Bad Day (viral video)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bad Day (also known as Computer rage or Office rage) is the name of a 25-second viral video that has circulated online since 1997, making it one of the earliest video clips that became an Internet meme.

The video contains footage of a man in his office cubicle, increasingly irritated with the lack of response from his computer. First he slaps the monitor, generating some concern from a person in a neighbouring cubicle. Then he punches the keyboard, picks it up and uses it like a bat to smash the monitor off the desk and out of the cubicle. He then gets up from his chair and, as his worried neighbor observes, delivers a final kick to the downed screen.

The video clip was part of a marketing campaign by Loronix Information Systems (as of 2008 a subsidiary of Verint Systems[1]) and stars Vinny Licciardi, the company's shipping manager. Licciardi appeared in a series of promotional videos extolling the benefits of Loronix's special brand of digital video recording systems. However, "Bad Day" made the largest impression and was easily distributed via e-mail thanks to its reasonable size (416KB). The origin was revealed in 1998 by Security Distribution Magazine.

According to user interaction expert Frank Thissen, though fictional, it provides an example of how user expectations from longstanding social conventions can be frustrated through poor programming. In the Bad Day scenario, "The expectations of the user are obviously badly neglected", and the computer's lack of reaction or poor reaction is understood in the context of a human social situation, such as someone walking away in the middle of a conversation.[2]

A 2005 spoof was produced by GoViral for the network security firm Netop, showing a computer fighting back.[3] The original video has been used in a television advertisement for Walker Wireless (Now Woosh Wireless), a wireless internet provider in New Zealand.[citation needed]

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Verint Systems emerges as leader in video surveillance market", Denver Post, August 14, 2005. Retrieved on 2008-01-09. 
  2. ^ Frank Thissen (2004). Screen Design Manual: Communicating Effectively Through Multimedia. Springer. ISBN 3540435522. 
  3. ^ Dabitch (February 16, 2005). New viral homage to old viral "Bad Day at the Office". Adland. Retrieved on 2008-01-08.

[edit] External links