Skip to navigation
   
Asavin Wattanajantra's Blog

The top five Flashmobs of all time

By Asavin Wattanajantra in Editorial

Posted in flashmob, social, Facebook, internet, Social Networking on February 10, 2009 at 2:50 pm

Permalink | Author Profile

Last Friday Liverpool Street Station was forced to close after a reported 13,000 people congregated to take part in a silent disco, organised using the social networking website Facebook.

With a crowd listening to music through headphones, they all broke into dance at 7pm in a scene imitating a T-Mobile advert that was filmed at the station last month. Police had to close the station for more than an hour due to overcrowding fears, while people partied on with antics including crowdsurfing, stripping and climbing of station furniture.

It isn’t the first time this a flashmob (when a large group of people assemble in a public place and perform an unusual action) has caused a ruckus - the social networking phenomenon has made it possible for a while now. Here are five of the best.

 1 Worldwide Pillow Fight Day

This was the largest pillow fight flashmob ever, taking place on March 22 last year. Over 25 countries took part, including London, New York, Paris and even Shanghai. The rules were self explanatory - in London thousands of people brought a pillow to Leicester Square to whack each other for a good period of time. Yelling “Pillow Fight!” at the top of your voice was a necessity. “If this is your first time at Pillow Fight Club - you have to fight.”

Video of the Pillow Fight Club

2  Leeds and London Hyde Park water fight flashmob

These are up here mainly because they went very wrong. An open invitation on Facebook resulted in thousands of pounds worth of damage to the city’s prize winning public garden. According to the council it resulted in trampled plants,ripped up turf and emptied water features. In July last year one in Hyde Park, London resulted in a girl being punched in the face!

Leeds Water Fight

3  The Rick Astley Rickrolling flashmob

Back in April last year, hundreds of people arranged on Facebook before 6pm at Liverpool Street Station to indulge in a rendition of Rick Astley’s trademark hit “Never Gonna Give You Up”. Some had Rick Astley masks on, and continued with the internet ‘Rickrolling’ trend, where millions of users have been tricked into watching Astley’s 80’s pop video classic.

All together now: “Never gonna give you up, never gonna let you down, never gonna run around and desert you!”

The London Rickmob footage

4 Flashmob - The Opera

The first Flashmob opera of the Orpheus story was performed in October 2004 in Paddington Station, London, one of Britain’s busiest railway stations. It was screened live on BBC Three with the aid of a flashmob. Soloists performed around the concourse, to commuters bemusement. Another was performed in Sheffield in 2005, showing a version of Faust.

5 The Flashmob chicken dance

No explanations are necessary, - just watch this video.

12345
Rated: 73.33% (3 votes)
Loading ... Loading ...

Previous Post | Next Post

 
 
Comments

Pingback by Sind Flashmobs illegal? « RaheBlog - January 23, 2010 on 11:23 pm

[…] jeweils eine öffentliche Aktion statt. Aber sie unterscheiden sich hinsichtlich Zielsetzung, Größe, und Art und Weise der […]

Trackback by URL - April 27, 2012 on 7:23 am

… [Trackback] …

[…] Read More Infos here: itpro.co.uk/blogs-archive/asavinw/2009/02/10/the-top-five-flashmobs-of-all-time/ […] …

Make a comment

* required

* required

We stop spam using reCaptcha.
Type the words below and click Submit Comment.

   
Tag cloud

James Bond top ten tips Star Trek Twitpocalypse hack Google Reader kill Cisco ASA ducks Flurry Wherecloud Terminator rickrolling Amazon Christmas Sega multimedia software virtual worlds old school data breaches tech journalism Lewis hamilton IM staff feed pirate password military bendy surveillance replies smartphone worm website instant messaging Mozilla legal illegal crime map Google YouTube status Apple MMORPG Friendfeed unlimited Sonic Google Street View Sophos Black Hat sony playstation Nintendo Sega Sinclair Spectrum gaming Mario Sonic Google video games Daily Mail poking app Bill Gates phone browser funny research Steve Jobs privacy Clampi sightings FBI credit card data Twitter remote working opinion crime spam Beijing Scrabble hackers medials Microsoft hype mobile Spotify pod casting alibi Nintendo morph alcohol vote swear words internet trend micro nokia pride death streaming music Facebook Pirate Bay university of portsmouth flashmob Farmville Kindle teenagers lapto Dark Market DNS tool control RPG iPhone Mafia Wars hacking growth downloading brainwaves Olympics flaw science IT PRO future uSwitch ID cards offline phishing cybercrime flexible working SQL injection Google Maps fire video eBooks Klingon Mario cyber crime Republicans brain traffic robots fun hatred DNSSEC Fraud BERTI World of Warcraft RSS update human clones Digital Britain Digg broadband NHS ENISA news filters Transformers Kaminsky Hitwise PR David Blunkett government malware murder BlackBerry satnav social media Firefox Second Life paranoia
Advertisement
Advertisement