
YouTube video of "Never Gonna Give You
Up", the song played when viewers are Rickrolled.
Rickrolling is an
Internet meme typically involving the
music video for the 1987
Rick Astley song "
Never Gonna Give You Up". The
meme is a
bait and
switch: a person provides a
web link
that they claim is relevant to the topic at hand, but the link
actually takes the user to the Astley video. The URL can be masked
or obfuscated in some manner so that the user cannot determine the
true destination of the link without clicking. When a person clicks
on the link and is led to the web page, he or she is said to have
been
"Rickrolled".
Rickrolling has extended beyond Web links to playing the video or
song disruptively in other situations, including public places;
this culminated when Astley and the song made a surprise appearance
in the 2008
Macy's
Thanksgiving Day Parade, a televised event with tens of
millions of viewers.
History
Astley recorded "Never Gonna Give You Up" on his 1987 album
Whenever You Need
Somebody. The song, his solo debut single, was a number
one hit on several international charts, including the
Billboard Hot 100,
Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks
and
UK Singles Chart. As a means of
promoting the song, it was also made into Astley's first
music video, which features him performing the
song while dancing.
The practice itself is said to have begun as a variant of an
earlier prank from the
imageboard
4chan known as
duckrolling, in which
a link to somewhere (such as a specific picture or news item) would
instead lead to a thread or site containing an
edited picture of a duck with wheels. The
user at that point is said to have been
"duckrolled".
The first known instance of Rickroll occurred in May 2007 on /v/,
4chan's
video game
board, where a link to the Rick Astley video was claimed to be a
mirror of the first trailer for
Grand Theft Auto IV (which was
unavailable due to heavy traffic). The joke was confined to 4chan
for a very brief period.
By May 2008, the practice had spread beyond 4chan and become an
Internet phenomenon, eventually amassing some coverage in the
mainstream media. An April 2008 poll by
SurveyUSA estimated that at least 18 million
American adults had been Rickrolled. In September 2009,
Wired magazine published a
guide to modern hoaxes which listed rickrolling as one of the
better known beginner-level hoaxes, alongside the
fake email chain letter.
Examples
Scientology protests
In connection with the online meme, "Never Gonna Give You Up" was
played and performed at most of the
Project Chanology February 2008 protests
against the
Church of
Scientology.
On February 10, 2008 protests in New York City
, Washington,
D.C.
, London
, St. Louis
, Detroit
, and
Seattle
, protesters played the song through boomboxes and
shouted the phrase "Never gonna let you down!", in what
The Guardian called "a live
rick-rolling of the Church of Scientology". In response to a
website created by Scientologists showing an anti-
Anonymous video, Project Chanology
participants created a website with a similar domain name with a
video displaying the music video to "Never Gonna Give You
Up".
EWU basketball games
Four
women's basketball games at Eastern
Washington University
(EWU) were Rickrolled during March 2008.
Before the start of the games, "Never Gonna Give You Up" was played
while a Rick Astley impersonator danced and
lip-synched to the music. A video containing
footage of the pre-game Rickrollings, misleadingly combined with
real game break footage, was later released on YouTube. It even
showed a fan with a "Scientology Kills" sign and the EWU mascot,
Swoop, holding a "Xenu.net" sign, both references to the
aforementioned Anonymous protests.
The New York Times
originally reported that a single game had actually been
interrupted by the Rickrolling. On March 27, 2008 it
issued a correction clarifying the situation, and saying that the
interruption never took place, but was rather a hoax by
Pawl Fisher, a student; Davin Perry, who shoots game videos for the
university; and Dave Cook, the university's sports information
director.
New York Mets
On April
4, 2008, many web communities, starting with Fark.com, urged their readers to vote "Never Gonna
Give You Up" for the 8th inning sing-along at Shea Stadium
for the New York Mets
season. The Mets posted a web poll to select a song, and
left a blank field for write-ins. The Mets organization announced
On April 7, 2008 that "Never Gonna Give You Up" was the winner with
more than five million votes. The Mets decided not to commit to
using Astley's song and subsequently announced a run-off among six
songs that would be played at Shea Stadium for the next six games,
starting with "Never Gonna Give You Up" on April 8, 2008.
MLB.com later reported on the game, claiming
"Never Gonna Give You Up" was played as a "result of fans rigging
the vote in favor of Astley, all part of a universal Internet
phenomenon known as Rick Rolling". The song was played during the
home opener and was greeted with "a shower of boos".
April Fools' Day, 2008
On
April Fools' Day 2008 and the
following weeks, numerous seemingly uncoordinated instances of
Rickrolling appeared on the internet, and
news media. All of the featured videos on
YouTube's front page
hyperlinked to the Rickroll. The prank began with
international YouTube portals before
appearing on the main site.
Social blog website
LiveJournal
announced on the same day that they would be adding a new member to
their Advisory Board, linking members to the journal "rickastley",
which contains a Rickroll.
The website
Fark featured a link to a video
claiming to be a blooper reel for the
Muppets but instead linked to a video of
Beaker performing Rick Astley's song (to a
video of him originally performing "
Feelings" on
The Muppet Show). Other social
bookmarking sites such as
Digg and
Reddit subsequently joined in linking the
video.
The online Web store
ThinkGeek advertised
on their front page a
Betamax to
HD DVD converter device. In the product page a
demonstration video was linked which was, in actuality, a
Rickroll.
Dan Kaminsky
In April 2008, security expert
Dan
Kaminsky demonstrated a serious security vulnerability by
setting up Rick Rolls on
Facebook and
PayPal.
Michelle Obama
On June 7, 2008, a number of political blogs, including
Wonkette,
Andrew
Sullivan, and Balloon Juice, posted an article claiming to show
Michelle Obama going on a rant full
of racist references to 'Whitey', but the video was actually a
Rickroll.
Barack Roll
Hugh
Atkin, an Australian lawyer and notable
producer of Internet viral videos,
created a popular YouTube parody video of
the Rickrolling meme involving United States
President Barack Obama, then the 2008 presidential
candidate for the Democratic Party and a
Senator from Illinois, entitled
"Barack Roll" that has been watched about 6 million times since its
release. However, the video has since been muted due to an
unauthorized soundtrack. The video consists of clips of Obama
speaking the words of Astley's song. A follow-up video shows
Senator
John McCain being "Barack
Rolled" at the
Republican National
Convention, though it never happened; the "Barack Roll" image
was displayed on the giant blue sky background that was behind John
McCain during parts of his speech, and the video was pieced
together from footage of the event. The video ends with what looks
like the delegation cheering while chanting Obama's name. This
version won the Favorite User Generated Video award at the
35th People's Choice
Awards.
It was highlighted on blogs for the
New York Times,
The Politico,
Comedy Central,
Andrew Sullivan and
Sports Illustrated. Writing for
Time magazine's
2009
Time 100 issue, Astley himself
mentioned the video in his writeup for
4chan
founder
moot.
As of October 2009 the Barack Roll has been removed from YouTube
due to copyright violation.
2008 Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade
On November 27, 2008, Astley participated in a live Rickroll during
the
Macy's Thanksgiving
Day Parade while the
Foster's Home For Imaginary
Friends characters were singing "Best Friend", the theme
from the 1970s TV series
The Courtship of Eddie's
Father. Midway through the song, Astley emerged from the
float and began to
lip synch his
signature hit. At the end of Astley's performance, Cheese (a
character from
Foster's) shouted out "I like
Rickrolling!".
Nancy Pelosi
On January 13, 2009, in honor of the new YouTube hub for Congress,
U.S.
Speaker of
the House Nancy Pelosi uploaded a
video called "Speaker Pelosi Presents Capitol Cat Cam" to her
official YouTube channel. She described it as "a behind the scenes
view of the Speaker's Office in the U.S. Capitol." The video
depicts cats roaming around the office. A rickroll occurs
approximately halfway through the video.
iPhone worm
In October/November 2009, a
worm
designed to infect
jailbroken iPhone smartphone changed
the wallpaper of infected phones to a picture of Rick Astley
overlaid with the text "ikee is never going to give you up."
Others
A Rickroll
flash mob took place on April 11, 2008 in
London's Liverpool
Street train station
with an estimated 300–400 people in
attendance. When the flash mob finished the countdown, they
sang the song from beginning to the end.
One Web site, Prankdialer.com, offers a Rickroll-by-phone service,
allowing visitors to enter a phone number to be called and have the
song played to the answering party.
The
MIT
dome was hacked on
September 9, 2009, to show a giant set of the first notes of Never
Gonna Give You Up.
As part of promotion for their upcoming title
Dante's Inferno,
Electronic Arts sent wooden boxes to several
video game websites, including
The
Escapist Magazine,
Destructoid and
Chud.com. Each box contained a hammer and a pair of goggles, and
when opened, the box would play the Rick Astley song on a
continuous loop.
Effects on Astley and reaction
In a March 2008 interview, Astley said that he found the
Rickrolling of Scientology to be "hilarious"; he also said that he
will not try to capitalize on the Rickroll phenomenon with a new
recording or
remix of his own, but that he
would be happy to have other artists remix it. Overall, Astley is
not troubled by the phenomenon, stating that he finds it "bizarre
and funny" and that his only concern is that his "daughter doesn't
get embarrassed about it". A spokesperson for Astley's record label
released a comment which showed that Astley's interest with the
phenomenon had faded, as they stated "I'm sorry, but he's done
talking about Rickrolling".
In November 2008, Rick Astley was nominated for
Best Act
Ever at the
MTV Europe
Music Awards after the online nomination form was flooded with
votes. The push to make Astley the winner of the award continued
after the announcement, as well as efforts to encourage MTV to
personally invite Astley to the awards ceremony. On October 10,
Astley's website confirmed that an invitation to the awards had
been received.
On November 6, 2008, just hours before the ceremony was due to air,
it was reported that MTV Europe did not want to give Astley the
award at the ceremony, instead wanting to present it at a later
date. Many fans who voted for Astley felt the awards ceremony
failed to acknowledge him as a legitimate artist. Astley stated in
an interview that he felt the award was 'daft', but noted that he
thought that "MTV were thoroughly rickrolled", and went on to thank
everyone who voted for him.
In 2009, Astley wrote about
4chan founder
moot for
Time magazine's annual
Time 100 issue, where he thanked moot for the
Rickrolling phenomenon.
See also
References
- ABC (2008). Unleashed.
Retrieved 2 March 2008.
- New York
Times (2008). Laugh Lines - You’ve Been Barack-Rolled.
Retrieved 11 August 2008.
- Politico.com (2008). Sunday reading: Barackroll. Retrieved 11 August
2008.
- Comedy
Central (2008). BREAKING NEWS: The Footage Barack Obama Doesn't
Want You to See - Do the Letters "RR" Mean Anything to You?.
Retrieved 13 August 2008.
- TheAtlantic.com (2008). The Daily Dish - Barack Roll. Retrieved 14
August 2008.
- SI.com (2008).
Hot Clicks: Braun shoots commercial with Marisa
Miller. Retrieved 13 August 2008.
Further reading