Vine attracted different types of uses, including short-form
comedy and
music performances,
video editing, and stop motion animation. Vine had also gained ground as a promotional tool; in 2013, the track listing of
Daft Punk's album
Random Access Memories was revealed via a Vine video, and on September 9, 2013,
Dunkin' Donuts became the first company to use a single Vine as an entire television advertisement.
A&W Restaurants launched its Mini Polar Swirls on Vine on April 1, 2014, with the claim that it was the first product launch on Vine. Music-oriented videos also shared success on the service; in July 2013, a Vine post featuring a group of women
twerking to the 2012 song "
Don't Drop That Thun Thun" became popular, spawned response videos, and led the previously obscure song to peak at number 35 on the
Billboard Hot 100 chart. In March 2013, 22 Vines were presented in an exhibit entitled
#SVAES (
The Shortest Video Art Ever Sold) at the
Moving Image art fair in New York City. Copies of the videos were available to purchase on
thumb drives for US$200 each.
Angela Washko's "Tits on Tits on Ikea" was sold to Dutch art advisor, curator and collector Myriam Vanneschi during the event, marking the first-ever sale of a Vine as art. Following the
shooting of Michael Brown in August 2014, then-St Louis City Alderman
Antonio French used Vine as a way to document the
protests in Ferguson and the surrounding area. These videos were among the earliest accounts of the racial tensions in Ferguson, and helped bring national attention to the situation.
Internet memes Vine has spawned countless
internet memes across its years. Here are just a few of them: "Eyebrows on Fleek" is a vine posted on June 21, 2014, by Kayla Lewis, better known as her online personality "PEACHES MONROEE", following her complimenting her eyebrows, and saying how her eyebrows, the now iconic phrase, were "on fleek" ("on fleek" basically meaning "attractive"). The vine quickly grew in popularity around the internet, even making an appearance inside an
Ariana Grande video and many beauty articles, of them repeatedly using the phrase. Following these events, Lewis wanted to trademark the phrase, stating how everyone uses the phrase, yet she doesn't get any recognition, so she started a
GoFundMe page, with the profits going towards her own
cosmetics line. Since then, her GoFundMe campaign continues to grow to her goal of $100,000. "Squidward Dab" is a vine posted on January 26, 2016, taking place in what appears to be a
SpongeBob-themed parade inside an
amusement park, when a float drives along with a person wearing a
Squidward costume standing atop it. A man in the crowd yells out to Squidward asking him to do the "
dab", a popular dance craze at the time, to which Squidward replies and dabs. It became a very popular meme. "What are those?" is a vine posted in 2015 by A-RODney King, which was taken from an
Instagram post by Brandon Moore, better known as "Young Busco", following him making fun of a police officer's shoes shouting out "What are those!?," while panning the camera towards the shoes. The vine quickly grew in popularity, receiving nearly 40 million loops and users among vine imitating the trend. Moore died in November 2018 at the age of 31 from combined drug intoxication, with "cocaine, morphine, codeine, methamphetamines and ecstasy" found in his blood. "Okay Guy" is a vine posted on December 29, 2014, by Lilianna Hogan, known as her online personality Lil e, following her and Bizagwira "Jackson" Marc when Hogan greets Marc with "hi!" to which he replies "okay". Unexpectedly, the post went viral, currently gathering over 60 million loops. Many other users on vine took on with the trend, making their own version of it; even
Justin Bieber posted a version of it. The video was created when Hogan tried to record her mother as she got angry at her phone, but Marc got into frame. When she posted the vine, she said she "felt a bit awkward" as the video grew in popularity as she thought people were laughing at the fact that Marc was black because "that's what people do on Vine". Marc is a porter for
Volcanoes National Park the hills of north-west
Rwanda, where the video is set in. He said that he is "very proud and happy" of the popularity of the video, though he said it was also "strange" to see the video. "9+10" is a vine posted in June 2013 by DREHUPEMSU, following him telling his brother that he is stupid. He replies, "no I'm not," so DREHUPEMSU continues with the question, "what's nine plus ten?". His brother replies with "twenty-one", and is again called stupid. The vine went viral, currently gaining over 700,000 likes and over 30 million loops. On September 10, 2021, a post was made on Instagram by a gimmick account named "TwentyOneCount" saying how today is 9/10/21, which contains the same digits as 9+10=21. People started joking about how the day could be something that could impact the world greatly, such as how the day could be
Judgement day, or how a natural disaster or a terrorist attack could occur. After the post, the account gained over 118,000 followers and some of the posts reaching over 150,000 likes. == Reception ==