Explanation

  • Refers to a piece of content (video, image, meme, post, etc.) spreading rapidly and widely across the internet, much like a biological virus spreads through a population.

Origin

  • The term viral in this context emerged with the rise of the internet and social media in the late 1990s and early 2000s.
  • It draws an analogy between the rapid, person-to-person spread of online content and the way viruses replicate and infect hosts.
  • Douglas Rushkoff's 1994 book Media Virus discussed related concepts. The term became mainstream with platforms like YouTube, Facebook, and Twitter.

Alternatives

Slang/Informal:

  • It's everywhere.
  • It popped off. (Became suddenly popular/successful)
  • That shit blew up. (Vulgar, emphasizes rapid popularity)

Milder/More Formal:

  • It gained widespread online popularity.
  • The content achieved massive reach.

Situational Appropriateness

  • Generally informal to neutral.
  • Used widely in discussions about media, marketing, and internet culture.
  • Acceptable in most professional contexts related to media or digital strategy.

Misunderstanding Warnings

  • Less likely to be misunderstood now, but initially, some might have confused it with actual biological viruses. The context usually makes the meaning clear.

Examples

  • Did you see that cat video? It completely went viral last week.
  • She's hoping her new song goes viral on TikTok.
  • Brands often try to create content specifically designed to go viral.

Dialogue

Person A: My cousin posted a video of her dog doing a trick, and it totally went viral!

Person B: No way! Seriously?

Person A: Yeah, it has like 5 million views on TikTok now. She's been interviewed by local news.

Person B: That's insane! Send me the link, I gotta see this.

Social Media Examples

  • Tweet: My tutorial on how to bake sourdough went viral overnight! 🤯 Thanks for all the love and shares! #baking #sourdough #viral
  • Facebook Post: Remember that hilarious dancing parrot video? It went viral again this year! Still makes me laugh.
  • YouTube Title: How My First Vlog Accidentally Went VIRAL (10 Million+ Views!)

Response Patterns

  • Expressing recognition: Oh yeah, I saw that! or Everyone was talking about it.
  • Asking for details: Really? What was it about? or Where did you see it?
  • Expressing impressiveness: Wow, that's amazing!

Common Follow-up Questions/Actions

After hearing something went viral:

  • Ask for a link or where to find the content: Can you send it to me? / What should I search for?
  • Discuss the content itself: What did you think of it?
  • Discuss the impact: How many views did it get? / Did the creator get famous?

Conversation Starter

  • Yes. Asking Did you see that thing that went viral? can be a good opener. Can also be used when sharing interesting content.

Intonation

  • Emphasis typically falls on viral. It went VIRAL.
  • Often said with excitement or surprise.

Generation Differences

  • Understood by most generations familiar with the internet, but particularly relevant and frequently used by Millennials and Gen Z who grew up with social media.

Regional Variations

  • Universal term across English-speaking regions due to the global nature of the internet.
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