Got it. I misunderstood your first post.

by San Pedro @, More than 100 feet from Bob Davies, Tuesday, March 17, 2026, 18:25 (73 days ago) @ hobbs

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I honestly don't have an issue with it

by hobbs, San Diego, CA, Tuesday, March 17, 2026, 12:27 (73 days ago) @ San Pedro
edited by hobbs, Tuesday, March 17, 2026, 12:35

As you said, news that happened.

It's just that I as someone who came across the clip, without knowing any backstory, it didn't paint the locals in the best light, and conveyed the usual stereotypes. My reaction was more from embarrassment than humor (I find it hard to laugh at people b/c of their life circumstance).

Probably an overly sensitive take on my part but that was my initial reaction. Then there's also my personal bias about the whole social media/meme culture scene ('nothing good ever bubbles up from there!")

"It could be a crack addict that got into some bad stuff."

by Chris, Raleigh, NC, Tuesday, March 17, 2026, 11:15 (73 days ago) @ San Pedro

I laugh every time at that.

--
"F--- everyone who isn't us."
#Team128

It happened. The news filmed it. What's the issue?

by San Pedro @, More than 100 feet from Bob Davies, Tuesday, March 17, 2026, 10:59 (73 days ago) @ hobbs

The locals look like they are having fun and some are definitely in on the joke.

it was an unscripted news report

by Jay, San Diego, Tuesday, March 17, 2026, 10:48 (73 days ago) @ hobbs

20 year anniversary

https://www.newser.com/story/385543/viral-leprechaun-lore-thrives-in-alabama-2-decades-...

Viral Leprechaun Lore Thrives in Alabama, 2 Decades Later

Residents reflect on headline-making story in Mobile, after 2006 broadcast on supposed sighting

Two decades after a supposed leprechaun sighting clogged a dead-end street in Mobile, Alabama, the tiny figure that no one can quite agree they saw is still everywhere. In a St. Patrick's Day feature, the New York Times revisits a 2006 WPMI-TV segment that showed residents in the Crichton neighborhood crowding under a tree, hamming it up for the camera as a rough pencil sketch of the supposed leprechaun circulated—unknowingly helping define the early "viral local news" genre on a then-fledgling YouTube. "The leprechaun was everywhere," one local says. "On ESPN, on BET, on MTV—it was everywhere. It was a big deal. It was a real big deal."

The Times tracked down some of those community members, as well as news anchor Scott Walker and relatives of the late Demarco Morrissette—the man who said back then that he had a magic flute passed down from his Irish ancestor; the "flute" was actually garbage picked up from the ground—to reconstruct how a gag turned into a recurring late-night clip, Comedy Central fodder, and, finally, civic branding. "If you would have told me 20 years later we'd still be talking about this, I would have said you were crazy," Walker says.

Today the crude sketch of the leprechaun appears on cookies, T-shirts, Mardi Gras beads, and even tattoos, as Mobile leans into a legend that some locals admit was always more performance than paranormal. The full oral history of how a two-minute bit became a 20-year mascot—which Jimmy Kimmel has called "the greatest local news story of all time," per Adweek—can be found here, or check out the original news report. Jezebel, meanwhile, thinks that the whole viral media blitz at the time over the supposed leprechaun sighting may have been a wee bit racist.

"Buckwheat" was less cringe than that video

by hobbs, San Diego, CA, Tuesday, March 17, 2026, 09:54 (73 days ago) @ Chris
edited by hobbs, Tuesday, March 17, 2026, 10:00

/meme

It's all there folks.

Maybe my antenna is too sensitive but how do you watch that and NOT see the blindingly obvious racial tropes.

I just want the gold

by Jay, San Diego, Tuesday, March 17, 2026, 09:10 (73 days ago) @ Chris

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Who all seen the leprechaun; say yeah?!

by Chris, Raleigh, NC, Tuesday, March 17, 2026, 09:07 (73 days ago)

[image]

--
"F--- everyone who isn't us."
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