This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Everyking (talk | contribs) at 23:11, 20 February 2005 (rm dup). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.
Revision as of 23:11, 20 February 2005 by Everyking (talk | contribs) (rm dup)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)A request has been made on Misplaced Pages for this article to be deleted in accordance with the deletion policy.
This request is being discussed to form a consensus whether this is, or could be, an article appropriate for Misplaced Pages. Please see this page's entry on the votes for deletion page for details. Also see possible outlets for removed articles. If you feel deletion is not justified by Misplaced Pages deletion policy you may vote against its deletion. Please do not remove this notice or blank this page while the question is being considered. However, you are welcome to continue editing this article and improve it, especially if you can address the concerns of those who believe the article should be deleted. Should you improve the article and address the concerns of those who believe the article should be deleted, please remark on this page's entry regarding its improvement.
Numanuma is a strong Internet meme based around a catchy Romanian techno song called Dragostea Din Tei by O-Zone, a Romanian band.
"Numanuma" specifically refers to a Flash-based video of 19-year-old Gary Brolsma of singing along energetically on his webcam. All traces found so far seem to be clipped and out-of-sync near the end of the song.
Gary Brolsma first posted his "Numa Numa Dance" on Newgrounds.com on December 12, 2004. Since then it has popped up hundreds of websites and blogs and made appearances on both CNN and VH1's "Best Week Ever."
Gary Brolsma is a New Jersey teenager from Saddle Brook, New Jersey. Brolsma, reportedly, is quite happy with his fame.
There are a number of other videos using the song, including several Japanese cartoons based on 2ch Japanese ASCII art and a Lego dancing video.
Joi Ito has a good post discussing this current and growing meme.
See also: Internet phenomenon
External links
- Numanuma video (main site)
- Original Numanuma video
- Joi Ito: O-Zone madness
- Japanese cartoon video
- Lego dancing video
- MSNBC "You go, Gary! 'Numa' takes Web by storm"