Mugshot ของเจเรมี Meeks — aka, "mugshot ร้อนผู้ชาย" — ไปไวรัสหลังจากที่กรมตำรวจโรงแรมอัปโหลดภาพไป Facebook ของพวกเขาในเดือนมิถุนายน Meeks ได้ถูกจับกุมเกี่ยวกับค่าธรรมเนียม felony อาวุธ แต่เนื่องจากได้รับ 10000 กว่าชอบบนภาพ เขาตอนนี้ยังมีสัญญาการสร้างโมเดล เช่นพลังของอินเทอร์เน็ตได้
กรกฎาคม: มันฝรั่งสลัด kickstarter
We are truly in the age of crowd-funding, and the phenomenon hit its self-parodying zenith in July, when Zack Brown posted a joking request for $10 to make a potato salad on Kickstarter. The internet got in on the joke, and he ended up making over 55,492, which he used to throw a potato salad party.
August: Ice bucket challenge
If you were on the internet at all this year you’ll likely be familiar with the Ice Bucket challenge, the ALS awareness campaign that everyone from Oprah to George W. Bush took part in. We’re still waiting for Beyonce to accept her nomination.But if she had sat down with Matt Lauer and addressed those questions head-on, it could’ve been great. She could turn the tables and ask Matt Lauer why he doesn’t consider it newsworthy enough to ask Hollywood’s leading men how they feel about earning more than their female co-stars. She could talk frankly about how frustrating it is to be one of her generation’s most talented actors and still have to deal with infuriating retrograde attitudes within her industry, like Aaron Sorkin’s belief that “year in and year out, the guy who wins the Oscar for Best Actor has a much higher bar to clear than the woman who wins Best Actress.” She could point out that if she can have more than twice the Academy Award nominations than Cooper and still be paid less, and if Columbia Pictures co-president of production Hannah Minghella is paid almost $1 million less than her male counterpart, Michael De Luca, what chance does the average working woman have?
I doubt we’ll ever see a conservative comic, or one of any partisan stripes, deliver the kind of satirical brilliance and insights that Colbert has for the last decade.After several theaters posted on social media that they’d be showing “The Interview” Sony Entertainment’s Chairman and CEO Michael Lynton, said in a statement:
“We have never given up on releasing The Interview and we’re excited our movie will be in a number of theaters on Christmas Day. At the same time, we are continuing our efforts to secure more platforms and more theaters so that this movie reaches the largest possible audience.”
Founder of the Alamo Drafthouse Cinema, Tim League, announced on Friday that they will be making the Seth Rogan comedy available on Christmas Day:The comedy, which stars Seth Rogan and James Franco, centers around a plot to assassinate the leader of North Korea, Kim Jong Un.
Earlier on Tuesday afternoon Rogan tweeted:November: Alex From Target“I don’t know what it’s all about,” he said that first morning. “People are coming from everywhere. Who are they? If someone tells me what to do, I’ll do it, that’s all, I don’t care about the rest.”
In his bedroom he displayed only two books. One was a body-building manual by Arnold Schwarzenegger and the other a work by Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh, the spiritual cult leader who, some years before, had poisoned an Oregon town in order to rig municipal elections in his favor. Both books were popular in Punjab, I’d see them in bookstores everywhere, along with, to my alarm, copies of Adolf Hitler’s “Mein Kampf,” which were ubiquitous. I was glad my cousin didn’t display a copy of that. The Groom said he was interested in the Bhagwan, he made him think, and he was interested in things that made him think.
We walked that evening around the gated park outside the house, and talked, me of New York, he of his recent years in the Ukraine where he studied medicine. His future wife was from Long Island, he said, but as a teenager, her family sent her to Delhi. “They wanted to make her a proper Indian girl, teach her our values, not American values.” He smirked when he said this, and I knew what he meant, to make her properly humble, to learn the roles of woman and future wife, to know her place, to say yes, to flatter, and above all, not to think. “It’s a good family,” he promised me, “import export, gem stones, that thing. We’ll settle in New York. She’s going to be MBA.” They’d met twice, both times chaperoned. “We’ll come visit you. We’ll go—how do you say it—clubbing. She likes that, this clubbing business. They have big clubs in New York, yes? They fill two floors. That must be cool. Do you go to them? Two floors of club-type people,” he mused.
I’d been away from my family for so long I’d forgotten what it felt like to drown in them, all that punchy childishness, all those subjects we were not allowed to talk about and therefore everything we were not allowed to say or feel or think. Every word we spoke was shadowed by a hundred we didn’t or couldn’t or had not imagined because the possibility had been killed years ago, perhaps centuries, and I found myself wallowing in idiocies, unable to find a path out.
There is perhaps no better example of the mysteries of virality than Alex from Target: In November, a girl shopping at a Target in Texas tweeted a photo of her handsome checkout guy, Alex. Then it got retweeted… a lot. By that evening, Alex from Target had 300,000 Twitter followers (he now has nearly 800,000) and the next morning he fending off interview requests from every news outlet in the country, a full-fledged overnight sensation. And all because he’s a cute guy who works at Target! Teen twitter is a glorious, terrifying thing.
December: Mail Kimp
Serial was a bonafide cultural obsession in itself, but perhaps the most insular, internet-y part of the whole obsession was ‘Mail Kimp’ (for non-listeners, this comes from a kid incorrectly pronouncing the name of the sponsor, ‘Mail Chimp,’ at the start of each episode) which online fans glommed on to, turning into a hashtag, referencing in parody videos, and even giving its own remix. Long live Mail Kimp!
Mugshot ของเจเรมี Meeks — aka, "mugshot ร้อนผู้ชาย" — ไปไวรัสหลังจากที่กรมตำรวจโรงแรมอัปโหลดภาพไป Facebook ของพวกเขาในเดือนมิถุนายน Meeks ได้ถูกจับกุมเกี่ยวกับค่าธรรมเนียม felony อาวุธ แต่เนื่องจากได้รับ 10000 กว่าชอบบนภาพ เขาตอนนี้ยังมีสัญญาการสร้างโมเดล เช่นพลังของอินเทอร์เน็ตได้
กรกฎาคม: มันฝรั่งสลัด kickstarter
We are truly in the age of crowd-funding, and the phenomenon hit its self-parodying zenith in July, when Zack Brown posted a joking request for $10 to make a potato salad on Kickstarter. The internet got in on the joke, and he ended up making over 55,492, which he used to throw a potato salad party.
August: Ice bucket challenge
If you were on the internet at all this year you’ll likely be familiar with the Ice Bucket challenge, the ALS awareness campaign that everyone from Oprah to George W. Bush took part in. We’re still waiting for Beyonce to accept her nomination.But if she had sat down with Matt Lauer and addressed those questions head-on, it could’ve been great. She could turn the tables and ask Matt Lauer why he doesn’t consider it newsworthy enough to ask Hollywood’s leading men how they feel about earning more than their female co-stars. She could talk frankly about how frustrating it is to be one of her generation’s most talented actors and still have to deal with infuriating retrograde attitudes within her industry, like Aaron Sorkin’s belief that “year in and year out, the guy who wins the Oscar for Best Actor has a much higher bar to clear than the woman who wins Best Actress.” She could point out that if she can have more than twice the Academy Award nominations than Cooper and still be paid less, and if Columbia Pictures co-president of production Hannah Minghella is paid almost $1 million less than her male counterpart, Michael De Luca, what chance does the average working woman have?
I doubt we’ll ever see a conservative comic, or one of any partisan stripes, deliver the kind of satirical brilliance and insights that Colbert has for the last decade.After several theaters posted on social media that they’d be showing “The Interview” Sony Entertainment’s Chairman and CEO Michael Lynton, said in a statement:
“We have never given up on releasing The Interview and we’re excited our movie will be in a number of theaters on Christmas Day. At the same time, we are continuing our efforts to secure more platforms and more theaters so that this movie reaches the largest possible audience.”
Founder of the Alamo Drafthouse Cinema, Tim League, announced on Friday that they will be making the Seth Rogan comedy available on Christmas Day:The comedy, which stars Seth Rogan and James Franco, centers around a plot to assassinate the leader of North Korea, Kim Jong Un.
Earlier on Tuesday afternoon Rogan tweeted:November: Alex From Target“I don’t know what it’s all about,” he said that first morning. “People are coming from everywhere. Who are they? If someone tells me what to do, I’ll do it, that’s all, I don’t care about the rest.”
In his bedroom he displayed only two books. One was a body-building manual by Arnold Schwarzenegger and the other a work by Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh, the spiritual cult leader who, some years before, had poisoned an Oregon town in order to rig municipal elections in his favor. Both books were popular in Punjab, I’d see them in bookstores everywhere, along with, to my alarm, copies of Adolf Hitler’s “Mein Kampf,” which were ubiquitous. I was glad my cousin didn’t display a copy of that. The Groom said he was interested in the Bhagwan, he made him think, and he was interested in things that made him think.
We walked that evening around the gated park outside the house, and talked, me of New York, he of his recent years in the Ukraine where he studied medicine. His future wife was from Long Island, he said, but as a teenager, her family sent her to Delhi. “They wanted to make her a proper Indian girl, teach her our values, not American values.” He smirked when he said this, and I knew what he meant, to make her properly humble, to learn the roles of woman and future wife, to know her place, to say yes, to flatter, and above all, not to think. “It’s a good family,” he promised me, “import export, gem stones, that thing. We’ll settle in New York. She’s going to be MBA.” They’d met twice, both times chaperoned. “We’ll come visit you. We’ll go—how do you say it—clubbing. She likes that, this clubbing business. They have big clubs in New York, yes? They fill two floors. That must be cool. Do you go to them? Two floors of club-type people,” he mused.
I’d been away from my family for so long I’d forgotten what it felt like to drown in them, all that punchy childishness, all those subjects we were not allowed to talk about and therefore everything we were not allowed to say or feel or think. Every word we spoke was shadowed by a hundred we didn’t or couldn’t or had not imagined because the possibility had been killed years ago, perhaps centuries, and I found myself wallowing in idiocies, unable to find a path out.
There is perhaps no better example of the mysteries of virality than Alex from Target: In November, a girl shopping at a Target in Texas tweeted a photo of her handsome checkout guy, Alex. Then it got retweeted… a lot. By that evening, Alex from Target had 300,000 Twitter followers (he now has nearly 800,000) and the next morning he fending off interview requests from every news outlet in the country, a full-fledged overnight sensation. And all because he’s a cute guy who works at Target! Teen twitter is a glorious, terrifying thing.
December: Mail Kimp
Serial was a bonafide cultural obsession in itself, but perhaps the most insular, internet-y part of the whole obsession was ‘Mail Kimp’ (for non-listeners, this comes from a kid incorrectly pronouncing the name of the sponsor, ‘Mail Chimp,’ at the start of each episode) which online fans glommed on to, turning into a hashtag, referencing in parody videos, and even giving its own remix. Long live Mail Kimp!
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