442: xkcd Loves the Discovery Channel

Explain xkcd: It's 'cause you're dumb.
Revision as of 18:51, 15 January 2014 by 173.245.54.91 (talk) (As promised, the transcript has no reference links any more. All links supplied by Randall are now in the explanation with context. Anonymous.)
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xkcd Loves the Discovery Channel
I love the title-text!
Title text: I love the title-text!

Explanation

This comic is a parody of the Discovery Channel commercial showing various clips of people singing a song with the chorus line 'Boom De Yada'. The comic is divided into a grid of 4 by 6 panels, each depicting a character or situation from a previous xkcd strip. In each panel is written a part of a song similar to the song from the Discovery Channel commercial."

The campaign from the Discovery Channel was not called "Boom De Yada", but I Love The World. The title "xkcd Loves the Discovery Channel" is in reference to this.

Most of the panels are references to previous xkcd strips, but some are not.

Panel 1 I love momentum.
A reference to comic 161, where Megan spins in a circle to "rob the planet of angular momentum."
Panel 2 I love to engineer.
A reference to comic 413, where Megan and Cueball turn an EEE PC into a household pet.
Panel 3 I love this bakery!
A reference to comic 434, where Beret Guy shows his liking for bakeries in first panel.
Panel 4 I love the blogosphere!
A reference to comic 239, where someone from the far future believes many people blogged while flying and wearing red capes and goggles.
Panel 5 I love the whole world. (Cueball running in large hamster ball.)
Likely a reference to comic 152, though there are multiple comics featuring human-sized hamster balls.
Panel 6 And all its messed-up folks.
A reference to the /b/ ("Random") forum on 4chan, which is in fact home to plenty of "messed-up folks".
Panel 7 Boom de yada, Boom de yada (Cueball and Megan immersed in playpen balls.)
A reference to comic 150, where Megan decides that she has the ability to, and wants to, turn her house into a giant playpen.
Panel 8 Boom de yada, Boom de yada (I put on my robe and wizard hat)
A reference to this (nsfw).
Panel 9 I love your suffering.
Black hat is just being his usual self, as in 72: Classhole.
Panel 10 I love cryptography.
This is a subject that comes up often in the comic. Notably, in comics 153 and 177 before this one.
Panel 11 I love entangled sheets.
Sexual reference. Also brought up in comic 230.
Panel 12 And kite photography.
A reference to Randall Munroe's own hobby of kite photography as well as comic 235.
Panel 13 I love the whole world (Map of the internet.)
A reference to comic 256, featuring a map of online communities at the time. There is, more directly, a pun on "internet", namely "outernet".
Panel 14 And all its mysteries.
A reference to a series of comics on "red spiders:" 8: Red Spiders, 43: Red Spiders 2, 47: Counter-Red Spiders, 126: Red Spiders Cometh, and 427: Bad Timing.
Panel 15 Boom de yada, Boom de yada (Two people sword-fighting on rolling office chairs.)
A reference to comic 303, where two coders battle with fake swords at work, with the excuse that their code is compiling.
Panel 16 Boom de yada, Boom de yada (Classroom with two students and Mrs. Lenhart.)
Nothing too special, but it does embrace the "everybody joins in" theme behind the commercials. Mrs. Lenhart first properly appeared in comic 263 but may have made an appearance in #59.
Panel 17 I love elections (Barack me Obamadeus!)
A pun on the song Rock Me Amadeus and US president Barack Obama.
Panel 18 I love transistors.
This panel has Cueball's crotch replaced with the (similar-looking) icon used for a transistor in a circuit diagram.
Panel 19 I love weird pillow talk. (There must be Taft slash fiction.)
Pillow talk means intimate conversations between lovers, slash fiction is fan fiction with characters of the same sex, and "Taft" is William Howard Taft, a US President mostly remembered for his severe obesity. It appears they are invoking rule 34 of the internet. Weird pillow talk is also the subject of comic 69, while the Taft reference comes from 214: The Problem with Wikipedia.
Panel 20 I love your sister.
A reference to xkcd's recurring joke of dating the female character's sister, which spans several comics including comic 49, comic 279, comic 317, and comic 408.
Panel 21 I love the whole world (Roller coaster with Cueball holding chess board)
A reference to comic 249 which inspired an internet meme.
Panel 22 The future's pretty cool! (Beret Guy in a forest.)
Possible reference to comic 167, where Cueball and Beret Guy make observations about the future while climbing a tree.
Panel 23 Boom de yada, Boom de yada (Megan doing the MC Hammer slide towards Cueball.)
A reference to comic 108, where Hairy falls in love with "a girl whose only mode of transportation is the M.C. Hammer Slide."
Panel 24 Boom de yada, Boom de yada (Cueball and Megan on an electric skateboard.)
A reference to comic 409, where Megan and Cueball go on an electric skateboard ride.

The title text just continues the song.

Transcript

[The comic is in parody of the Discovery Channel commercial showing various clips of people singing a song with the chorus line "Boom De Yada."]
[The comic is divided into a grid of 4 by 6 panels, each depicting a character or situation from a previous xkcd strip.]
[In each panel is written a part of a song similar to the song from the Discovery Channel commercial.]
Panel 1:
[Megan spinning around.]
I love momentum.
Panel 2:
[Megan laying on floor tinkering with EEE PC hamster ball robot.]
I love to engineer.
Panel 3:
[Beret Guy standing in bakery holding a loaf of bread in each hand, sign with "PIE!" in background.]
I love this bakery!
Panel 4:
[Cory Doctorow in goggles and red cape flying superman-style.]
I love the blogosphere!
Panel 5:
[Cueball running in large hamster ball.]
I love the whole world
Panel 6:
[Depiction of internet sludge (4chan b-Random)]
And all its messed-up folks.
Panel 7:
[Cueball and Megan immersed in playpen balls.]
Boom De Yada
Boom De Yada
Panel 8:
[Mass of playpen balls with speech "I put on my robe and wizard hat" originating from it.]
Boom De Yada
Boom De Yada
Panel 9:
[Black Hat taking gift away from kid with party hat.]
I love your suffering.
Panel 10:
[Diagram showing RSA fingerprint authentication between two people.]
I love cryptography.
Panel 11:
[Cueball and Megan in bed covered by red sheet.]
I love entangled sheets.
Panel 12:
[Cueball hanging from kite string holding camera.]
And kite photography.
Panel 13:
[Map of the internet.]
I love the whole world
Panel 14:
[Cube with red spider on top.]
And all its mysteries.
Panel 15:
[Two people sword-fighting on rolling office chairs.]
Boom De Yada
Boom De Yada
Panel 16:
[Classroom with two students and Mrs. Lenhart.]
Boom De Yada
Boom De Yada
Panel 17:
[Cueball saying "Barack me Obamadeus!" to another man speaking energetically at a podium.]
I love elections.
Panel 18:
[Cueball holding schematic diagram of a transistor in front of his crotch.]
I love transistors.
Panel 19:
[Cueball and Megan in bed, Cueball saying "There must be taft slash fiction."]
I love weird pillow talk.
Panel 20:
[Cueball speaking to Megan.]
I love your sister.
Panel 21:
[Roller coaster with Cueball in front car holding chess board and thinking about a move.]
I love the whole world.
Panel 22:
[Beret Guy standing in the midst of leafless trees.]
The future's pretty cool!
Panel 23:
[Megan doing the MC Hammer slide towards Cueball.]
Boom De Yada
Boom De Yada
Panel 24:
[Cueball and Megan on an electric skateboard.]
Boom De Yada
Boom De Yada

Trivia

  • This comic was enacted by Olga Nunes and various famous people as We Love xkcd.


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Discussion

I think that panel 9 actually is meant to be Black Hat giving the child a present and the lines around the gift suggesting that there is something moving around inside (likely alive and agitated) for the child to open and be mauled/harmed by.

  • The transcript comes from Randall himself, and it says he's taking the present away. Blaisepascal (talk) 10:14, 22 August 2012 (UTC)
I was hoping it was a bobcat. 76.106.251.87 19:05, 10 May 2013 (UTC)
It definitely looks like its a present being taken away, and it fits the line better 172.71.151.98 05:04, 10 April 2023 (UTC)

Great! Now I have a targeted list of comics to add explanations for! Blaisepascal (talk) 10:14, 22 August 2012 (UTC)

To Dgbrt, "Links do not belong to the transcript, this needs to be fixed." I know I'm just a noob here, but if you're so sure of that, why didn't you remove them yourself? Isn't one of WikiMedia's pillars "Be Bold"? I personally see no problem, given the self-referential nature of this comic. Anonymous 07:53, 12 January 2014 (UTC)

This is not actually a WikiMedia site, but you're right that "Be Bold" is a wiki thing, in general. Nevertheless, in this case, the official transcript provided by Randall includes these references, so they might as well be wikilinked here. (In Dgbrt's defence, he (or she) may not have had the time to undo it himself (or herself).) Mark Hurd (talk) 12:12, 12 January 2014 (UTC)
No time was in fact my first reason; but on the other hand I didn't want to remove links without an section at the explain section. The links are not from the original transcript, it does only mention the references, and this belongs to the explain. The transcript is a transcript, not more. (even no time today for me on this...) --Dgbrt (talk) 22:26, 12 January 2014 (UTC)
A compelling argument. I'll take care of it. Anonymous. 18:18, 15 January 2014 (UTC)
Please remove next time only the links but not the text. --Dgbrt (talk) 22:23, 15 January 2014 (UTC)
Whoops. Sorry I misinterpreted. Anonymous 09:46, 21 January 2014 (UTC)

For panel 19, I have to point out: Everything r34 related isn't necessarily a reference to the comic about it. Just because it is related doesn't mean that he was specifically making a joke about a previous comic, as he is making a joke about r34 which he ALSO happened to make a joke about in another comic. If it referenced Wetriffs or something, THEN it would be a reference. 173.245.50.72 03:44, 25 July 2014 (UTC)

I love lamp. 162.158.126.46 13:44, 9 July 2019 (UTC)

The Discovery Channel song is itself a parody of a traditional children's song: I love the mountains I love the rolling hills I love the flowers I love the daffodils I love the fireside When all the lights are low Boom dee ah dah (Randall writes "boom de yada") Boom dee ah dah ......... Jsharpminor (talk) 16:07, 28 December 2019 (UTC)