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Preved
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Preved (Russian: Преве́д) is a term used in the Padonkaffsky jargon, a meme in the Russian-speaking Internet which developed out of a heavily circulated picture, and consists of choosing alternative spellings for words for comic effect. The picture, a modified version of John Lurie's watercolor Bear Surprise, whose popularity was stoked by emails and blogs, features a man and a woman having sex in the clearing of a forest, being surprised by a bear calling "Surprise!" with its paws raised. In later Russian adaptations, the bear shouts "Preved!" (a deliberate misspelling of privet, приве́т – "hi!"). In keeping with a popular trend of image manipulation, the iconic bear — dubbed Medved (Russian: Медвед), a misspelling of медведь ("bear") — has been inserted into many other pictures where his appearance adds a new dimension to the joke.
The word and the bear image have found their way into the mainstream mass media, such as a poster for the Russian edition of Newsweek.
Eventually, it has become known that the author of the altered picture with the word "preved" was user Lobzz from site Dirty.ru, real name Roman Yatsenko. The authorship of the word itself is still unclear, although the "unfinished" version, "prevet" was traced to 2003.[1]
Preved is identified by a specific pattern of alternative spelling which emerged from the word. In this pattern, voiceless consonants are replaced with their voiced counterparts, and unstressed vowels are interchanged pair-wise – a and o stand in for each other, as do e and i. The words уча́снег (uchasneg) (a misspelling of участник (uchastnik), "user" or "participant"), preved itself, and кагдила (kagdila) (a misspelling of как дела (kak dela), "how are you") illustrate this pattern.
The larger trend of alternative spellings, called "olbansky yazyk" ("Olbanian language", misspelled "Albanian") developed from the padonki movement which originated on sites such as udaff.com. That trend uses the opposite conversion from the Preved trend – voiced consonants are replaced with their voiceless counterparts (which are sometimes doubled). For vowels, o is replaced with a and e with i. For example, áвтор (ávtor, "author") would be spelled áффтар (áfftar) or áфтар (áftar). The latter exhibits a sort of eye dialect.
This meme has made its way to the American spotlight, as another reference of this popular term was used in a cartoon of Steve Jobs yelling this phrase in an image that was used in the mid to late 2000's as a custom recovery logo for devices such as the iPhone 2G, the iPod Touch, and iPhone 3GS that was exclusive for the early jailbreak tools like PwnageTool. This image was spread all around social media in places like Reddit, and other small developer forums.
"Medved" in politics
[edit]In Russian, MEDVED (Russian: МЕДВЕД) is an abbreviation of the name of the Interregional Unity Movement (Russian: Межрегиональное Движение Единство) - a pro-government movement that formed a faction in the 3rd State Duma (1999-2002), long before the appearance of the Internet meme.[2] The movement's logo featured a brown bear. In 2002, the Interregional Unity Movement merged into the newly formed United Russia party. United Russia adopted the Unity bear logo, later changing its color from brown to white.[3] This, along with the Internet meme, influenced the fact that the word "medved" is often associated with Dmitry Medvedev, President of Russia from 2008 to 2012.[4]
During an internet conference with Russian President Vladimir Putin on 6 July 2006, during which all interested Runet users asked him questions through a Yandex portal, the question "PREVED, Vladimir Vladimirovich! How do you feel about MEDVED?" received the largest number of votes (28,424).[5] This event played a significant role in the "Preved-Medved" meme gaining fame and popularity even among those who rarely use the Internet.[6] In the end, the question was not asked to Putin (the organizers considered this and some other questions to be a flash mob); the question "How do you feel about the Medved' magazine?" was asked instead. Some representatives of non-Russian press took the original "Medved" question literally; in particular, Associated Press reportedly interpreted it as a reference to then-deputy prime minister Dmitry Medvedev.[7][8]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Preved-Effect" (in Russian) Archived September 17, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Ведомости: "МЕДВЕД всея Руси"" [Vedomosti: "MEDVED of All Rus'"] (in Russian). Archived from the original on 2009-01-09.
- ^ ""Единая Россия" поменяла символику: бурый медведь стал белым" [United Russia has changed its symbols: the brown bear has become white] (in Russian). Newsru. 2005-11-26.
- ^ "Блогосфера отреагировала на выдвижение Медведева: "Превед, Медвед!"" [The blogosphere reacted to Medvedev’s nomination: "Preved, Medved!"] (in Russian). Yekaterinburg Online. 2007-12-10.
- ^ "Questions to Vladimir Putin" (in Russian). Yandex. 2006-07-01. Archived from the original on December 31, 2007. Retrieved 2008-11-10.
- ^ "69 % россиян вообще не пользуются Интернет — превед-медвед выходит в "офлайн"" [69% of Russians don’t use the Internet at all—preved-bear goes "offline"] (in Russian).
- ^ "Интернет: Дмитрия Медведева перепутали с Медведом" [Dmitry Medvedev has been confused with Medved] (in Russian). Lenta.Ru. 2006-07-07. Retrieved 2008-11-10.
- ^ Krongauz, Maksim (2013). Самоучитель Олбанского [Olbanian self-instruction manual] (in Russian). Moscow: AST. ISBN 978-5-17-077807-2.
External links
[edit]- http://www.preved-medved.deviantart.com the DeviantArt community about Preved
- Online transformation of standard Russian into Internet slang
Preved
View on GrokipediaOrigins
The Source Image and Initial Caption
The source image for the Preved meme originates from the watercolor painting Bear Surprise created by American artist John Lurie, which depicts a brown bear emerging unexpectedly from dense green foliage toward the viewer, evoking a sense of sudden confrontation.[5][6] Lurie's work, known for its whimsical and anthropomorphic animal motifs, provided the visual foundation due to the bear's direct gaze and the painting's inherent element of surprise, which amplified the caption's humorous effect when paired online.[5] In February 2008, Russian internet user Roman Yatsenko uploaded a digitally edited version of the painting to the Russian imageboard 2ch.ru (Dvach), appending the caption "Preved, medved!"—a deliberate phonetic misspelling of the standard Russian greeting "Privet, medved!" (translated as "Hello, bear!").[5] This alteration mimicked intentional grammatical errors common in informal online Russian, transforming the bear's implied "surprise" into a comically inept salutation that played on the image's startling composition.[5] The combination of the painting's abrupt bear emergence and the caption's absurd, broken-language greeting directly contributed to its initial traction, as users on platforms like JoyReactor began sharing it for its visual punch and linguistic novelty, marking the meme's empirical genesis without reliance on broader cultural dissemination at this stage.[5]Connection to Padonkaffsky Jargon
Padonkaffsky jargon, also known as the padonki language or Olbanian, emerged in the early 2000s within Russian internet subcultures on forums such as those frequented by self-identified "padonki" (delinquents or outcasts), characterized by deliberate orthographic distortions, phonetic spellings, letter repetitions (e.g., "zheeeestokii" for "жестокий," meaning cruel), grammatical deviations, and frequent integration of obscene vocabulary (mat) to parody and undermine normative Russian literary standards.[7] This slang system served as a marker of youthful rebellion against formal linguistic education and institutional authority, fostering an anti-establishment identity among participants who viewed standard Russian as elitist and restrictive.[8] Empirical traces in archived forum threads from platforms like the early Runet boards demonstrate its roots in countercultural expression, with patterns of subversive wordplay evident in posts dating to 2001–2003, predating widespread meme adoption.[9] The distortion "preved" exemplifies padonkaffsky techniques by altering "privet" (hello) through simplified phonetics and vowel shifts, while "medved" (bear) aligns with the jargon's penchant for anthropomorphizing animals via playful malformations, often employed for absurd humor and to evoke a folksy, irreverent tone that mocks polished discourse.[10] Such animal-centric references, common in padonki narratives, reinforced the subculture's emphasis on chaotic, anti-intellectual creativity, drawing from oral traditions but digitized for ironic effect.[7] Although originating independently as a linguistic counterpractice, padonkaffsky jargon gained amplified visibility through the "Preved, medved!" meme's viral circulation starting in 2006, which embedded its stylistic hallmarks into broader Runet folklore and extended its influence on subsequent online vernacular experiments.[7] This integration highlighted the jargon's role in early digital subversion, where intentional "errors" functioned as badges of subcultural authenticity rather than mere illiteracy, as critiqued by language purists.[9]Viral Spread and Evolution
Early Dissemination in Russian Internet Culture
The Preved image meme emerged in Russian internet culture in February 2006, initially circulating via email chains, personal blogs, and forums such as Dirty.ru, where users like Roman Yatsenko shared early edited versions featuring the misspelled greeting in padonkaffsky jargon. Its proliferation accelerated on anonymous imageboards including Dvach (the Russian analog of 2ch.hk) and sites like JoyReactor, which hosted user uploads and discussions amid the still-dominant dial-up and early broadband infrastructure that favored lightweight image files and simple forum posting.[11] This organic dissemination was driven by minimal technical requirements for participation, as basic image editing software enabled rapid creation and sharing of variants without advanced skills.[12] By March to May 2006, the meme had permeated broader Runet platforms, with archived threads on these sites documenting surges in user-generated content, including photoshopped derivatives inserting the bear into diverse scenarios or altering captions for humorous effect. Forum metrics from the period indicate high engagement, such as individual posts amassing tens of thousands of views and replies within weeks, reflecting behaviors like chain reposting and contest-style challenges to produce novel edits. The shareability stemmed from the meme's concise, visually striking format, which bypassed heavy multimedia demands and thrived in text-heavy forum environments where users competed for visibility through iterative modifications.[13] This static-to-dynamic evolution manifested by mid-2006, as creators integrated Preved elements into rudimentary video parodies and Adobe Flash animations shared on emerging platforms like early Rutube and YouTube mirrors in Russia. These adaptations, often featuring the bear in animated greetings or skits, marked an early shift toward multimedia experimentation in Runet communities, with user behaviors evolving from isolated image tweaks to collaborative remixing of audio-visual clips on forum-embedded players.[14] By late 2006, such content had generated dozens of documented derivatives, underscoring the meme's role in pioneering accessible digital remixing before widespread video hosting normalization.[15]Image Macros and Variations
The Preved meme developed into exploitable image macros primarily through edits on Russian forums and blogs beginning in 2006, where users employed Adobe Photoshop to alter John Lurie's "Bear Surprise" painting by replacing the "SURPRISE" text with "ПРЕВЕД" and modifying visual elements for humorous effect.[5] These templates isolated the bear's dynamic, ambushing pose and speech bubble, enabling substitutions that preserved the core surprise greeting motif while introducing absurd variations.[5] Common non-political adaptations featured animal substitutions, such as replacing the bear with wolves, foxes, or birds in exaggerated, lunging poses that echoed the original painting's tension, often accompanied by "Preved" captions directed at unsuspecting figures.[5] Caption variants like "Preved from Medved" shifted the perspective to imply the bear initiating the greeting, appearing in early forum posts and Photoshop contest submissions around 2006-2007.[5] Layered composites further evolved the format by overlaying multiple greeting animals or surreal environmental details onto the base template, creating chained absurd sequences that heightened replicability and encouraged iterative mutations among users.[5] Photoshop's layering and distortion tools facilitated these edits, contributing to the meme's proliferation via shared PSD files and contest entries on sites like Dirty.ru by February 2008.[5]Cultural Impact
Role in Early Russian Meme Development
Preved emerged as one of the earliest prominent image-based memes in Runet during the 2005-2007 period, marking a shift from predominantly text-oriented padonkaffsky humor to visually driven formats that combined absurd imagery with linguistic distortion.[6] The meme's core mechanic relied on the surprise element of the source illustration—a bear displaying an erection while approaching a startled figure—paired with the misspelled caption "preved medved" (a padonkaffsky rendering of "privet medved," or "hello bear"), which generated humor through incongruity and phonetic play.[16] This approach demonstrated early causal dynamics of virality in Russian online spaces, where the meme's simplicity allowed rapid adaptation and remixing by users on platforms like Dirty.ru, fostering iterative variations that amplified its spread.[16] By predating global image macro templates such as Advice Animals (which gained traction around 2008), Preved illustrated the potential of user-generated visuals to engage audiences more dynamically than preceding text-only padonkaffsky content, which relied heavily on written distortions without graphical anchors.[6] Its proliferation normalized the creation and sharing of custom image edits in Runet, encouraging broader participation in meme production amid a media environment dominated by state-controlled outlets, thereby expanding informal digital expression.[6] Quantitative indicators of engagement, such as forum reposts and blog embeddings tracked in early analyses, underscored Preved's role in elevating interactive content over static textual memes, though direct comparative metrics remain limited.[16] While Preved's success highlighted adaptability as a driver of meme persistence, variants often amplified juvenile or obscene elements inherent to the original artwork, drawing criticism for prioritizing shock value over subtlety in humor.[2] Nonetheless, these traits contributed to its democratizing effect, enabling ordinary users to subvert linguistic norms and visual taboos in ways that text-based predecessors could not, thus laying groundwork for subsequent Russian meme evolution toward multimedia formats.[6]Linguistic and Subcultural Influence
The term "preved," a padonkaffsky distortion of the standard Russian greeting "privet" (привет), exemplifies the jargon’s phonetic and orthographic deviations that permeated online discourse, serving as an informal shorthand for salutations in Russian internet communities during the mid-2000s.[17] This misspelling, characterized by vowel substitutions and consonant softening to mimic slurred or childish speech, contributed to broader adoption of olbanian (padonkaffsky) elements in slang, where such forms resisted prescriptive grammar in favor of expressive playfulness.[18] Linguistic analyses from the 2010s document "preved" in compilations of Runet vernacular, reflecting its integration into non-standard lexicons by approximately 2010, though formal dictionaries of standard Russian excluded it due to its deliberate irregularity.[19] Within padonki subcultures, prevalent on early forums like those associated with the "padonki" self-identifier, "preved" facilitated communal bonding through shared anti-normative humor that subverted linguistic conventions, positioning participants as rebels against perceived cultural elitism and state-sanctioned propriety.[8] This fostered creative linguistic experimentation, enabling ironic detachment and collective identity formation amid Russia's evolving digital landscape, where such jargon underscored a rejection of authoritative language policing.[7] However, detractors, including language purists and educators, critiqued it as contributing to the erosion of orthographic standards, arguing that widespread use degraded communicative clarity and reinforced subcultural insularity over accessible expression.[17] While "preved" exerted negligible influence beyond Russian-speaking spheres, its padonkaffsky roots echoed in adjacent Slavic online clusters, with analogous misspelling memes appearing sporadically in Ukrainian and Belarusian nets through shared Runet infrastructure, though without substantial independent evolution or mainstream uptake.[19] This limited propagation highlights the jargon's confinement to regional digital enclaves, prioritizing insider signaling over cross-linguistic diffusion.[18]Political Usage
Association with "Medved" Symbolism
The bear (medved in Russian) has served as a potent national symbol of strength, resilience, and ferocity in Russian folklore and political iconography for centuries, often depicted as a guardian of the forest embodying the Russian spirit.[20] This imagery extended into modern politics with the United Russia party—closely aligned with Vladimir Putin—adopting a stylized walking bear as its emblem in the early 2000s, reinforcing associations between bears and ruling authority.[21] The Preved meme's bear motif intersected with this symbolism amid Dmitry Medvedev's ascent in 2007, when Putin endorsed him as his successor for the March 2008 presidential election.[22] Emerging in Russian internet circles around 2006–2007 from an adapted artwork by John Lurie featuring a bear startling a hunter, the meme's caption "Preved, medved!" (a padonkaffsky mangling of "Privet, medved!" or "Hello, bear!") phonetically evoked Medvedev's surname, prompting users to overlay it on bear images as a playful nod to his candidacy.[23] These edits proliferated on forums like Dirty.ru, initially as apolitical humor tied to the surname's literal meaning, but gaining momentum during the election cycle without any verified endorsement from Medvedev or Kremlin officials.[16] Forum discussions from the period reflected user perceptions of Medvedev as a compliant figure—likened to a "tame bear" managed by Putin—amid the tandemocracy arrangement where Putin assumed the prime minister role post-presidency.[24] This association remained organic and user-driven, with no evidence of orchestrated political promotion, though it amplified the meme's visibility in Runet commentary on the power transition.[25]Applications in Satire and Commentary
The Preved meme, leveraging the phonetic similarity between "Medved" (a Padonkaffsky misspelling of "bear") and Dmitry Medvedev's surname, found application in online satire during his 2008–2012 presidency, where opposition-leaning internet users edited images to depict him as a bumbling or intrusive figure akin to the original bear startling a couple mid-act.[16] [22] Such adaptations, proliferating on forums like LiveJournal and early VKontakte groups, aimed to underscore perceptions of Medvedev as a comedic placeholder in Russia's "tandemocracy" system, with Putin retaining de facto control; for instance, anti-corruption activist Alexey Navalny invoked "Preved, Medved" in a 2010 blog post critiquing Medvedev's U.S. tech tour as superficial.[26] State-aligned outlets and pro-Kremlin commentators largely dismissed these uses as juvenile fringe antics, avoiding substantive engagement and framing them within broader narratives of internet immaturity rather than addressing underlying critiques of leadership dynamics.[22] Independent analyses note the meme's role in humorously exposing causal asymmetries in power—Medvedev's ceremonial role versus Putin's influence—yet criticize it for risking the spread of unsubstantiated visuals that could blur into misinformation, as evidenced by divided blog reactions where some praised its levity for humanizing elite detachment while others decried it as undermining serious discourse on governance.[16] Following Medvedev's 2012 return to the premiership, Preved's satirical deployments waned amid shifting political memes favoring direct critiques of policy, though sporadic revivals appeared in commentary on Russia-Ukraine tensions post-2014, repurposing bear imagery to mock Medvedev's hawkish statements as performative bluster rather than strategic depth.[22] These later instances, often on opposition Telegram channels, prioritized evidentiary ridicule of public gaffes over narrative embellishment, reflecting a meme evolution toward targeted causal commentary on elite rhetoric amid escalating conflicts.[16]References
- https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Aalst_preved.JPG