Batmanning (original) (raw)

Batman1

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About

Batmanning is a YouTube video series and a photo fad that involves hanging vertically from objects by their feet, mimicking a bat's roosting position.

Origin

The earliest instance of Batmanning on YouTube dates back to July 20th, 2008, when YouTuber keralady uploaded a video showing a group of young adults hanging upside down from the handrail on a moving subway car. Over the span of three years, the video remained relatively unknown with a little over 31,000 views.

[This video has been removed]

On August 29th, 2011, a group of college students uploaded a video titled "Original Batmanning video" onto their YouTube channel. It was created by the Lins Brothers[1], a group of friends at Purdue University who have been making YouTube videos since January 2008.[2]

[This video has been removed]

Spread

Declaring themselves the Batman Boilers, the Lins Brothers created an official homepage[3], a Facebook fan page[4] and a Twitter account[5] to promote their video. They also sent tweets to celebrities like Daniel Tosh and Stephen Colbert and comedy websites like College Humor in attempt to draw their attention to the video.
Two sites mentioned the "batmanning" fad before the Lins Brother's video was even uploaded: The Sun News' Weekly Surge[6] on August 18th, 2011 and Joonbug's Cool Sh!t[7] on August 22nd, 2011.
Batmanning did not get mainstream media coverage until after the Lins Brothers' video. On September 6th, 2011, ABC News[8] published an article about the video. The next day, it appeared on the UK Daily Mail Online[9] and E! Online.[10] On September 8th, 2011, it reached the Los Angeles Times[11], Gawker,[12] and actor/director Kevin Smith even tweeted a link to the video.[13]

Notable Examples

BATMANNING Because Planking and Owling are too mainstream.BATMANNING

Videos

Search Interest

External References



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Recent Videos8 total


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Batmanning

About

Batmanning is a YouTube video series and a photo fad that involves hanging vertically from objects by their feet, mimicking a bat's roosting position.

Origin

The earliest instance of Batmanning on YouTube dates back to July 20th, 2008, when YouTuber keralady uploaded a video showing a group of young adults hanging upside down from the handrail on a moving subway car. Over the span of three years, the video remained relatively unknown with a little over 31,000 views.

[This video has been removed]

On August 29th, 2011, a group of college students uploaded a video titled "Original Batmanning video" onto their YouTube channel. It was created by the Lins Brothers[1], a group of friends at Purdue University who have been making YouTube videos since January 2008.[2]

[This video has been removed]

Spread

Declaring themselves the Batman Boilers, the Lins Brothers created an official homepage[3], a Facebook fan page[4] and a Twitter account[5] to promote their video. They also sent tweets to celebrities like Daniel Tosh and Stephen Colbert and comedy websites like College Humor in attempt to draw their attention to the video.

Two sites mentioned the "batmanning" fad before the Lins Brother's video was even uploaded: The Sun News' Weekly Surge[6] on August 18th, 2011 and Joonbug's Cool Sh!t[7] on August 22nd, 2011.

Batmanning did not get mainstream media coverage until after the Lins Brothers' video. On September 6th, 2011, ABC News[8] published an article about the video. The next day, it appeared on the UK Daily Mail Online[9] and E! Online.[10] On September 8th, 2011, it reached the Los Angeles Times[11], Gawker,[12] and actor/director Kevin Smith even tweeted a link to the video.[13]

Notable Examples

BATMANNING Because Planking and Owling are too mainstream.BATMANNING

Videos

Search Interest

External References

Recent Videos8 total

Recent Images20 total

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