Submission   16,906

Part of a series on K-Pop. [View Related Entries]

ADVERTISEMENT

About

K-Pop Fancam Replies refers to the use of footage of Kpop stars as a response in an online conversation. These posts are generally read as nonsequential responses or shitposts.

Origin

On March 31st, 2010, Urban Dictionary [1] leschoristes354 defined "fancam" as "Footage of a celebrity taken by a fan. Most likely to be of low quality."

Spread

While fancams existed prior, on October 9th, 2014, YouTuber pharkil shared a fancam that received more than 30.2 million views in less than five years (shown below).

The earliest mention of "fancam replies" on Twitter was posted on November 23rd, 2018 by Twitter user @ghoulip (shown below). They wrote, "A*mylands thinkin their stolen cousin jokes hit harder than ours when they just get three likes and twenty fancam replies captioned w loonarmys follow me."

Over the next year, commenting on these replies more common. For example, on July 11th, 2019, Twitter user @track11sea tweeted, "this is the live action ver of a fancam in the middle of a twitter argument thread." The tweet received more tahn 26,000 likes and 12,000 retweets in less than four months (shown below).

On July 31st, Mashable [2] wrote a piece on the replies.

On October 8th, Redditor [3] hitlergrapefruite posted about the replies in the /r/OutOfTheLoop subreddit. Redditor Lisbethy responded:

answer: it's a trend in kpop stan twitter to reply with any kind of fancam as a comeback, sometimes to up the views in the original video, to promote their idol/group, to prevent/cease an argument or just to plain annoy you, or even all of the above. sometimes it can even be disrespectful, but honestly, it's really not that deep.

Various Examples

Search Interest

Not available.

External References



Share Pin

Related Entries 28 total

BTS
Psy
Woozi Hitting Mingyu with A G...
K-Pop Fans: "Which One Is Cut...


Recent Images 3 total


Recent Videos 2 total




Load 5 Comments
See more