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Why videos go viral - Kevin Allocca

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    Hi I'm Kevin Allocca. I'm the trends manager of Youtube and I professionally watch youtube videos
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    It's true
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    So we are going to talk a little bit today about how videos go viral and why that even matters
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    we all want to be stars. Uh celebrities, singers, comedians.
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    and when I was younger that seemed so very very hard to do.
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    but now web video has made it so that any of us or any of the creative things that we do can become completely famous in a part of our world's culture
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    I mean, any one of you could be famous on the internet by next Saturday
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    But there are over fourty-eight hours of video uploaded to Youtube every minute [In Text: 48:00]
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    and of that only a tiny percentage ever goes viral and gets tons of views and becomes a cultural moment [In Text: < tiny tiny % have more than 1M views]
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    so how does it happen?
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    three things
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    tastemakers, communities of participation, and unexpectedness
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    Alright Let's go
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    [Background: Oh oh.oh my god oh my god (laughter) wooh oh wow]
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    Last year, "Bear" Vasquez posted this video that he had shot outside his home in Yosemite National Park
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    In 2010 it was viewed 23 million times
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    This is a chart of what it looked like when it first became popular
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    last summer
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    but he didn't actually set out to make a viral video "Bear"
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    He just wanted to share a rainbow because that's what you do when your name is "Yosemite Mountain Bear"
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    and he had posted lots of nature videos in fact this video had been posted all the way back in January
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    So what happened here
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    Jimmy Kimmel
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    actually
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    Jimmy Kimmel posted this tweet that would actually propel the video to be as popular as it had become
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    [In Text: Tastemakers] because tatemakers like Jimmy Kimmel introduce us to new and interesting things and bring them to a larger audience
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    [Background: (Music) It's Friday, Friday gotta get down on friday. Everybody's looking forward to the weekend weekend. Friday Friday gettin' down on Friday]
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    So you didnt think that we could actually have this conversation without talking about this video I hope
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    Uh Rebecca Black's Friday has become one of the most popular videos of the year
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    it's been seen nearly 200 million times this year
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    This is a chart of what it looked like and
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    similar to double rainbow it seemed to have just sprouted up out of nowhere
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    so what happened on this day
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    Well it was a friday, this is true
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    And if you were wondering about those other spikes
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    those were also Fridays
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    But what about this day, this one particular Friday
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    Well Tosh.0 picked it up
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    A lot of blogs started writing about it
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    Michael J. Nelson from Mystery Science Theater was one of the first people to post a joke about the video on Twitter
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    But what's important is that an individual or a group of tastemakers
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    took a point of view and they shared that with a larger audience accelerating the process
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    and so then this community formed of people who shared this big inside joke
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    and they started talking about it and doing things with it
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    and now there are 10 thousand parodies of Friday on Youtube
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    even in the first 7 days there was one parody for every other day of the week
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    Unlike the one way entertainment of the 20th century
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    [In Text: Participation] This community participation is how we become a part of the phenomenon
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    either by spreading it or doing something new with it
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    [music]
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    So uh Nyan Cat is a looped animation with looped music
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    It's this
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    Just like this
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    It's been uh viewed nearly 50 million times this year
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    and if you think that that is weird you should know that there is a 3 hour version of this that has been viewed 4 million times
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    even cats were watching this video
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    cats were watching other cats watch this video
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    alright but
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    [laughs]
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    but what's important here what's important here
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    is the creativity that it inspired amongst this techy-geeky internet culture
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    there were remixes
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    [music]
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    someone made an old-timey version
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    [music]
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    and then it went international
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    [music]
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    An entire remix community sprouted up that brought it from being just a stupid joke to something that we can be apart of
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    because we don't just enjoy now we participate
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    [violin playing]
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    and who could have predicted any of this
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    who could have predicted Double Rainbow or Rebecca Black or Nyan Cat
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    what scripts could you have written that would have contained this in it
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    In a world where over 2 days of video get uploaded ever minute
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    [In Text: Unexpectedness] Only that which is truly unique and unexpected can stand out in the way that these things have
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    When a friend of mine told me that I needed to see this
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    This great video of a guy protesting bicycle fines in New York City
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    I admit I wasn't that interested
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    [Background: So I got a ticket for not riding in the bike lane but often there are obstructions that keep you from properly riding in the bike lanes]
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    Yeah..
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    By being totally surprising and humorous
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    Casey Neistat got his funny idea and point seen 5 million times
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    And so this approach holds for anything new that we do creatively
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    and so it all brings us to one big question:
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    [Background: What does this mean?]
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    [In Text: What does it Meeeaan?!?]
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    What does it mean
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    Tastemakers, creative participating communities, complete unexpectedness
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    These are characteristics of a new kind of media and a new kind of culture
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    where anyone has access and the audience defines the popularity
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    I mean as mentioned earlier, one of the biggest stars in the world right now
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    Justin Bieber
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    got his start on youtube
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    No one has to green light your idea and we all now feel some ownership in our own pop culture
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    and these are not characteristics of old media
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    and they are barely true of the media of today
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    but they will define the entertainment of the future
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    Thank You
Title:
Why videos go viral - Kevin Allocca
Description:

View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/kevin-alloca-why-videos-go-viral

Kevin Allocca is YouTube's Trends Manager, and he has deep thoughts about silly web videos. In this talk from TEDYouth, he shares the 4 reasons a video goes viral.

Talk by Kevin Allocca.

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
07:21

English subtitles

Revisions