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With considerable help, including assists from RCA Records, the webmaster of Astley's U.K. fan site, and his manager at Sony BMG. Astley spoke for the first time about the phenomenon called Rickrolling, best described by example: You are reading your favorite Hollywood gossip blog and arrive at a link urging you to "Click here for exclusive video of Britney's latest freakout!!" Click you do, but instead of Britney, it's a dashing 21-year-old Briton that pops onto the screen. You, sir, have been Rickroll'd.
Over the last year or so, Astley has watched with puzzled amazement as "Never Gonna Give You Up" has been mocked, celebrated, remixed and reprised, its original music video viewed millions of times on YouTube, all by a generation that could barely swallow its Gerber carrots when the song first topped the pop charts.
"I think it's just one of those odd things where something gets picked up and people run with it," Astley said. "But that's what's brilliant about the Internet."
Search for Astley's name on YouTube and you'll find dozens of instances of the campy, infectious video, which features a heavily coiffed Astley bobbing and swaying behind oversized sunglasses. He's flanked by two blond backup dancers (one of whom apparently didn't have the footwork down), and a male bartender in short shorts who excels at spontaneous back flips.
Rickrolling is an example of an Internet "meme" (defined by Wikipedia as "any unit of cultural information ... that gets transmitted verbally or by repeated action from one mind to another").
With all the online momentum it's gathered, the Rickroll has now trundled its way into the real world, too.
See The New York Mets Get RICK ROLLED
Why have people picked up on the song so much? It has just turned out to be one of those viral phenomenons.
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