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This is a list of phenomena specific to the Internet, such as popular themes and catchphrases, viral videos, amateur celebrities and more. Such fads and sensations grow rapidly on the Internet because its instant communication facilitates word of mouth. The search and rating features of sites like YouTube and Google then amplify this interest.
Advertising
- Lowermybills.com - Banner ads from this mortgage company feature endless loops of cowboys, women, aliens, and office workers dancing.
- Orbitz.com - Miniature golf game that became one of the few popular pop-up ads.
Animals
- Badger Badger Badger — A hypnotic loop of animal calisthenics set to the chant of "badger, badger, badger".
- Crazy Frog — an animated character used in the marketing of a ringtone based on The Annoying Thing.
- David Motari — a soldier in Iraq who threw a puppy off a cliff. The video that was made quickly gained viral status.
- " Dramatic Chipmunk ", Drama Prairie Dog or Drama Hog — Actually a prairie dog turning its head suddenly toward the camera, with a zoom-in on its face. The clip comes from an appearance by J-pop group MiniMoni on the Japanese TV show Hello! Morning .
- Hampster Dance — A page filled with hamsters dancing, linking to other animated pages. It spawned a fictional band complete with its own CD album release.
- LOLcat — image macros featuring cats with humorous captions, typically in Internet slang or leet. Originated on 4chan.
- Rose the goat — married a Sudanese man after being caught in flagrante .
- Tyson — a skateboarding bulldog.
- Raptor Jesus — a series of image macros featuring the head of a velociraptor photoshopped onto the body of an icon of Jesus Christ, typically featuring some variation of the phrase "Where is your god now?" and is the subject of a series of t-shirts.
Animation
- Dancing baby — A 3D-rendered dancing baby first appeared in 1997 by the creators of 3D Studio MAX, and became something of a late-'90s cultural icon, featured many times in the TV show Ally McBeal .
- Hey Macaroni! — A spoof of the Macarena featuring a squad of elbow pasta that comes to life for a lively song and dance number.
- Joe Cartoon — Alias of online cartoonist Joe Shields, who maintains joecartoon.com. Best known for his interactive Flash animations Frog in a Blender and Gerbil in a Microwave , released in 1999. Two of the first Flash cartoons to receive fame on the internet.
- Loituma Girl (also known as Leekspin) — Loop of Orihime Inoue twirling a leek set to the music of Loituma.
- Peanut Butter Jelly Time — featured the Dancing Banana with the song by the Buckwheat Boyz.
- Ultimate Showdown of Ultimate Destiny — a battle royale between many notable real and fictitious characters.
- Bill Gates Beta — an e-mail chain-letter that appeared in 1997 and was still circulating as recently as 2007. The message claims that AOL and Microsoft are conducting a beta test and for each person you forward the e-mail to, you will receive a payment from Gates of more than $200. Pseudo-realistic contact information for a lawyer appears in the message.
- Cookie recipe — an e-mail chain-letter from the mid to late 1990s in which a person tells a story about being ripped off for over $200 for a cookie recipe from Neiman Marcus. The e-mail claims the person is attempting to exact revenge by passing the recipe out for free.
- Goodtimes virus — an infamous, fraudulent virus warning that first appeared in 1994. The e-mail claimed that an e-mail virus with the subject line "Good Times" was spreading, which would "send your CPU into an nth-complexity infinite binary loop", among other dire predictions.
- Carmen Winstead/Jessica Smith — a chain-letter style posting that first appeared on MySpace and has since spread to other Social Networking sites. The post is about a girl that was murdered by her fellow high-school students by pushing her down a sewer, and informing that recipient that they will be haunted by the ghost of the dead girl if they do not forward the message.
Films
- The Blair Witch Project — The first film to use the Internet for astroturfing. Its makers spread rumors that the material they shot was authentic and that the three protagonists really disappeared in Burkittsville. Many websites began to feature "stolen" clips of the film, later discovered to be supplied by Artisan and the filmmakers, and planted reviews of the film, which disguised their origin with intentional spelling mistakes and poor design. Other filmmakers accused the producers of creating a fake fan buzz to generate a real one, stating " That was an organized effort. What happened is that they tricked the press. "
- Brokeback Mountain — inspired many online parody trailers.
- Cloverfield — Paramount Pictures used a viral marketing campaign to promote this monster movie.
- Downfall — Clips from the 2004 film are subtitled in English with references to Hitler getting angry about Australian Rules Football, online gaming, the Super Bowl, the downfall of Morris Iemma and other events — this meme is current in late 2008
- Party Girl — First feature film shown in its entirity on the Internet (June 3, 1995).
- Snakes on a Plane — attracted attention, due to the film's title and premise, a year before its planned release, and before any promotional material was released. Producers of the film responded to the Internet buzz by adding several scenes anticipated by the fans.
- 300 — attracted the attention of many after the movie was released. This was usually by quoting lines such as "This is SPARTA!" and intentionally placing them on photographs or in online forums where they did not relate. A 'Caution: Wet Floor' sign was even created with one stick figure kicking the other into a what appears to be a well, the writing being replaced with "Caution: This is Sparta".
Games
- All Your Base Are Belong To Us — Engrish from the opening cut scene of the 1989 video game Zero Wing, which has become a catchphrase, inspiring videos and other derivative works.
- Leeroy Jenkins — A World Of Warcraft player charges into a high-level dungeon with a distinctive cry of "Leeeeeeeerooooy... Jeeenkins!", ruining the meticulous attack plans of his group and getting them all killed.
- Line Rider — A Flash game where the player draws lines that act as ramps and hills for a small rider on a sled.
- I Love Bees - An alternate reality game that was spread virally after a 1 second mention inside a Halo 2 advertisement. Purported to be a website about Honey Bees that was infected and damaged by a strange Artificial Intelligence, done in a disjointed, chaotic style resembling a crashing computer. At its height, over 500,000 people were checking the website every time it updated.
Images
- Bert is Evil — A satirical website stated that Bert of Sesame Street is the root of many evils. A juxtaposition of Bert and Osama Bin Laden subsequently appeared in a real poster in a Bangladesh protest.
- Goatse.cx — A shock image of a distended anus.
- Little Fatty — Starting in 2003, the face of a student from Shanghai was superimposed onto various other images.
- Lootie — An Associated Press photo taken in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, under the caption "A looter carries a bucket of beer out of a grocery store in New Orleans." The original photo shows a black man in waist-deep waters carrying a tub full of bottles of beer. This image and the man's face were incorporated into various parody and gag images.
- O RLY? — Originally a text phrase on Something Awful, and then an Image Macro done for 4chan. Based around a picture of a "surprised" owl.
- The Saugeen Stripper — A female student at the University of Western Ontario performed a striptease at a birthday party and dozens of digital images of the party ended up on the Internet.
Music
- Canon Rock — a rock arrangement of the Canon in D
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