Internet Culture

posted 03/17/08 by Rick Webb

Lolz OMG. Suxxors. Reading the internet can be like reading esperanto.
When we started this company, we viewed the internet as a population, a culture unto itself. We added value for our clients not just through our awesome production, creative and development skillz, but because we understood this internet culture. Because we were part of it. Because we lived it. As the internet usage has expanded in the last 6 years, the mainstream population has moved onto the internet. We’ve got a wider audience. There are “normal” people on this thing now. But that doesn’t mean the internet culture has disappeared. Think on this: the creators of the Lolcat, I Can Has Cheezburger employs nine people and still, to this day, gets millions of page views a month1. Seriously. Think about that. People have made a serious web business consisting of little more than pictures of cats with captions. IT MAKES NO SENSE. Except on the internet, it does.
Our psyche is comprised of several overlapping subcultures, really. We know this. We have our class identification, our race, our religion, and several others. Our hobbies. Our passions. Our obscure interests. Those forums we frequent. We market based on class, we market based on race. We often think of the Barbarian Group through this prism as a multicultural marketing agency for Internet Culture. The Subservient Chicken was a perfect example of this. It was marketing to a segment of BK’s consumers – the ones who get the munchies, let’s say.
This has interesting ramifications against brands and branding. Branding has always been about speaking to everyone in the same voice. We often reject this at The Barbarian Group. Benjamin often points out that he speaks to his mother differently than he speaks to a client, and he may speak to two friends differently and that this is all totally right and good. it is counterintuitive – though obviously less effort – to speak to everyone in one voice. We recognize this in multicultural marketing, and it should be recognized with the internet culture. As an aside, the internet culture is generally a high-value audience: young, educated and upwardly mobile. In searching to be respectful and understanding of our customers, we almost have a duty to speak their language. And if that means we need to shoot beer out of a cannon for no good or apparent reason, well, that’s not such a terrible thing, is it?

1 http://www.metacafe.com/watch/1157418/i_can_has_cheezburger_founder_and_ceo/

Here are some recent posts from our employees about Internet Culture:

Weekly Attack Statistics

So I’m gonna try and do this as a weekly thing, attack statistics!
Like any good webserver, our stuff gets pounded on pretty regularly. here are some of this weeks top offenders!!
First IP address, then hostname (if there is one):
58.61.157.6
64.234.216.140 -> xxxlatinchat.com
65.243.161.225
116.7.252.136
121.162.129.138
125.46.37.160 -> hn.kd.ny.adsl
193.200.178.251
202.56.215.19 -> dns-dsl-del1.mantraonline.com
203.197.82.242 1
1. did a whois on this one IP didn’t resolve to a host, but if you visit the IP address it takes you to a Fedora test page.

Chocolate for passwords

This is pretty funny, picked up on the story from Bruce Schneier’s Security Blog which i read a lot usually. Anyway here is a link to the real article, with thoughts after the fold.

Grass and Sky is the new Mirrored Floor


Please adjust your designs accordingly. Thank you.

The Greatest Band in Baseball.

So I started thinking – the Sox aren’t that far off from one of those 80’s rock bands you see on Behind The Music. Think about it: starting out, and for years sometimes, you have a band with a small but rabidly loyal fanbase that attends every show, buys any and all merchandise, and argues about your best shows and who heard of you first.

I've got a New Blog, same as the Old Blog.

My problem with blogging, why I swore it off and gave it up a year ago, is that I think it is a symptom of what’s wrong with my generation. We were raised by idealist parents, those intrepid 70’s new parents who swore they weren’t going to be like their old man, who read Spock and Free to Be You and Me and believed that the best thing they could teach their child was that they were unique, special and important.

YO wb here.

OK so there is this guy you can call. when he picks up the line he says something to the effect of, “YO wb here.” then i usually reply, “yo wb whats goin on??” then he’ll start in to a conversation with you like he’s known you for years.

sailor hams!

hey look everyone hams is a sailor!
ps – har har, kenji.
pps – it is very difficult to concentrate when it is the first truly nice day of the year.
sailor hams!

Cute Puppies

Ok so I’m a little obsessed with lolcats and other cute things on the internet. Sickening for someone with a beard as majestic as mine, I know.