Obama As Joker Drives Web Wild
It may not be Gotham City, but some joker's gone wild in L.A. A poster that mashes up an image of President Obama with the smeared face paint and red lips of Heath Ledger's Joker from "The Dark Knight" has hit the streets, guerilla style. The eerie face is underscored with the title "Socialism." Say, what?
Confusing message aside, the posters are causing a surge of interest on the Web. Queries have heated up the Search box, with lookups on "obama joker," "obama joker shirt," "obama socialist poster," and "obama poster" all soaring. Already a digital form of the poster has popped up on Flickr, Twitter, and Facebook. You can see the image for yourself. (Be warned, it is disturbing.)
As Newsbusters points out, the poster "does not appear to be in the same category as the many benign take-offs on the Shepard Fairey 'Hope' poster."
It sure doesn't. Heath Ledger's Joker was the villain's villain, bent on gleeful destruction. There's no "hope" here. By contrast, the street artist Shepard Fairey created an iconic image to promote the message of the Obama campaign.
So far, the creator of the "Socialist" design has not come forward. Maybe that's wise. Shephard Fairey is fighting a battle over the rights to the photo he used for the "Hope" art. The photo from the "Socialist" poster is taken from a Time magazine cover. It's probably clear who would have the last laugh.
Filed under: Politics, Artists, Barack Obama
Banksy Strikes the Buzz
He has spray painted corners with enormous rats and stenciled walls with policemen making out. He's snuck his own work into some of the world's most famous museums, and tagged sections of Israel's security barrier. Earlier this month, he stocked stores across the U.K. with "updated" versions of Paris Hilton's new album. Now, graffiti artist and agitprop prankster Banksy has struck again —with "a three-day vandalized warehouse extravaganza" in Los Angeles.
Each time this notoriously secretive trickster pops up with a new project, the brouhaha —and the buzz —is sure to follow. After the Paris Hilton stunt, searches on his name rose 24%. Now as bloggers, photographers, and the press track the Southern California show (and its pink elephant on parade), buzz jumped once more.
Though fans of the satirist also hit the Web for more on his graffiti, stencils, and quotes, the top related searches invariably point to his most recent exploits. Past feats have splattered "banksy palestine" and "banksy graffiti london" across the Search box. Currently, "banksy paris hilton" and "banksy cds" top the list. It's just a matter of time before we see what —or who —he propels up Search next. Perhaps a certain famous duo who are, apparently, fans?
top movers
| Rank | Subject | 1-Day Move |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ford 400 | Breakout! |
| 2 | Indonesia Ferry | Breakout! |
| 3 | Jordan Chandler | 3481% |
| 4 | Evan Chandler | 2322% |
| 5 | American Music Awards | 1841% |
| 6 | John F. Kennedy | 1529% |
| 7 | Turkey Stuffing Recipes | 1361% |
| 8 | Liam Hemsworth | 1172% |
| 9 | Lou Dobbs | 1142% |
| 10 | Hendrick Motorsports | 888% |

top leaders
| Rank | Subject | Move | Score |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Black Friday | +340 | 1290 |
| 2 | NFL | +489 | 670 |
| 3 | Jennifer Lopez | +451 | 515 |
| 4 | New Moon | -67 | 250 |
| 5 | American Music Awards | +236 | 249 |
| 6 | UFC | -36 | 239 |
| 7 | Miley Cyrus | +66 | 169 |
| 8 | Hulu | -11 | 154 |
what's the buzz?
A subject's buzz score is the percentage of Yahoo! users searching for that subject on a given day, multiplied by a constant to make the number easier to read. Weekly leaders are the subjects with the greatest average buzz score for a given week.
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