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Listicles

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About

Listicles are short-form articles and blog posts featuring lists surrounding a specific theme with brief descriptions for each numbered item. The term is a blend of the words “list” and “article.”

Origin

The exact origin of the term “listicle” is unknown. One of the earliest definitions of the word was submitted to the site for the public radio program Way With Words[2] on October 8th, 2004.

listicle n. a (newspaper, magazine, web site, etc.) article consisting primarily of a list. Editorial Note: This term is often used in a deprecating way, to describe an article or news story which required very little effort to produce.

Spread

On July 9th, 2008, the word was featured in a glossary published by Gawker[1] on July 9th, 2008. On January 15th, 2009, the Listicles Tumblr[6] blog was launched, which posts links to notable list articles on the web.

Listicle: An article broken down into a list. Many writers hate writing them because they make them feel dirty and cheap. However, readers ostensibly “love” lists, and our publisher Denton loves them because they are traffic bait.

On March 9th, 2011, Urban Dictionary[7] user PRwiz101 submitted an entry for “listicle.” On August 12th, 2013, The Guardian[5] published an article titled “5 ways the listicle is changing journalism,” which noted that listicles existed in print journalism prior to their use on websites like BuzzFeed. In January 2014, The University of Chicago Magazine[4] published an article describing why the listicle is popular as a literary form. On August 14th, Oxford Dictionaries[3] officially acknowledged listicle in an update to its online dictionary.



Search Interest

External References

[1]Gawker – Look We Made You a Gawker Glossary

[2]Way Word Radio – listicle

[3]Oxford Dictionaries – listicle

[4]University of Chicago Magazine – The listicle as a literary form

[5]The Guardian – 5 Ways Listicles are Changing Journalism

[6]Tumblr – Listicles

[7]Urban Dictionary – listicle


Chest Hair Bikini

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About

Chest Hair Bikini is a photo fad in which men shave their chest hair to reveal a patch of hair that resembles the shape of a women’s bikini top. Originally introduced via Twitter in September 2013, the trend went viral almost a year later on Instagram in August 2014, following the emergence of numerous gender-swapped fashion fads like Flower Beards and Makeup Transformations.

Origin

On September 6th, 2013, Twitter user BenFindlay83[4] tweeted out a picture of himself with his chest hair shaved in the shape of a bikini with the hashtag #ChestHairBikini.



Spread

On November 18th, 2013, Whoa Flow[5] featured a photo of a man sporting a chest hair bikini as the “Pic of the Day.”



On June 29th, 2014, Neatorama[6] published a roundup titled “The Hot Summer Look For Really Hairy Guys.” On July 7th, 2014, People[2] published a post titled “Introducing the Mankini: Chest Hair Gag or Hot Summer Trend?” The trend was covered by several sites on August 11th, including Buzzfeed[1], TIME[3] and The Huffington Post.[7]

Notable Examples



Search Interest

External References

Mashable

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About

Mashable is a news website founded by Scottish blogger and entrepreneur Pete Cashmore in 2005. While most well-known for its focus on technology-related and social media news content, the site has also expanded its scope of coverage to
current events, entertainment, Internet laws, startup industry, as well as web and mobile development.

History

Pete Cashmore[13] founded Mashable as a blog on technology from his home in Scotland in 2005. Cashmore took the name from mashups[15], or the melding of two technologies. In 2009 Cashmore moved the company’s office to New York City. On October 30th, 2013, Mashable announced[16] Jim Roberts, formerly of the New York Times, would begin as their executive editor and chief content officer.

Features

Mashable features six channels or main topics: social media, tech, business, entertainment, US and World and Watercooler (viral web content and memes).

Social Good Summit

On September 20th, 2010, Mashable held its first Social Good Summit.[4] The event was held in New York City during UN week and featured speakers such as Geena Davis and Soledad O’Brien. Topics of the panels included “Activating Millennials for Social Good” and “Digital Youth and the Social Good: Opportunities and Challenges.” On September 21st and 22nd, 2014, they will hold their 4th annual Summit[2], featuring guests such as Connie Britton, Michael Dell and Yael Maguire.

Open Web Awards

Mashable held their first Open Web Awards[17] in January of 2008, though in 2010 the name of the ceremony was changed to Mashable Awards. The first ceremony was held in San Francisco and attended by around 500 people. Awards were given in web based categories such as best meme and best app. In 2013 Mashable launched the Mashies,[18] which focuses on the use of technology in marketing. Categories included:

  • Best Use of Facebook
  • Best Use of Vine
  • Best Use of Twitter
  • Best Social Media Campaign
  • Best Use of Instagram, Presented by Olapic
  • Best Viral Video
  • Best Video Series, Presented by Social Vibe
  • Best Use of GIFs
  • Best PSA
  • Best Branded App
  • Best Branded Content Series, Presented by Social Vibe
  • Best New Brand
  • Best Use of Pinterest
  • Best Use of Google+
  • Best Use of Real-Time Marketing, Presented by M Booth
  • Best Branded YouTube Channel
  • Best in Show
  • Best Digital Agency
  • Rising Star
  • Digital Marketing Innovator of the Year

The 2014 Mashies[19] will be held on November 4th in New York City.

MashableReads

On August 8th, 2013, Mashable announced its online book club MashableReads.[12] The book club involves inviting the author of the month’s selected book to the Mashable office in New York City to discuss the book with Mashable employees, while also taking questions about the book through Twitter.The first book selected for the group was The Love Affairs of Nathaniel P. by Adelle Waldman. Other books featured include The Vacationers by Emma Straub[11] and To Rise Again at a Decent Hour by Joshua Ferris.

YouTube Channel

On July 30th, 2006, Mashable’s YouTube Channel was created.[14] The channel features several different kinds of videos including informative such as the Mashable Explains series (top, left) and Mashable News (top, right) as well as entertaining videos such as the Too Long, Didn’t Watch series (bottom, left) and LOL Mashable (bottom, right).



As of August 2014, the channel has gained over 120,000 subscribers.

Social Media Presence

As of August 2014, Mashable’s main Twitter account[5] has gained over 4.2 million followers. The site also manages Twitter accounts for each of their verticals including Watercooler[6], Tech[7] and Business.[8] Its Facebook account[9] has gained over 2.7 millions likes, and its Instagram account[10] has gained over 80,000 followers.



Traffic

As of August 2014, Mashable[4] is the 98th most popular website in the United States, with over 36% of the traffic coming from the United States and over 12% coming from India.

Search Interest

External Links

Five Nights at Freddy's

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Overview

Five Nights at Freddy’s is a unique horror video game by an IndieDB user known as animdude.
The goal of the game is to survive five nights at Freddy Frazbear’s Pizza (a pizzeria and children center) from animatronic animal characters Freddy and his friends.
The gameplay is unique since you have to keep watching the animatronic animals using the security cameras and close the doors to prevent them from getting you

Background

The game was first released on July 24, 2014 at IndieDB as a demo by user animdude, then later released at Desura available for purchase at five dollars. The game is yet to be released on Steam as it is on greenlight.

Development

The game picked up fame when Let’s Player yamimash and Markiplier posted videos of themselves playing the game. Many other youtubers started posting “reaction” videos to the game. The game is also widely discussed on 4chan’s /v/ board as users loved the game

Notable deriatives

Here are some examples of people playing the game

Downton Abbey

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About

Downton Abbey is a British period drama set in the early 20th century in an estate, Downton Abbey, located in Yorkshire, England. The show follows the family who owns the estate, the Crawley family, as well as the people they employ.

History

Downton Abbey premiered on September 26th, 2010, on the UK station ITV and on PBS on the United States. As of August 2014, the series has aired four seasons and 34 episodes. A fifth season is scheduled to premiere in the UK in late 2014 and on PBS in early 2015.

Online Presence

As of August 2014, Downton Abbey’s Facebook page[2] has gained over 1.9 million likes, and its Twitter account[3] has gained over 360,000 followers. Its Instagram account[4] has gained over 110,000 followers. Its first three seasons are available to stream to Netflix subscribers. Fans might also find character sketches and episode guides on the shows Wikia.[10]



Fandom

The show has several fan run Tumblr blogs dedicated to the show inlcuding you-had-me-at-downton[6], downtonobsession[7] and dawntonabbey.[8] Fans also gather to discuss the show on the /r/DowntonAbbey[9] subreddit, which has gained over 9,000 subscribers as of August 2014. As of August 2014, there are over 2,000 pieces of fan art tagged Downton Abbey on DeviantArt.[5]



Notable Examples



Search Interest

External References

[1]IMDBDownton Abbey

[2]Facebook- Downton Abbey

[3]Twitter- Downton Abbey

[4]Instagram- Downton Abbey

[5]DeviantArt- Downton Abbey

[6]Tumblr- you-had-me-at-downton

[7]Tumblr- downtonobsession

[8]Tumblr- dawntonabbey

[9]Reddit- DowntonAbbey

[10]Wikia- DowntonAbbey

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Funny News Headlines

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About

Funny News Headlines are unintentionally humorous titles of news stories in print, broadcast or on the web, which are often shared on online humor communities.

Origin

On November 12th, 2000, the website HeadlineHumor.com[3] was launched, which highlights notable examples of funny newspaper headlines, classified ads and signs.



Spread

On February 1st, 2001, the website for the Forum for English Language Teachers in Ireland[2] posted a page titled “Funny Newspaper Headlines,” featuring examples of unintentionally humorous news headlines. On October 28th, 2003, the humor website Fun With Words[1] posted a compilation of notable ambiguous headlines gathered from various newspapers. On September 24th, 2007, Redditor liberal_one submitted an image of an article with a placeholder headline to /r/reddit.com,[6] where it gathered more than 930 votes (75% upvoted) prior to being archived (shown below).



On July 14th, 2009, Redditor theprizefight posted a photo of a television news report featuring a squirrel with a yogurt container on its head with the headline “One squirrel , one cup” (shown below, left). Prior to being archived, the post received upwards of 2,500 votes (90% upvoted) on the /r/funny[5] subreddit. On June 23rd, 2010, Redditor krodnoc submitted a photograph of a newspaper headline about a woman who attacked her ex-girlfriend while wearing a sumo wrestler suit to the /r/pics[4] subreddit, where it gained over 800 votes (94% upvoted) before it was archived (shown below, right).



On December 22nd, 2011, BuzzFeed[7] highlighted 50 funny headlines from the past year. On May 24th, 2012, The Huffington Post[9] published a compilation of poorly written headlines containing obvious statements. On April 22nd, 2013, the Internet humor blog Pleated Jeans[8] highlighted 23 funny headline examples.



Search Interest

External References

Unturned

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About

Unturned is an free to play indie sandbox survival horror game developed by seventeen year old Nelson Sexton. It was greenlit on Steam and subsequently the amount of users playing at the same time surpassed that of Team Fortress 2 and Garry’s Mod. The game has been compared to Minecraft due to it’s sandbox elements and art style and DayZ due to it’s zombie survival element.

History

Unturned started out as a prototype on the sandbox MMO Roblox, the prototype had no survival elements or zombies and was similar to Pay Day 2. Roblox players suggested that the games developer, Nelson, added zombies and a survival aspect, Nelson listened to these suggestions and created Deadzone.



Deadzone was inspired by games such as DayZ and WarZ as well as Apocalypse Rising, another popular zombie survival game on Roblox. When Apocalypse Rising went offline, Deadzone was suddenly flooded with players and became one of the most played games on Roblox with over five million people plays. A sequel to the game; Deadzone 2 was in development and had features very similar to the finish product of Unturned.

While Deadzone 2 was in development, the original Deadzone was hacked and the game released to the public. Many users re-released Deadzone claiming that it was there own. Roblox attempted to delete these copies and in doing so also deleted the original Deadzone. The combination of Deadzone being deleted and the limitations of the Roblox engine led to Deadzone 2 being cancelled and Nelson moving on to create Unturned using the Unity game engine.

The Unturned that was released on Steam was actually the sequel to the original Unturned which started out as a downloadable game and was then remade into a browser game. Due to limitations with the structure of the original Unturned and the costs of hosting the Unturned downloads, he decided to create a sequel to Unturned which would be put on Steam Greenlight.

Spread

As soon as Unturned 2 was greenlit, it grew in popularity due to being one of the only free sandbox survival horror games on Steam. Soon, Pewdiepie played Unturned along with Cryaotic and CinnamonToastKen, the video received five million views and soon, many more people began uploading themselves playing Unturned 2.



Notable Examples







Search Interest

External Links

[1]Website – Unturned

[2]Steam – Unturned

[3]Wikipedia – Unturned

[4]Reddit – Unturned

[5]Wikia – Unturned

[6]Twitter – Unturned

[7]ROBLOX Blog – Unturned

[8]PCGamer – Unturned

[9]Kotaku – Unturned

[10]Rock Paper Shotgun – Unturned

[11]PCGamer – Unturned

[12]Old Unturned Blog – Unturned

I'm gonna BLOW! (Rust)

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About

The phrase, “I’m gonna blow”, is a shock phrase in the videogame Rust used to indicate one is about to violently murder another player in order to incite surprise in the victim. It usually starts with a whisper, like “I’m gonna…” and then eventually ends up in the player yelling shocking loud while screaming “Blow!” before shooting the other player. It is more of a humorous way of killing a player that is often performed on players that would be unable to defend themselves since most players familiar with the phrase would be able to foresee the attack. The meme as a whole is a parody of the interactions between players on Rust, depicting that a “proper greeting” would only be a violent one resulting in the deaths of a neighbor, illustrated by how the creator of the guide advises that the viewer “takes notes” on how the players interact.

Origin

The shock phrase originates from a joke guide for the videogame (shown below), that deceptively acts as a helpful page to teach players the “proper” way to greet and respond to an approach by another player. However, once the reader is directed to the main video, the reader is presented with an unseen neighbor knocking on the recorder’s door while the recorder softly whispers the phrase, “I’m gonna… I’m gonna blow!” in a progressively louder voice before opening the door and shooting the knocking player in the face with a sawed-off shotgun.



The video (seen below), rapidly grew in popularity due to many positive and hearty responses from readers who had laughed from the deceptively helpful guide. In mere days, the guide skyrocket in popularity and remained the most popular Steam Guide on Rust for weeks before eventually being replaced by legitimate guides.


Spread

The video itself spawned many reactions from the audience as well as it’s own animation made by the animator, Zortov, (Seen below), which helped the gaming meme’s growth but not as much as the posts on sits like the Rust subreddit, where within about 30 minutes a post of the video titled “How I Greet my Neighbor When he Knocks on my Door” received over 60 upvotes and remained one of the most popular posts on the subreddit for about a week. The post on the subreddit had been deleted for unknown reasons, however.



BatteryIncluded

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About

BatteryIncluded refers to the American colostomy bag and troll likely originated from Mexico. It is said that he has many friends within Wikipedia, the WMF and the Internet. Like Dennis Brown, BatteryIncluded has gravitated into positions of higher authority on Wikipedia and the Internet and using highly misleading statements to re-write histories of people and manipulate everyone to their fates, namely an increase in their medication for the “good mental health”, which eventually results in their deaths, in which he, as well as Stanistani, an administrator of Wikipediocracy using the name Zoloft, defines it as “well”.

Online History

He joined Wikipedia in 2007, and since then, he has made many exceptionally good contributions on Wikipedia, and like most functional and disease-free editors, incited the wrath of an aspie, which is how he came to have an article on this site. BatteryIncluded edits mostly fascinating articles about space and shit, with an edit count well into the thousands [1]. BatteryIncluded made himself an enemy or two, and told them to “write a book”, which is Wikipedian for “climb a tower of dicks and eat your way down”. He then refused to even acknowledge calls for civility on his part. BatteryIncluded notified the involved editors of the Life article about Stevertigo’s editing restrictions, however, he raped his shit and threatened with retaliatory shit. Worse still, BatteryIncluded was raped once for his incivility by William M. Connolley. He also asked that all Martian spiders be moved to the Dark Dune Spots, which seems to be a sensible precaution against Martian spider invasions.

He got involved in an edit war over Astrobiology with Viriditas, whom he accused of using IP socks to delete his shit.

Between late January and early April 2012, an editor (who is a sockpuppet of Bryan Seecrets) was using anonymous IPs to add unnecessary statements to the Phobos-Grunt article, one of the articles he largely contributes. Responding to this, he reverted and deleted most of his shit, and the article was semi-protected was protected as he was persistent in adding it. Initially, Starkiller88 seemed to be insistent on adding claims that the Fobos-Grunt mission would not be repeated, based on speculation that Russia was about to join the European ExoMars program as its partner. As this came to pass, he took the opposite direction, that the mission would be cleared for a repeat, based on the opinion of a single scientist. His efforts to fag up the article’s talk page were fruitless. Eventually, BatteryIncluded made a series of outrageous posts in an attempt to get him to stop speaking the truth about the planned repeat mission to Phobos. However, this had no effect, as it simply caused Starkiller to start claiming at every possible opportunity, and with much emphasis as possible, that no other mission could take its place in the future. This was finally resolved according to policy.

Starkiller also claimed the scientists and engineers behind the Phobos-Grunt mission were accused of treason, particularly Alexander Zakharov, who he also claimed would die in 2015 or be “disappeared”, cited by a single user-generated content on Pastebin, he attempted to add a page about an operation by Anonymous called “Operation Phobos-Gone”, a “campaign” to redress the injustice of a Russian rocketry club being closed following a programming error left a $163 million dollar space probe stuck in low earth orbit, a firable offense in most office settings. This campaign was evidenced by only a twitter account and a shit LiveJournal knockoff journal, but that didn’t stop Starkiller88 from writing an article up to cover the whole affair. When asked to account for his creation of a pointless non-article about a twitter feed, Starkiller admitted in broken, near unreadable prose that he himself had started the twitter feed and the journal the article was based upon, appearing to be inciting criminal and vigilante activities against the parties involved in order to make the claims he was adding to these articles genuine. He said he was forced to do so because BatteryIncluded stated the fact that no further Phobos probes were planned. Making this point to him had been the cause of his insistence that there would never be another mission to Phobos.

After having his shit article raped as pure vandalism and smelling the burnt flesh stench of banhammer in the air, Starkiller88 went running like a child to BatteryIncluded in a desperate attempt to avoid being shit-canned, starting a harassment campaign on him. His messages range from his pleads to a supposed “redemption”, to a claimed compulsion to vandalize Wikipedia, and lately, to blaming BatteryIncluded for infecting his computer with malware, while he told him not to do so.

Shortly after this conversation, Starkiller88 went on to user page vandalism with pain series attacks against BatteryIncluded in retaliation for his anger. Despite many contributions to pages such as Anonymous, Malaysian National Space Agency, Future spaceflights, various Malaysian Railways, and Series of Unfortunate Events pages, the editor known as Starkiller88 was permabanned for this, with no administrator willing to challenge this ban who doesn’t want to take their full brunt of his wrath. He informed one administrator, Boing! said Zebedee to enact this ban by using fabricated statements, becoming abusive in the process in making unilateral weighted decisions, and a month later, he awarded the administrator with a indirect personal attack. This would later be followed by ArbCom and BASC, including AGK; that’s the reasons why most appeals to the latter were denied without any further reason.

This events have sent a clear signal that Wikipedia’s united community do not let his interaction with the project to continue with personal attacks and outing, having an ever-lasting ripple effect throughout the Internet, causing every website and their communities to take a more robust and vile approach to any actions taken therein against Wikipedia and its members involved. The individual behind “Starkiller88” was banned from Wikipediocracy, Bleeping Computer and Above Top Secret; and still continues his anti-Wikipedianistic activities elsewhere.

Not being a banned loser himself, BatteryIncluded continues to edit without any opposition from others. That is, until August when he made a partial reversion of another editor’s edits and engaged in asserting that it introduced scrolling lists and violated common sense. Using his previous incivility against Starkiller88, he once again told Piotrus to stay away from an article to place what he called as his flashy tricks and “Hello Kittys” somewhere. He got a warning, but he deleted several posts to cover up, thereby ignoring it.
His ignorance became apparent when he ran into FitJock87 over the inclusion of VIGO System in the Curiosity rover article. Although this resulted in the information about VIGO is being retained with his corrections that they are just a sub-system vendor rather than its designers, he was intent on watching him. This caused FitJock87 to call him “not only stupid, but also pathetic,” similar to the comments from Starkiller88’s earlier vandalism of his userpage as being disruptive to make a point responding to BatteryIncluded’s incivility.
2013

After his reversion warring on the 2013 Russian meteor event, BatteryIncluded began wanting another editor, Medeis, to bitch and fight another person who attacked him and take “his meds”, killing himself. Then, an unimaginable happened – the outing of Russavia by Cla68 and the subsequent events resulting in the resignation of ArbCom member Hersfold. His resignation is attributed to the recent outings of editors, of which BatteryIncluded has did in the past.

BatteryIncluded and his people supported Russavia’s indefinite block in June 2013.

Reputation

BatteryIncluded has gained friends, expanding the alliance. After the Phobos-Grunt campaign of 2012, Dennis Brown, AGK, and Boing! said Zebedee has joined him, then followed by Zoloft, Beyond My Ken, and others.

Personal Life

Nothing much is known about his personal life.

Search Interest

As of 2014, the search interest of BatteryIncluded has yet to be shown.



External References

[1]BatteryIncluded’s user page

Luigi Gloor

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It’s a clinically proven and scientifically approved This page MiraHealth Garcinia. Specially designed to defeat obesity, this fat burner dietary supplement works effectively to shed extra pounds and make you slim. By extra ordinarily suppressing appetite, this product takes care of overall health while lose weight.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/125574957@N05/14767730357/

John Oliver

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About

John Oliver is an English actor and comedian best known for his time as a correspondent on the comedic news show The Daily Show and host of the HBO weekly comedic news show Last Week Tonight with John Oliver.

Acting Career

Oliver made his acting debut on the mini-series Masterpiece Theatre: Bleak House in 1985. He gained a few more TV roles in the early 2000s, making his feature film debut in the 2008 film The Love Guru. He acted as a voice actor in a few television shows including Gravity Falls (2012) and The Simpsons (2014), and has a recurring role in Community (2009-2014).

The Daily Show

John Oliver first appeared on The Daily Show on July 31st, 2006. He remained a recurring correspondent until leaving the show for his own HBO show Last Week Tonight with John Oliver on December 19th, 2013. He acted as the show’s host for 32 episodes from June 10th, 2013, through August 15th, 2013. The same day The Hollywood Reporter[9] published a piece titled “John Oliver’s Last ‘Daily Show’ as Host: 5 Best Moments.”



Accolades

Oliver shared six Emmy nominations for Outstanding Writing for a Variety, Music or Comedy Series with the writers of The Daily Show winning three in 2009, 2011 and 2012. He was also shared six Writers Guild Awards nominations for Comedy/Variety Series winning one in 2010.

Online History

Social Media Presence

As of August 2014, Oliver’s Facebook page[2] has gained over 50,000 likes and his Twitter account[3] has gained over 470,000 followers.

Last Week Tonight Night With John Oliver

Last Week Tonight With John Oliver,[5] a half hour comedic news program hosted by Oliver premiered on HBO on April 27th, 2014. The show’s YouTube channel posted its first clip the same day, as of August 2014, the clip has gained over 460,000 views. As of August 2014, the most viewed clip on channel is titled “FIFA and the World Cup,” which was posted on June 8th, and has gained over 7.6 million views. The channel has gained over 570,000 subscribers.



As of August 2014, the show’s Facebook page[6] has gained over 270,000 views and its Twitter account[7] has gained over 130,000 followers. Its Instagram account[8] has gained over 8,000 followers.



Search Interest



External References

Gnome Child

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About

Gnome Child is a type of non-player character featured in the massively multiplayer online roleplaying game Runescape that has gained notoriety for its tendencies to respond with bizarre and philosophical quotes when approached by the player.

Origin

On December 12th, 2002, Runescape was updated with several new features, maps and non-player characters (NPCs), most notably a group of youthful gnomes who could be found in the Tree Gnome Stronghold.



Spread

On June 6th, 2008, an entry for “Gnome Child” was created on the Runescape Wiki.[1] The character did not gain a significant following online until July 2014, when discussions of the character began surfacing on the /r/2007scape subreddit. On July 21st, 2014, Redditor helofrand posted a screenshot of a Gnome Child’s portrait titled “I love gnomes” to /r/2007scape[3] (shown below, left). On July 25th, Redditor Cheesydude submitted a photoshopped image of a Runescape avatar wearing a Gnome Child mask and hat to /r/2007scape,[2] where it gained over 450 votes (90% upvoted) in the first month (shown below, right).



Also on July 25th, Redditors began posting images of quotes attributed to Gnome Child to /r/2007scape and /r/runescape (shown below).[7][8][9]



Meanwhile, YouTuber Flopske uploaded a video titled “Gnome Child,” featuring Runescape gameplay footage in which Gnome Child discusses the existence of God before being attacked and killed (shown below). On July 26th, Runescape Forums[5] member Kirtinaa submitted a thread hailing Gnome Child as the “new overlord.”



Notable Examples



Slayer

In August, an audio clip of the kill streak announcer from the Halo video game series saying the phrase “slayer” accompanied by a thumbnail of a Gnome Child began circulating on Tumblr according to user shrekyourself.[6]



That month, additional audio clips of the Halo announcer with various photoshopped Gnome Child thumbnails began circulating on the microblogging and social networking site under the tag “#slayer”[7] (shown below).



Search Interest

External References

The "Louisville Purge" Hoax

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Overview

Louisville Purge Hoax refers to a practical joke orchestrated by a Louisville, Kentucky teenager who disseminated a false rumor via Twitter announcing the observance of a free-for-all, violent purge across the city for 10 hours and 30 minutes on the Friday night of August 15th, 2014. The “purge” scare was subsequently debunked as a hoax inspired by the plot of the 2013 horror film The Purge.

Background

On August 10th, 2014, an unnamed teenager posted a tweet asking who would assist him in starting a “Louisville Purge” (shown below).



Notable Developments

Online Reaction

On August 15th, 2014, Twitter[1] user Jeremy Daugherty tweeted a photoshopped promotional poster for the film The Purge advertising the hoax event, claiming that the placards had been hung up around Louisville (shown below).



The same day, Redditor mbritt74 submitted a post titled “Louisville Purge megathread” to the /r/Louisville[5] subreddit for discussions and updates related to the purge. A page was subsequently created on the hoax database website Snopes,[6] labeling the rumor as “false.”

Interview

Also on August 15th, the manualredeye SoundCloud feed posted an audio interview with the student responsible for starting the rumor, who claimed that is was supposed to be “just a joke” and that he had been kicked off the football team for the hoax (shown below).



News Media Coverage

Later that night, Thought Catalog[2] published a live blog of the evening, including reports of increased police scanner activity, explosions and shots being fired. The following day, Gawker[3] published an article about the hoax, referring to the Thought Catalog piece as a “fictional account.” In the coming days, additional news sites reported on the incident, including NY Daily News,[7]BBC News,[8] Time,[9] People,[10] E! Online[11] and UpRoxx.[12] According to the Cincinanati, Ohio news station WLWT,[4] rumors of other hoaxes subsequently spread to Detroit, Jacksonville, Kansas City, Miami and Cleave.

Search Interest

External References

That's The Show

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About

That’s the Show refers to a common caption on Tumblr which captions a series of GIFS or screenshots that represent a TV show which suggests the entire series can be summed up with those images.






Notable Examples



MT Craze


Quinnspiracy

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Overview

Quinnspiracy refers to the online controversy surrounding indie game developer Zoe Quinn’s alleged affair with a number of video game journalists, including a staff writer at the Gawker-affiliated video game news site Kotaku, supposedly in exchange for publicity for her and her 2014 text-based indie game Depression Quest. In August 2014, the scandal came into public’s light when Eron Gjoni, her now-former boyfriend, chronicled the details of her affairs in an expose blog post, which prompted online discussions regarding the validity of Gjoni’s claim and ethics in video game journalism at large. Due to the scandal’s online amplification in reaction to perceived media suppression, the event has been cited as an example of the “Streisand Effect”.

Background

On December 4th, 2013, Quinn submitted her game Depression Quest to Steam Greenlight[1] to be selected for release on the software distribution service. On December 12th, Quinn (@Quinnspiracy) posted several tweets complaining about harassment she had allegedly received for placing the game on Greenlight, specifically from the *chan board Wizardchan.[2] However, Wizzardchan has counterclaimed that they did not doxx her in a series of images that conveys their side of the story with a cronological breakcown and an explination why they didn’t target her.[15]



On August 11th, 2014 the game was released on Steam.[3]


Note: click on the image to visit the website and play the game

On August 16th, Quinn’s ex boyfriend Eron Gjoni launched a Wordpress blog[4] titled “The Zoe Post,” featuring screenshots and pictures providing evidence that Quinn cheated on him with five different men, including her boss Joshua Boggs and video game journalist Nathan Grayson, who writes for Kotaku and Rock, Paper, Shotgun.



Note: click on the image to read the original post in full-length

Notable Developments

Online Reaction

On August 17th, Redditor MannoSlimmins submitted a series of screenshots to provide evidence that Quinn faked being harassed by Wizardchan users to garner support for her game to the /r/TumblrInAction[6] subreddit. The same day, Tumblr[7] user KC-Vidya-Rants published a blog post denouncing Quinn for using Robin Williams’ suicide to promote her game and faking harassment for sympathy. In the first 48 hours, the post gained over 940 notes. Meanwhile, Escapist Magazine Forums[5] member Rebant submitted a thread about the scandal, which criticized Quinn’s behavior and video game blogs for ignoring the story.

Phil Fish’s Twitter Rant

Also on August 17th, indie game developer Phil Fish defended Quinn on Twitter, calling those who were attacking her “cowards” and claimed he was “canceling projects” in retaliation (shown below).



Fish at one point went as far as to compare the people who were attacking Quinn to rapists. However, he deleted this tweet moments after posting it.



“The Five Guys Saga”

On August 18th, YouTuber Internet Aristocrat uploaded a video titled “Quinnspiracy Theory: The Five Guys Saga,” which criticized Quinn for using sex to influence journalists and for portraying herself as a victim to receive donations and support (shown below). The name spawns from the fact that Quinn allegedly slept with five different men who had positions in the video game or video game journalism industries. The following day, the video was submitted to the /r/videos[14] subreddit, where it gained over 2,200 votes (87% upvoted) and 460 comments.



In homage to this video, 4chan’s /v/ (video games) board began using references to the Five Guys chain restaurant as a way to make threads about Quinn without it catching the attention of mods.

Hacking & Doxing Claims

On August 19th, Quinn claimed that her Tumblr and Twitter page were both hacked and that she had been doxxed by users from /v/. The post was subsequently deleted. That day, Tumblr[12] user The Spectacular Spider-Girl pointed out several inconsistencies in the story as evidence that Quinn fabricated the hacking.

In addition, the phone numbers included in the Tumblr dox post were found to have no connection with Zoe.

Rebel Game Jam & The Fine Young Capitalists Doxxing

During the immediate fallout of Eron Gjorni’s blog posts, a Reddit user going by the name of SillySladar has raised allegations that Zoe Quinn intentionally sabotaged a female-centric game development event on the grounds that the idea was opressive, in order to promote her own similar event, Rebel Jam, which is currently being organized.

GamesNosh Article

On August 19th, the video game news blog Games Nosh[10] published an article accusing Quinn of “exploiting games press for coverage.” Hours later, the @GamesNosh Twitter feed announced that their host had asked them to remove the article (shown below). That day, the page was removed and redirected a HostGator 404 page. The article was subsequently mirrored on Pastebin.[13]



N4G Article

On August 19th, the video game rumor site N4G published an article that Quinn “was being accused of exploiting games press for coverage.” Hours later, the article was removed. N4G has not made a public statement on why the article was removed.



Total Biscuit’s Response

Also on August 19th, British video game critic Total Biscuit published a blog post which denounced Quinn for abusing the DMCA to take down criticism of her product and lamented the nepotism present in the gaming journalism industry. The post was subsequently submitted to /r/gaming,[9] where comments were mass-deleted by a subreddit moderator. A screenshot of a Twitter conversation between /r/gaming senior moderator @ElChupacupcake and Quinn began circulating, with many speculating about his involvement in the deletions (shown below).



Zoe Quinn’s Response

On August 19th, Quinn published a post on her Tumblr[11] blog about the scandal, claiming it was about her private life, complaining that members of 4chan had doxxed her and thanking moderators for removing posts about her across the web.

This has nothing to do with games and is not a matter of legitimate public interest, but is simply a personal matter. I would hope and request that the games press be respectful of what IS a personal matter, and not news, and not about games. This is explicitly about my private life, which has been regrettably forced into the public and framed by people who pose a threat to my safety and well being as well as that of the people I love. I would hope that the effort people have gone through to dress it up as anything more would not be enough to have those who see it for what it is take the bait.


I am not going to link to, or address anything having to do with the validity of the specific claims made by an angry ex-boyfriend with an axe to grind and a desire to use 4chan as his own personal army. This is not a “she-said” to his “he-said”. The idea that I am required to debunk a manifesto of my sexual past written by an openly malicious ex-boyfriend in order to continue participating in this industry is horrifying, and I won’t do it. It’s a personal matter that never should have been made public, and I don’t want to delve into personal shit, mine or anyone else’s, while saying that people’s love and sex lives are no one’s business. I’m not going to talk about it. I will never talk about it. It is not your goddamned business.

What I am going to say is that the proliferation of nude pictures of me, death threats, vandalization, doxxing of my trans friends for having the audacity to converse with me publicly, harassment of friends and family and my friends’ family in addition to TOTALLYUNRELATEDPEOPLE, sending my home address around, rape threats, memes about me being a whore, pressures to kill myself, slurs of every variety, fucking debates over what my genitals smell like, vultures trying to make money off of youtube videos about it, all of these things are inexcusable and will continue to happen to women until this culture changes. I’m certainly not the first. I wish I could be the last.

Because I’ve had a small degree of success in a specific subculture, every aspect of my life is suddenly a matter of public concern. Suddenly it’s acceptable to share pictures of my breasts on social media to threaten and punish me. Suddenly I don’t have any right to privacy or basic dignity. Suddenly I don’t get to live out normal parts of life, like going through a bad and ugly breakup in private. I have forfeited this by being a blip in a small community, while those who delight in assailing me hide behind their keyboards and a culture that permits it, beyond reproach.

My life and my body are not public property. No one’s life and body are public property.

Sexuality is one of the most personal, hurtful, and easy things to demonize a woman over, and also has nothing to do with my games. Yet large swaths of the gaming community are either unable or unwilling to separate the two. I’m convinced that my ex chose 4chan as the staging ground for his campaign of harassment and character assassination because he knew this; he knew that someone claiming to be “from the Internet” has shown up at my house once already, and he is counting on the most reviled hubs of our community to live up to their sordid reputations. This is another example of gendered violence, whereby my personal life becomes a means to punish my professional credentials and to try to shame me into giving up my work. I’m still committed to doing my small part to create a world where no woman is at risk of experiencing this. That said, I am thankful that even boards with a reputation for being the most hostile places online have been able to tell the intent behind these threads and banned them outright, seeing the hate speech for what it is, and not-news for what it is.

As much as those leading the charge against me will do mental backflips to make posting pictures of my tits about “ethics”, the real agenda is plain as day if you give it even a moment of sincere critical thought. No one who would terrorize someone and the totally uninvolved people they love in this way on such a massive and public scale could ever honestly claim to be interested in “ethics” of any kind. These kinds of accusations have been levied against any woman of status in any industry, ever. I have been judged because, if you are a woman, you are expected to constantly “prove” yourself, and even mere accusations can somehow undo all the good you’ve done and justify any measure of depraved brutality against you. Meanwhile, I see major support thrown the way of my male colleagues when they are accused of any sort of wrongdoing. Neither of these attitudes is correct, and they are patently unfair and reductive. Nobody exists in a vacuum, and anyone can change and grow into a better person. Heroes and villains don’t exist – just regular boring-ass people with scars and fuckups and moments of brilliance. And every single boring-ass person deserves the space to keep personal matters private and handled outside the shark tank of anonymous internet boards.

Once again, I will not be addressing the specific validity of any statements about my private life. If you have good-faith questions or doubts, I am more than happy to discuss private matters in private, where they belong. But I refuse to be coerced into making my private life or anyone’s private life a matter of public record, and I refuse to be continually emotionally terrorized by people who have long decided to hate me regardless.

I’m looking forward to moving on and getting back to work. To anyone else who has had to deal with this kind of indignity on any scale, you have my undying support and my ear if you ever want to talk to someone who might understand. To the people who support my work and can see this crusade for what it is, thank you from the bottom of my heart. To those people, I love you, I always have, and I always will.

Search Interest



External References

Kid President

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About

Kid President is the online persona of Robby Novak, a child YouTube star who creates videos for the Soul Pancake YouTube channel run by comedian Rainn Wilson. Kid President’s videos are often encouraging and inspirational.

Online History

Robby Novak and his brother-in-law Bradley Montague[6] began tweeting through the Twitter account I Am Kid President[4] in July of 2012.[9] On October 4th, 2012, YouTube channel Soul Pancake[6] run by actor Rainn Wilson, published a video titled “Meet Kid President” which introduced Novak’s character who has catchphrases such as “If it doesn’t make the world a better place, don’t do it” and “I’m not in a party. I am a party." As of August 2014, the video has gained over 500,000 views.



On January 24th, 2013, Soul Pancake published a video titled “A Pep Talk from Kid President to You” which featured Novak giving upbeat advice ending the video by suggesting viewers “create something that makes the world more awesome.” The video was featured on the Ted Talk website[8] the following month, where it gained over 680,000 views as of August 2014. The original video gained over 33.3 million views as of August 2014, and is the channel’s most popular video.



On April 4th, 2013, Soul Pancake published a video titled “Kid President meets the President of the United States of America” which showed Novak visiting the White House and meeting with President Obama. As of August 2014, the video has gained over 6 million views.



Television Show

On June 21st, 2014, Kid President’s television series, Kid President: Declaration of Awesome premiered on the Hub Network. On June 6th, Soul Pancake uploaded a promotional video for the show, within two months it gained over 40,000 views. As of August 19th, eight episodes of the series have aired.



Social Media Presence

As of August 2014, Kid President’s Facebook page[3] has gained over 170,000 likes and his Twitter account[4] has gained over 210,000 followers. His Instagram account[5] has gained over 110,000 followers.



Highlights



Search Interest



External References

How to flip the bird

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About

How to Flip the Bird is an animation series featuring various Miku Miku Dance characters (MMD) demonstrating how to perform a middle finger hand gesture to a character in front of them, expressing three different reactions of discontent.

Origin

On June 8th 2013, Nico Nico Douga user 如月 銃駆 (Juke Kisaragi) uploaded a video titled 人を怒らせるMMD (How to Flip The Bird MMD). The video is divided into two parts. In the first one, two Vocaloid characters are talking to each other in Japanese, one seemingly trying to interrupt the other as she tries to speak to her. The other half of the video consists of a three-steps instructional bit featuring Miku Hastune giving the middle finger in three different ways, from the dullest to the most expressive.

Niconico How to Flip The Bird MMD

Spread

While the Nico Nico Douga video amounted to more than 20 000 views only, Youtube user Zellgadissiv uploaded his own take on the scene to Youtube on June 25th. As of today, it has gathered more than 1 million views.

!!

In the description, Zellgadissiv said that the motion capture for that bit has been shared by its creator, Juke Kisaragi. The Nico Nico Douga video states that it was on the site BowlRoll[1].

As many Youtubers discovers the segment on Youtube, they joined in the craze to create their own MMD-inspired videos featuring various characters “flipping the bird”.



As a Reaction Face

[WIP]

External Reference

[1]BowlRoll 人を怒らせるMMDモーション

2014 Ferguson Riots

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About

2014 Ferguson Riots refers to a series of civil disturbances and violent demonstrations which occurred in Ferguson, Missouri in late August 2014. These riots were the result of the shooting of unarmed African American Michael Brown teenager by Ferguson police, and escalated when an autopsy for Brown was released.

Background

On August 9th, 2014, Michael Brown,[1] an eighteen-year-old African American, was fatally shot by a police officer in Ferguson, Missouri. Brown was unarmed at the time of the shooting. On August 10th, Jon Belmar, the police chief for St. Louis County, gave a statement explaining Brown had been shot after he assaulted a police officer and attempted to gain control of officer’s gun. On August 10th, crowd members participating in a day of vigils reportedly began looting businesses, vandalizing vehicles and antagonizing police officers. 150 riot officers were dispatched to the scene, using tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse the crowd. On August 12th, protesters congregated in Clayton, Missouri demanding the criminal prosecution of the officer who shot Brown. Police used tear gas on the crowd, claiming bottles had been thrown at officers. On August 13th, journalists Ryan J. Reilly of The Huffington Post and Wesley Lowery of Washington Post were arrested while charging their phones at a McDonald’s restaurant. Later, Reilly claimed officers slammed his head into the glass and Lowery tweeted that he had been pushed into a soda machine.[3]



That evening, the @OccupyOakland Twitter feed posted a screenshot of tweets sent from Palestinian citizens provided tips on handling tear gas.



On August 14th, Redditor kevan submitted a photograph of police officers in Ferguson purportedly tear gassing press and dismantling their equipment to the /r/pics[2] subreddit (shown below). In the first six hours, the post garnered upwards of 5,500 votes (95% upvoted).



Development

After a few days of relative calm and peace following the appointment of Missouri highway patrol Captain Ron Johnson to head police efforts in Ferguson,[11] violence escalated on August 17th, 2014, in the evening, with the police reporting the next morning that violent protestors had thrown rocks at the police.



The escalation of violence was seen as result of the release of a private autopsy on Brown that day which revealed he had been shot six times, including twice in the head.



The Ferguson public school year,[10] originally scheduled to start the week of the 11th, was also cancelled on August 18th, following the riots and raids. On August 18th, the governor of Missouri Jay Nixon ordered the National guard to Ferguson to temper any further violence.

Water Canon Vine

On August 19th, Vine user Joseph Solis[5] uploaded a clip of CNN’s coverage of the riots which features anchor Rosemary Church[6] suggesting the police use water canons on the protestors, while her co-anchor Errol Barnett gives her an incredulous look. This suggestion came off as offensive seeing as the police actions in Ferguson have increased racial tension and water canons were famously historically used during desegregation protests in the 1960s. The Vine was posted to Reddit’s r/videos subreddit[7] the same day. The clip was also covered by several websites the same day including UpRoxx and Buzzfeed.[8]



External References

ARROW

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Disclaimer

I do not own Arrow or anything to do with CW network.

This is dedicated to the memes and content made off of the show ARROW on the CW

http://www.cwtv.com/shows/arrow

https://www.facebook.com/CWArrow

Depicting Oliver Queen(Green Arrow) and friends in their fight against Slade Wilson (Deathstroke) for the soul of Starlet City.

ABOUT
Arrow is an American television series developed by writer/producers Greg Berlanti, Marc Guggenheim, and Andrew Kreisberg. It is based on the DC Comics character Green Arrow, a costumed crime-fighter who was created by Mort Weisinger and George Papp. It premiered in North America on The CW on October 10, 2012, with international broadcasting taking place in late 2012. The series follows billionaire playboy Oliver Queen, portrayed by Stephen Amell, who, after five years of being stranded on a hostile island, returns home to fight crime and corruption as a secret vigilante whose weapon of choice is a bow and arrow. Unlike in the comic books, Oliver does not go by the alias “Green Arrow” in the television series. Arrow also features appearances by other DC Comics characters..
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PLOT
After a violent shipwreck, billionaire playboy Oliver Queen (Stephen Amell) was missing and presumed dead for five years before being discovered alive on a remote island in the Pacific. He returned home to Starling City, bent on righting the wrongs of his family and fighting injustice. To do this, he creates the persona of Arrow – a vigilante – and allies himself with former military man John Diggle (David Ramsey) and computer science expert Felicity Smoak (Emily Bett Rickards), while keeping his secret from those closest to him.

Critical reception

Season one received favorable reviews, with a Metacritic score of 73 out of 100, based on reviews from 25 critics, making it the highest rated CW show in five years.

Review aggregate Rotten Tomatoes calculated an approval rating of 86%, based on 35 reviews, for the first season. The general consensus reads: “The CW nails the target with Arrow, a comic book-inspired series that benefits from cinematic action sequences, strong plotting, and intriguing characters.” Mary McNamara of the Los Angeles Times called the series an interesting setup with a quality look, describing Amell as “a poster boy (no doubt literally) for the Katniss Everdeen set.” Brian Lowry at Variety described the series as a handsome but stiff surrogate for Batman that could benefit from sharper execution. In reviewing the final episode of season one, Alasdair Wilkins of The A.V. Club gave the season as a whole a rating of B+, noting that the show “hasn’t quite figured everything out yet, but it’s had some standout episodes.”

MEME

As the show grew in popularity to did the phrase “You have failed this city.” which began being applied to memes of him telling various members of pop culture like Lady Gaga, Justin Beiber or Barack Obama that they had failed this city, or post, or thread, or which ever applied to the circumstance.


See more on Know Your Meme


See more on Know Your Meme
That brought in a new stream of Arrow "related memes which simply depict jokes, inside or no, of the shows and characters, anime versions of them, or simply switching them out with other characters from other franchises.


See more on Know Your Meme

Main Characters
Oliver Queen, played by Stephen Amell. He is a billionaire playboy turned hooded vigilante, who is based on the DC Comics character Green Arrow. After surviving a ship wreck on an isolated island for five years, Oliver returns to his home city with a mission to right the wrongs of his father and save the city from the crime that has grown in his absence. Amell was one of the first actors to audition for the role, and Kreisberg felt that he “hit the target from the outset” and “everyone else just paled in comparison”.

Katie Cassidy portrays Laurel Lance, based on the DC Comics character Dinah Laurel Lance,[4][5] an attorney and former girlfriend of Oliver Queen. Similarly to Oliver, Laurel also fights for the people of Starling City. In the first season, she works for a non-profit legal office that helps people in need.

Colin Donnell portrays Tommy Merlyn, Oliver’s best friend,[8] who eventually learns of Oliver’s secret life as a vigilante. Like Oliver, Tommy has romantic feelings for Laurel. His father is Malcolm Merlyn, the main antagonist in season one. The surname “Merlyn” is the name of one of Green Arrow’s nemeses in the comics. He died saving Laurel at the end of the first season’s finale, leaving Oliver and Laurel to cope with this loss.

David Ramsey portrays John Diggle, Oliver’s partner, confidant, and bodyguard.[9] Diggle is ex-military, and works to have Oliver channel his abilities into helping others in the city, and not just taking down the wealthy, corrupt businessmen that worked with Oliver’s father.

Willa Holland portrays Thea Queen, Oliver’s younger sister. Thea develops a drug habit early in season one, but gets clean after criminal charges are brought against her for driving while under the influence. In season two’s seventh episode, it is revealed that Malcolm Merlyn is Thea’s biological father.

Susanna Thompson portrays Moira Queen, Oliver and Thea’s mother.[12] Moira is revealed to also be part of the secret organization her late-husband was involved with, which is making plans to bring down the city as a means of rebuilding it in the image of the organization’s leader.

Paul Blackthorne portrays Detective Quentin Lance, Laurel’s father and Starling City police detective. Detective Lance blames Oliver for the presumed death of his daughter, Sara, as she was with him on his family yacht when it sank.

Emily Bett Rickards portrays Felicity Smoak, the IT technician at Queen Consolidated who has become part of Oliver’s vigilante team. The DC Comics character of the same name was the step-mother of Ronnie Raymond and manager of a computer software company. Like Diggle, Felicity also serves as Oliver’s friend and confidant. Rickards was promoted to a series regular for season two, after having been a recurring character throughout season one.

Manu Bennett portrays Slade Wilson, a character based on the DC Comics character Deathstroke. Slade is an ASIS agent who teamed up with Oliver during his time on the island. However, in season two Slade arrives in Starling City to kill Oliver out of vengeance for events that occurred on the island. Bennett was initially cast as a recurring character for season one, before receiving series regular status at the start of season two.

Colton Haynes portrays Roy Harper, a character based on the DC Comics character of the same name. A petty crook, Roy was befriended by Thea, and subsequently began dating her, and is fascinated by the hooded vigilante, unaware that he is Thea’s brother (until “Tremors”). Haynes was moved to series regular status at the beginning of season two, following his recurring appearance in the first season.

John Barrowman portrays Malcolm Merlyn, Tommy’s father; he is based on the comics character Merlyn, an archenemy of Green Arrow in the comics. Malcolm sabotaged Oliver’s family yacht, and is thus responsible of Robert Queen’s death and indirectly the creation of Oliver and Sara Lance’s vigilante alter egos. Malcolm is apparently killed by Oliver in the first season finale, but his plan to destroy the Glades still succeeds.

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