President Obama on Death of Osama bin Laden (SPOOF)
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
"President Obama on Death of Osama bin Laden" | |
---|---|
Song |
"President Obama on Death of Osama bin Laden (SPOOF)" is Iman Crosson's spoof video posted to the YouTube video sharing website, including a spoof of U.S. President Barack Obama's May 1, 2011 speech announcing the death of Osama bin Laden. The video is the basis of the rap music single "Momentous Day."
The video was produced by actor-impressionist and dancer Iman Crosson and posted on YouTube three days after Obama's speech. Crosson's video includes a spoken explanatory introduction followed by a spoof of Obama's speech. The spoof includes comedic dancing, and presents the speech in rap music form, sometimes covering topics from Obama's speech with references to contemporary memes.
Popular and critical reaction focused on the video's humor and on Crosson's impersonation. Additionally, CBS News' Bailey Johnson said that Crosson's version of the speech "seems to perfectly capture the national mood,"[1] and Al Jazeera 's "Listening Post" stated that Crosson's satirical interpretation "cuts through the usual diplomatic platitudes and delivers - what seems to be - a more honest ... account of what happened."[2] CQ Roll Call Daily Briefing Editor David Hawkings remarked that the video "skewered the president’s 'no drama' affect and at the same time captured the mood of the country in the days after the Abbottobad raid."[3]
Content
Three days after Barack Obama's May 1, 2011 speech from the East Room of the White House announcing the death of Osama bin Laden,[4] actor, impressionist, dancer and Internet personality Iman Crosson posted a YouTube video "President Obama on Death of Osama bin Laden (SPOOF)"[5] that was a spoof of Obama's speech.
In the video, the East Room spoof followed a spoken-word introduction by Crosson, impersonating Barack Obama sitting at a desk,[6] explaining that the rest of the video was an "alternative speech" that had not been chosen for broadcast, replaced by the "traditional speech" that Obama in fact delivered.[7] In character with the spoof, TVGuide.com quipped, "originally, this diss track was supposed to be the nail in Osama's coffin."[8] CBS News' Bailey Johnson echoed that Crosson's version was "an earlier draft of the speech - a draft very different from the one that aired."[1]
The spoof was delivered in rap and included comedic dancing in an East Room-appearing backdrop, with The Huffington Post saying the video was "works in almost every meme from the last month."[9] The video not only included topics relating to bin Laden's killing, but referenced Internet culture[6] including contemporary memes such as Charlie Sheen's "Duh, Winning", Rebecca Black, Antoine Dodson, ENJ vs. Niks,[10] as well as snuggies, Donald Trump, and Google Earth.[7][11] The single "Momentous Day"[12] is derived from the rap portion of the video.
One commentator described the video as what Obama's speech--"in all likelihood the most pimp moment of his first two-and-a-half years in the White House"--"would have looked and sounded like had the man gone swag with it," characterizing Crosson's performance as a "rhymed flow over a booming, Lex Luger-esque beat."[10] New York magazine's Amanda Dobbins referred humorously to Crosson's dancing of the Dougie as a "bonus: the official Obama Family Dance."[13] The Post-Standard affiliate Syracuse.com's Geoff Herbert described "the witty parody rap" as "a fierce rap with lots of swag."[7]
Crosson ended his speech with "Oh that’ll be two terms please, thank you,"[10] referring to Obama's possible 2012 re-election in view of his increased popularity[14] following the success of the bin Laden mission.
CBS News' Bailey Johnson contrasted Crosson's rap and dancing performance with Obama's "model of confidence, restraint, and calm authority," further stating that Crosson's version of the speech "seems to perfectly capture the national mood."[1] The San Francisco Chronicle's "City Brights" contributor Zennie Abraham quoted Johnson and added that the video "exactly expresses what you and I both know Barack wanted to say after the Navy Seal Team 6 got to their objective."[15] Al Jazeera 's "Listening Post" remarked that Crosson's satirical interpretation "cuts through the usual diplomatic platitudes and delivers - what seems to be - a more honest and rhythmically tuned account of what happened."[2] CQ Roll Call Daily Briefing Editor David Hawkings remarked that the video "skewered the president’s 'no drama' affect and at the same time captured the mood of the country in the days after the Abbottobad raid."[3]
Viral video--statistics and distinctions
The media soon responded to the video as "a viral hit".[9]
The video was viewed at least 233,837 times in its first 24 hours,[17] and accelerated in its second 24 hours to achieve its millionth view about 50 hours after being posted,[18] and its two millionth view about 92 hours after being posted.[19]
Before the end of its second 24 hours after being posted, YouTube had reported Crosson's video as being its fifth most viewed video across all categories.[20]
At the end of its third 24 hours after being posted, YouTube reported Crosson's video as being the Comedy category's #1 most "Popular Around the Web," (which YouTube defines as "Videos with the most views when embedded on other websites").[21]
On its sixth day, the video was shown on the front page of the Funny or Die comedy video website.[22]
By the end of its sixth day, the video had received over 2.5 million views[23] and Crosson's "Alphacat" YouTube channel had received over 20,000 new subscribers.[24]
When the video received its three millionth view on its ninth day, it had received over 20,000 comments, and its "Like/Dislike" ratio was 51.[25]
Three months after the video was posted, Matt Wilstein of The Huffington Post.com named the it among the top five Obama impressions.[26]
Media coverage and popular response
The video received substantial media attention within days, with the video's views-per-day actually increasing over the course of its first three days.[27]
Media attention included features from such news outlets and political commentators as CBS News's Bailey Johnson,[1] The Huffington Post[9] including Matt Wilstein,[26] Al Jazeera 's "Listening Post,"[2] MSNBC's "The Last Word" staff,[28] Sean Hannity,[29] New York magazine's Amanda Dobbins,[13] The San Francisco Chronicle 's "City Brights" contributor Zennie Abraham,[15] The Atlantic 's Chris Good,[30] and The Post-Standard affiliate Syracuse.com's Geoff Herbert,[7] recognition from comedy video websites such as Funny or Die,[22] in addition to mentions in a variety of pop, cultural and celebrity websites such as TV Guide.[8]
Within a day of the video's posting on YouTube, Excite (Italy) reported that L'imitatore numero uno del Presidente degli Stati Uniti (the number one impersonator of the President of the United States) had turned Obama's speech into rap.[31] The same day, Obama's "comedic doppelganger" was said to have "spit hot fire" ... "with one of his best Obama impressions to date, ... his lyrics (being) pretty tight, especially coupled with his on-point presidential delivery and hitting his Dougie."[32] CBS News's Bailey Johnson concluded that Crosson was "one of the best presidential impersonators working today."[1] Calling Crosson "master of the interweb airwaves," Infotainment News remarked of the video, "yeah, it’s a meme, and the interweb will be full of them soon enough, but this is done with good clean humor."[33] NonAmos.com remarked that "It's difficult to strike a perfect balance between political satire and complete poor taste. But ... actor and impressionist Iman Crosson gets it right."[34] "Alphacat is a legitimate genius for making this video spoof... Alphacat’s touch up on the speech is much more than a comedic approach, it’s a mass collection of all 2011 memes, from Rebecca Black’s Friday, Charlie Sheen’s winning, to Dougies’ Dougie, it’s an endless troupe of hilarity.[11]
On the second day after the video's posting on YouTube, The Huffington Post said that the video was "fast becoming a viral hit," and that Crosson "doesn't stop at getting the look and sound of the president down, he has created an impression that is almost a parallel worlds version of the man; one who raps or sings his way through every major event while maintaining his signature calm, collectedness.".[9] MSNBC's "The Last Word" linked to the video, remarking that "comedian Iman Crosson does a pretty spot-on impression of our Commander-in-Chief. He's also not half bad at writing political rhymes."[28] TheRoot called it an "hilarious video" from "the man best known for his Obama impersonations during the 2008 elections."[35][36] Fanpage Italia (Italy) called it "one of the most anticipated and successful parodies by... one of the most popular political Internet Webstars."[37] Crosson's impression of Obama was called "spot-on ... absolutely nailing the hand gestures and uh, vocal, uh, tics of our nation’s 44th president."[10]
On the third day, New York magazine's Amanda Dobbins called Crosson "he of the spot-on YouTube Obama impersonations," saying "he really goes in" during the video[13] Il Quotidiano Italiano (The Italian Daily (Newspaper)) wrote that Crosson was "punctual as always"[6] in his production of the video so quickly after the news event it was spoofing. "Alphacat, one of the most popular political Internet Webstars... has not missed an opportunity to mount a parody ad hoc for this historic event."[6] The Moderate Voice expressed that "there have been some great spoofs of Obama in the past and this impersonator, Alphacat has been responsible for a good chunk of them. This new video has to be one of his best yet."[38]
Ten days after the video was posted, Al Jazeera 's "Listening Post" named Crosson's video "Internet Video of the Week," remarking "we found a clip of a talented Obama impersonator putting all his acting, singing and dancing skills to work."[2]
More than a month after the video was posted, The San Francisco Chronicle 's "City Brights" contributor Zennie Abraham commented on the spoof video and its related behind-the-scenes video, calling the spoof video "a work of genius."[15]
Video views were possible through various other websites that had shorter commentaries, but embedded Crosson's video: The Atlantic 's Chris Good ("President Obama's leading rap impersonator supplies an alternate we-killed-bin-laden announcement"),[30] WJVL Radio (Wisconsin; "Funny Friday" video for May 6, 2011),[39] the facebook page of Ashton Kutcher ("lol"),[40] New England Sports Network's DirtyWaterTV ("...clever nuances. Very funny."),[41] Power 98.3 FM website ("HILARIOUS... too funny"),[42] Glow Radio (FusionRadio.ca; "He goes in!"),[43] BookerRising.com ("this version of his speech would've been much better LOL"),[44] The Hollywood Grind ("totally believable"),[45] Jack & Jill Politics ("The Hip Hop/Pimp Walk musical version that black people secretly wish had happened...(SPOOF)"),[46] Electronic Urban Report's "ThisNthat" (Iman Crosson delivers Obama's "real victory speech"),[47] political commentator Sean Hannity (linked under "Faves"),[29] rapper Funkmaster Flex ("BY FAR the most officially funny skit I’ve seen on the topic"),[48] Radio 104.7 KISS FM ("Iman Crosson... does a pretty spot-on Obama"),[49] and Mario Armstrong (interview; "incredible spoof").[50]
See also
- Chroma key (includes "green screen" compositing)
- YouTube
- Social impact of YouTube
- United States Navy SEALs
References
- ^ a b c d e Johnson, Bailey, "President's bin Laden speech could have gone differently" (WebCite archive), CBS News, May 5, 2011.
- ^ a b c d "Syria: Keeping the story alive" (WebCite archive), "Listening Post" section of Al Jazeera English, May 14, 2011.
- ^ a b "FishbowlDC Interview With CQ Roll Call’s Hawkings" (WebCite archive), Betsy Rothstein interview of CQ Roll Call Daily Briefing Editor David Hawkings, mediabistro.com, interview published September 2, 2011.
- ^ Whitehouse.gov video and transcript of President Obama's speech of May 1, 2011 (WebCite archive).
- ^ a b The subject video "President Obama on Death of Osama bin Laden (SPOOF)" (WebCite archive) posted to YouTube channel "Alphacat" on May 4, 2011.
- ^ a b c d Paladini, Elisabetta, "“Bin Laden è morto”, la parodia rap di Obama" ("Bin Laden is dead, "A parody rap of Obama") (WebCite archive), ilquotidianoitaliano ("The Italian Daily (Newspaper)"), between March 5 and archive date of March 7, 2011
- ^ a b c d Herbert, Geoff, "Viral Video of the Day: Obama impersonator turns bin Laden speech into a 'winning' rap" (WebCite archive), Syracuse.com (The Post-Standard affiliate), May 8, 2011.
- ^ a b "Barack Obama's REAL Speech On Bin Laden" (WebCite archive), TVGuide.com, May 6, 2011.
- ^ a b c d "Osama Rap Spoof Reveals How Obama Really Wanted To Make His Announcement (VIDEO)" (WebCite archive), The Huffington Post, May 6, 2011.
- ^ a b c d e Unterberger, Andrew, "President Obama's Hip-Hop Public Address" (WebCite archive), Popdust.com, May 6, 2011.
- ^ a b "Alphacat’s President Obama on the Death of Osama bin Laden (SPOOF) Rebecca Black, Charlie Sheen, & Dougie SPOOF!" (WebCite archive), LoyalKNG.com, May 5, 2011.
- ^ Search results (WebCite archive after 2011-10-26 release date) for "Alphacat" on music search site allsongsby.com.
- ^ a b c Dobbins, Amanda, "Obama Osama Rap" (WebCite archive), New York (magazine), between May 5 and archive date of May 7, 2011.
- ^ Shephard, Michelle, "History still in the making 10 years after 9/11" (WebCite archive), TheStar.com (Toronto), May 8, 2011. "According to various polls, the president’s approval rating jumped as much as 10 per cent this week."
- ^ a b c Abraham, Zennie, "President Obama on Death of Osama bin Laden (SPOOF)" (WebCite archive), The San Francisco Chronicle 's "City Brights" contribur, June 12, 2011. Article links to both the subject spoof video and Crosson's "behind-the-scenes" documentary video.
- ^ WebCite archive of video "President Obama on Death of Osama SPOOF- BEHIND THE SCENES" posted to Crosson's secondary YouTube channel "Iman" on May 8, 2011.
- ^ WebCite archive of the video's YouTube comment page, saved between 23 and 24 hours after the video's posting (determines video's posting time to within an hour).
- ^ WebCite archive of YouTube search results page at about 50 hours after the video's posting time as determined from the video's comment page's earlier archive).
- ^ WebCite archive of YouTube search results page at about 92 hours after the video's posting time as determined from the video's comment page's earlier archive).
- ^ WebCite archive of 2011-05-06 of YouTube's "Most Viewed" video page.
- ^ WebCite archive of 2011-05-07 of YouTube's "Popular Around the Web" page, Comedy category.
- ^ a b WebCite archive of Funny Or Die website front page, May 10, 2011.
- ^ WebCite archive of YouTube search results page at about 138 hours after the video's posting.
- ^ WebCite archives of Crosson's "Alphacat" YouTube channel on April 30, 2011, May 5, 2011, and May 10, 2011.
- ^ WebCite archive of subject video's page on 2011-05-13.
- ^ a b Wilstein, Matt, "Happy 50th Mr. President! The Top 5 Obama Impressions" (WebCite archive), The Huffington Post.com, August 4, 2011.
- ^ Computed from WebCite archives of YouTube pages specifying the video's views near the end of its first, second, and third 24-hour periods after being posted.
- ^ a b The Last Word Staff, "Pres. Obama's" other bin Laden speech (WebCite archive), MSNBC.com's "The Last Word" blog, May 6, 2011.
- ^ a b WebCite archive of 2011-05-09) of hannity.com/videos (posted without comment as a "Faves" in video collection).
- ^ a b Good, Chris, "Obama (Impersonator) Raps the Bin Laden Announcement" (WebCite archive), The Atlantic website, May 6, 2011.
- ^ 'Osama è morto', il discorso di Obama in versione rap ('Osama is dead', Obama's speech in rap version) (WebCite archive), Excite.it (Italy), May 5, 2011.
- ^ Butta (author), "President Obama Spits Hot Fire In This Spoof" (WebCite archive), SoulBounce.com, May 5, 2011.
- ^ "Alphacat Does Obama" (WebCite archive), Infotainmentnews, May 5, 2011.
- ^ Fluker, Elayne, "WATCH: Obama on the Death of Osama (Spoof)" (WebCite archive), NonAmos.com, May 5, 2011
- ^ Mohamed, Hayat, "Kanye Launches Scarf Line, Man Calls Police on Crack Dealer, President Obama Spoof and More" (WebCite archive), TheRoot, May 6, 2011.
- ^ "(SPOOF) President Obama on Death of Osama bin Laden [VIDEO]" (WebCite archive), TailorMadeTalkRadio, May 6, 2011.
- ^ "Osama Bin Laden è morto: la canzone parodia di Obama" (Osama Bin Laden is dead: the song parody of Obama) (WebCite archive), fanpage.it (Italy), May 6, 2011.
- ^ Njolinjo, Dalitso, "Obama’s alternative Usama speech" (WebCite archive), TheModerateVoice.com, May 7, 2011.
- ^ Brown, Justin, "Friday Funny - Death of Osama bin Laden (SPOOF)" (WebCite archive), WJVL radio (Wisconsin) website, May 6, 2011.
- ^ WebCite archive of 2011-05-06 of "Ashton Kutcher" entry of Starpulse.com, showing Kutcher's facebook link to the video with a comment "lol".
- ^ Fairweather, Julie, "Obama's Alternative Osama Bin Laden Speech" (WebCite archive), DirtyWaterTV (program of New England Sports Network), May 6, 2011.
- ^ "President Obama Announces Osama's Death Parody **HILARIOUS!**" (WebCite archive), Power 98.3 FM website, May 6, 2011.
- ^ "Obama spits freestyle on the Death of Osama bin Laden (parody)" (WebCite archive), Glowradio.com (through FusionRadio.ca, Toronto), May 7, 2011.
- ^ "5/7 VIDEO OF THE DAY: President Obama Announces Osama Bin Laden's Death (Rap Spoof)" (WebCite archive), BookerRising.com, May 7, 2011.
- ^ "Barack Obama Announces Osama Bin Laden Death Again" (WebCite archive), Hollywoodgrid.com, between May 5 and archive date of May 8, 2011.
- ^ "Friday Open Thread" (WebCite archive), JackAndJillPolitics.com, between May 5 and archive date of May 8, 2011.
- ^ "Jokey Joke: President Obama Gives True Victory Speech…Rap! (Video)" (WebCite archive), EURThisNthat.com (Electronic Urban Report), May 9, 2011.
- ^ "(VIDEO) MUST SEE!! President OBAMA Raps on Demise of OSAMA!! TOO FUNNY!!" (WebCite archive), "News" section of Funkmaster Flex's website, May 10, 2011.
- ^ Short, Donovan, "President Obama Breaks Down Osama Bin Laden Announcement, Hip-Hop Style (VIDEO)" (WebCite), Radio 104.7 KISS FM, May 11, 2011.
- ^ Armstrong, Mario, "(spoof) President Obama on Death of Osama Bin Laden" (WebCite archive), MarioArmstrong.com (Mario Armstrong), after interviewing Crosson, May 12, 2011.
External links
- The subject YouTube video "President Obama on Death of Osama bin Laden (SPOOF)" (WebCite archive) posted on May 4, 2011 to YouTube channel "Alphacat".
- Official video "President Obama on Death of Osama bin Laden" showing the actual (non-spoof) May 1, 2011 speech by President Obama, posted to YouTube channel "whitehouse" on May 1, 2011 (WebCite archive).
- Whitehouse.gov transcript of Barack Obama's speech of May 1, 2011 (WebCite archive) announcing the death of Osama bin Laden.
- Iman Crosson's "Alphacat" YouTube channel