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Internet meme
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This article has multiple issues. Please help improve the article or discuss these issues on the talk page.
It needs additional references or sources for verification. Tagged since September 2008.
Its lead section requires expansion. Tagged since September 2008.

The Hampster Dance, a widely distributed Internet meme of the late 1990s.
The term Internet meme (pronounced /mi:m/, meem) is a phrase used to describe a catchphrase or concept that spreads quickly from person to person via the Internet, much like an inside joke.[1] The term is a reference to the concept of memes, although this concept refers to a much broader category of cultural information.
Contents [hide]
1 Description
2 Types and uses
2.1 Self-promotion
2.2 Inadvertent celebrity
2.3 Urban rumors and hoaxes
2.4 Advertising and marketing
2.5 Image editing
2.6 References to pop culture
3 See also
4 References
5 Further reading
6 External links
[edit]Description

At its most basic, an Internet meme is simply the propagation of a digital file or hyperlink from one person to others using methods available through the Internet (for example, email, blogs, social networking sites, instant messaging, etc). The content often consists of a saying or joke, a rumor, an altered or original image, a complete website, a video clip or animation, or an offbeat news story, among many other possibilities. An Internet meme may stay the same or may evolve over time, by chance or through commentary, imitations, and parody versions, or even by collecting news accounts about itself. Internet memes have a tendency to evolve and spread extremely quickly, sometimes going in and out of popularity in just days. They are spread organically, voluntarily, and peer to peer, rather than by compulsion, predetermined path, or completely automated means.[2]
The term may refer to the content that spreads from user to user, the idea behind the content, or the phenomenon of its spread. Internet memes have been seen as a form of art.[3] There exist websites that collect and popularize Internet memes as well as sites devoted to the spread of specific Internet memes. The term is generally not applied to content or web services that are seen as legitimate, useful, and non-faddish, or that spread through organized publishing and distribution channels. Thus, serious news stories, videogames, web services, songs by established musical groups, or the like are usually not called Internet memes.[citation needed]
[edit]Types and uses

[edit]Self-promotion
One common form of Internet meme is created when a person, company, product, musical group, or the like is promoted on the Internet for its pop culture value. Vanity sites, for example, are among the first recognized Internet memes.[2]
[edit]Inadvertent celebrity
Often, a person or company becomes infamous (or indeed famous) by virtue of an embarrassing video, e-mail, or other act.[citation needed]
[edit]Urban rumors and hoaxes
Many Internet memes are urban legends, fraud schemes, slander or false news stories that are either planted deliberately to become an Internet meme, evolve by mistake or rumor, or that jump from an offline source to the Internet. It is common to create fake "for sale" listings on sites such as Craigslist or eBay for no other reason than to amuse people.[1] Web sites such as snopes.com collect lists of such hoaxes or offer services by which users can fact-check popular claims they find on the Internet in order to determine their source and whether or not they are true. Sites like Urban Dictionary and Snopes collect user-generated information about rumors, neologisms, and other popular culture phenomena, many of which could be considered Internet memes.
[edit]Advertising and marketing
Public relations, advertising, and marketing professionals have embraced Internet memes as a form of viral marketing to create marketing "buzz" for their product or service. Internet memes are seen as cost-effective, and because of their (sometimes self-conscious) faddishness, a way to create an image of cleverness or trendiness. Marketers, for example, use Internet memes to create interest in films that would otherwise not generate positive publicity among critics. The film Snakes on a Plane generated much publicity from this method.[4] Political operatives use Internet memes to shape opinion. Used in the context of public relations, the term would be more of an advertising buzzword than a proper Internet meme, although there is still an implication that the interest in the content is for purposes of trivia, ephemera, or frivolity rather than straightforward advertising and news.[citation needed]
[edit]Image editing
Main article: Image macro
Perhaps the most popular Internet memes are made by editing images (pictures, drawings, portraits, etc.) because of the ease that editing an image implies; these kind of Internet memes acquire a broad significance rapidly because they can be shared easily over the Internet. These images usually depict a same original image edited or modified in several ways. For example, some accessories may be added, colors or dimensions changed or the background/foreground replaced. Also, an existing image may be turned into a parody of a motivational poster using various websites, which gives a picture a background, title and brief description without needing to open up image editing software. Another trend is to create a totally new image or version of the original concept. Many of these images originate from sites such as heavily-frequented internet forums.
[edit]References to pop culture
Often internet memes will include references to current items of pop culture, such as popular movies, celebrities or news. Some examples of this are the Chuck Norris facts or the "Sparta!" meme, quoting (or 'referencing') popular lines from the movie 300, especially in places where they don't make sense. Some common lines quoted are:
"This is blasphemy. This is madness!"
"Madness?... This is SPARTAAAAA!!"
Sometimes, but not always, accompanied by images from the film, most commonly depicting one figure kicking another into a large black pit (such as a picture similar to common yellow-black warning signs: a stick-person kicking another into a pit with the warning "CAUTION: This is Sparta!" on the top and bottom).[5] Another common variation of the Sparta meme involves that of editing images by superimposing Leonidas' face over someone else's, and then add an image macro caption using lines from the film.[6] In 2008, there was even a Facebook group set up to encourage students to insert "This is Sparta" into their Advanced Placement tests.[7]
Another example of a pop culture reference meme is the insertion of the name "Leeroy Jenkins" accompanying an ill-advised charge, following the staged events that occurred in World of Warcraft during a routine raid gone horribly wrong after the actions of "Jenkins". This meme and its typical usage prior to a catastrophic strategic failure has become popular enough to appear on the prime-time NBC comedy series My Name Is Earl. In the show's 2008 Halloween episode, Randy Hickey charges into a fight with an angry mob with the battle cry, "Leeroy Jenkins!"[8] The battle-cry also appeared in CBS' Moonlight when Logan Griffen (played by David Blue) screamed "Leeroy Jenkins!" while running in front of an escaping van.[9] The earliest Leeroy Jenkins reference on television was a hint in a Jeopardy question.[10]
[edit]See also

Forum spam
List of Internet phenomena
Meme - A unit of cultural information that propagates from one mind to another as a theoretical unit of cultural evolution and diffusion
ROFLCon - A convention of the people central to the memes and their fans.
Encyclopedia Dramatica - A comic encyclopedia including a series of articles on internet memes
YTMND
Rickroll — A bait and switch link to Rick Astley's "Never Gonna Give You Up"
Keyboard Cat
Lolcat
Anonymous — a collective of anonymous individuals on the internet, known for creating many popular internet phenomena
Milk and Cereal
Bloody GIR
b3ta
Typoglycemia
4chan
Bad Day
[edit]References

^ a b Karen Schubert (July, 2003). "Bazaar goes bizarre". USA Today. Retrieved on 2007-07-05.
^ a b Karl Hodge (August 10, 2000). "It's all in the memes". the Guardian. Retrieved on 2007-07-05.
^ Xeni Jardin. "Digital Art: It's All About L.A.". Wired Magazine. Retrieved on 2007-07-05.
^ David Carr. "Hollywood bypassing critics and print as digital gets hotter". New York Times. Retrieved on 2007-07-05.
^ Primate Brow Flash - This is Sparta
^ Web page containing a gallery of photomanipulated images involving the Sparta meme
^ This is Sparta! — Facebook prank or political statement? - Examiner.com
^ My Name Is Earl - 10-31-2008
^ [1]
^ [2]
[edit]Further reading

Gerson, Jen. "Meme's the word." Toronto Star Tuesday, August 22, 2006. LIFE, page C01.
[edit]External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Internet memes
Gary Marshall, The Internet and Memetics - academic article about Internet and memes
Know Your Meme
Categories: Internet memes | Neologisms | Spamming | Words coined in the 1990s
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