Please, God, save me from writing about the #sharknado.
But I must. For if ever there was a Twitter-nado, it was last night, because of the beyond-awesome movie on Syfy called
“Sharknado.” For the uninitiated, the movie featured the entirely plausible premise that a tornado could contain hundreds of sharks – and that they would wreak incredible havoc on
the streets of Los Angeles.
Of course, I haven’t seen the movie – though I certainly plan to – but I was alerted to the vastness of its unique charms last night when I turned
on the Tweetdeck and saw dozens upon dozens of tweets carrying the #sharknado hashtag. Literally, about 90% of the people I follow – most of them self-respecting members of the social media
intelligentsia – were tweeting about a tornado made out of sharks. And it came out of nowhere! Not even The Weather Channel was prepared.
Of course, I wanted in on the action, even if I
didn’t know precisely what the action was. I lamely tweeted, “no F*ckin idea what #sharknado is, but whatevs, #sharknado it is!” (If you need a summer Friday time-waster with much better tweets, check out the Sharknado page on Rebelmouse.)
And
now, it’s the morning after. After cutting a wide swath through Twitter, talk of #sharknado has died down. At one point today it had died down to not even be a top 10 trending topic, leaving a
sizable number of people completely out of the movie’s – wait for it – whirlwind. I just got off a conference call, and when I mentioned the #sharknado, I was met with
befuddlement.
It does make me wonder what we are to make of this social media event, and others like it. We increasingly find ourselves in the middle of spontaneous, zeitgeist-y moments when
millions of people get obsessed with something and share it, only to lose the obsession as quickly as they acquired it. To some extent, this is simply the tenor of the times, or the real-times, you
might say. So many memes hit the national, and international, psyche, and in such rapid succession, that ultimately one wonders if they have any long-lasting impact on the collective conscious.
Which makes it peculiar to consider that ever since the famous Oreo ad during the Super Bowl blackout, advertisers have been looking for the perfect #sharknado to piggyback on, and from what I can
tell, they missed this one. The only advertiser participation I did see was a Twitpic from @Millerlite that was even lamer than my #sharknado tweet. Riffing off of the movie’s official poster,
which simply stated: “Sharknado … Enough said,” it replaced the shark on the poster with a Miller Lite bottle, under the headline “Litenado.” Really? If you
can’t play well, don’t play at all.
And that, it seems, is the problem with real-time advertising that has the sole goal of tapping into the zeitgeist. The moment will be fleeting
and often missed, and the creative executions? Most of the time, they will be meh. Real-time advertising – like confronting a tornado full of sharks – is not something most of
us can do well.