Star Wars kid
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Ghyslain Raza (born 1988), from Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada, became known throughout the Internet in May 2003 as the "Star Wars Kid" when a video he recorded of himself was leaked online.
The video
On November 8, 2002 Raza made a video of himself swinging a golf ball retriever around as if it was a weapon. Most believe he was imitating the Star Wars character Darth Maul with a lightsaber, but some believe he was imitating the character Kilik from the game Soul Calibur. The video was filmed at the studio of Séminaire St-Joseph high school. The cassette was left in a studio for a few months. On or around April 19, 2003, the original owner of the tape discovered Raza's recorded acts and immediately shared it with some friends. Thinking that it would be a funny prank, they encoded it to a WMV file and shared it using the Kazaa peer-to-peer file sharing network, calling the videofile Jackass_starwars_funny.wmv.Within two weeks, the file was downloaded several times. An adapted version of the video was created, adding Star Wars music, texts, and lightsaber lights and sounds to Raza's golf ball retriever. According to [Waxy.org], this was done by Bryan Dube, an employee from Raven Software. Several gaming, technology and Star Wars-related sites began to host the video, which caused the video to be downloaded more and more. Soon, people all over the world picked up the original and began making conversions of it, adding music, visual effects, and sounds, combining it with other well-known videos or scenes from films, for comic effect.
Raza reportedly suffered considerable embarrassment, in part because the video showed him to be overweight, and not particularly graceful. The case raised privacy issues and was extensively reported in mainstream news media worldwide, including the New York Times, CBS News and BBC News. The boy had to undergo therapy and counseling that began on October 12 and is currently still suffering chronic depression. Raza became the spokesperson for an anti bullying campaign in Ontario in September of that year but the campaign was taken down due to the lack of consent from Raza himself.
An Internet petition to get Raza a cameo role in [[Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith|Star Wars Episode III]] received more than 178,000 digital signatures. Although George Lucas sympathized with the young man's plight, the film contains no such cameo and there were never any plans known to do so, nor is it at all clear that Raza himself would have wished it.
At the height of the video's popularity, two webloggers ([waxy.org] and [jish.nu]) began a fundraiser to buy Raza an Apple iPod. In less than a week, they raised over $3,200 and [shipped him] a 30GB iPod and a $2,600 gift certificate.
The lawsuit
In July 2003, his family filed a $250,000 CAD lawsuit against the families of the schoolmates — Michaël Caron, Jérôme Laflamme, and Jean-Michel Rheault. Legal proceedings against François Labarre have been dropped. The three defendants were alleged to have taken the video and put it on the Internet without Raza's consent. The family claimed that Raza had suffered harassment and derision from both his schoolmates and the general public because of the video.The lawsuit stated that he had dropped out of school and had finished his school year at the Pavillon Arc-en-ciel child psychiatry ward at the Trois-Rivières Regional Hospital Centre, and quoted Internet chat transcripts among the four defendants as demonstrating lack of remorse. [link] The transcript of an interview done by the technology columnist [Bruno Guglielminetti] from Radio-Canada (in French) with Raza's lawyer at the time (François Vigeant) can be found [here].
The lawsuit was [expected] to go to trial April 10, 2006, but on April 7, news came out that Raza and his parents reached an out-of-court settlement[link] with the families of the former schoolmates. Terms of the settlement were not announced, but previous proceedings included discussions about whether the defendants had liability insurance.
Cultural references
In 2004, an episode of Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends featured a story entitled World Wide Wabbit, which may have been based on this incident. Unlike Raza, the character caught on tape actually benefited from it by creating awareness of the orphanage.In 2004, on the animated series The Venture Bros. which airs on Cartoon Network's Adult Swim line up, there is an episode entitled "Tag Sale -- You're It!" in which a stout henchman finds a lightsaber-esque device at a garage sale and proceeds to try to fight with it, his moves being drawn to mimic Raza's in the video.
In 2004, the video game Tony Hawk's Underground 2 featured three references to Raza. In the Boston level, an overweight kid with glasses can be found inside an apartment; the player can approach him and make him dance around and make wooshing noises as Star Wars-like music plays in the background. He can also be found in the hidden area of the Triangle level in which he can be seen standing atop an operating table fending off alien doctors. As the player progresses through the game, the boy can even be unlocked as a playable character.
In 2004 on the TV show "Ed", the character Mark Vanacore makes a video of himself trying out new walks with the school video camera, then forgets the tape in the camera, which is found and released on the Internet with results very similar (probably based on) the Star Wars Kid video.
In an episode of Unscrewed, Martin Seargant performed his own rendition of the Star Wars kid and told viewers to take the video of him and turn the broom into a lightsaber. He stated that the Star Wars kid was ungrateful that the Internet made him famous and that he wished he could become famous by simply swinging around a broom.
In 2004, the TV network G4 featured Dave Navarro in a spoof of the Star Wars Kid on their annual awards show G-Phoria.
In 2005, the TV series Arrested Development had George Michael Bluth's lightsaber moves in the middle of a family video. Buster is also shown doing lightsaber moves. Bluth's video is seen four more times in the series: once in a high school election video, leading to his reconciling with his ex-girlfriend, a second time at a fundraiser for the family in the episode Prison Break-In, a third time by the FBI, who mistake it for a terrorist training video in Sword of Destiny, and a fourth time when he uses it to tape his dad's girlfriend Rita eating fake fruit in the episode The Ocean Walker. Bluth wearily suggests they should get a new tape because "they're not expensive".
In 2005, the Swedish TV-series 100 höjdare (100 Highlights) ranked Raza's video clip as the 60th funniest moment in the world.
In 2005, the TV-series Veronica Mars featured a reference to the Star Wars kid. In the episode "M.A.D." a character states that she fears a sexually explicit video of herself will be posted online, turning her into an internet joke similar to "Paris Hilton or that Star Wars kid."
In 2005, the San Francisco Giants, when playing at AT&T Park, played a video of the Star Wars Kid on the Jumbotron alongside the away team pitcher whenever the catcher and coach come out for a meeting on the pitcher's mound.
In 2005, CNET listed the Star Wars Kid as #8 on its [Top 10 Web Fads] list.
In 2005, the TV-series American Dad, in the episode "All About Steve", has main character Stan fighting a crowd of angry geeks at a sci-fi convention. In the midst of the battle, Raza steps out of the crowd and attempts to "attack" Stan, in a sequence mimicking the video. The "fight" ends when Raza loses his balance and falls over. [Putfile] has a long video clip showing this sci-fi convention scene.
In 2005, the animated series Teen Titans had an episode entitled "For Real" which featured a brief sequence in which a geek-stereotype villain named Control Freak clumsily swings a double-ended lightsaber. The scene features an innocuous piece of fabric in the background and an identical camera angle to the original Raza video. The stateside production team even sent a copy of the original Star Wars Kid video to the Korean studios where the program is animated.
In 2005, MAD Magazine made a brief reference to the Star Wars Kid. A section of the October 2005 issue details the pros and cons of new media releases, and for the [[Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith]] DVD, the MAD writers lament that "The only special video we were really looking forward to was that one with the fat kid having the lightsaber battle all by himself."
In 2005, "Ned's Declassified School Survival Guide" on Nickelodeon showed a boy swinging a mop around and acting like the Star Wars Kid; his friends embarrassed him with the video at school.
In 2005, Xiaolin Showdown showed evil genius Jack Spicer making a video of himself mimicking the Star Wars Kid.
In 2005, on the TV-series According to Jim, in the episode Nanny-cam, the character Andy is caught secretly on camera while pretending to use a mop as a lightsaber.
keaton-world.com has a video of the Star Wars Kid performing a ["Break the Targets" challenge] in Super Smash Brothers Melee. His moves are similar to Fox McCloud's. Many people jokingly refer to him as a secret character in SSBM, even though it is obvious that the video is fake.
"[Star Wars Kid MacBook]", a video on YouTube, was viewed 120,143 times by 25 May 2006, just three days after its addition.
Andrew Kepple's Animutation "Conquest of Animutopia" features the Star Wars Kid as one of the horrors that the plastic Jesus H. Christ unleashes upon Colin Mochrie in the battle arena, "TEH CIRCUS", emerging from a gate marked "Your worst nightmare". A loop of the Star Wars Kid swinging his golf-ball retriever is shown, as if to be attacking Colin. Mochrie stares for a moment, gets angry, and then knocks Raza out of the arena and into the sky with a single punch at about the time the song reaches its crescendo.
See also
References
- [Short interview with the Star Wars kid], Jish.nu. May 13 2003. (provided by waxy.org)
- Kahney, Leander. ["Star Wars Kid Gets Bucks From Blogs"], Wired. May 19 2003.
- Stonehouse, David. ["Price of glory"], Sydney Morning Herald. July 12 2003
- ["Le «Star Wars Kid» ne la trouve plus drôle"], Le Canal Nouvelles. July 21 2003.
- Ha, Tu Than. ["Parents file lawsuit over Star Wars video"], The Globe and Mail. July 23 2003.
- ["Star Wars Kid Files Lawsuit"], Wired. July 25 2003.
- [Star Wars video prompts lawsuit], BBC News. July 25 2003.
- ["Star Wars Kid' becomes unwilling Internet star"], USA Today / Associated Press. August 21 2003.
- Katz, Leslie. ["When 'digital bullying' goes too far"], CNET. June 22 2005.
- Ha, Tu Than. ['Star Wars Kid' cuts a deal with his tormentors], The Globe and Mail. April 7, 2006.
External links
- [The Star Wars Kid videos]
- [Ghyslain Raza] on NNDB
- [Waxy.org: An early Internet posting about the Star Wars kid] (April 29 2003)
- [Waxy.org: An effort to buy Ghyslain an Ipod for his trouble] (May 13 2003)
- [Waxy.org: Ghyslain gets his Ipod] (July 16 2003)
- [CNET lists the Star Wars Kid as #8 on its Top 10 Web Fads list] (July 21 2005)
- [CBS News video report] (from November 18 2003 — a RealPlayer Video)
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