![]() ![]() The catchphrase became a staple of French parodies, being mashed up in movie segments, remixed in songs or having people showing in on posters at live events. It also reached Facebook with an official page gathering over 29 000 likes, even having a female variant known as "Do you want to see my pussy?". In addition to the aforementioned links, other corners of the French web reported on the phenomenon, like making a tongue-in-cheek comparison to a bollard (called bitte d'amarrage in French) and Éteignez votre Ordinateur. The meme's strength lies down in the way the voice actor repeated the logs out loud with a robotic and indifferent tone. Indeed, the username used by the journalist, Lolita13, to bait her preys, wasn't considered to be "innocent" at all the same way the chatroom the logs came from was a dating-themed chatroom, more than a more "common" chatroom. Many were quick to point at yet another TV show trying to warn their public about Internet and its threats, intentionally depicting a world with its dangers and predators using an overly dramatic tone while having flaws in their arguments. Several articles, including, and, accounted for the meme that ensued and commented on the general tone of the investigation. Since the very day the show was broadcast, there were forums threads made mainly to mock on it. The youtube video has accumulated more than 1 200 000 views as of August 2012. Jonathan-du11 a quitté le chat ( Jonathan-du11 left the chatroom) Reaction Tu va voir ma bite (though there is a typo that may change the meaning of the actual sentence, here, it means Do you want to see my dick) As the camera zooms in, it allows the viewer to have a glimpse of the entire logs (shown below).ĬC (French shorthand for "coucou", meaning Hello) ![]() As she describes, she logged in a Skyrock chatroom and, without really starting any conversation, she was accosted by a stranger named Jonathan-du11. It depicts a woman journalist impersonating a young girl, using the username Lolita13 in a chatroom, in order to show the dangers of Internet to the audience. From the entire show, the following scene, taken from the "les Dangers d'Internet" ( The Dangers of Internet) segment and uploaded to Youtube on February 12th 2009 (shown below), would greatly catch attention: ![]() In their segment dating from January 19th 2009, their investigation, titled Ces ados qui nous échappent ( These teenagers that grow away from us), was centred on teenagers. Complément d'enquête is a France 2 investigation show mainly dealing with societal problems, broadcast every fortnight on TV. ![]()
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