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YouTube Rewind 2018 is the single most disliked video on YouTube, receiving over 19 million dislikes since its upload on December 6, 2018. [1] This list of most-disliked YouTube videos contains the top 42 videos with the most dislikes of all time, as derived from the American video platform, YouTube's, charts. [2]
If you look at the first sentence of the article, "This list of most disliked YouTube videos contains the top 40 videos with the most dislikes of all time, as derived from YouTube charts", it explains that the list is based only on the number of dislikes.
The video has received over two million views and has been parodied several times on YouTube; the TV3 show The Jono Project ran a series of clips titled Food in a Nek Minnit which parodied a nightly advertisement called Food in a Minute. As a result of the video, the term Nek Minnit was the most searched for word on Google in New Zealand for ...
On 1 November 2022, the video hit 2 billion views and 13 million likes on YouTube. [74] The video for "Somebody That I Used to Know" was voted number 1 in the annual Rage Fifty countdown. [75] Andy Samberg and Taran Killam parodied the video in a Saturday Night Live "digital short" that coincided with Gotye's 14 April 2012 performance on the ...
The video was parodied [448] and became one of the most disliked videos on YouTube. [449] Ted Cruz–Zodiac meme – A mock conspiracy theory suggesting that American Senator and Presidential candidate Ted Cruz was the Zodiac Killer, an unidentified Californian serial killer of the late 1960s and early 1970s. [450]
Drake nearly broke the Internet with the release of the 'Hotline Bling' music video, and Justin Bieber had fans grooving with his 'Sorry' dance video. 11 most buzzworthy music videos of 2015 Skip ...
YouTube poop is a subset of remix culture, [2] in which existing ideas and media are modified and reinterpreted to create new art and media in various contexts. [3] Forms of remix culture have existed long before the internet, with DigitalTrends's Luke Dormehl listing the cut-up technique of William Burroughs and sampling in hip-hop as examples. [4]
The first known example of this meme, a redub of A-ha's "Take on Me", was posted on YouTube by Dustin McLean in his now-defunct channel Dusto McNeato, in October 2008. [7] [8] McLean, who worked on the animated SuperNews! show on Current TV, stated that the idea for literal videos came about from an inside joke with his fellow workers, [8] and that two of his coworkers along with his wife ...