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Weird Al: Forefather of the YouTube Spoof

Brian Raftery

“Weird Al” Yankovic isn’t just popular. He is also the unlikely forefather of the infectious, hyperlinked, quasi-referential comedy that’s become the lingua franca of the Web. Yankovic’s influence can be seen in the slow-jam pinings of Obama Girl, the cross-cultural pairings that turn Yoda and SpongeBob SquarePants into hardcore rappers, and in the nimble hands of that couch potato who farts out “Bohemian Rhapsody” with his palms (1.8 million YouTube views and counting). You can even detect traces of his style in the perfectly metered wordplay of “Lazy Sunday,” the 2005 Saturday Night Live short that earned YouTube—and viral humor—its first barrage of mainstream attention. “Ever since I was old enough to listen to music, I’ve been listening to Weird Al,” says 30-year-old “Sunday” co-creator Andy Samberg. “For my generation, he’s a huge influence.”

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