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Would Anyone Do This On Their Campus? Posted on 08-11-2003
C Diddy

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (Aug. 5) - About 200 people, mostly in their 20s and 30s, crowd into the card section of the Harvard Coop bookstore, pretending to look for a card for ``Bill.'' On cue, they burst into spontaneous applause. It's another "flash mob'' strike, wherein a crowd, organized by e-mail lists and Web sites, converges in pre-arranged location and performs a wacky, harmless stunt for a few minutes in public. The crowd then abruptly disappears, leaving bystanders befuddled. Some participants consider these acts of swarming to be art. Others fancy them social revolution. But for many it's just irreverent, silly fun. The phenomenon, called smart flocking by some, is spreading across the globe along with the portable digital devices that enable it. After the original flash mob coalesced in Manhattan less than two months ago, similar 21st century be-ins were staged from Minneapolis to Tokyo to Vienna. In June, flash-mobbers crowded into a Manhattan Macy's and surrounded a large oriental rug, telling puzzled salespeople they all lived together and wanted the $10,000 ``Love Rug.'' In Rome, hundreds flooded a bookstore, asking employees for imaginary books and authors. In San Francisco, a flock crossed a busy downtown crosswalk back and forth, waving their arms in the air and spinning in circles, as tourists stared agape. The Cambridge crowd fascinated Melissa Krodman, a 24-year-old mobber. ``But to get the joke, you had to look at the woman there behind the counter, the expression on her face'' when the crowd materialized out of nowhere, Krodman said. A flash mob is a lighthearted variation of the ``smart mob'' - people who use digital technology to hastily mobilize, as activists did to protest the U.S. invasion of Iraq or cell phone-equipped teenagers simply do to organize their evening on the spur of the moment. Futurist Howard Rheingold unwittingly inspired the flash-mobbers, with his 2002 book ``Smart Mobs: The Next Social Revolution,'' which examines how technology redefines social interaction. Often, anonymous flash mob organizers send out e-mails and post on online ``blogs'' specifying a date and time for swarming. Word spreads quickly. And before you know it, hundreds are in New York's Central Park, making bird sounds. What inspires participants? ``Everything makes a lot of sense nowadays, a bit too much sense. Then, for 10 minutes, you get to do something completely nonsensical. You get to be a kid for a few minutes,'' said a 30-year-old organizer of the San Francisco mob, who wanted to be known only as ``The Governor.'' Even friends who got his mob ``summonses'' didn't know he was the organizer, he says - and that secrecy is part of what has people hooked. Only organizers know the details. Participants are told to synchronize their watches and gather in nearby bars, organized in clusters according to their birth month. Volunteers, who get cues only minutes prior by cell phone, hand out slips of paper with instructions - the precise minute when the mob should appear and disappear. The slips must be hidden after memorizing instructions and everyone must disperse no later than two minutes after it ends. ``It's all very 'spy novel,' very hush-hush,'' said 34-year-old New York City flash-mobber Fred Hoysted. Numerous web logs (blogs), chat rooms and Yahoo group lists are devoted to the movement. As soon as San Francisco blogger Sean Savage started recording flash mob events on his Web site - www.cheesebikini.com - traffic skyrocketed from 350 visitors a day to more than 9,000, he said. A recent mention on the popular techie site, Slashdot.org, brought even more traffic, crashing Savage's server. Savage, 31, says the phenomenon empowers citizens in a world controlled by ``Big Government and Big Corporation.'' ``This interests people - even if it's frivolous, totally for fun, and doesn't have a label attached to it - because they see something can still happen from the grassroots without any help from the government and corporations,'' said Savage, a computer system designer and analyst at Stanford University. Rob Zazueta, who is creating an online meeting place - FlockSmart.com - for organizers and wannabe participants, says the practice turns on its head arguments that evolving digital communications tools like text messaging or e-mail are depersonalizing. ``With smart mobs, these same tools that used to push us apart, are now bringing us back together,'' he said. Zazueta, 28, hopes to see more instant physical gatherings - not of anonymous pranksters but rather of like minds. They could be at a coffee shop to discuss anything from technology, to music to politics. ``It takes the concept of chat rooms,'' he said, ``and brings it into the real world.'' 08/05/03 01:16 EDT
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replied on 08-11-2003 09:11AM [Reply]
Man I wanna do this at Hampton. Any suggestions??? :lol: And if you would do it at your school what would you do?
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replied on 08-11-2003 03:18PM [Reply]
I read that article too. I think that's stuff is pretty funny, and I could see myself participating in something like that. I just don't see one going down at an AUC school. I just thought the whole flash-mob epidemic (it's friggin worldwide) was pretty interesting.
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Dat Man 1914 replied on 08-11-2003 11:34PM [Reply]
Man that is just crazy :lol: . I mean could you imagine walking into a store with like one person in line, and then all of a sudden there is like 1000 peeps behind you???
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Aggie Blues replied on 12-30-2003 05:00AM [Reply]
I would love to pull something like this here at A&T. I dont exactly know what I would do though. **Starts digging into the Aggie Blues Bag-o-tricks** :twisted:
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replied on 12-30-2003 09:45AM [Reply]
Um referring to ur siggy...I believe that ur school's name is North Carolina Agricutural and Technical State University...so u fall in line with the rest of us...annnnnnnnnnnddddddddddd there is only ONE HIU in the MEAC...sorry I couldn't resist.
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d.blaze replied on 12-30-2003 11:01AM [Reply]
i used 2 think flash mobbing would be a fun thing 2 do BUT then i realized i don't trust people on the internet(lol or people in general) so why would i entrust my safety and possibly my record(D@MN JAKES j/p) for a mob with no cause
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PrinceMannyX from columbus, OH replied on 12-30-2003 04:12PM [Reply]

Hotep, That is Crazy and Stupid it would be good for a laugh I wouldn't do it. Prince
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replied on 12-30-2003 04:15PM [Reply]
I would...the stuff is harmless (going to central park and making bird calls<------ Harmless) its the 200 other peeps behind u that makes it funny. Then everybody just bounces like ain't nothin happen.
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*J.O.* from East Orange, NJ replied on 12-30-2003 09:02PM [Reply]

Sounds funny, i would do it but i can't see it happening at dsu.
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