Whassup? was a commercial campaign for Anheuser-Busch Budweiser beer from 1999 to 2002. The first spot aired during Monday Night Football, December 20 1999. The ad campaign was run worldwide and became a pop culture phenomenon. The phrase itself is a corruption of the phrase "What's up?".
The commercials were based on a short film, entitled "True", written and directed by Charles Stone III, that featured Stone and several of his childhood friends - Fred Thomas, Paul Williams, Terry Williams, and Kevin Lofton. The characters sat around talking on the phone and saying "Whassup!" to one another in a comical way. The short was popular at a number of film festivals around the country and eventually caught the attention of creative director Vinny Warren and art director Chuck Taylor at the Chicago based ad agency DDB, who took the idea to August A. Busch IV, vice president of Anheuser-Busch, and signed Stone to direct Budweiser TV commercials based on the film. Scott Martin Brooks won the role of "Dookie" when Kevin Lofton declined to audition. "Whassup!" won the Cannes Grand Prix award and the Grand Clio award, among others. In May 2006, the campaign was inducted into the CLIO Hall of Fame.
Later in the 2000s, independently produced parodies began appearing on the Internet (including, for example, the SuperFriends, The Simpsons, South Park, the Teletubbies, Rabbis, Grannies, and others mimicking the commercials). In addition, Saturday Night Live and ESPN's SportsCenter did their own parodies of the commercials. The commercial was further parodied in the 2000 hit spoof Scary Movie.
The characters in the campaign have made guest appearances on a variety of television shows, including The Oprah Winfrey Show, the Tonight Show with Jay Leno, Live With Regis & Kathy Lee, The Howard Stern Show, Entertainment Tonight, the Today Show, CBS This Morning, 48 Hours, and Inside Edition.
Budweiser would later do their own parodies of the ads with "yuppies" saying; "What are you doing?", and "New Jersey-ites" saying; "How ya' doin'?" There was also an international parody which featured Yorkshire men screaming the phrase "Ey up!", Scotsmen saying; "How's about ye'!", and Japanese men screaming; "Konnichiwa!"
Dance songs with the sole purpose of featuring the phrase were created, and resulted in chart success. These include "Whazzup" by True Party in 2000 (#13 on the UK Singles Chart), and "Wassup" by Da Muttz (a nom de plume of producers Alex Rizzo and Elliot Ireland) in the same year (#11 in the UK, #12 on Australian ARIAnet singles chart).
A professional wrestling tag-team, the Dudley Boyz, adopted it as part of their signature finishing move. Bubba Ray slams the opponent to the mat, and D-Von climbs to the top rope, upon which, both men look at each other and proclaim "Whazzup!" before D-Von leaps on top of the prone opponent. The move was dubbed the Wazzup Headbutt.
In early 2002, Budweiser decided to end the ad campaign, for undisclosed reasons.
The phrase's popularity faded by about 2003. In a 2002 episode of The Simpsons, Milhouse greets everyone with a "Whassup!", only to be met with indifference. It was also included in the MTV special: "That's so 5 minutes ago". In addition, the phrase is used often by Steve Carell's character in the US version of the sitcom "The Office", as a way of showing how corny the character is.
The phrase was parodied in the 26th August 2008 edition of The Daily Show.
Former American PGA Tour golfer and musician Will Mayo had made extensive use of the phrase on the greens and is responsible for a recent resurgence of its popularity, as featured in a parody ad campaign for TaylorMade's Burner 460 TP driver.
In the pilot episode of The Office, both American and British, the boss initiates the gimmick. In the British version, done in 2001, the joke is better received, as the American version, done in 2005, was still funny, even "after seven years.
In 2008, Stone made another version of the ad with the same cast called "Wassup 2008." The 2-minute short film was heavily critical of the Bush administration and was a clear endorsement of the presidential campaign of Barack Obama.[1] The 2008 video has been nominated for the "Favorite User Generated Video" award at the 35th People's Choice Awards.
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