Confirmed   21,102

Part of a series on Rap / Hip-Hop. [View Related Entries]


Ludacris' Fake Abs

Part of a series on Rap / Hip-Hop. [View Related Entries]

PROTIP: Press 'i' to view the image gallery, 'v' to view the video gallery, or 'r' to view a random entry.

Advertisement

About

Ludacris' Fake Abs refer to jokes made about poorly-CGI'd abdominal muscles on rapper Ludacris in his video for the song "Vitamin D."

Advertisement
Advertisement

Origin

On April 10th, 2017, World Star Hip Hop premiered the music video for Ludacris' "Vitamin D" (shown below).



In the beginning of the video, Ludacris walks into a room of beautiful women with his shirt unbuttoned, revealing a CGI'd torso.



Advertisement
Advertisement

Spread

Immediately, Twitter users began making jokes about Ludacris' torso in the video. Many compared it to that of different video game characters. @GinoTheGhost[1] compared him to a Grand Theft Auto character in a tweet that gained over 2,900 retweets and 6,600 likes (below, left). Buzzfeed employee @elliesunakawa[2] tweeted the most popular joke about Ludacris' abs, comparing them to bread rolls. Her tweet (below, right) gained over 12,000 retweets and 33,000 likes.



The jokes were compiled in a Twitter Moment[3] that day. Many pointed out that Ludacris has a history of morphing his body with exaggerated CGI in videos, as he did in the videos for songs "Stand Up" and "Roll Out,"[4] and the poorly-CGI'd abs were intentional. Ludacris responded to the jokes by pointing this out[5] and responding to several tweeted jokes in good humor.



The Daily Dot,[6] Fact Mag,[7] Oxygen,[8] and more covered the jokes. Ludacris later went on Late Night with Conan O'Brien to discuss the video and the jokes around it.



Various Examples



Search Interest

External References


Advertisement

Comments ( 12 )

Sorry, but you must activate your account to post a comment.

Please check your email for your activation code.

    See more