashian’s racy cover photo instantly became a trending topic and prompted a slew of photoshopped parodies on Twitter, Instagram and elsewhere online.

Origin

On November 11th, 2014, Paper Magazine’s Twitter account shared a link to a brief article showcasing two studio photographs of Kim Kardashian, the 34-year-old TV personality and wife of Kanye West, for the cover image of its latest issue, both captioned with the subtitle “Break the Internet / Kim Kardashian” (shown below). In less than 24 hours, the tweet racked up more than 3,200 retweets and 2,500 favorites.



Within the hour, Kim Kardashian also shared one of the cover photos via Instagram, in which she is shown popping a bottle of champagne, with its geyser drawing a perfect arc over her head and being poured into a glass positioned on her buttocks (shown below). Kardashian’s Instagram photo garnered more than 462,000 likes and nearly 15,000 comments.



The cover photographs were commissioned by renowned French graphic designer and photographer Jean-Paul Goude, who sought to recreate his iconic portrait photograph Carolina Beaumont, New York, 1976 originally featured in his 1982 book Jungle Fever (shown below).

Spread

Kanye West’s Response

Later that evening, Kardashian’s husband and celebrity rapper Kanye West retweeted the cover photo in approval using the hashtag #ALLDAY (shown below). In just over 20 hours, West’s tweet accumulated over 60,000 retweets and 68,000 favorites.



Online Reaction

On November 12th, discussions about Kardashian’s racy magazine cover photo flooded Twitter and other social media outlets, soon giving rise to the trending hashtags #BreakTheInternet and #ThingsThatLookLikeKimKardashiansBum, which were mentioned over 42,000 times and 2,500 times, respectively, within the 24-hour period. Meanwhile, dozens of photoshopped parodies based on the cover photograph began to surface on Twitter, Instagram, Reddit and Tumblr.

News Media Coverage

Shortly after Paper Magazine’s unveiling of the cover photo, the story was picked up by virtually all celebrity gossip and entertainment news sites, including Gawker[3], BuzzFeed,[11] Perez Hilton[2], E! Online[5], Daily Mail[4], TMZ[6], MTV[8] and Vanity Fair[7], as well as a number of major U.S. news outlets like TIME Magazine[9][11], The Washington Post[10] and CNN.[13]

Notable Examples




Search Interest



External References

ME!ME!ME!

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About

“ME!ME!ME!” is a 2014 electronic pop song created by Japanese DJ and producer Teddyloid that quickly gained cult status among anime fans for its catchy tunes and the enigmatic premise of its music video, which prominently features suggestive themes and an abundance of attractive-looking female characters.

Origin

On November 17th, 2014, a preview of the animated music video for Teddyloid’s “ME!ME!ME!”[1] was released on the official website of Japan Animator Expo[2], a weekly web series launched and curated in collaboration between the Neon Genesis Evangelion creator Hideaki Anno’s Studio Khara and the Japanese media company Dwango in late October 2014 as an outlet to showcase various works by up-and-coming artists, followed by the release of the full-length music video on November 21st. According to the official description, the music video illustrates the story of a young man being “attacked and ravished by many girls.”



[NSFW: This Music Video Contains Mature Content]

The track was originally composed by Japanese electronic musician Teddyloid with lyrics provided by Daoko; the animated music video for the song was produced as a joint effort between character designer Shuichi Iseki and executive director Hibiki Yoshizaki.

Spread

Following its release, the music video was instantly met with high acclaims from the viewers and critics alike, many of whom cited its high quality animation and catchy-sounding composition, as well as its suggestive themes intended for mature audience and the enigmatic premise of the music video, especially surrounding the role of female protagonist Mimi.



Throughout the week, the music video for “ME!ME!ME” was reported on by several English-language anime news sites and other forums, including AnimeNewsNetwork[3][4] and NeoGAF.[5] It also soon reached 4chan’s /a/ (anime) board, where numerous discussions[6][7] took place at length, with many threads eventually reaching the limit of 500 posts per thread.[8][9][10] In addition, dozens of character fan art inspired by the music video began to emerge on illustrator communities on the Japanese web and overseas, such as pixiv[11], Tumblr[12] and DeviantART,[13] as well as several booru-style imageboards like Danbooru[14] and Gelbooru.[15]

Notable Examples



Search Interest


External References

[1]Japan Animator Expo – ME!ME!ME! / 11-21-2014 [NSFW: Explicit Content]

[2]Japan Animator Expo – News

[3]AnimeNewsNetwork – Khara’s Japan Animator Expo Posts TeddyLoid Music Video / 11-20-2014

[4]AnimeNewsNetwork – 3rd Animator Expo Short is “ME!ME!ME!” TeddyLoid Music Video / Posted on 11-18-2014

[5]NeoGaf – Short anime video by Studio Khara / Posted on 11-22-2014

[6]Archive.moe – Is ME!ME!ME! the On Your Mark of our times? / Posted on 11-23-2014

[7]Archive.moe – Has Anno saved anime yet? / Posted on 11-23-2014

[8]Archive.moe – I feel like we need more threads about this masterpiece / Posted on 11-21-2014

[9]Archive.moe – Lets have another lengthy thread about this masterpiece shall we? / Posted on 11-21-2014

[10]Archive.moe – Lets talk about the masterpiece that is this short / Posted on 11-22-2014

[11]pixiv – Search results for the tag ME!ME!ME!

[12]Tumblr – Search results for the tag me!me!me!

[13]DeviantART – Search results for the tag mememe

[14]Danbooru – Search results for the tag me!me!me![NSFW: Explicit Content]

[15]Gelbooru – Search results for the tag me!me!me![NSFW: Explicit Content]

Amanda Todd's Death

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Overview

Amanda Todd was a Canadian teenager who was reported dead in October of 2012. Like other teen suicides, including Amanda Cummings and Mitchell Henderson, her death became the subject of many conversations online about the issue of cyberbullying.

Background

On September 7th, 2012, the 15-year-old Amanda Todd uploaded a video to YouTube titled “My story: Struggling, bullying, suicide, self harm,” in which she recounted her experiences of being bullied by current and former classmates using a series of handwritten notes on index cards in similar vein to Jonah Mowry’s “What’s Going On…” video (shown below). As of October 15th, 2012, the video has accumulated over 3.3 million views and 63,500 comments.



In the video, Todd revealed that one year after she flashed her breasts to a man during a BlogTV web video chat, she received a message on Facebook threatening to send screen captures to everyone she knew. During Christmas break that year, the police showed up at her house explaining that the pictures had been sent to many people she knew. After she began to suffer from severe anxiety, depression and panic disorders, she was forced to move to a new town. After moving schools, the pictures were shared with her new friends and classmates on Facebook. She then began cutting herself and had to move to another school. After being attacked by the girlfriend of a boy she was intimate with, she attempted to commit suicide by drinking bleach and recovered after having her stomach pumped at the hospital. After moving to another new school, former classmates continued to harass her on various social media outlets by urging her to kill herself and posting pictures of her drinking bleach. On October 10th, Todd was found dead at her home in Port Coquitlam, British Columbia, Canada after hanging herself.

Notable Developments

News Media Coverage

The day after Todd hung herself, the Canadian news channel CTV[2] confirmed that her death was caused by suicide. The same day, Gawker published an article titled “Bullied Canadian Teen Commits Suicide After Posting Last-Ditch Cry for Help on YouTube”[4] and The Huffington Post[6] published a post titled “Amanda Todd: Bullied Canadian Teen Commits Suicide After Prolonged Battle Online and in School.” On October 12th, the women’s interest blog Jezebel[5] published an article titled “Will This 15-Year-Old Suicide Victim’s PSA Actually Convince Bullies to Knock it Off?,” which criticized anti-bullying initiatives in public schools as being ineffective and suggested broadcasting Todd’s YouTube video instead. On October 15th, the Internet news site The Daily Dot[16] published an article titled “BlogTV and the Sad Avoidable Path to Amanda Todd’s Suicide,” reporting that teen blackmail was a common practice by criminals known as “cappers” on video sites like BlogTV.

Online Reaction

Following the reports of Todd’s death on October 11th, the total volume of tweets containing the hashtags “#RIPAmanda” and “#RIPAmandaTodd” began increasing significantly, according to the Twitter analytics site Topsy (shown below).



On October 11th, Redditor TheSmoove submitted Todd’s YouTube video to the /r/videos[9] subreddit. On October 14th, Redditor Batman5991 submitted a post to the /r/toosoon[8] subreddit titled “Hypocrite Amanda Todd Worshippers", comparing the likes count of Facebook memorial pages for Amanda Todd (452K) and Shanie Gray, a teenager from Texas who was fatally shot in September after being lured by a man posing as a teen on Facebook. Within 24 hours, the post received over 3,400 up votes and 300 comments. Several memorial pages have been created on Facebook, including two “R.I.P. Amanda Todd”[1][11] pages that have accumulated a combined total of over 910,000 likes as of October 15th, 2012.

Canadian Government Responds

On October 15th, 2012, the Vancouver Sun[7] reported that New Democrat Member of Parliament (MP) Dany Morin, representing the riding of Chicoutimi--Le Fjord, Quebec, called for a national effort to fight cyberbulling and the creation of a House of Commons committee to come up with ways to address the problem.

Blackmailer Identity

On October 14th, the Internet news blog Motley News[12] published a post titled “Anonymous Exposes Amanda Todd’s Extortionist | Name: Kody Maxson,” which claimed that Todd’s blackmailer had purportedly been identified by 4chan users. The post linked to a Pastebin[13] page containing Maxon’s personal information, screenshots and several links connecting the username kody1206 to various jailbailt-related websites. On the following day, the arts and culture blog Vice[14] reported on the Pastebin expose in an article titled “A Jailbait Loving Perv Destroyed Amanda Todd’s Life,” which went on to reveal that Anonymous hacked teenager Alex Ramos’ Twitter[15] account after rumors spread that he was responsible for distributing photographs of Todd’s naked body during an autopsy.



By October 17th, Maxson had stated in an interview that he was a friend of Amanda and identified another man who goes by the name “Viper” as the culprit. Meanwhile, Maxson’s lawyer issued a statement revealing that the Royal Canadian Mounted Police cleared his name as a person of no interest regarding Amanda Todd’s death.



However, nearly a month later on November 10th, previously unknown evidence that allegedly connects Maxson to Amanda Todd’s death was published in an episode of The Daily Capper, a web series that covers the exploits and scandals that take place within the sketchy webcam chat community. According to HyperVocal’s summary of the episode, The Daily Capper questioned Maxson’s finger-pointing at “Viper” as the stalker by providing screen shots of chat logs in which the said individual apparently rejects participating in blackmailing, as well as friendly chat conversations between Maxson and “Viper.”



“Viper and Kody worked alongside each other in groups, they trawled rooms together and even shared videos with each other. They continued working with each other till mid-2011. Kody was directly involved with Amanda in December, while he and Viper were still friends who shared videos with each other. Even if what Kody said were true, that would mean he knew Viper was blackmailing her the whole time and he did nothing to stop him because they shared videos with each other for long after. If Viper is the culprit, Kody was likely still involved and assisting him. That’s assuming what Kody says is true.”

Search Interest

External References

"It's Gonna Be May"

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About

“It’s Gonna Be May” refers to a mondegreen featured in the 2000 pop hit single “It’s Gonna Be Me” performed by American boy band NSYNC. Since 2012, various image macros and animated GIFs of the band’s former lead vocalist Justin Timberlake mouthing the lyric with the misheard caption have been circulating on the web, particularly during the last week of April and days leading up to May every year.

Origin

“It’s Gonna Be Me” was released on June 13th, 2000 as the second single from ’NSync’s sophomore album No Strings Attached. The music video was first uploaded to the official NSYNCVEVO YouTube Channel[1] on October 24th, 2009. As of April 2014, the video has gained over 20.3 million views.



On January 29th, 2012, Tumblr user amyricha[5] posted a picture of ‘N Sync band member Justin Timberlake with the caption "It’s gonna be May," which pokes fun at the fact when Timberlake sings “Me,” in the song it sounds like “May.”



Spread

On March 16th, 2012, BuzzFeed[3] posted a picture of a calendar turned to April with a picture Timberlake with the caption “It’s gonna be May,” taped to the final day. The picture was taken from the since deleted Tumblr blog Seapeas.[4]



On April 29th, 2012, YouTuber Aaron Ochoco[2] uploaded a video which featured a clip from “It’s Gonna Be Me,” of Timberlake singing the title. The video was titled “It’s Gonna Be May.”



On April 26th, 2013, YouTubers PassionateFriendTime[5] uploaded a video titled “It’s Gonna Be May,” which parodies the ’N Sync song and focuses on the coming month of May. As of April 2014, the video has gained over 14,000 views.



Notable Examples



Related Memes

April 25th

In the 2000 comedy film Miss Congeniality , a contestant is asked what her perfect date would be, and she replies, “April 25th.” GIF sets featuring this exchange are often reblogged on Tumblr on this date every year.



May 4th

“May the Force Be With You” is a quote from the 1977 science fiction film Star Wars: Episode IV – A New Hope. Within the world of Star Wars, as well as among fans of the franchise, it is used as an expression of good luck. Fourth of May was chosen as the Star Wars day by the fans as a clever wordplay on this expression.



October 3rd

In the 2004 teen comedy film Mean Girls the protagonist Cady (Lindsay Lohan) is asked what day it is, and she reply, “It’s October 3rd.” GIF sets featuring this exchange are often reblogged on Tumblr on this date every year.



Search Interest



External References

*Tips Fedora*

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About

“Tips Fedora” is an online expression used in mocking response to a statement of opinion thought to be held by a young adult male who probably wears fedora as a fashion accessory. The phrase refers to the gesture of tipping one’s hat as an expression of recognition or acknowledgement between two persons.

Origin

On April 4th, 2012, the phrase was used in the /v/ (Video Games) board on 4chan[1] in a thread regarding white knight behavior.

Spread

In February and March 2013, the phrase spread to the /a/ (Anime and Manga)[6], /v/ (Video games) [7], /sp/ (Sports)[8] and /tv/ (Television and Film)[9] boards on 4chan. On September 15th, 2013, Tumblr user Nyehs made a post[4] under the tag “tips fedora” about being friend zoned by a “succubus.” On October 13th, YouTuber archivemind uploaded a Source Filmmaker video in which the Heavy from the online first-person shooter game Team Fortress 2 tips a fedora (shown below, left). On October 20th, YouTuber The Cheesy Banana uploaded a video in which he performs a fedora tip (shown below, right).



On November 12th, Redditor radarmaxx submitted a photograph of a man tipping a fedora to the /r/cringepics[10] subreddit (shown below), where it recieved over 1,800 up votes and 120 comments in the first two months. On December 23rd, the FedoraCoin[2]altcoin was launched, which are referred to as “TIPS.”



Notable Examples

Many reaction faces had been made with the caption “tips fedora”, many of which feature a person tipping a fedora or other brimmed hat.



Jerry Messing’s Fedora Photo

One of the most well-known “fedora tipping” reaction images is based on a headshot of Jerry Messing, an American actor best known for portraying Pugsley Addams in the 1998 comedy film Addams Family Reunion, originally uploaded to his Facebook profile on May 1st, 2011 (shown below).




The earliest known association between Messing’s studio portrait and fedora-tipping was made on October 31st, 2013, when Redditor I Have2BrokenArms_AMA submitted the photo to the /r/circlejerk[12] subreddit, gaining over 580 upvotes and 20 comments prior to being archived. On January 31st, 2014, the photo was reposted to the /r/pics[11] subreddit, gathering more than 14,700 upvotes and 590 comments in three months. Since rising to prominence as the posterchild of neckbeards on Reddit, the model has been identified by as a Disney Channel child actor on more than one occasions[15] and his photograph has been modified into a variety of animated GIFs and image macros accentuating the tipping gesture (shown below).




Search Interest

External References

Brent Rambo

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About

Brent Rambo is a child model featured in a promotional video for Apple’s desktop products in the early 1990s. On Reddit, the animated GIF of Rambo giving a thumbs up gesture in the video has been paired with humorous and suggestive clips as a seal of approval, in similar vein to the use of Approval Guy on 4chan.

Origin

In the early 1990s, Apple Inc. released a promotional video for their Macintosh and Apple II products. In the video, a young boy identified as Brent Rambo is shown nodding at a computer monitor while narrating a letter to Apple CEO John Sculley[8] (shown below).



Brent Rambo: “Dear Mr. Scully,
Mac rules the world.
Your Mac friend,
Brent Rambo”

On March 25th, 2013, Redditor ToadLicker93 submitted a post titled “Have an upvote!” to the /r/funny[7] subreddit, which featured an animated GIF of Brent Rambo nodding approvingly from the Apple promo video (shown below). Within the next two months, the post garnered upwards of 13,000 up votes and 130 comments.



Spread

On March 28th, 2013, Redditor DapperJules submitted the same GIF in a post titled “MRW I see boobs on the front page” to the /r/reactiongifs[3] subreddit, receiving over 3,400 up votes and 35 comments within the first month. On April 3rd, IGN Forums[4] member bibabo posted a thread asking for the origin of the GIF. On May 1st, Redditor HotelWomb submitted a GIF of Rambo watching a video of a woman eating cereal out of a bathtub filled with milk (shown below) to the /r/gifs subreddit.[2] Within 24 hours, the post gained more than 11,900 up votes and 430 comments.



The same day, the /r/BrentRamboApproves[1] subreddit was created, featuring various edited versions of the GIF with added scenes from other videos. In the same time frame, the subreddit received over 670 subscribers. Also on May 1st, the Internet humor blog PandaWhale[5] posted about the animated GIF series, which outlined its spread on Reddit and linked to a Facebook[6] page of man named Brent Rambo.

Notable Examples



Identity Revealed

On July 12th, 2013, Redditor VenusBlue submitted a link to an episode of Command Center, a TwitchTV web series that focuses on the the massively multiplayer online first person shooter game Planetside 2, to /r/BrentRamboApproves in a post titled “Brent Rambo works for [Sony Online Entertainment], and on Planetside 2. Here he is on the ‘cribs’ portion of this week’s episode of Command Center.”[9] At about 22-minute mark in the episode, Rambo can be seen recreating his signature thumb-up gesture (shown below).



That same day, Redditor dong_lover submitted a GIF[10] pairing the younger Rambo’s gesture with the grown-up version to /r/BrentRamboApproves. On July 13th, Brent Rambo (TheRealBR)[11] responded in the comments section of the post, confirming that he works as a developer for Sony Online Entertainment and still remains an avid user of Mac computers and devices.



Search Interest



External References

Still a Better Love Story than Twilight

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About

Still a Better Love Story than Twilight is a comment usually found on forums or as captions on image macros to critique pairings or people, objects or animals, saying that the connection between them, romantic or not, is a better love story than the relationships portrayed in the fantasy novel and film series Twilight.

Origin

The love story as presented in Twilight between a young girl named Bella and a vampire named Edward has been compared to other well-known novel and film love stories as early as November 2009, with a poll on SodaHead[1] asking readers to choose the best love story among Twilight, Nicholas Sparks’ The Notebook and William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet. In 2010, a BodyBuilding forums thread[2] compared the love stories in Harry Potter, specifically Severus Snape’s unrequited love for Lily Potter, to those in Twilight. This was reemphasized in July 2011 when the Facebook group “JK Rowling Told a Better Love Story In 1 Chapter Than Meyer Did In 4 Books”[3] was created. Additionally in 2010, there was a trend in YouTube comments on music videos calling things Better than Bieber, no matter what the quality of the song was.

Spread

The earliest use of the phrase in describing the relationship between two inanimate objects can be traced to a Reddit[8] image post submitted on December 2nd, 2011, showing a plug about to be inserted into a socket.



Two days later, on December 4th, 2011, the comment was posted on a fan video of Discord from My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic shared on My Little Brony.[9] The following month, the Facebook fan page “Still a better love story than Twilight”[10] was created, which has accrued 1134 likes as of July 2012. The phrase began appearing in comments on FunnyJunk[11] that March.

The subreddit “Better Than Twilight”[4] was created on December 25th, 2011, but it only managed to gather 234 subscribers as of July 2012, however there are more than 600 unique posts with the phrase throughout all of Reddit.[5] On YouTube, the phrase is often found in the comments of movie trailers or short film clips that viewers find anticlimatic or uninteresting. On Tumblr, additional instances are posted with the tags “still a better love story than Twilight”[6] and “better love story.”[7] There are more than 200 instances of images containing the phrase “better love story than” on humor site 9gag.[12] Collections of images with the phrase have appeared on Fanpop[13] and Pop Hangover.[14]

Notable Examples




Search Interest



External References


Katy t3h PeNgU1N oF d00m

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About

Katy t3h PeNgU1N oF d00m (Katy the Penguin of Doom) is a copypasta story told from the perspective of a 13-year-old girl who claims to visit 4chan’s /b/ (random) board because she is “very random.” Written in a jumble of l33tspeak and SMS shorthands, the story is meant to mock the attention-seeking style of humor that is often characterized as “so random” by adolescent Internet users.

Origin

The earliest known instance of the copypasta appeared on October 12th, 2006 in the /a/ (anime) discussion board of 4chan[2] in a thread discussing reasons why the anime series Naruto“sucks.” In the thread, the poster identified herself as a “random” 13-year-old girl named Katy and demanded to be referred to as “t3h PeNgU1N oF d00m.”

hi every1 im new!!!!!!! holds up spork my name is katy but u can call me t3h PeNgU1N oF d00m!!!!!!!! lol…as u can see im very random!!!! thats why i came here, 2 meet random ppl like me _… im 13 years old (im mature 4 my age tho!!) i like 2 watch invader zim w/ my girlfreind (im bi if u dont like it deal w/it) its our favorite tv show!!! bcuz its SOOOO random!!!! shes random 2 of course but i want 2 meet more random ppl =) like they say the more the merrier!!!! lol…neways i hope 2 make alot of freinds here so give me lots of commentses!!!!
DOOOOOMMMM!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! <--- me bein random again _^ hehe…toodles!!!!!

love and waffles,

t3h PeNgU1N oF d00m

Spread

On January 3rd, 2007, a user profile for “t3h PeNgU1N 0F d00m” was created on the anime-themed social networking site Gaia Online.[6] On December 1st, an entry for “Penguin of Doom” was created on the Shii Wiki,[1] which credited 4chan as the site of origin for the meme. On March 30th, 2008, Katy’s copypasta was submitted to the Island Troll Tribes Forums[3] by member PenguinOfDooom, receiving over 80 responds within the next week. On July 21st, 2009, Facepunch Forums[4] member jjsullivan submitted a post asking readers to share “the most random thing you’ve ever seen/heard on the Internet,” to which member shill responded with the copypasta.

On January 1st, 2011, League of Legends Forum[5] member Havy_whopons_gai posted the copypasta in a thread about the “Yordle Snap Trap” character attack in the online strategy game League of Legends. Later that same year on December 2nd, YouTuber dukerecordings uploaded a dramatic recital of the copypasta story (shown below, left) performed by a colleague only identified as “dynd.” On February 2nd, 2012, YouTuber Ender Man uploaded a dramatic reading of the copypasta, accompanied by a picture of character Gir from the animated television series Invader Zim (shown below, right).



Notable Variations

The Older Sister

Greetings, everyone. I am new. (One second – let me get this spork out of the
way.) My name is Katy, but you can call me the Penguin of Doom. (I’m laughing
aloud.) As you can plainly see, my actions have no pattern whatsoever. That is
why I have come here. To meet similarly patternless individuals, such as myself.

I am 13 – mature for my age, however! – and I enjoy watching Invader Zim
with my girlfriend. (I am bisexual. Please approach this subject maturely.)
It is our favorite television show, as it adequately displays stochastic
manners of behavior such as we possess.

She behaves without order – of course – but I wish to meet more individuals
of her and my kind. As the saying goes, “the more, the merrier.”

Ah, it is to laugh. Anyway, I hope to make many friends here, so please
comment freely.

Doom!

That is simply one of many examples of my random actions. Ha, ha. Fare
thee well. I wish you much love and waffles.

Yours,

The Penguin of Doom.

The Younger Brother

hi every1 im new!!!!! charges mah lazr my name is ted but u can call me Anonymous!!!!!!!! lol…as u can see im very random!!! thats why i came here, 2 meet random ppl like me _… im 22 years old (i still live w/ my mom tho!!) i like 2 look at mudkip threads with my boyfreind (im bi if u dont like it gtfo) its our favorite kindof thred!!!! bcuz their SOOOO random!!!! hes random 2 of course but i want 2 meet more random ppl =) like they say the more the merrier!!!! lol…neways i hope 2 make alot of friends here so give me lots of replieses! DESUDESUDESUDESUDESU!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! <--- me bein random again _ hehe…toodles!!!!!

traps and cp,

Anonymous

Space Marine

GREETINGSBATTLEBROTHERS I AM NEW. HOLDS UP BOLTER MY NAME IS SERGEANTARGUSBUTYOUCANCALL ME BATTLEBROTHER. AS YOUCANSEE I AM VERYLOYAL TO THEEMPEROR. THAT IS WHY I HAVECOMEHERE, TO MEETOTHERBATTLEBROTHERSWHOARELOYAL TO THEEMPERORLIKEMYSELF. I AM 127 YEARS OF AGE ( PRAISETHEEMPEROR) I LIKE TO PURGEHERETICSANDXENOSCUMWITH MY BATTLEBROTHERS ( I LOVE MY BATTLEBROTHERS, IF YOU DO NOTLIKETHATTHEDEALWITH IT) IT IS OURFAVORITEACTIVITYBECAUSETHEYARENOTLOYAL TO THEEMPEROR. ALL MY BATTLEBROTHERSARELOYAL TO THEEMPERORTOO OF COURSE, BUT I WANT TO MEETMORELOYALSERVANTS OF THEEMPEROR. LIKETHEEMPERORONCESAID, THEMORETHEMERRIER. I HOPE TO BONDWITH A LARGEAMOUNT OF LOYALSERVANTS OF THEEMPEROR SO JOIN ME IN PRAISE OF THEEMPEROR. FAREWELL.

PRAISETHEEMPEROR

BATTLEBROTHER

Search Interest



External References

[1]Shii.org – Penguin of Doom

[2]4chan – 100 reasons why Naruto sucks thread

[3]My Fast Forums – hi every1

[4]Facepunch – most random thing

[5]League of Legends – racism against yordles

[6]Gaia Online – pengu1n of d00m

Bad Joke Eel

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About

Bad Joke Eel is an advice animal image macro series featuring a close-up photograph of a Moray eel with various captions delivering unfunny puns and jokes, very similar to Lame Pun Coon.

Origin

The photograph[1] (shown on left) was originally taken by Jeffrey N. Jeffords while scuba diving in the Philippines for his site, Dive Gallery.[2] The first known image macro instance (shown on right) was posted via AdviceAnimals subreddit on January 12th, 2012. The thread[6] reached the frontpage of Reddit and the image has been viewed over 400,000 times in the first four days.



Prior to becoming associated with the title “Bad Joke Eel” on Reddit, the same image was used as a punchline for the phrase “That’s amore” by a commenter on FARK[3] forum on October 13th, 2009 and in an image macro on the humor site So Much Pun[4] on January 25th, 2011. The series shares similar characteristics with several image macros including Lame Pun Coon and Chemistry Cat.

Spread

The Quickmeme entry[5] for “Bad Joke Eel” was created on the same day of original Reddit post, spawning over 700 instances on the site in four days. A variety of derivative instances were soon posted on a number of internet humor blogs like I Can Has Cheezburger[9], Sad and Useless[8], Tastefully Offensive[11], FunnyJunk[12] and BuzzFeed[10] among others. Additional image macros has been posted on various Tumblr blogs[13], which can be tracked with the hashtag #Bad Joke Eel.

Notable Examples




Search Interest

[not available]

External Links

Amy's Baking Company PR Scandal

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Overview

Amy’s Baking Company PR Scandal refers to an online feud that erupted between a restaurant owner in Arizona, United States and members of Reddit over an episode of Fox reality show Kitchen Nightmares aired in May 2013.

Background

As early as August 2010, Scottsdale, Arizona restaurant Amy’s Baking Company[2] began receiving poor reviews on Yelp,[3] which became the focal point of a local news story (shown below) about the restaurant and its online notoriety. That same month, owner Amy Bouzaglo responded to the backlashes on the Yelp page[12], calling an unhappy reviewer names including “loser” and “moron” under the guise of a five-star review.



Kitchen Nightmares

In 2013, celebrity chef Gordon Ramsay went to the failing restaurant for an episode of his reality television show Kitchen Nightmares[1], which aired on May 10th, 2013. Owners Samy and Amy Bouzaglo blamed their poor business on “haters” who were commenting on the restaurant’s Yelp page. Despite this, the owners were depicted reheating and serving prepared food and pocketing the wait staff’s tips. During the episode, Ramsay walked out, refusing to continue helping a client for the first time in the show’s history.[4]



Notable Developments

On Reddit

One day prior to the show’s national airing, a clip from the episode was shared on the /r/Videos subreddit[5], billed as the “craziest restaurant owners” in the show’s history. The post gained 7,784 upvotes, 2,966 points overall and nearly 1,000 comments before it was removed from the subreddit and commenting was disabled.

Facebook Meltdown

On May 13th, Redditor dojosnail submitted a screenshot of Amy’s Baking Company’s Facebook page (shown below) to /r/CringePics[6], claiming that the owners were having a public meltdown over criticism from the Kitchen Nightmares episode. The post gained more than 9,200 upvotes, 2,800 points overall and nearly 2,800 comments within 48 hours. On March 14th, two additional screenshots were submitted to /r/CringePics[7][8] by two different Redditors, each gaining more than 1,400 points each. That evening, all three posts were removed with most of their comments hidden.[9]



Hacking Claim

At around 6pm EST on May 14th, all of the offending posts had been removed from their Facebook page. The owners left a status update[13] claiming their website as well as all of their social media accounts had been hacked and they would be working with the FBI to track down the perpetrators.



Waitress AMA

On May 15th, former Amy’s Baking Company waitress Katy Cipriano participated in an “ask me anything” session on the /r/IAmA[21] subreddit, which received upwards of 28,800 up votes and 9,700 comments within six days. In the post, she acknowledged that the Bouzaglos treated their staff very poorly and that they were portrayed accurately in the episode of Kitchen Nightmares.

Re-Opening

Also on May 15th, the Amy’s Baking Company Facebook[14] page posted a status update announcing a press conference event for the restaurant’s “Grand Re-Opening” on the evening of May 21st. In addition, the culinary news blog Eater[19] reported that the Bouzaglos hired the PR firm Rose+Moser+Allyn Public & Online Relations to assist their media event.

“Customers will be able to decide who is correct: a famous celebrity chef or the marketplace that has supported the small, locally-owned business for six years.”

However, on May 17th, FOX lawyers sent the Bouzaglos a formal notice reminding their agreement to not speak publicly about the reality TV show and threatening legal action if they proceeded to hold a press conference to talk about Kitchen Nightmares (shown below). By May 21st, AZ Central[20] and other news sites reported that the planned event had been canceled due to legal threats and a fall out with the PR firm over “strategy disagreements.”



Later that same day, the Phoenix New Times[16] published several photographs from the re-opening event, noting that security guards and police officers prevented press members from approaching the restaurant. Meanwhile, AZ Central[15] reported that the crowd at the event was “thin.”



Immigration Issues

On May 21st, the Phoenix New Times[17] reported that co-owner of the restaurant Samy Bouzaglo may be facing deportation from the United States in a two-year-long immigration case. On the following day, AZ Central[18] reported that Bouzaglo had a past criminal history which involved “drug distribution, threats and extortion” and that he had been banned from entering both France and Germany.



Employee Contract Leaked

On June 28th, 2013, Radar Online[22] published an article reporting on a leaked legally binding contract that Amy’s Baking Company employees were required to sign in order to work at the restaurant. The agreement contained a list of 20 provisions, many of which penalized staff financially if they were broken. Pay would be withheld if food was burned or plates were broken and if an employee failed to show up for a holiday or weekend shift, they would be “penalized with a fee of $250.00.” The contract also included a non-compete agreement, which prevented ex-staff from working at a competing restaurant within a 50 mile radius for an entire year after termination for resignation.



In the coming days, the leaked contract was reported on by several news sites, including MSN,[24] Fox News,[27] Eater[25] and the IBI Times.[26] On July 2nd, Redditor tlgnome24 submitted a post about the contract to the /r/WTF[28] subreddit, which gained over 9,100 up votes and 1,700 comments in the first nine hours.

Dr. Phil Interview

On April 10th, 2014, Amy and Sam Bouzaglo were interviewed on the talk show Dr. Phil, where they defended their business practices and revealed that they had been harassed with offensive prank calls since the Kitchen Nightmares episode was broadcast (shown below). Bouzaglo also claimed that some callers had mentioned the video game Battletoads, referencing 4chan’s Gamestop preorder pranks.



Return to Amy’s Baking Company

On April 11th, 2014, a follow-up Kitchen Nightmares episode for Amy’s Baking Company was released, which contained host Gordon Ramsay’s summary of the story behind Amy’s Baking Company, along with previously never-seen-before footage from the original episode and interview clips with a number of Internet bloggers who covered the story as it happened. In addition, the episode also featured an encore interview with the owner Amy Bouzaglo (shown below).



On the following day, Redditor me_and_batman posted the episode to the /r/videos[30] subreddit, where it received upwards of 2,100 up votes and 560 comments. In the coming days, several news sites published articles about the follow-up episode, including The Huffington Post,[31] BoingBoing,[32] Perez Hilton,[33] International Business Times,[34] Gawker[35] and Today.[36]

Search Interest



External References

[1]Hulu – Kitchen Nightmares: Amy’s Baking Company

[2]Facebook – Amy’s Baking Company Bakery Boutique & Bistro

[3]Yelp – Amy’s Baking Company

[4]Eater – Watch Gordon Ramsay Give Up on Delusional Restaurant Owners in Kitchen Nightmares

[5]Reddit – /r/videos: Craziest Restaurant Owners in Kitchen Nightmares History (US). (Gordon Ramsay actually walks out for the first time)

[6]Reddit – /r/cringepics: So Amy’s Baking Company’s Facebook page is having a complete meltdown right now. They are actively commenting and replying to “haters”. The cringe is good

[7]Reddit – /r/cringepics: aaaaaand they’ve snapped.

[8]Reddit – /r/cringepics: Amy’s Baking Company tries to scare off redditors by posting this badly photoshopped screenshot.

[9]Reddit – /r/SubredditDrama: /r/cringepics mods delete everything related to Kitchen Nightmares, rendering an entire highly upvoted bestof thread obsolete.

[10]Tumblr – What Should We Call Social Media: When Amy’s Baking Co Had a Meltdown

[11]Buzzfeed – This Is The Most Epic Brand Meltdown On Facebook Ever

[12]Phoenix New Times – Ouch! Today’s Hard Lesson on Yelp

[13]Facebook – Amy’s Baking Company: Obviously our Facebook, YELP, Twitter and Website have been hacked.

[14]Facebook – Amys Baking Company Boutique

[15]AZ Central – Amys Baking Company co-owner faces deportation

[16]Phoenix New Times – Amys Baking Company Reopening

[17]Phoenix New Times – Amys Baking Company Owner Samy

[18]AZ Central – Amys Baking Company Owner Faces Deportation

[19]Eater – Kitchen Nightmares Restaurant Will Relaunch Next Week

[20]AZ Central – Amys Baking Company gets lawsuit threat

[21]Reddit – Former Waitress Katy Cipriano

[22]Radar Online – Kitchen Nightmares Restauranters

[24]MSNAmys Baking Company has an insane contract

[25]Eater – Amys Baking Co Makes Employees Sign a Crazy Contract

[26]IBI Times – Amys Baking Company Employee Contract is Exactly What Youd Expect

[27]Fox News – Amys Baking Company Makes Employees Sign 20 Item Contract

[28]Reddit – How desperate for a job must you be to agree to this

[29]Reddit – Amys Baking Company is back on Kitchen Nightmares

[30]Reddit – Amys Baking Company is back on Kitchen Nightmares

[31]The Huffington Post – Amys Baking Company Returns to Kitchen Nightmares

[32]Boing Boing – Amys Baking Company Has its Revenge

[33]Perez Hilton – Amys Baking Company has its revenge

[34]International Business Times – Watch Amys Baking Company Part 2

[35]Gawker – Infamous Kitchen Nightmares Couple Still Crazed

[36]Today – Kitchen Nightmares turned Amys Baking Co

[37]Eater – Kitchen Nightmares the Return

Tear Jerker

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About

“Tear Jerker”, or “Tearjerker”, is a slang term used to describe various melodramatic[6] stories and online media that are meant to invoke feelings of sadness, sorrow or despair for the viewer.

Origin

According to the Online Etymology Dictionary,[7] the word “tear jerker” was first used in 1911 as a compound noun used to describe newspaper stories about upsetting events.

Spread

On July 12th, 2003, Urban Dictionary[4] user Eric Hartman submitted an entry for “tearjerker,” defining it as a sub-genre of drama films that conclude with “a sad, emotional ending.” On September 25th, 2004, Movie Forums[11] member vintempe posted a list of 50 tear jerker films. On February 14th, 2005, the BBC[9] reported that the “farewell” scene in the 1982 science fiction film E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial was voted the “top tearjerker” in a survey of over 70,000 voters (shown below).



On October 10th, 2007, Yahoo Answers[10] user Val submitted a post requesting tear jerker novel recommendations. On October 12th, 2008, The Daily Mail[12] reported that the 1942 animated film Bambi had been voted the “top tear jerker film of all time” in an online poll by the British cinema advertising company Pearl & Dean. On June 26th, 2009, Entertainment Weekly[13] published an article listing 25 tearjerker films. On August 1st, 2010, a page titled “Tear Jerker” was created on the trope database website TV Tropes">.[3] On October 3rd, 2012, Redditor lxxo submitted a post requesting readers to share their favorite tear jerker film scenes to the /r/AskReddit[14] subreddit, where it garnered upwards of 1,300 up votes and 4,300 comments prior to being archived. On June 18th, 2013, the tech news site Mashable[5] published a compilation of advertisements titled the “Top 10 Tear-Jerker Commercials of All Time.”

Notable Examples



Related Term: Feels

“Feel”, a shorthand for the word “feeling,” is an Internet slang term used to describe an intense emotional response, such as sadness, excitement or awe. The term is also commonly associated with the phrase “right in the feels,” which indicates that something has deeply affected the speaker.

Search Interest

External References

[1]Merriam-Webster – Tearjerker

[2]Reference – Tearjerker

[3]TV Tropes – TearJerker

[4]Urban Dictionary – tearjerker

[5]Mashable – Top Ten Tear-Jerking Commercials

[6]Wikipedia – Melodrama

[7]Online Etymology Dictionary – tear jerker

[8]Word Reference – tear jerker

[9]BBCET farewell named top tearjerker

[10]Yahoo – Good tear jerker novels

[11]Movie Forums – Top 50 Tearjerkers

[12]The Daily Mail – Disney classic Bambi named top tear jerker

[13]Entertainment Weekly – 25 Best Movie Tearjerkers Ever

[14]Reddit – Which films or scene still makes you choke

Mystery Skulls - Ghost

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About

Ghost is a electro synth-pop single produced by American indie pop / electronica musician Luis Dubuc, who is better known by his stage name Mystery Skulls. Originally Ghost was released on May 8th of 2012 but an official live action video was released on February 6th of 2014 he song gained much of its online traction following the release of an animated version of the music video in October 2014.

Origin

Dubuc’s “Ghost” was initially released as a preview on the Mystery Skulls Tumblr on May 8th, 2012.[9] The song was later on remastered and released as a single via iTunes on January 31st, 2014, followed by the YouTube debut of the live action music video on February 4th (shown below, left). However, the song didn’t receive much attention until an animated version of the music video, commissioned by YouTube animator Ben Mangum (a.k.a MysteryBen27), was released on October 26th (shown below, right). Within a week, the animated rendition of the music video[3] drew more than 750,000 views and over 25,000 up votes.



Prior to their collaboration on the music video for “Ghost,” Mystery Ben, who first rose to YouTube fame through his 2011 fan music video tributes to My Little Pony, had produced a fan music video for Mystery Skull’s “Money,”[1] which featured various animated characters from the Phoenix Wright Attorney video games (shown below). Upon its debut in May 2012, Mangum’s music video tribute to “Money” quickly became a hit, garnering nearly 1.6 million views in the following three years. Having taken note of the music video’s success, Mystery Skulls then contacted Ben Mangum to commission an official animated music video for his single Ghost.[2]



Spread

On October 27th, Redditor GamingAnarchy submitted the animated music video to /r/animation. On October 29th, Kotaku user PrinceofTheUniverse submitted the music video in a post titled “Animation Underground: Mystery Skulls Animated – Ghost.” On October 30th, BuzzBandsLA highlighted the animated music video in a blog post. In addition to the music and animation blog coverage, some of the characters featured in the music video quickly inspired a series of fan art illustrations on DeviantART and Tumblr. On November 5th, the Tumblr music staff announced a Q&A session with artist Mystery Skulls scheduled for the following day to answer questions about the success of the music videos and his music in general.[10]

Notable Examples

Lewis The Skeleton

Lewis The Skeleton is the name given to the fictional skeleton character in the video that subsequently became popular on DeviantART and Tumblr through fan art, cosplay and plush toys since the video was first posted on YouTube. In addition, people have taken to calling him ‘Bara Skeleton,’ which is a reference to his masculine size and shape. As of October 31st, 2014, DeviantART host hundreds of original sketches and drawings related to Lewis.[4]



Search Interest



External References

Trust Nobody, Not Even Yourself

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About

“Trust Nobody, Not Even Yourself” is an exploitable catchphrase associated with a photoshopped image of a teenage boy pointing a gun at a clone of himself that went viral online in September 2014.

Origin

The original image was first posted online by Twitter user @MohamedKamoul on June 8th, 2014, though the tweet was subsequently removed from his feed shortly after it began to take off on the microblogging platform. Prior to its deletion, the post accumulated at least 3,800 retweets and 3,110 favorites.



Spread

By mid-June, multiple screenshots of the original tweet and duplicate posts had begun to surface on Twitter, Tumblr and elsewhere online, including CringeBlog,[2] MemeCenter,[3] Imgur[4] and FunnyJunk,[5] with many commenters highlighting the trifecta of its cringeworthy, thug life and 2deep4u elements in humor. On December 4th, 2014, a photoshop request thread was posted on 4chan’s /b/ (random) board with the original image, which went on to spawn a series of photoshopped remixes depicting other characters in place of the teenage boy and his clone. Although the thread is no longer accessible on 4chan, screenshots of the compilation were soon posted on the /r/4chan subreddit.[1]

Notable Examples




Search Interest


External References

Banjo-Kazooie

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About

Banjo-Kazooie is a video game franchise developed by Rare. The game’s main protagonists are lazy but kindhearted bear named Banjo and snarky bird named Kazooie. The series features five games, which were published on Nintendo 64, Gameboy Advance and Xbox 360.

History

It began as a SNES game named Project Dream. It was supposed to star a boy named Edison, who fought against a pirate named Blackeye. The idea was scrapped due the development team Rare feeling that it was “too generic.” The development then transferred the project onto Nintendo 64. The first game, Banjo-Kazooie, was released on 29th June 1998 in North America, and on 17th July 1998 in Europe. The sequel Banjo-Tooie was released on 20 November 2000 in North America and on 12 April 2001 in Europe. The third game Banjo-Threeie was supposed to come out on Gamecube, but it was reworked for a Xbox 360 game named Banjo-Kazooie: Nuts & Bolts.

Reception

The series received positive reception from critics and gamers alike. However Banjo-Kazooie: Nuts & Bolts, which was still received positive reception, the fan reception was mixed due drastic changes of the franchise.

Impact

The Banjo-Kazooie series was the inspiration for the Playtonic Games (made out of former Rare employees) latest project Yooka-Laylee . Banjo and Kazooie themselves appeared on Rareware’s last game on Nintendo 64, Conker’s Bad Fur Day.

Fandom

There are over 8,809 results of Banjo-Kazooie on DeviantArt.

Search Interest


Ryan Gosling Won't Eat His Cereal

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About

Ryan Gosling Won’t Eat His Cereal is a series of Vine videos pairing on-screen projections of Ryan Gosling’s emotional acting scenes with a slowly approaching spoon full of cereal held by the videographer.

Origin

On April 22nd, 2013, Vine user Ryan McHenry[1] began uploading a series of videos titled “Ryan Gosling Won’t Eat His Cereal.” The videos feature various screen projections of Canadian actor Ryan Gosling’s intense acting scenes meanwhile at the end the videographer is approaching his spoon full of cereal.



Spread

On May 6th, McHenry’s parody clips were first picked up on the actor’s fan blog Gosloving[2], followed by BuzzFeed’s compilation coverage[3] on May 9th. On the following day, YouTuber bleubonbontv[4] uploaded a video compilation of McHenry’s Vines, receiving more than 3.6 million views within three months. On May 11th, McHenry[5] also uploaded his own compilation video with an additional Vine (shown below).



Throughout the week, dozens of other entertainment news outlets including Gawker[6], Vulture[7], E! Online[8], Daily Mail[9] and The Sun[10] featured McHenry’s Vine clips, with many hailing it as one of the more notable memes yet to emerge from the platform. On July 4th, 2013, The Fine Bros uploaded a “YouTubers React” episode featuring notable video bloggers reacting to viral Vine videos, including Ryan McHenry’s “Ryan Gosling Won’t Eat His Cereal” videos. In two months, the video gathered upwards of 5.3 million views. (shown below)



McHenry’s Illness

On July 17th, not long after the viral takeoff of his Vine parody meme, McHenry was diagnosed with bone cancer. As a result of the finding, McHenry postponed his production work for his first feature film Zombie Musical and began undergoing chemotherapy and surgery for the removal his tumor. A few days later, McHenry’s close friends and associates launched a fundraising campaign titled “Ryan McHenry Won’t Eat His Cancer” via Indiegogo in order to assist him in paying for the medical bills (shown below). In less than a month, the campaign met and exceeded its initial goal of raising $10,000. In the following months, the story of McHenry’s battle with cancer and the fundraising campaign were soon picked up by numerous internet culture news outlets, including Mashable and The Verge, among others.



On May 3rd, 2015, despite undergoing nearly 20 months of chemotherapy and a series of operations, Ryan McHenry passed away. The death of the meme-maker was quickly met by tributes and messages of condolences from his supporters and friends on Vine and Twitter, including an eulogical video clip of McHenry looking out the window on a train issued by Vine’s official account on the video-sharing platform (shown below), as well as a number of other Vine tributes in remembrance of the 27-year-old Scottish filmmaker.


Kim Jong Un

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About

Kim Jong Un is the supreme leader of North Korea who assumed the position in December 2011 following the death of his father, Kim Jong-Il.

Online History

While it is widely assumed that Kim has little presence on the state-controlled and heavily censored Internet, a lot of discussions surrounding North Korea’s latest head of state began circulating in the South Korean and Western social media following the death of his father Kim Jong Il and during his subsequent rise to power in December 2012.

Kim Jong Un Looking at Things

On December 18th, a parody blog titled Kim Jong Un Looking at Things[1] launched. It was inspired by a similar blog utilizing state propaganda photos of his father, Kim Jong Il Looking At Things, which launched in October 2010. As of November 2012, the blog is still active.



Hungry Kim Jong Un

The day after Kim Jong Un Looking at Things launched, on December 19th, Redditor GunnieGraves submitted a photo to the Funny subreddit[2] depicting Kimg Jong Un pointing at something with the caption “Ok so…can I eat this?” (shown below, left). The same day, a Quickmeme[3] titled Hungry Kim Jong Un was established, with an instance (shown below, right) reaching the front page the same day. As of November 2012, it has more than 220 submissions. Four days after the first Reddit post, a single topic Tumblr titled Kim Jong Un is Hungry[4] launched, using other photos of the leader with similar food-related captions.



TIME Person of the Year Campaign

On November 26th, 2012, users on 4chan‘s /b/ (random) message board began to organize a way to fix Time Magazine’s annual Person of the Year voting event [9] so Kim Jong Un would take the top place in the poll. Over the next 24 hours, multiple threads were posted to the forum with links to Pastebin[5] documents of a VBS script as well as a downloadable Java-based program[6] to help users vote in bulk.



An IRC channel was also set up with the name #OpFuckMorsy[7], as a reference to Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi[8] who stayed in the lead of the poll throughout November 26th. Later that same day, 4chan’s latest poll scheme was featured on Betabeat[10], the Daily Dot[11]and Reddit[12], where a screenshot of one of the threads earned more than 9182 upvotes and 2148 points overall. On December 3rd, The Daily Dot[25] published a follow-up article, which reported that Jong-un had passed Egyptian president Mohamed Morsi for the top spot with 2.9 million votes (shown below).



Spelling Out “KJU Gas Chamber”

The article also reported that 4chan users aimed to spell the word “KJU Gas Chambers” with the first letter of the top 14 candidate’s names in the poll, alluding to North Korea’s gulag Camp 22 which has been accused of human rights violations from the international community. The same day, both ABC News[27] and Gawker[30] reported on the poll results. On December 4th, a new version of a script called “NKVoter”[28] was released (shown below), which allows users to automate vote spamming. That same day, Jong-un’s votes reached 3.38 million.



On December 8th, Redditor DrHuxleyy submitted a post to the /r/4chan[31] subreddit announcing that 4chan users managed to spell out “KJUGASCHAMBERS” in the Time poll and included a screenshot of the results (shown below). Within 48 hours, the post received over 13,200 up votes and 490 comments. The following day, Facepunch[32] forums member koeniginator posted the same screenshot in a thread titled “4chan Does it again.”



On December 10th, The Daily Dot[33] published an article titled “‘KJUGASCHAMBERS’: How hackers stole Person of the Year poll,” which included a statement by IRC user _js5, who created a java script automating the voting process:

“There really is nothing too exciting about the meaning, sorry to say. We chose it because it was clever, had semi-subtle offensive overtones, and wasn’t as childish as our second choice of KFCBUTTSEX.”

The Onion: Sexiest Man Alive for 2012

On November 14th, 2012, satirical news site The Onion[13] posted an article naming Kim Jong Un as the site’s Sexiest Man Alive for 2012. Five days later, Korean newspaper the Korean Times[17] published an article on the Onion story. They noted in the Korean version that the Onion article was meant to be satirical, but left that out of the English translation. On November 27th, the official newspaper for the community party of China, the People’s Daily[14], reported on the story, complete with a 55 photo slideshow of the North Korean leader.



The North Korean newspaper’s misreporting of the Onion article was featured on the Los Angeles Times[15], the Atlantic[16], the Guardian[18], BBC News[19] and Mashable.[20] A news article on the subject from the Associated Press was submitted to the World News subreddit[21]where it earned 13,686 upvotes and 2862 points overall. Following the news coverage, the Onion amended[22] their article, linking to the “exemplary reportage” provided by the People’s Daily.

Hoax: Kim Fed His Uncle to 120 Hungry Dogs

On December 13th, 2013, it was reported that Kim executed his own uncle Jang Song Thaek, a key figure in the North Korean regime widely considered to be the second most powerful man, following his arrest and expulsion from the post on charges of “anti-party and counter-revolutionary activities.” Upon execution, North Korea’s state-run Korean Central News Agency ran a 2700-word article detailing Jang’s crimes.



That same day, Hong Kong’s daily newspaper Wen Wei Po reported that Jang was executed by being stripped naked and fed alive to 120 hungry dogs, citing an account posted on the Chinese social media site Weibo. Although the story was largely ignored by the news outlets in China and South Korea, the sensational report was picked up by the Singaporean Strait Times on December 24th, eventually reaching the U.S. media and news blogs on December 26th.



Hoax: Kim Mandates His Hairstyle For Students

On March 25th, 2014, Washington D.C.-based North Korean news outlet Radio Free Asia[39] (RFA) published a report about a recently-enacted mandate that allegedly requires all North Korean university students to sport the signature hairstyles worn by the leader Kim Jong Un and his wife Ri Sol Ju. Citing unnamed local sources in the Southern Hamgyung region of the hermit nation, RFA added that, while the policy is said to have been treated more like a recommendation rather than a strictly enforced order, many students have reportedly expressed resentment towards the mandate since it went into effect in mid-March 2014.



The unconfirmed report was instantly picked up by several South Korean news publications[40][41] and soon translated into English by The Korea Times[47], which gave further boost to the story’s viral momentum to spread across the English-language news outlets. That same day, numerous U.S. news outlets[42][43][44][45] and blogs ran similar reports with headlines like “Every Man in North Korea Now Has to Get a Kim Jong-Un Haircut” (Gawker), “North Korea: Students required to get Kim Jong-un haircut” (BBC) and “North Korea mandates Kim Jong-un haircut for all men” (Washington Times). However, by the next day, the authenticity of the RFA report had come into question after the Associated Press[46] skeptically reported that no such change in hairstyle has been noticed among the student population, citing numerous accounts of American tourists who have recently visited the country.

The Interview

On June 11th, 2014, Sony Pictures Entertainment’s official YouTube channel[48] uploaded the first teaser trailer for the film The Interview, which is scheduled to be released in October 2014. The film follows a talk show host and his producer, played by James Franco and Seth Rogen respectively, who are hired by the CIA to assassinate North Korean dictator Kim Jong-un after the two arrange an interview with him. Within two weeks the video gained over 5 million views.



On June 25th, a representative for the North Korean Ministry of Foreign Affairs released a statement[49] about the film, saying:

“If the United States administration tacitly approves or supports the release of this film, we will take a decisive and merciless countermeasure.”


The threat was covered by many sites the same day including TIME[51], the BBC[52] and The Daily Dot.[52] Also the same day, Seth Rogen[50] tweeted a joking response to the threat. In less than 48 hours, the tweet received over 8,000 favorites and over 5,000 retweets.



In late November 2014, weeks before the box office premiere of The Interview, Sony Pictures Entertainment’s online database was hit by critical cyberattacks from a group of hackers who identified themselves as the Guardians of Peace (GOP), leading to the leak of private corporate data at an unprecedented volume in the tens of terabytes in early December. Among other things, the leaked data included many scripts and screeners of recently released or upcoming films to be distributed by the studio, like Fury, Annie, Still Alice, Mr. Turner and To Write Love On Her Arms, as well as personally identifiable information and corporate profiles of over 6,000 employees.



In the following week, cybersecurity experts began speculating that North Korea’s state-run secretive hacking group, which has been dubbed “DarkSeoul” in the South Korean media, may have been behind the attacks as a retaliatory measure against Sony Pictures Entertainment for planning to release The Interview, citing circumstantial but telling evidences, including a suspicious IP address traced back to a location where North Korean agents are known to remain operative, similarities in the style of the hackers’ messages posted during the 2013 cyberattacks against South Korea and the Sony Pictures incident (shown below), as well as the discovery of Korean characters in the software that was used to breach the system.



On December 4th, North Korean officials released a statement denying any involvement in the cyberattack, though one of them implied that the hack “might [have been] a righteous deed” of its supporters or sympathizers. Then on December 8th, GitHub user GOP released another large batch of internal data obtained from Sony Pictures employees’ computers in a post titled “Gift of GOP for 4th day: Their Privacy.” In the post, the group demanded the company to stop the release of The Interview in order to prevent any further attacks or leaks:

We have already given our clear demand to the management team of SONY, however, they have refused to accept. It seems that you think everything will be well, if you find out the attacker, while no reacting to our demand. We are sending you our warning again. Do carry out our demand if you want to escape us. And, Stop immediately showing the movie of terrorism which can break the regional peace and cause the War! You, SONY& FBI, cannot find us. We are perfect as much. The destiny of SONY is totally up to the wise reaction & measure of SONY.

Personal Life

Not much is known about Kim Jong Un’s personal life, including his birthday which may have been in either 1983 or 1984.[23] He attended boarding school in Switzerland under a fake name, where he was said to have had poor grades[25], but enjoyed skiing, the American NBA and actor Jean Claude Van Damme.[24] Kim Jong Un married a North Korean woman named Ri Sol-ju in 2009, but this information was not made public until July 2012.[26]



Search Interest



External References

[1]Tumblr – Kim Jong Un Looking at Things

[2]Reddit – Kim Jong Un looks….hungry

[3]Quickmeme –

[4]Tumblr – Kim Jong Un is Hungry

[5]Pastebin – For_teh_leader_v3.vbs

[6]VoteFucker – Download Page

[7]Foolz Archive – Operation Fuck Morsy /b/

[8]Wikipedia – Mohamed Morsi

[9]TIMEWho Should Be TIME’s Person of the Year 2012?

[10]Betabeat – Betabeat

[11]Daily Dot – 4chan tries to make Kim Jong-Un Time’s Person of the Year

[12]Reddit – Operation: “KIMJONG UN FOR TIME’S PERSON OF THEYEAR” Go!!!

[13]The Onion – Kim Jong-Un Named The Onion’s Sexiest Man Alive For 2012 [UPDATE]

[14]People’s Daily English – North Korea’s top leader named The Onion’s Sexiest Man Alive for 2012

[15]LA Times – Kim Jong Un ‘sexiest man,’ Onion says; China’s People’s Daily buys it

[16]the Atlantic – The Onion Convinces Actual Chinese Communists That Kim Jong-un Is Actually the Sexiest Man Alive

[17]The Korea Times – Kim Jong-un named Sexiest Man Alive for 2012

[18]The Guardian – China’s People’s Daily falls for Kim Jong-un ‘sexiest man alive’ spoof

[19]BBC News – China paper carries Onion Kim Jong-un ‘heart-throb’ spoof

[20]Mashable – Newspaper Cites ‘The Onion’ Article Naming Kim Jong-Un ‘Sexiest Man Alive’

[21]Reddit – China’s party paper falls for Onion joke about Kim Jong Un

[22]Los Angeles Times – Onion to People’s Daily: ‘Exemplary reportage’ on ‘sexiest man’

[23]BBCProfile: Kim Jong Un

[24]Washington Post – Son Named Heir to North Korea’s Kim Studied in Switzerland, Reportedly Loves NBA

[25]The Telegraph – Kim Jong-un’s poor marks exposed

[26]BBC News – North Korea leader Kim Jong-un married to Ri Sol-ju

[27]ABC News – 4Chan Gives a Boost to Undocumented Immigrants on Times List

[28]The Daily Dot – 4chan Helps Kim Jong-un Top Time Person of the Year Poll

[29]Weebly – Our Glorious Leader

[30]Gawker – Kim Jong-un Is a Shoo-In for Time’s Most Influential Person of the Year Thanks to 4chan

[31]Reddit – So 4chan just made the Time Person of the Year

[32]Facepunch – 4chan does it again

[33]The Daily Dot – How hackers stole Person of the year poll

[34]NBC News – Kim Jong Un’s executed uncle was eaten alive by 120 hungry dogs: report

[35]South China Morning Post – Post tops survey on newspaper credibility as trust in Hong Kong media sinks to all-time low

[36]The Strait Times – "Jang’s execution bodes ill for China":www.straitstimes.com/the-big-story/asia-report/china/story/jangs-execution-bodes-ill-china-20131224

[37]NBCKim Jong Un’s executed uncle was eaten alive by 120 hungry dogs: report

[38]Washington Post – No, Kim Jong Un probably didn’t feed his uncle to 120 hungry dogs

[39]Radio Free Asia – North Korean College Students Ordered to Adopt Leader Kim’s Haircut

[40]Chosun – 北, 김정은-리설주 헤어 스타일 강요…대학생들 불만 목소리

[41]Joongang – 북, 김정은 헤어스타일 강요 … 대학생들 불만

[42]Gawker – Does Every Man in North Korea Now Have to Get a Kim Jong-Un Haircut?

[43]BBCNorth Korea: Students required to get Kim Jong-un haircut

[44]New York Times – Mandatory Kim Jong Un Haircuts a Baldfaced Lie?

[45]TIMENorth Korean University Students Are Now Reportedly Required to Get the Same Haircut as Kim Jong Un

[46]AP – MANDATORYKIMJONG UN HAIRCUTS A BALDFACEDLIE?

[47]The Korea Times – ‘Dear leader haircut’ forced on NK students

[48]YouTube – Sony Pictures Entertainment

[49]NYTimes – North Korea Warns U.S. Over Film Mocking Its Leader

[50]Twitter – Sethrogen

[51]TIMEKim Jung Un Swears ‘Merciless’ Retaliation if New Seth Rogen Film Released

[52]BBC- North Korea Threatens War on US over King Jung-un movie

[53]The Daily Dot- 11 reasons North Korea should really condemn Seth Rogen and James Franco

[54]The Verge – The Sony hacking evidence points to North Korea, but it may not be enough

[55]The Verge – Hackers tell Sony to halt the release of The Interview

[56]Github – Gift of GOP for 4th day: Their Privacy

[57]Wall Street Journal – Email Claims Fresh Sony Data Released, Threatens Studio

[58]Voice of America – North Korea Denies Involvement in Cyberattacks on Sony Pictures

Side Eyeing Chloe

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About

Side Eyeing Chloe is a photoshop meme based on a screen capture of a concerned-looking little girl in a YouTube video of two children reacting to their parents’ announcement of a surprise trip to Disneyland that went viral in September 2013.

Origin

On September 12th, 2013, YouTuber KAftC[1] uploaded a video titled “Lily’s Disneyland Surprise… AGAIN,” which shows two sisters, Lily and Chloe, reacting to the news of a surprise trip to Disneyland on their way to school. As the older sister, Lily, breaks into tears of joy, Chloe is briefly seen on camera with a disturbed look on her face.



Spread

On September 18th, Tumblr user Lee[2] submitted an animated GIF photo set of highlights from the YouTube video, including one of Chloe reacting to her sister’s crying, with the caption “i just love this because chloe is like ‘da hell is this girl cryin about.’” In less than a month, the post gained more than 895,700 notes.



On September 24th, BuzzFeed[8] picked up on Lee’s GIF photo set in a post titled “Girl Reacting To Disneyland Is The Only Reaction You’ll Need For Anything Ever.” On November 1st, Tumblr user Yungbasedblogger[3] uploaded a reaction image based on a screenshot of Chloe’s reaction with the caption “could u fucking not,” racking up over 120,000 notes in two weeks.



By November 5th, a single topic blog named Chloe Queen of Everything[4] had been launched to showcase a series of photoshopped images featuring the face of Chloe on celebrities. On November 13th, BuzzFeed[7] reported on the parody phenomenon in an image compilation post titled “Side-Eyeing Chloe Is Officially The Patron Saint Of Tumblr.”



External References

Toothpasting

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About

Toothpasting (sometimes seen as Pasting) refers to the act of putting toothpaste on one’s nipples in order to get high. The term was coined in a 4chan thread that urged its readers to make it spread to major news sites.

Origin

On May 5th, 2012, a user on 4chan’s /b/ (random) board posted a thread[7] urging board members to send reports of a “new drug craze” to respectable news websites involving teenagers rubbing toothpaste on their nipples to induce a full-body high. In the thread, users posted screenshots of messages left on anonymous chat site Omegle as well as messages that were apparently sent to local Fox affiliate news stations. Many users linked to a PubMed abstract[15] stating that titanium dioxide nanoparticles, which can be found in toothpastes, may have harmed spatial recognition memory in the mice they tested.



However, similar practices have been observed prior to the coinage of the term “toothpasting.” On March 11th, 2010, a user on the Body Building Forums[4] started a thread titled “Ask a guy who just put toothpaste on his nipples anything,” but the thread did not recieve any responses until May 26th, 2011. The original poster stated that he did it to combat “gyno,”[5] short for Gynecomastia[6], or the abnormal growth of breast tissue in males. This reasoning appeared a second time on the board[14] on April 6th, 2012.

Putting toothpaste on one’s nipples saw a resurgence on question and answer sites, appearing on Yahoo! Answers in March 2011[3] and July 2011[1], and Blurt It![2] also in July. In the latter two posts, users asserted that it was a method to encourage breast tissue growth.

Spread

Over the next two days, several more threads[8][9] appeared on 4chan, escalating the act of notifying local news stations to Operation: Toothpasting. The Facebook group Protect Our Children from Household Drugs[10] was created on May 5th, garnering 1421 likes in three days. On the 6th, a Change.org petition[11] to stop Toothpasting was created, getting 575 signatures in two days. The same day, a rage comic about Toothpasting was posted to FunnyJunk[16], receiving 1161 upvotes and nearly 90,000 views in two days.



Additionally, a handful of Yahoo! Answers[12][13] questions appeared. On May 7th, the first question about Toothpasting was posted to Reddit[17] and a thread on sports form MMO Champion[19] was started, discussing whether or not the act was real. The following day, a Redditor claimed[18] that a radio station in Washington DC reported that parents should monitor the amount of toothpaste being used in their homes. The post received 1150 points within 9 hours.

Search Interest



External References

Nutella

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About

Nutella is a brand name of a hazelnut chocolate spread that was first introduced in 1963. Online, the food has become associated with hipster subculture, attracting a large amount of fans across social media, especially on Tumblr.

History

The first version of the spread was created in the 1940s by Pietro Ferrero, who chose to add hazelnuts to the product to make the rationed supply of chocolate due to World War II last longer.[1] He sold the first product, a solid brick of chocolate known as Pasta Gianduja, in 1946. Five years later, in 1951, he released a spreadable version called Supercrema Gianduja (shown below, left).[2] The name was taken from a marionette style character[3] representing the town of Turin that originally appeared in Italy’s Commedia dell’Arte (shown below, right). The product was renamed Nutella in 1964 as part of a campaign to market the spread throughout Europe. The company currently celebrated the birthday of Nutella on April 20th.[10]



Online discussions of Nutella began as early as the 1990s on the Furry newsgroup alt.fan.furry, where people would consistently joke about sharing Nutella covered dog biscuits. In 2002, a thread discussing its health value was posted to the Low-Carber Forums[13] and later that year, a pornographic fanfiction story[14] involving the condiment and members of the 1980s rock band Duran Duran was shared on a personal Geocities page. Also in the early 2000s, Nutella was discussed on the Straight Dope message board[15], cooking message board eGullet[16] and language blog Diacritiques.[17] The brand name was first defined on Urban Dictionary[18] in July 2005, misattributing it as a French product.



In November 2008, a Yahoo! Answers user claimed[19] they were addicted to Nutella and were seeking help to curb their cravings. A Nutella subreddit[24] was established in September 2010 and has approximately 350 subscribers. Since 2012, Nutella has been discussed on Best Roof Talk Ever[21], the Escapist[22] and the Body Building forums.[23] Additionally, humorous images and jokes about Nutella have appeared on Cracked[25], Memebase[26], Meme Center[27], FunnyJunk[28] and Reddit[29], which has more than 5,900 posts about the chocolate spread. Nutella images are also popular on Tumblr[32] where four single topic blogs dedicated to the spread have been created since August 2010: All Things Nutella[33], Nutella Lovers Welcome[34], Nutella Every Day[35] and Fuck Yeah Nutella.[36]

Class Action Lawsuit

In February 2011, a Californian mother filed a class action lawsuit[4] against Ferrero USA claiming they were deceptively marketing Nutella as a healthy breakfast food, misrepresenting itself as nutritious. The suit claimed Nutella was composed of more than 70% processed sugar and saturated fat and asked the company to cease mismarketing the product followed by a corrective advertising campaign. Later that month, a similar suit was filed in New Jersey[6] by an Alabama resident. A settlement to the California was proposed[7] in November 2011, but did not go into effect until April 2012[8], when Ferrero agreed to pay $3 million dollars in total and up to $20 per person to people who purchased the spread between 2008 and 2012.



Online Presence

The brand created a Facebook fan page[9] on July 28th, 2008 which has accrued more than 17 million likes as of April 2013. Additionally, the brand has branched off in to localized Facebook fan pages[11] for eleven different countries and regions. Nutella Italy also maintains a Twitter account[12] that has more than 7,600 followers as of April 2013.

Fandom

In Hipster Culture

Nutella became associated with hipsters as early as 2010, when a Yahoo! Answers[30] question was asked, inquiring about the link between the two. As of April 2013, there are dozens of Tumblr bloggers who associate hipsters and Nutella in their URLs but do not post about the chocolate spread, with many of the posts focusing on fashionable young women, inspirational photo quotes and nebula GIFs. This trend dates back to July 2011 when Hipsters-Gone-Nutella[31] launched.

Impact

World Nutella Day

In 2007, bloggers Sara Rosso[37] and Michelle Fabio[38] decided to launch World Nutella Day to celebrate the chocolate spread. They launched the domain NutellaDay.com[39] to organize the event, which continues to happen annually on February 5th. Images of the celebrations are shared via the event’s official Facebook[40] and Twitter[41] accounts, as well as in a Flickr pool[42] and a Pinterest tag.[43]



Search Interest



External References

[1]Nutella – History

[2]Nutella – History Page 2

[3]Wikipedia – Gianduja (commedia dell’arte)

[4]United States District Court Southern District of California – Athena Hohenberg v. Ferrero USA, Inc.

[5]Top Class Actions – Mom Files Nutella Class Action Lawsuit

[6]DISTRICT OF NEWJERSEY: TRENTONDIVISIONMarnie Glover vs. Ferrero USA, Inc.

[7]Association of Corporate Counsel – Ferrero settles with California plaintiffs in Nutella® false advertising class action

[8]Huffington Post – Nutella Lawsuit: Ferrero Settles Class-Action Suit Over Health Claims For $3 Million

[9]Facebook – Nutella

[10]Facebook – Nutella: We want to surprise you all on Nutella’s birthday:

[11]Facebook – Nutella’s Fanned Pages

[12]Twitter – @Nutella_Italia

[13]Low-Carber Forums – Nutella, worst junk food of all time?

[14]Geocities Archive – The Infamous Nutella Story

[15]Straight Dope – Correct Pronunciation of “Nutella”?

[16]eGForums – Nutella confessions…

[17]Diacritiques – Nutella: machisme de gauche?

[18]Urban Dictionary – Definitions for Nutella Oldest is #6

[19]Yahoo! Answers – HELP IM MENTALLYADDICTED TO NUTELLA?

[20]WikiFur – Nutella

[21]Best Roof Talk Ever – What’s with the internet’s Nutella obsession?

[22]The Escapist – What’s up, Nutella?

[23]BodyBuilding – accidentally ate half a jar of nutella no joke

[24]Reddit – /r/Nutella

[25]Cracked – Nutella

[26]Memebase – Posts tagged “nutella”

[27]Meme Center – Posts tagged “nutella”

[28]FunnyJunk – Images tagged “nutella”

[29]Reddit – Search results for “nutella”

[30]Yahoo! Answers – Why do hipsters like Nutella so much?

[31]Tumblr – Hipsters-Gone-Nutella

[32]Tumblr – Posts tagged Nutella

[33]Tumblr – All Things Nutella

[34]Tumblr – Nutella Lovers Welcome

[35]Tumblr – Nutella Every Day

[36]Tumblr – Fuck Yeah Nutella

[37]Ms. Adventures in Italy – Home

[38]Bleeding Espresso – Home

[39]Nutella Day – Home

[40]Facebook – World Nutella Day

[41]Twitter – @nutelladay

[42]Flickr – Nutella Day Pool

[43]Pinterest – Pin Results for #nutelladay

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