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Good Guy Boss

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About

Good Guy Boss is an advice animal image macro series featuring a stock photograph of a middle-aged businessman making a thumbs-up hand gesture. Similar to its precursor Good Guy Greg, the captions often depict the character as a thoughtful, considerate and generous manager.

Origin

The stock photo of the thumbs-up signing businessman was originally hosted on the Microsoft Office[5] image database (shown below, left). On March 27th, 2012, Redditor Bournefox submitted an image macro based on the stock photo to the /r/AdviceAnimals[2] subreddit (shown below, right). Prior to being archived, the post received over 14,000 up votes and 210 comments.



Spread

On the following day, the “Good Guy Boss” Quickmeme[1] page was created, accumulating 640 submissions over the span of a year. Also on March 28th, 2013, Redditor jlmawp submitted an image macro[6] describing a boss encouraging his employee to check out a post on Reddit (shown below). The post gained more than 7,200 up votes and 95 comments prior to being archived.



On February 1st, 2013, Redditor Shishakli submitted an image macro praising bosses who provide adequate wages to /r/AdviceAnimals[3] (shown below, left), which received upwards of 9,400 up votes and 300 comments within two months. On February 27th, Redditor gkden submitted an image macro retelling the way the boss reacted to his resignation (shown below, right). In the next month, the post received over of 31,000 up votes and 560 comments.



Notable Examples



Search Interest

External References


UGNazi

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About

UGNazi, short for the Underground Nazi Hacktivist Group, is a computer hacker group best known for their staunch opposition to CISPA and SOPA and practice of DDoSDDoS (distributed denial of service) attacks against United States government websites in retaliation to the bills. Members of the group are also known for hacking the Twitter accounts of two Westboro Baptist Church members following the Sandy Hook school shooting in late 2012.

Online History

The UGNazi Twitter account @UG[1] was created on December 9th, 2011. Their first orchestrated DDoS attacks were against Coach.com, CoachFactory.com[4] and UFC.com[5] after the companies had announced their support of the Stop Online Piracy Act. The group redirected all three domain names to the now-defunct UGNazi.com, where they also began cataloging all of their targets.[2] At this point, the website[7] claimed that the group was run by hackers known as Josh The God[16], MrOsama and AntiGov.[8] Following the hacks, the group compiled a list[6] of dozens of forum threads and news articles about their actions, adding pieces of commentary about the discussions. Both sites were only down for a short period of time.



April 2012: Government DDoS

In April 2012, the group had expanded to include two new hackers Cosmo and s3rver.exe, while AntiGov was no longer listed on their website.[9] The same month, they began attacking government websites beginning with New York City’s official website nyc.gov[10] on the 18th under the guise of “AlQaedaSec.” Over the next several days, the group took down dozens of sites including the District of Columbia[11], Washington DC’s tourism board[12], NASDAQ[13]. the CIA, the FBI and the Department of Justice[14] in protest of the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protect Act (CISPA). Each website was down for several hours while Cosmo the God[15] and Josh the God[16] took to Twitter to brag about their exploits.




May 2012: Credit Card Data Leak

On May 21st, 2012, members of UGNazi impersonated British billing company WHMCS’ creator and lead developer Matt Pugh to obtain access codes to the company’s servers[17], which they used to temporarily take the site offline, delete important data and hijack the company’s Twitter account.[18] Additionally, they leaked more than 1.7 gigabytes of data[19], including more than 500,000 user names, passwords, IP addresses and credit card information. A member of UGNazi told Softpedia they did this after finding that the company did not take any action against the “cybercriminals” who were using their services to sell illegal hosting and malware, among other things. Nine days after the breach, the FBI seized UGNazi.com and arrested then fifteen-year-old Cosmo[20] for allegedly orchestrating the impersonation and obtaining the access information.



Despite Cosmo’s arrest, on June 21st, 2012, UGNazi took credit[30] for 40 minute Twitter outage, though the company claimed it was due to a “cascaded bug”[29] in their infrastructure. On June 26th, Cosmo and JoshTheGod were two of 24 people arrested as part of an FBI sting known as “Operation Card Shop”[21], in which the government agency tracked credit card thieves through the fake marketplace carderprofit.cc for two years. JoshTheGod, whose real name is Mir Islam[22], was arrested in New York City following a meetup with someone he thought was another user on the site.[23] Cosmo was arrested in California, but his name was not released as he was a minor. Following the arrests, Cosmo tweeted about it, calling out another hacker known as The Jester after he took credit for being involved in the sting.




Following these arrests, Anonymous began to target The Jester[24][25], hacking into his email, blog and social networking accounts[26] in early July. Days later, Cosmo confirmed to the International Business Times[27] that The Jester was not involved, stating that FBI Agents were “laughing about Jester taking credit.” That September, Cosmo was profiled by Wired[3], where he imparted some explanations of his social engineering hacking methods. Two months later, he was sentenced to six years probation, during which he would not be allowed to use the internet unsupervised and without consent from his parole officer.

December 2012: Westboro Church Twitter Hack

Following the events of the Sandy Hook Elementary School Shooting, members of the Westboro Baptist Church threatened to picket the funerals of the children killed in the massacre via Twitter on December 14th, 2012.[33] Two days later, @CosmoTheGod violated his parole by breaking into the account of WBC spokeswoman Shirley Lynn Phelps-Roper[31], which was suspended nearly a day later. On the 19th, Cosmo also hacked into the Twitter account of the Church’s leader, Fred Phelps Jr.[32] On December 20th, 2012, the day following the Westboro Baptist Church Twitter account takeovers, UGNazi claimed they were responsible for another CIA website outage.[34]




Search Interest



External References

[1]Twitter – @UG

[2]UGNazi.com – Targets

[3]Wired – Cosmo, the Hacker ‘God’ Who Fell to Earth

[4]Techie Buzz – Coach.com and Coachfactory.com Hacked to Protest Against SOPA by UGNazi Group

[5]USA Today – UFC website hacked for short period

[6]UGNazi.com – News

[7]UGNazi.com – Home

[8]Twitter – @OpAntiGov

[9]Softpedia – Hackers Attack “Heart” of US, District of Columbia Site Down

[10]Softpedia – AlQaedaSec Launch DDOS Attack on New York City Website (Updated)

[11]DCist – Hackers Launch DDoS Attack on D.C. Government Websites

[12]DCist – Hackers Continue Attacks on D.C., Post Info About Gray

[13]Softpedia – NASDAQ Site Taken Down by UGNazi Hackers

[14]Softpedia – UGNazi Hackers Launch DDOS Attacks on CIA, DOJ Sites to Protest CISPA

[15]Twitter – @ThaCosmo

[16]Twitter – @JoshTheGod

[17]WHMCS Forums – 21st May 2012 – Further Update

[18]Forbes – Hackers Impersonate Web Billing Firm’s Staff To Spill 500,000 Users’ Passwords And Credit Cards

[19]Softpedia – UGNazi Leaks 1.7 GB of Data from WHMCS Servers

[20]Softpedia – UGNazi Hacker Cosmo Arrested After WHMCS Breach

[21]Wall Street Journal – Arrests Made in Massive Online Sting Operation

[22]The New York Times – F.B.I. Says 24 Are Arrested in Credit Card Theft Plan

[23]Wired – Feds Arrest 24 in Global Carding Ring Bust

[24]Kevin Townsend – Did Jester take down UGNazi?

[25]International Business Times UK – Anonymous Targets ‘Good Hacktivist’ the Jester after Arrest of UGNazi Members

[26]th3j35t3r – Jester, it’s time to retire

[27]International Business Times – The Jester’s Claims a Joke, Says UGNazi Hacker Cosmo

[28]DCist – Hacker Who Attacked D.C. Government Websites Sentenced to Probation, Won’t Be Able to Use Internet For Six Years

[29]Wired – Outage Hurts Twitter More Than It Hurts You

[30]Mashable – Hackers Take Credit for Twitter Outages

[31]Washington Post – Westboro Baptist Church Twitter account hacked

[32]Gizmodo – UGNazi Hackers Seize Another Westboro Baptist Church Hate Account

[33]Huffington Post – Hackers’ Westboro Baptist Church Blitz Continues: UG Nazi, Jester, Anonymous Take Down Twitter Accounts, Sites

[34]Gothamist – CIA Website Down, UGNazi Hackers Claim Responsibility

Salt and Ice Challenge

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Work in progress

About

The Salt and Ice Challenge is a famous YouTube phenomenon similar to the Cinnamon Challenge, consisting in pouring salt on some part of the body and pressing ice against it. This can cause severe burns, and in some cases, permanent body damage.

Notable Examples

The Jester

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About

The Jester is a computer hacker who has claimed responsibility for multiple high profile attacks on various websites and organizations, including WikiLeaks, 4chan and several Islamist websites.

Online History

On December 19th, 2009, The Jester created the @th3j35t3r Twitter[1] feed, which gained over 43,000 followers in the next three years. On June 26th, 2010, Jester launched his personal blog Jester’s Court,[2] with his first post[3] describing the blog as “insights into the world of an independent citizen fighting the Jihadists online.”

Attack on WikiLeaks

Barrett Brown Doxed

Sandy Hook Twitter

Reputation

Search Interest

External References

[1]Twitter – @th3j35t3r

[2]Jesters Court – Jesters Court

[3]Jesters Court – Maybe I might setup a blog here

[4]

LOG

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LOG is a nickname that donors on the Minecraft server, Minelegacy, put at the end of the first word in their actual IGN. Some names include JayLOG (JayRay2001), SnipesLOG (snipes88) CreeperLOG (creeperman4553), and many more. The joke is actually a praise to the genius behind one of the biggest Skyblock servers, RasecLOG. The meme was first used in Image Mackeral of Rasec’s Minecraft Head titled “Leave it To Rasec” was posted on memecreator.org with the Caption “Trying To Create New Meme. Leave It To Rasec!”. Other /nick memes were only used on the server. they were _FaZe and _Fade, still in the add it to your IGN format. The 2 were used as rivalry. the meme ended as soon as it started. The only one that lives on is LOG

Surprised Patrick

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(Work in Progress)

About

Surprised Patrick is an exploitable image. It is inserted in images to denote shock or surprise, but is also used for purely decorative reasons as well.

Origin

In the 2004 movie, The Spongebob Squarepants Movie, a scene showed the character Patrick Star in a surprised state.

(searching for original exploitable post)

The gif was then posted to reddit with the title “This just popped up in my news feed”. [2]

Spread

Within a few days of the original post, the twitter account @PatrickPics [3] was made to collect and tweet various Surprised Patrick pictures, along with a Surprised Pat tumblr.

Buzzfeed also covered Surprised Patrick. [1]

External Links

[1]Buzzfeed – Surprised Patrick Is Surprised By Everything On The Internet

[2]reddit – This just popped up in my news feed

[3]twitter @PatrickPics

[4]tumblr Surprised Pat

Internet Food

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Food is used in a variety of ways on the internet. while there are some foods that are better than others (such as how tacos, bacon, and cake) there are also foods that present a negative connotation on the internet (potatos). Some of the more notable examples include Cheezeburgers, which were made popular in 2007 when Eric Nakagawa created a www.cheezburger.com. Since the creation of the website food has been heralded on the internet.

For reasons unknown (most likely because they are delicious) foods such as Tacos, Bacon, and Cake have been considered the best thing to ever dawn upon mankind. With Potatos being a notable example of food that is just plain terrible.

X and Robot-X discuss about Y

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Notice

The Thumbnail used for this article is just a placeholder. Please submit a proper image if you happen to come across one.
This article is a stub. You can help by expanding it.

About

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oCCFU9gSw78

“X and Robot-X discuss about Y” is a series of Youtube Videos featuring a random Team Fortress 2 Class and his MVM Robot counterpart repeating the same word through the entire video. The words repeated are usually a memetic quote, such as “Nope.avi” and “SEE!”


Foster's Home For Imaginary Friends

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In the Foster’s universe, imaginary friends take physical form and become real as soon as children think them up. Once the children outgrow them, the friends move to Foster’s Home for Imaginary Friends, where they stay until other children come to adopt them. The home is run by the elderly Madame Foster, its founder; her imaginary friend Mr. Herriman, the business manager; and her granddaughter Frankie, who handles day-to-day operations.
Mac is an eight-year-old boy whose mother told him that he needs to give up his friend Bloo, who hears about Foster’s and thinks it will be a perfect place for him to stay. Bloo moves in with the lanky and one-armed Wilt, the scary-looking but cowardly Eduardo, and the bizarre bird/airplane/tree friend Coco. He is saddened to learn that staying at Foster’s makes him eligible for adoption by another child, but eventually Madame Foster makes a special deal: as long as Mac visits every day, Bloo can live there and not be adopted.

Hadokening

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About

Hadokening is a photo fad that involves two or more people staging a “Ki attack” knockout sequence and photographing themselves in mid-action, as seen in the popular Japanese fighting arcade game Street Fighter and manga series Dragon Ball.

Origin

Parody re-enactments of harnessing and blasting Qi in the form of energy balls have been circulating on the South Korean web under the generic name “Qi attack play”[6][7][8] (장풍놀이) as early as since 2009.



However, the photo fad didn’t reach the English-speaking and western audiences until March 25th, 2013, when Japanese Twitter user ちゃんまん[9] (@mkpiiii9) posted an image of herself and her classmates staging a dramatic shot.




Spread

The tweet instantly spawned a series of copycat photos from other Japanese Twitter users, many of whom appear to be high school girls judging from their school uniform attires. The Japanese photo fad was soon picked up by Oregon-based DJ and blogger KentBalls[1] on March 27th in a compilation post with the following description:

One of the latest twitter trends coming out of Japan is for young school girls to take photos with their friends doing poses and power moves from anime series like Dragon Ball Z. Here’s hoping this is the next trend in North America.

On the following day, Redditor Auyx[3] linked to an Imgur gallery version of the KentBalls post in a post titled “HADOKEN-ing. The latest craze in Japan,” which introduced the name “HADOKEN-ing” for the first time, derived from the well-known special attack Hadouken (literally “wave motion fist” or “surge fist” in Japanese) used by several characters featured in the game. The post reached the front page with more than 42,000 up votes and 1,990 comments within the first 24 hours. That same day, Japan’s “Hadokening” photo fad was covered by BuzzFeed[2], Vice Magazine[10] and ABC News.[4]

Notable Examples




External References

NullCrew

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(Work in progress!!)

About

NullCrew is a hacktivist group known for working against large corporations, educational institutions and government agencies deemed corrupt. Lead by a person using the pseudonym Null, the group consists of the hackers known as 0rbit, Doc, 3cho, Siph0n, Nop and crazyboris.

Online History

NullCrew’s first attack took place on July 12th, 2012, when they hacked into the World Health Organization’s website[15], leaking 568 user credentials from their servers in protest of poor global healthcare systems. The following day, they also released passwords from PBS.[13] On the 16th, NullCrew broke in to the technology equipment company ASUS’s online store[14], leaking the usernames and passwords of people who had shopped with them. In the following days, NullCrew also hacked into a South African ISP directory[16], Yale University[17] and NetCom[18], leaking user information from each site. On August 5th, the group launched their official Twitter account[1], making their first tweet later that month to announce a hack on Memorex Electronics.




In late August 2012, the group aligned itself with #OpFreeAssange, an Anonymous-lead campaign in support of Wikileaks founder Julian Assange, and targeted Cambridge University, releasing dozens of login information of professors and administrators.[12] Weeks later, NullCrew took on the several websites belonging to the Cambodian government[10] following the arrest of The Pirate Bay’s co-founder in that country. The following month, NullCrew claimed that they had control of eight of Sony’s servers[11], releasing more than 400 names and e-mail addresses.



On March 6th, 2013, the group hacked in to Time Warner Cable’s customer service website, defacing it with the former Gorilla Munch cereal mascot associated with the meme That Really Rustled My Jimmies.[2] They announced on Twitter that the hack was in protest of their use of the Copyrights Alert System[19] launched the previous month to punish subscribers who acquire illegal content. Though the defacement only lasted several hours, the hack exposed the fact that one of Time Warner’s administrator passwords was set to the default “change me.”



Search Interest



External References

Barrett Brown

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About

Barrett Brown is a writer and founder of the intelligence contracting industry wiki Project PM.[1] Brown has often been treated as a spokesperson for the ad-hoc group of Internet known as Anonymous by several news media outlets.

Online History

In April of 2000, Brown began writing for America Online’s features department, where he remained employed for the next four years. In April of 2007, he began writing freelance for the satirical news publication The Onion. In August of 2009, he began contributing articles to the news site True/Slant and The Huffington Post. On March 25th, 2010, an article by Brown was published on The Huffington Post,[2] which reported that the United States government was planning to destroy the online leak publication site WikiLeaks. On March 4th, 2011, Brown was quoted in an article on The Tech Herald[4] about Anonymous defense of Bradley Manning, in which he was referred to as “a self-styled spokesperson for Anonymous.” On March 23rd, D Magazine[5] published an article titled “Barrett Brown is Anonymous,” which described Brown as a ex-heroin addict and former Internet troll who had become passionate about hacktivism.

Operation Cartel

On October 6th, 2011, YouTuber MrAnonymousguyfawkes uploaded a video to YouTube featuring a man wearing a Guy Fawkes mask ordering the Mexico-based International drug cartel The Zetas to release a member of Anonymous that had been taken captive. The man in the video threatened to expose the personally identifiable information of individuals linked to the cartel if their captive was not set free (shown below).



On November 3rd, Gawker[8] published an article by staff writer Adrian Chen, which referred to Brown as "Anonymous’ informal spokesman. The article went on to quote Brown who claimed hackers had compiled a list of 75 collaborators with the Zetas, which were planned for release as payback for the kidnapping of an Anonymous member in Veracruz. The following day, D Magazine[6] reported that Operation Cartel had been halted by Anonymous after the Zetas threatened to kill 10 people for each outed collaborator.

Arrest

On March 6th, 2012, Brown announced via Twitter that his apartment had been raided by the FBI following the LulzSec founder Xavier Monsegur (a.k.a. Sabu) was pressured into giving up information about Anonymous members.[9]




On September 12th, Brown uploaded a video to YouTube in which he threatens to destroy FBI agent for harassing his mother (shown below, left). The same day, YouTuber raincoaster uploaded a video featuring a Tinychat video session in which Brown can be heard being arrested in the background (shown below, right). On September 13th, The Huffington Post[10] reported Brown was arrested for threatening an FBI agent.



On January 30th, 2013, the Dallas Observer[11] reported that Brown was being charged with concealing evidence, threatening an FBI agent and disseminating information, for which he could face up to 100 years in prison. On the following day, Vice[12] published an article about Brown’s indictments, noting that the concealing evidence charge was linked to Brown pasting a link to a document containing stolen credit card numbers into an IRC chat room.

Search Interest

External References

Star Ship Voyager Mission

So tell me...

Sonic The Hedgehog Bad Hack Creepypasta

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The Creepypasta you are about to see contains realistic events that happend way back in time (1990) Viewer discrection is advised.

a child, I really loved playing the Sonic the Hedgehog games on the SEGA MegaDrive. Sadly, when nostalgia hit me one evening, I found out our console broke when we moved house, meaning my mum threw out all of the old games.

So, I decided to search eBay for a preowned MegaDrive. I stumbled across one, at the rather cheap price of six pounds, including delivery. The description claimed it also came with Sonic 1, yet on closer inspection, the cartridge’s paper seemed to have been torn off, with a label crudely placed on the front, written in a scrawled script.

I thought nothing of it, and decided to bid on it. Weirdly, despite it having a day to go, I immediately won the item. I proceeded to payment, left my feedback, and it arrived within three days. The Megadrive was in surprisingly good condition for the price, almost brand new sans smudged fingerprints. I blew into the labelled cartridge (old habits die hard you see), and inserted it into the cartridge slot.

The TV screen flickered on. The familiar image of the SEGA logo faded in left to right, but instead of the joyous chorus, there was a cacophonic blast of static which lasted far longer than it should’ve done.

But this is where things got weirder. The title screen was polluted, black sludge pouring into the sea, with dark skies and lightning. The music was slower, in a dissonant, minor key, and when Sonic popped out of the marquee, he looked genuinely terrified and afraid. I thought this must’ve been some sort of hack, until I hit start.

I saw Robotnik, in graphics far more realistic than possible for the time, holding a lifelike rabbit by the ears. He looked full of malice and hatred, his pince-nez glasses glinting as he revealed in his other hand a machete. He held it up to the defenseless animal’s throat and slit it, blood pouring out like a fountain. Robotnik began to laugh, but it was almost like he was in the room with me, it was so realistic.

Added by Oskarmandude

The game then went to Green Hill Zone, where the music was replaced with a low buzzing drone. The background looked just like it did on the title screen, and again, Sonic looked visibly shaken. His skin was paler, and he appeared to shake with fear. On running, he began to cry.

Nevertheless, I decided to play through as normal, just to see if this was some sort of cruel joke. I ended up losing rings against a Buzz Bomber. The noise on losing my rings was a harsh ringing, and I heard Robotnik chortle once more, his face flashing in the stormy background. Sonic hit the floor; I was unable to control him at this point, as the Buzz Bomber began to descend on Sonic’s helpless body.

The Buzz Bomber literally stabbed Sonic, and all I could hear was tortured screams. I couldn’t take my eyes off the crudely animated sprites of Sonic writhing in pain as the Buzz Bomber rammed into him. This went on for a good 30 seconds, before the Buzz Bomber flew off, leaving a bloodied Sonic corpse behind. The screams subsided as the screen faded to black.

I heard incredibly deep murmurings in some sort of weird language, maybe Japanese or Korean. Again, the hyper realistic Dr Robotnik faded into view again, but this time he was holding an even more realistic Sonic by the head. Sonic was crying, begging for mercy, sheer terror in his cries, but this time, Robotnik didn’t have a knife.

He literally broke Sonic’s neck, the sound reverberating, and I was ‘treated’ to the sight of Robotnik kicking the defenseless corpse of the hedgehog around, blood flying everywhere, Sonic’s spines breaking off, while all the time, the distorted sounds of Robotnik’s laughter and Sonic’s screaming played.

A message appeared in Japanese, with a selection- Yes or No. I chose Yes, somehow driven to continue. I appeared back in Green Hill Zone, but this time, there were graves where the totem poles were. Sonic was even more afraid, looking directly at the screen, as if begging me not to continue. But I felt I had to.

I continued through the game, of which its layout hadn’t changed at all. The iconic loop de loop was there, the tunnel Sonic span down, everything was the same, but decaying and full of pollution. I reached the end of the level, however, and it was the iconic boss level, you know, with the wrecking ball.

Only when Robotnik appeared, there was a blast of loud cacophonous synth sound. Robotnik’s face was contorted with sheer disgust for the hedgehog- and before I even had a chance to attack, Robotnik’s wrecking ball slammed into Sonic and crushed him against the side of the screen. Once more, the screams played, but the screen began to glitch horrifically and turn gray, almost into television static.

Before I had a chance to hit the power button and take out the cartridge, I heard very clearly in a deep voice- “This was your fault, and your fault alone.” I looked at the television and the hyper realistic Robotnik’s face from before occupied the entire screen.

The words game over flashed over his face as I saw Sonic’s hyper realistic carcass fall and land on top of the letters, sliding off and hitting the ‘floor’. All you could hear was Sonic whimpering and crying and asking “Why did you do this? Why?”

I promptly ripped the game out of the console, and threw them both straight into the garbage. To this day, I have never seen that eBay seller online again. My computer returned 404s on searching in the history, and anyone I asked on the eBay forums claimed the user had never existed in the first place


Subway Porn

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About

Subway Porn referes to edited images and original fanart in which questionable and explicit content has been censored by using the restaurant franchise Subway, making it appear as if the characters are engaging into sexual activities with a Subway sandwich. These type of censors were initially used by the Brony fandom to fight explicit art in a jesting way, but were quickly adapted to be used as a non-serious censor in general.

Origin

Lauren Faust is an American animator and the creator of the animated series My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic. Due to this she has become an iconic figure within the brony fandom and even received a ponified version of herself, nicknamed Fausticorn (shown below, left). Late 2011, certain fans began including Fausticorn into explicit fanworks, which were mostly met by negative replies due to Faust’s iconic status within the fandom. In reply to this other bronies began editing Subway sandwiches into the fanart in an attempt to stop the creation of it (shown below, right). Due to the deactivation of the largest brony image board, Ponibooru, in August 2012, the original instances of both the fanworks and the edits have most likely been lost. The earliest unedited piece that is still accessible can be found on the brony image board Twentypercentcooler on October 31st, 2011.[7]



Spread

As the amount of censors on explicit art of Fausticorn grew, the use of Subway sandwiches slowly turned into a toungue-in-cheek joke within the brony fandom. The result of this was that Fausticorn was more often combined with the Subway brand in general in fanworks (shown below, left). Subways also began to gain a more notable presence in fanworks, often intentionally added from the start or even drawn in.



On December 26th, 2011, a forum thread was started by Facepunch user Jackald, asking users to photoshop Subways onto pages of hentai manga and doujin pages.[1] As of March 2013, the thread contains over 200 pages and had its most recent activity late January of the same year. A Facebook page called Hatsune Miku Troll was also launced early 2012, and has created various edits of hentai manga with Subways up until its deactivation later that year.



Subway’s Facebook Flooding

On August 15th, 2012, members of the Hatsune Miku Troll Facebook[2] page began tagging their creations with the Facebook profile of the restaurant franchise by the suggestion of an admin of the profile. This resulted in the Facebook profile of Subway being flooded by censored hentai containing subways, most of the images originating from Facebook page and the Facepunch thread.[1] This event was also covered by The Daily Dot,[3] Gawker[4] and Hypervocal.[5] A post on the r/funny sub-Reddit[6] managed to gain more than 11,000 upvotes as of March 25th, 2013. Subway replied later that day that they were aware of the content and began removing it.



External References

Hubba Hubba Zoot Zoot

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[w.i.p.]

About

“Hubba Hubba Zoot Zoot”, is the name of a 1981 pop song, released by Swedish group, Caramba. The song rose to fame on youtube, following an AMV parody, featuring characters from the anime “El-Hazard”

Origin

The song was originally released as part of a self-titled album by band Caramba[1], with the album being the band’s only release. The album became famous, due to the entire album being recorded using a made-up language.

Spread

On 21 Febuary 2006 an AMV using the song was posted to Youtube. This video showed the character Katsuhiko Jinnai[2], main antagonist of anime series “El-Hazard”[3], and his army, the Bugram[4], singing the song. The video soon grew in popularity, with many parodies following afterwards.

Notable Deriatives

Search Interest

External References

[1]Wikipedia – Caramba

[2]Wikipedia – Katsuhiko Jinnai

[3]Wikipedia – El-Hazard

[4]Wikipedia – Bugram

hadokening

PBS Idea Channel

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[Researching]

About

PBS Idea Channel is a YouTube channel that features discussions about aspects of online and popular culture and their relationships to human experiences. The channel uploads weekly on Wednesdays and is affiliated with PBS[1], a not-for-profit broadcasting network.

The videos uploaded to the channel are hosted by Mike Rugnetta, a former cast member of the Know Your Meme show[2].

Origin

The PBS Idea Channel was created on February 17th, 2012, but did not upload any videos until March 6, when it uploaded a promotional video announcing its premiere on March 14. The channel’s first full video, which discussed the connections between Super Mario Bros. for the NES and surrealist art, was uploaded that day.

Though the channel initially opted for a bimonthly uploading schedule, PBS Idea Channel became popular enough that the PBS decided to upgrade the show to a weekly series. Since then, the channel has gained over seven million video views and over 180,000 subscriptions (the latter of which is more than its parent channel, PBS[3]).

Notable Videos

Google Trend

External References

[1]Wikipedia – PBS

[2]Wikipedia – Know Your Meme

[3]Youtube – PBS

priceless

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i met a boy on omegle saying that he wanted a meme of his face so here it is

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