This week Quartz posted a lengthy breakdown of the short history behind the recent omnipresent viral phenomenon and Billboard-topping single known as the “Harlem Shake,” and how corporations played a key role in its unprecedented popularity. The author, Kevin Ashton, challenged the notion that the forces fueling Baauer’s track were everyday media consumers and creators: Experts said the “Harlem Shake” phenomenon was emergent behavior from the hive mind of the internet—accidental, ad hoc, uncoordinated: a “meme” that “went viral.” But this is untrue. The real story of the “Harlem Shake” shows how much popular culture has changed and how much it has stayed the same. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest
Tag Archives: Harlem Shake
Librarian fired over 'Harlem Shake' video
OXFORD, England, March 20 (UPI) — Students at Britain’s Oxford University are calling for the rehiring of a librarian who was fired after students made a “Harlem Shake” video in a library.
So Your Video Went Viral: Great! Just Don’t Expect to Get Rich
By The Huffington Post News Editors
The original creators of the “Harlem Shake” should see a big chunk of change because they’re entitled to a portion of the ad revenues generated from each video featuring the song that’s posted at YouTube. A year ago, the New York Times highlighted how the family behind the “Charlie Bit My Finger” video—viewed well over 400 million times since it was posted on YouTube in 2007—had helped net its creators over $150,000.
Watch The Top YouTube Videos Of The Week: Break Dancing, Buzzer Beaters And Big-Ticket Cars
By The Huffington Post News Editors
If you’re looking to see the most popular YouTube videos of the week, look no further.
We’re taken a different tact this week with our usual roundup on YouTube videos. Instead of just rounding up the top videos, we’ve sifted through the 20 or so most most trending YouTube postings, according to video service’s “Charts” tool, and culled the 10 that we think give the best slice of the viral web last week, March 3-9.
So what did the Web go wild over? We’re saw some amazing Italian car porn from the Geneva Motor Show, the best 6-year-old dancer in Internet history and the last throes of the “Harlem Shake” (we hope).
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‘Harlem Shake’ Goes Anti-Gay With Bizarre Clip Produced By Jamaica’s Love March Movement
By The Huffington Post News Editors
The “Harlem Shake” phenomenon continues at full-force across the globe, but one of the latest videos to emerge from the trend is downright disturbing.
The Love March Movement, a Jamaican group “dedicated to representing Christ’s view on sexual sin, including homosexuality, and standing in love and prayer for our country,” is reportedly behind this bizarre “Harlem Shake” clips, which includes dancers carrying placards with the terms “pedophilia,” “gay marriage” and “the buggery law,” among other eyebrow-raising terms.
In November, grainy footage of what appeared to a young gay man being beaten at a leading Jamaican university sparked the ire of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) rights advocates after making the blogosphere rounds.
NASA Does the 'Harlem Shake' in Video Spoof
In NASA’s newest parody video, rocket scientists do the “Harlem Shake.” …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Space.com
How to add YouTube to your Roku box
Did you hear the news? Roku just announced a new box, the Roku 3, complete with a faster processor, dual-band Wi-Fi, and a headphone jack in the remote.
Still missing: YouTube.
It’s borderline crazy that a box that can stream every video service you’ve ever heard of—and plenty you haven’t—doesn’t support YouTube.
That’s a pity, because it means you can’t watch “Gangnam Style,” basketball’s best buzzer-beaters, or the latest Harlem Shake videos on your TV.
To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here
…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld
‘All My Children’ Does The ‘Harlem Shake’ (VIDEO)
By The Huffington Post News Editors
In a sign that the newly-revived web soap has never been more culturally relevant, “All My Children” has made a “Harlem Shake” video.
The “All My Children” cast recorded the “Harlem Shake” video on February 25 to celebrate their first day back on the set of the resurrected soap, which returns for a new online season on Hulu and iTunes this spring.
“AMC” stars Stars Julia Barr (Brooke English), Jill Larson (Opal Cortland), Darnell Williams (Jesse Morgan) and Debbi Morgan (Dr. Angela Hubbard) — as well as other members of the cast and crew — are featured in the video sporting masks, sunglasses, cowboy hats and feather boas.
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FAA investigates 'Harlem Shake'
DENVER, March 4 (UPI) — The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration said it is investigating a “Harlem Shake” incident aboard a Frontier Airlines flight.
New York high school raises $489,000 at marathon dance fundraiser
The 710 students from South Glens Falls High School danced for more than a day: Conga lines, “Gangnam Style,” giddy-ups, hand jives and the “Harlem Shake.” Then, flushed and weary, the teens showed why this is a dance marathon with a difference.
Students cleared a path for a group who walked or were wheeled to the stage set at one end of the gym. One by one — a woman battling cancer in a stocking cap, mothers of ailing children, car crash survivors — thanked the teenage dancers who just raised almost $500,000 to help them tackle life’s challenges.
“When a community comes together to help lift financial stress, which allows a child to get the proper care and have the best chance in life, that’s priceless,” Kate LaFoy told the hushed crowd in a choked voice. Her 15-month-old daughter Alessandra has Turner Syndrome, a genetic condition. “You know how they say it takes a village to raise a child? You’re part of our village now. We are forever grateful.”
South Glens Falls High School students donated the hefty sum to LaFoy and 39 other recipients by dancing around the clock this weekend as part of an annual event in this small, weathered village just south of New York‘s Adirondack Mountains.
The dance marathon was started in 1978, the age of turntables and disco. It has morphed into a monster event consuming not only the students, but the community. Kids go door-to-door seeking donations, sponsor pancake breakfasts, collect bottles and lean on family, friends and neighbors to pitch in. Locals — many who fondly remember their own dancing days — help direct traffic, donate goods for auction, paint faces or cut hair to raise money.
And they open their wallets — something not so easily done in this village of about 3,500 souls still struggling to find its economic footing. Paper mills once powered by the Hudson River have shuttered and residents have a median household income of $47,587, lagging behind the national figure of $52,762.
The weekend’s record $489,716 easily topped the $395,352 collected last year, maintaining a trend of growing tallies. Some well-heeled colleges raise money into the seven figures with their annual dance marathons but you’d be hard-pressed to find any high schoolers pulling in this kind of dough.
“You’re raised in the South Glens Falls community, you’re expected to dance in the marathon dance,” said senior Carly Weller, a member of the student committee that organizes the dance and selects recipients, all local. “And after you do it once, you’re hooked.”
This dance marathon is different from the old endurance contests in which the last exhausted couple on the floor escapes the tap on the shoulder to win. The teenage dancers get a couple of hours to sleep, plenty of food and drinks and some other breaks from Friday night to Saturday night. There are costume parades and opportunities to chill out on the gym floor.
But it’s still grueling.
“Definitely sleep during sleep break, drink lots of water, (use) deodorant,” said senior Blake Snyder. “Deodorant …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News
NY high school raises $489K with marathon dance
The 710 students from South Glens Falls High School danced for more than a day: Conga lines, “Gangnam Style,” giddy-ups, hand jives and the “Harlem Shake.” Then, flushed and weary, the teens showed why this is a dance marathon with a difference.
Students cleared a path for a group who walked or were wheeled to the stage set at one end of the gym. One by one — a woman battling cancer in a stocking cap, mothers of ailing children, car crash survivors — thanked the teenage dancers who just raised almost $500,000 to help them tackle life’s challenges.
“When a community comes together to help lift financial stress, which allows a child to get the proper care and have the best chance in life, that’s priceless,” Kate LaFoy told the hushed crowd in a choked voice. Her 15-month-old daughter Alessandra has Turner Syndrome, a genetic condition. “You know how they say it takes a village to raise a child? You’re part of our village now. We are forever grateful.”
South Glens Falls High School students donated the hefty sum to LaFoy and 39 other recipients by dancing around the clock this weekend as part of an annual event in this small, weathered village just south of New York’s Adirondack Mountains.
The dance marathon was started in 1978, the age of turntables and disco. It has morphed into a monster event consuming not only the students, but the community. Kids go door-to-door seeking donations, sponsor pancake breakfasts, collect bottles and lean on family, friends and neighbors to pitch in. Locals — many who fondly remember their own dancing days — help direct traffic, donate goods for auction, paint faces or cut hair to raise money.
And they open their wallets — something not so easily done in this village of about 3,500 souls still struggling to find its economic footing. Paper mills once powered by the Hudson River have shuttered and residents have a median household income of $47,587, lagging behind the national figure of $52,762.
The weekend’s record $489,716 easily topped the $395,352 collected last year, maintaining a trend of growing tallies. Some well-heeled colleges raise money into the seven figures with their annual dance marathons but you’d be hard-pressed to find any high schoolers pulling in this kind of dough.
“You’re raised in the South Glens Falls community, you’re expected to dance in the marathon dance,” said senior …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News
Australian miners reportedly fired for 'Harlem Shake' in mine
A newspaper says up to 15 miners have been fired for performing the “Harlem Shake” dance craze underground in an Australian gold mine.
The West Australian newspaper reports the miners lost their six-figure salaries over the stunt in the Agnew Gold Mine last week.
A dismissal letter cited by the paper says mine owner Barminco considered the stunt a safety issue. Barminco did not immediately respond to a request for comment Monday.
A YouTube video shows eight miners performing the convulsive dance. A sacked worker who wouldn’t give his name told the newspaper that up to 15 people were fired, including some who watched the performance but did not participate.
Up to 4,000 videos of “Harlem Shake” variations are uploaded on the Internet daily.
Activists do Harlem Shake for Brotherhood
CAIRO, March 2 (UPI) — A group of young Egyptians put on a performance of the Harlem Shake in front of the headquarters of the Muslim Brotherhood in Cairo.
FAA Not Delighted By Mid-Air Harlem Shake
By Kevin Spak Federal investigators are casting a less-than-approving eye at a frankly spectacular mid-air rendition of the “Harlem Shake” meme. The video, recorded by the Colorado College Ultimate Frisbee Team, begins with a man in a helmet dancing alone in the aisle of a passenger jet, and ends with an aisle full… …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Home
Heat 'Harlem Shake' video makes waves
Add the Miami Heat to the “Harlem Shake” craze. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at NBA
Teens suspended for 'Harlem Shake' video
HIGHLAND, Mich., Feb. 26 (UPI) — A suburban Detroit school said students were suspended for making a version of the “Harlem Shake” viral video featuring a live duck and sexual dancing.
Baauer's 'Harlem Shake' tops U.S. record chart
LOS ANGELES, Feb. 21 (UPI) — Baauer’s infectious dance hit “Harlem Shake” is No. 1 on the U.S. record chart, Billboard.com reported Thursday.
Students suspended for 'Harlem Shake'
BROWNSVILLE, Pa., Feb. 21 (UPI) — A Pennsylvania parent said her daughter and 12 other high school students should not have been suspended for their take on the “Harlem Shake” viral video craze.
YouTube and the Challenge of Video Ads
Filed under: Technology
RT‘s one minute, 24 second footage of the Siberian meteor blast has gotten almost 30 million pageviews in six days, an extraordinary number according to the Russian TV channel. Total views of all videos of the event are even more impressive. But what stands out as much as the number is the lack of advertising that accompanies the content. In a nutshell, this is YouTube’s challenge to garner enough revenue to make it an important contributor to the revenue of parent Google Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOG).
RT said in a press release:
The blast, which hit Russia’s Chelyabinsk region on the morning of February 15, became the most watched video event of all time with 138 million views, and the fastest video event ever to hit 100 million views, according to VideoMeasures, an online measurement company. More than 400 videos across several online platforms were tracked in this calculation.
That one minute, 24 second clip does not open with an advertising message of any kind, despite how long it has been posted. Neither do most of the other widely watched clips of the event. Some advertiser somewhere must have seen some benefit is all of these “eyeballs,” but no one at Google, or any other firm that could profit, made any money.
The YouTube problem could stem from several things. Among them is the “CNN problem.” Big events draw large audiences. But the shows that cover them often do not run many ads, or when they do, CNN likely cannot capture high rates from advertisers who have not committed upfront to extra expenditures. Or worse, YouTube has no capacity at all to get to major advertisers quickly with the opportunity to reach millions of people fast.
With the exception of music videos, many of the most popular videos on YouTube do not have ads that run with them. Take all those new “Harlem Shake” videos.
But all is not lost. “Gangnam Style” starts with an ad.
Filed under: 24/7 Wall St. Wire, Internet Tagged: GOOG
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Cara Delevingne and Jourdan Dunn Do the Harlem Shake
It was only a matter of time before someone in the fashion industry made a response to the Internet’s latest dance video craze, the Harlem Shake – and who better suited for the task than model friends Jourdan Dunn and Cara Delevingne?
The duo were backstage at the Topshop Unique show on Sunday with fellow model Rosie Tapner when cameras captured Dunn, following the meme’s custom, breaking into a spontaneous dance to the Baauer song “Harlem Shake.” Delevingne and Tapner don’t seem particularly amused to be in the middle of a dance party until they suddenly join in on the fun.
Iterations of the Harlem Shake video have come from the campuses of West Point and the University of Texas, to the offices of BuzzFeed and Anderson Cooper Live. Given how much the industry likes its memes, we’re a little surprised it took this long for someone to make a version, but we’re excited to see the ones that follow it. Your move, Alber.









