The Harlem Shake Meme Is Dead
In the wee hours of Feb. 13, 2013, the hosts of the Today show committed meme murder. The moment they aired their take on the so-called "Harlem Shake" was the moment the Internet's meme guardians pronounced the viral, trap-soundtracked dance craze dead. It was one week old.
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The meme's life was so short, you'd be forgiven for not knowing it even existed. For those who didn't catch our first Harlem Shake post, here's what you need to know to mourn properly. These goofy 30-second videos all started with one person (usually in a mask) wriggling along to the build-up of a wobbly EDM track. Then when the beat dropped, everyone in the frame who'd been sitting idly would join in for some uninhibited looniness. Such videos brought joy to many souls wasting time on Youtube.
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The meme is survived by the song which tied all the videos together. Baauer's "Harlem Shake" remains one of the most popular tracks in a budding offshoot of EDM called trap. Hip-hop purists will tell you that this emerging genre rips off and waters down the original "trap" music, a drug-running subgenre of Southern rap that's been around for years. But that hasn't put the brakes on the rising popularity of other trap producers like Flosstradamus or TNGHT.
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According to online response the Harlem Shake meme was killed swiftly by this Today show segment from Wednesday morning:
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Before Al Roker donned that cupid costume, the Harlem Shake had been recreated by people such as (take a deep breath):
Autotune pioneer T-Pain
The staff of Late Night with Jimmy Fallon
Indie-pop duo Matt and Kim
Real-life firefighters
The University of Georgia's men's swim and dive team
A Norwegian army squadron
The staffs of College Humor, Buzzfeed, and Mixmag
Some far-out members of the Dallas Mavericks
Anderson turned out to be a dance party-pooper, but the producer who's earned widespread Internet fame through the fleeting meme didn't mind:
shouts to the homie @andersoncooper hes not rlly feelin it but we still cool youtu.be/W3v9OOx7bCA
— Baauer (@baauer) February 12, 2013
All those versions brought the Harlem Shake to online ubiquity, but apparently the Today show's version was what put the meme six feet under. Gawker's Neetzan Zimmerman pointed to a video begging people to quit making Harlem Shake videos. Another blogger responded to Matt Lauer and co.'s Harlem Shake with a headline reading "Today Show's Harlem Shake Marks Official Death of the Harlem Shake." Even the leading lights of trap are starting to make fun of trap's mainstream breakthrough. Perhaps Lauer himself put it best during the fade-out of the Harlem Shake, Today show edition: "We have seen just about enough of that."