For those of you who have been blissfully unaware of the
phenomenon, the Harlem Shake is a 30 second video, initially created by five Australian
teenagers in their Sunny
Coast Skate, in which one person dances whilst everyone around them ignores
them. After 14 seconds the video cuts to everyone dancing like a loon,
generally wearing some kind of fancy dress. The sound track is the Harlem
Shake, by US DJ Baauer.
The formula took off and has been repeated thousands of times
worldwide. The concept is incredibly simply and easily personalised, and the
videos are only 30 seconds long. So, as Constine comments, the end product is
"remarkably snackable".
Constine goes on to call the Harlem Shake a "symbiotic meme".
He says
that "when content creators serve up a meme with an equation full of
variables, people remix the variables, and share the product to their own
networks. The audience becomes curious about what the source content was. This
floods traffic back to the original or flagship version of the meme." The
symbiotic relationship is caused by the original meme being so easy to copy
that many do copy it, and because so many copies are produced the original
becomes notorious in its own right.
It's an interesting concept which brings to mind the success of
Psy's Gangnam Style (see here):
so many people copied the video that the Gangnam Style dance went viral causing
Psy's original to become hugely popular. To give an idea of the scale of the
Harlem Shake's success, the Sunny Coast Skate was uploaded on 2 February.
According to Wikipedia,
on 10 February, the upload rate of Harlem Shake videos reached 4,000 per day.
As of 11 February, about 12,000 versions had been uploaded to YouTube, with
over 44 million unique views. By 15 February, about 40,000 Harlem Shake videos
had been uploaded, totalling 175 million views. That's a crazy rate which most
marketers would aspire to.
To be clear, it is unlikely that the Harlem Shake concept would be
protected by copyright, as it is an idea or a formula for a video rather than a
work itself. However the unprecedented success of the original (the Sunny Coast
Skate has been viewed over 17 million times on YouTube) is surely something
which rightsholders aspire to. Forgoing copyright and actively encouraging
copies is not a strategy that would work for all rightsholders by any means,
but it is trend that we are seeing more and more in popular culture and is one
that rightsholders might want to at least consider.
As a side note, Baauer hasn't done too badly out of this either. With
the exception of a takedown notice issued when established artist Azealia Banks
uploaded her own version of the track, Baauer and his label, Mad Decent
records, have made use of YouTube's Content ID database to assert copyright
over the fan-made videos and to claim a proportion of advertising revenue in
respect of each one. This is a bit of a change from what we're used to seeing
from music rights holders, and is a change that seemingly benefits everyone.
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