View Full Version : So How Did Rick Roll'ed Internet Hoax Get Started? CavNews Reports


SideOfBacon
04-21-2008, 02:25 PM
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,352010,00.html

The Biggest Little Internet Hoax on Wheels Hits Mainstream



It's the little Web hoax that got huge.

On April 1, thousands of Internet users clicked links to what they thought would be videos of preening supermodels or cute, tumbling puppies — only to find themselves watching a painfully awkward, decades-old music video by British pop singer Rick Astley.

They'd been "rickrolled" — fooled into watching Astley's 1987 hit "Never Gonna Give You Up." Click here and you can be, too (http://youtube.com/watch?v=eBGIQ7ZuuiU).

An estimated 18 million were rickrolled that April Fool's Day, along with every visitor to YouTube, which was one of several sites to redirect all its links to Astley's video.

One week later, rickrolling went beyond just the virtual world.

The New York Mets announced that "Never Gonna Give You Up" had received 5 million online votes to become the winner of the team's eighth-inning sing-along song, thanks to sites like Fark and Digg that stumbled upon the vote and urged users to pick the Astley croon.

"We've probably not gotten that many votes for anything before," Mets spokesman Jay Horwitz said in a telephone interview.

It's all just a bit of harmless geek rebellion, say Web pranksters.

"It's just one of those things we do at Fark," founder Drew Curtis said by phone. "Just something silly. The moment we saw the possibility of voting for Rick Astley, they just started going for it."

Once the Mets realized what was happening, they quickly invalidated the results of the poll and decided that on Opening Day, April 8, they'd take the vote to the people. When Astley's song was played, it was greeted with boos. The Mets had finally overcome rickrolling.

"We're not talking about a nuclear bomb here: It's a fun thing, it's in good fun, and we're not offended," Horwitz said. "But it wasn't a true indicator of our fan base."

The origin of rickrolling goes back three years and involves an egg, a duck without feet and the video game "Grand Theft Auto."

In keeping with silly Internet humor, the director of the photo-sharing Web site 4chan, who goes by the handle "moot," decided he'd play a joke and change the word "egg" to "duck" every time a user posted a message.

In time the phenomenon spread, and the word "eggroll" was replaced by "duckroll." When someone came up with the idea to redirect Internet links to an image of a duck on wheels, rickrolling's forebear, "duckrolling," was born.

Then, in March 2007, came the release of the eagerly awaited "Grand Theft Auto IV" trailer.

So popular was the response, it immediately crashed the site it was posted on.

In what was to become a pivotal moment in Internet hoax history, someone at 4chan took the now-defunct Web link for the Grand Theft Auto IV video game and duckrolled it. But instead of linking to the image of a duck on wheels, they linked to the Rick Astley video on YouTube.

Rickrolling was born.

When interviewed by the Los Angeles Times, Astley himself said he was OK with rickrolling and had no plans to capitalize on it, but he found it "bizarre."

Even 4chan's "moot" was underwhelmed at first.

"When I first saw it, I thought it was silly, stupid," he said in a telephone interview. "After hundreds of times, it got really catchy, I knew all the words. But on April 1, it really blew up. I was frankly very surprised when I saw a certain number of Web sites outside of Internet-culture sites running rickrolling as a prank."

It was April Fool's Day, and in an apparently uncoordinated move, Web sites everywhere rickrolled their readers. Then came the Mets incident. Rickrolling had truly hit the mainstream.

"I was actually getting gas at a gas station, and the song was coming on, and I had to look around at everyone else like, 'Is this for real?' " Curtis said.

Now that rickrolling has officially entered the popular consciousness, it's doomed to go the way of other Internet phenomena like "All Your Base," the "Hamster Dance," or "2 Girls, 1 Cup," both Curtis and "moot" said.

"It's gone from silly Internet prank to entering the mainstream, so a lot of people are being elitist about it, saying it's beating a dead horse, and it has kind of lost its appeal," moot said. "At the end of the day, it's just a link where you get a guy singing an '80s pop song. There's only so far you can delve into the intricacies."

Even Astley, who goes on tour in the U.K. in May, seems to have wearied of his newfound Internet fame.

In response to a request for comment, a spokesman for his record label wrote back a single line:

"I'm sorry, but he's done talking about rickrolling."

fahrfegneugen
04-21-2008, 02:46 PM
You expect me to click on that link?

Kari
04-21-2008, 04:32 PM
Wow, did I just get an ad for Rick Astley ringtones? :lol:

Apostle
04-21-2008, 07:39 PM
actually, rick rolled came from duck rolled. there use to be links to a picture of a wooden duck with wheels.