What is Kappa? The Story Behind Twitch's Undisputed King of Sarcasm - YouTube

Channel: theScore esports

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The world of memes is a complex and oftentimes bewildering landscape to navigate.
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To the outsider, it’s an ever-expanding language of seemingly nonsensical words and images.
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But to the insider, the symbols of this world are powerful tools of communication, often
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subject to controversy, transformative meanings and varying durations of popularity.
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However, since Twitch’s launch in 2011, one emote has become the trademark
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of sarcasm and continues to thrive atop the platform’s throne.
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That’s right.
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We're finally doing it: we’re tackling the grey face (no space).
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"Josh, you can’t meme on people when trying to explain a meme!"
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Listen you can't tell me what the f*ck to do.
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We’re doing Kappa.
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"Kappa!"
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"Kappa?"
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"Cappuccino? Nah makes me hyper."
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"What's a Kappa?"
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The seemingly smug, desaturated face you’re seeing right now is that of former Twitch
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developer Josh DeSeno.
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Back in 2009, he was hired to work on the chat client for what would eventually become TwitchTV.
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And, like many of his co-workers, DeSeno decided to insert his employee photo as an easter
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egg which would appear when a specific word was typed.
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He chose the command Kappa based on his love of Japanese mythology.
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The Japanese Yokai are a collection of various demons or monsters, and the Kappa is a kind
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of strange water imp, complete with beak, shell, and a dish on its head that holds water.
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On an average day, the Kappa enjoys fine activities like eating cucumbers, engaging in some sumo
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wrestling...
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...or pulling people’s souls out of their butts.
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I’m not joking.
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"I'm an a** man. Yeah!"
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According to DeSeno, once his face was was initially discovered, it was used as a kind
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of generic, punny replacement for parts of other words, like “kappa-licious.”
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But over time, the emote and its command became synonymous with sarcasm.
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And given Kappa’s ceaseless popularity, I wanted to talk to an expert about how this
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type of phenomenon emerges and develops.
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Yes.
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I had to seek out a meme overlord, one even greater than I.
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"That's impossible!"
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My quest for memetic enlightenment would see me venture to the University of Toronto and
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a quiet office where I’d meet Dr. Marcel Danesi, a semiotician with over 40 years of
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experience in his field.
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“It’s a bizarre world in which we live, I’m sorry to put it that way.
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It is bizarre.
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But I’ll tell you as well, it's extremely interesting.”
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Professor Danesi wrote an entire book about Emoji, and has another coming out next year
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called “From Popular Culture to Meme Culture.”
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In the case of emoji, many of those symbols had obvious pre-existing meaning.
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But I asked Professor Danesi if there were any cases he could think of where a near-meaningless
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set of symbols was simply handed over to users.
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"Not in this way, but if you look at all kinds of symbols from the beginning of time.
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They have and bear meaning in a context, in fact even magical meaning and Emotes are still signs – symbols
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of a certain type – that accrue meanings through usage and through the participation
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of the users of these symbols.
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Adding to them. Developing a kind of sui generis language.
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That says an awful lot again, to the insider rather than to the outsider. So it forms a code."
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Think about the eggplant emoji.
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It's just a f***ing eggplant, but over time it has developed a secondary meaning.
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Just because it kinda looks like a

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"Pecker!"
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"Oh where?"
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So what, then, was the early context for Kappa?
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Well Twitch chat is a medium that viewers use to respond to streams.
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DeSeno’s face in the Kappa emote appeared perhaps slightly smug, and that was a visual cue for users.
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The meaning that Kappa did eventually accrue was one of sarcastic intent, but it took time
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for that to happen.
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Sometimes, like we did with our Paid By Steve video, it is possible to track this development.
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But other times it isn’t – and Kappa is so old by Twitch standards that it’s impossible
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to know for sure who first discovered it.
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But Prof. Danesi points out something else, as well:
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Many people using the emote may not even fully understand what they’re doing.
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"As you see tribal symbols and rituals evolving, you’re an outsider, you look at them and
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say “what the heck is going on?"
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If you’re an insider, they bear meaning by virtue of the fact that they form a cohesive
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pastiche, most of those people have no idea concretely what they mean."
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They’ve inherited this from the connotations that they have had over time.
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It’s a kind of distributed meaning that we acquire not intentionally, but by osmosis...
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I don't know what better word to use."
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The idea that people don’t know the concrete meaning of a symbol is the reason that we
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can do this series at all.
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You guys know something intuitively about the emotes that you use, but you click on
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our videos to confirm your understanding and seek a greater context.
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Over the course of history, mankind has attempted to create universal symbols for signifying the presence
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of irony or sarcasm via text.
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And those efforts have largely failed.
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But could Kappa finally solve this problem?
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While its use is currently limited to Twitch.tv users, as the platform, streaming and meme
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culture continues to grow in popularity, so too does Kappa’s global presence.
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It transcends the boundaries of written language and has developed something of a cult-following:
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Kappa’s rampant popularity has spawned a number of variations and even fanatics who revel in its use.
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"I'm not gonna ask you to sing me happy birthday but, everyone spam Kappa in the chat. Aaaand...
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Let's get a nice loud Kaaaappaaaa.
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"Kaaaaa- No? You guys suck! Let's try again!"
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"haHAA"
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I asked Professor Danesi how symbolic meaning is decided between groups,
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And what factors come into play when determining it.
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“From tribal cultures to now, it’s the quest for meaning.
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I don’t know why.
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Hey, if I knew the answer, I wouldn’t be here talking to a YouTube channel.”
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"Boom, roasted."
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Sorry. I love YouTube channels."
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But what we can confirm is that Kappa is the biggest emote on Twitch, and that’s unlikely
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to change any time soon.
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And while DeSeno wasn’t even really with Twitch during the emote’s rise to popularity,
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he has kept track of it on his personal website.
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Now living in Japan, he seems amused by it, suggesting that his face could possibly be
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the most digitally reproduced ever.
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For something that was added as a joke, it seems truly fitting that Kappa has come to symbolize just that.
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"Cut!"
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"Great job man, I’m really happy with how this one turned out."
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What can I say? I'm a one man show.
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"Are you gonna throw a Kappa on the end of that or?"
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Nah I'm good.
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"You know I love Grumpy Cat, I don't know why."
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"I had a cat. In fact. Again for the first time your question is making me think and make associations."
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"It makes me laugh. At the same time it makes me think and so on.
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And that therefore leads me to say right now that meme culture is an associative culture.
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It is not just concocted on the spot. Which I thought it was.
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Because it connected me to my previous experience.
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Which obviously are shared by many others. So now that I think about it's probably my favorite meme."