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- I accidentally became a meme,
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and this is that story.
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(electronic music)
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My name's Drew Scanlon,
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and some of you may know me as the blinking white guy meme.
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I was working as a video producer at a website
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that covers the video game industry called Giant Bomb.
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Part of my duties as a video producer,
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I not only was shooting and editing a lot of video,
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but because we were a really small team,
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everyone was always on camera kind of all the time.
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We did this weekly show called Unprofessional Fridays
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for our premium subscribers
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and it was basically just us sitting around
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playing a bunch of video games.
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The Giant Bomb fans are amazing
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and they're very passionate,
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[crowd cheers]
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so, there were animated gifs being made of us constantly.
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So, that part was not really new to me.
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When that happened, it always was sort of contained
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within the Giant Bomb community
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or maybe video games at large.
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The video of the meme was recorded in just one
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of these sessions where we'd get together and play games,
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and my coworker Jeff was playing a game called
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Starbound, which involves farming,
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and he said...
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- So I've been doing some farming-
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- Nice.
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- With my hoe here. I can kind of till the-
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- What kind of a-
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- So what is that-
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(deep slow motion voice)
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And that's the reaction I made to that,
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sort of, double entendre, I guess.
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And it was just one joke in a 2 hour show,
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it didn't, at the time, it didn't stand out
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as anything particularly special.
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I think, one of the weirdest things,
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is that 4 years went by between the fil-
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when that video was shot and when the meme
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kind of reached its critical mass.
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[alarm Buzz]
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I don't know why that happened.
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Uh, I always just attribute it to internet chaos theory.
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The point where I noticed that it had, sort of,
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blossomed into this larger thing,
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like outside of the gaming community,
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was people mentioning to me on Twitter
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that they saw it used somewhere else.
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Like, their Mom used it on Facebook or something.
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She has no idea who you are, but she used it on Facebook.
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And there were also a lot of tweets using it
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that had tens of thousands of likes and retweets.
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Once I got a sense of how large it was,
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it was honestly a little scary,
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(somber music)
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because it felt very much out of my control.
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I mean, nothing on the internet is within anyone's control,
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really, but it just, there's something about
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the scale that was a little alarming.
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I was very thankful that that clip was fairly inocuous.
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Something I said may have been twisted into something bad,
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or it could have been more embarrassing,
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like, that has certainly happened to people on the internet.
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At some points, it almost doesn't feel like me.
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Like, I just made a face on a livestream.
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It was other people that, you know,
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trimmed that out and then discovered a way to use it.
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There's still not a lot of association with me.
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People think it's Cary Elwes,
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they think it's Michael C. Hall,
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and so, you really have to dig a little bit
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to figure out, to trace it back to again, a real person.
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I have been recognized one time as the meme guy
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because of the fact that it was so long between
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the filming of the video and when it, kind of, got popular,
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I looked pretty different.
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Like, I had more facial hair, my hair was longer.
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So, shout out to the guy at the Dublin Best Buy.
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Memes are this weird different thing.
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They're different from, you know,
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celebrities like actors or something.
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People expect actors to be real people.
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They don't necessarily expect that,
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and this is just my theory,
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they don't necessarily expect that from memes
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because memes come from the internet.
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I don't know that people necessarily will notice someone
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and say hey, I think I know that guy from a meme.
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It actually happened right at the time
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where I was leaving Giant Bomb to start Cloth Map.
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Cloth Map is a video project on YouTube,
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but it's supported by my audience on Patreon.
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Some people, I think, jokingly associated, like,
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Drew's a big meme now so he's gonna go out on his own,
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when, like, there was no correlation there at all.
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My audience sends me around the world
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to explore different countries
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through the lens of the games and sports that they play.
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Games are a lot like food.
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They're this thing that people come together
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and do with their family and friends,
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and it's a commonality across all cultures.
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On a trip for Cloth Map, I went to Brazil,
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and I met some people who had heard somehow
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that the guy from the blinking white guy meme was coming.
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Like, that was not, I wasn't there to be a meme,
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I was there to like, you know, ask them questions about
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video game development in Brazil
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and they were all very excited to meet me,
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which, you know, that was strange but kind of fun,
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which I think, strange but kind of fun
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kind of sums up the whole thing.
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I think virality is a weird thing.
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I think, if you chase it, it doesn't come.
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I think, people are really good at detecting deception
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and when people are being inauthentic,
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that is easy for humans to detect.
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I think, if this happens to you,
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I think my advice would be just to embrace it.
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You can't hide on the internet
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so whatever is out there, is out there
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and just try as best you can to have fun with it.
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[electronic music]