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FROM: smiley

Smiley
First appearance1963
Created byHarvey Ball[1]

A smiley, smiley face, or happy face, :) or :D is a stylized representation of a smiling humanoid face, commonly occurring in popular culture. It is often represented as a yellow circle (or sphere) with two black dots representing eyes and a black arc representing the mouth. However the representation of a happy face does not have to be yellow and many other colors are often used. “Smiley” is also sometimes used as a generic term for any emoticon.

The variant spelling "smilie" is not as common,[2] but the plural form "smilies" is commonly used.[3]

Popularization

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The first happy face recorded on film can be seen in Ingmar Bergman's 1948 film "Hamnstad". Later on, in 1953 and 1958, the happy face was used in promotional campaigns for motion pictures Lili and Gigi, respectively.

First use of happy face in a campaign for the film Lili in 1953

The happy face was first introduced to popular culture in 1958 when the WMCA radio station in New York ran a competition for the most popular radio show at the time, 'Cousin Brucie'. Listeners who answered their phone 'WMCA Good Guys!' were rewarded with a 'Good Guys!' sweatshirt that incorporated a happy face into its design. Thousands of these sweatshirts were given away during the late 1950s. [4]

In 1963, Harvey Ball, an American commercial artist, was employed by an advertising company to create a happy face to be used on buttons. His rendition, with bright yellow background, dark oval eyes, and creases at the sides of the mouth, was to become the most iconic version of the happy face.[5][6]

In 1967, Ball's design was used in an advertising campaign for Seattle-based University Federal Savings & Loan. This was later used when the man behind this campaign, David Stern, ran for Seattle Mayor in 1993.[6]

In 1972, Franklin Loufrani introduced the happy face to a European audience, giving it the name "Smiley". On January 1st of that year, the 'take the time to smiley' promotion was launched in the French newspaper 'France Soir'. The Smiley logo was used to highlight all good news so people could choose to read positive and uplifting articles.[7]

The graphic was popularized in the early 1970s by Philadelphia brothers Bernard and Murray Spain, who seized upon it in September 1970 in a campaign to sell novelty items. The two produced buttons as well as coffee mugs, t-shirts, bumper stickers and many other items emblazoned with the symbol and the phrase "Have a happy day" (devised by Gyula Bogar) which mutated into "have a nice day". Working with New York button manufacturer NG Slater, some 50 million happy face badges were produced by 1972.[8]

In the 1970s, the happy face (and the accompanying 'have a nice day' mantra) is also said to have become a zombifying hollow sentiment, emblematic of Nixon-era America and the passing from the optimism of the Summer of Love into the more cynical decade that followed. This motif is evidenced in the era of "paranoid soul" such as "Smiling Faces Sometimes" (released by The Temptations in April 1971, and by The Undisputed Truth in July 1971), "I'll Take You There" (The Staples Singers, 1972), "Don't Call Me Brother" (The O'Jays, 1973), "Back Stabbers" (The O'Jays), and "You Caught Me Smilin'" (Sly and the Family Stone, 1971).[8] The origins of this was parodied in a famous scene from the movie Forrest Gump when Forrest is on his multiple jogs across America, and wipes his face on a T shirt given to him by a struggling salesman, and on the shirt, as if transferred there by Forrest's face, is the image of the happy face, whereupon the man gets his idea.

In the UK, the happy face has been associated with psychedelic culture since Ubi Dwyer and the Windsor Free Festival in the 1970s and the dance music culture that emerged during the second summer of love in the late 1980s. The association was cemented when the band Bomb The Bass used an extracted smiley from Watchmen on the centre of its Beat Dis hit single.

Usage in Technology

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The smiley is the printable version of characters 1 and 2 of (black-and-white versions of) codepage 437 (1981) of the first IBM PC and all subsequent PC compatible computers. For modern computers, all versions of Microsoft Windows after Windows 95[9] can use the smiley as part of Windows Glyph List 4, although some computer fonts miss some characters, and some characters cannot be reproduced by programs not compatible with Unicode.[10] It also appears in Unicode's Basic Multilingual Plane.[11]

Unicode smiley characters :
U+263A White Smiling Face
U+263B Black Smiling Face
Unicode also contains the "sad" face:
U+2639 White Frowning Face

The rise of social media in the early twenty century gave new meaning to the term emoticon. Websites and instant messaging programs, including text messages, have created systems where typing codes create images of smiley faces and other characters. [12] For example, the short cut ":O" would generate an image of a smiley face with a surprised sentiment. Emoticons have become a way for users of social media to combine "emotions" and "icons" to better communicate and express more complex feelings and tones in writing. Happy faces and other emoticons have been described by researchers as a valuable addition to communication media because they "have a positive effect on enjoyment, personal interaction, perceived information richness and perceived usefulness of the system". [13]

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A satirical use of the smiley at the 2010 Rally to Restore Sanity.

French journalist Franklin Loufrani registered the iconic smiley face image as a trademark in France in 1971, and he created "The Smiley Licensing Corporation, Ltd." to sell, license, and advertise the smiley face image in the United Kingdom and Europe. In 2001 the name of Loufrani's company was changed to SmileyWorld, which has managed to register the symbol in over 100 countries (not including the USA) for 25 classes of goods and services.[14]

In 1999, Harvey Ball belatedly formed his own "World Smile Corporation" and began licensing his particular rendering of the happy face to fund charitable causes.[15] Profits are distributed to charities through the Harvey Ball World Smile Foundation, which also sponsors the annual World Smile Day Ball started in 1999 to encourage "acts of kindness."[16]

In 1997, Franklin Loufrani and Smiley World attempted to acquire trademark rights to the symbol (and even to the word "smiley" itself) in the United States. This brought Loufrani into conflict with Wal-Mart, which had begun prominently featuring a happy face in its "Rolling Back Prices" campaign over a year earlier. Wal-Mart responded first by trying to block Loufrani's application, then later by trying to register the smiley face themselves; Loufrani in turn sued to stop Wal-Mart's application, and in 2002 the issue went to court,[17] where it would languish for seven years before a decision.

Wal-mart began phasing out the smiley face on its vests[18] and its website[19] in 2006. Despite that, Wal-Mart sued an online parodist for alleged "trademark infringement" after he used the symbol (as well as various portmanteaus of "Wal-," such as "Walocaust"); and they lost that case in March 2008, when the judge declared that the smiley face is not a "distinctive" mark, and therefore cannot be trademarked by anyone—and thus, Wal-Mart has no claim to it.[20]

The Loufrani vs. Wal-Mart case was finally closed in March 2009, when the judge dismissed Loufrani's claims to any rights on either the generic smiley face symbol or the word "smiley," noting that both had become "ubiquitous" in American culture long before Loufrani's initial trademark application.[21]

These two court decisions effectively ruled the smiley face (as well as the words "smiley face") to be in the public domain, at least within the jurisdiction of the United States. U.S. court decisions have no effect in other countries though, and Loufrani's SmileyWorld continues to claim (and enforce) trademark rights in much of the rest of the world. [citation needed]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Nordin, Kendra (4 October 2006). "Smiley Face: How an in-house campaign became a global icon". Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved 22 December 2010.
  2. ^ Google ngram viewer: smilie vs smiley
  3. ^ Google ngram viewer: smilies vs smileys
  4. ^ Stiffen, Allan. "WMCA Good Guys History". WMCA Good Guys. Retrieved 1 April 2012.
  5. ^ Honan, William H. (April 14, 2001). "H. R. Ball, 79, Ad Executive Credited With happy Face". The New York Times. Retrieved August 29, 2009.
  6. ^ a b Adams, Cecil (23 April 1993). "Who invented the smiley face?". The Straight Dope. Retrieved 18 April 2011.
  7. ^ http://www.smileycompany.com/smiley-world
  8. ^ a b Peter Shapiro, Smiling Faces Sometimes, in The Wire, issue 203, January 2001, pp44-49.
  9. ^ "WGL Assistant v1.1: The Multilingual Font Manager". Archived from the original on 24 March 2008.
  10. ^ Announcing WGL Assistant. Announcement: WGL Assistant V1.1 Beta available, comp.fonts, 27 July 1999, Microsoft Typography - News archive
  11. ^ wikibooks:Unicode/Character reference/2000-2FFF
  12. ^ Steen, Margaret (22 September 2010). "Effective Use of Social Media Requires Tapping Emotions". Stanford Knowledgebase. Retrieved 1 April 2012.
  13. ^ Ploug, Thomas and Per Hasle and Harri Oinas-Kukkonen. "Persuasive Technology". Springer, 2010, p. 272.
  14. ^ Smiley Story. Smiley World website.
  15. ^ World Smile About Us page
  16. ^ World Smile website
  17. ^ "Wal-Mart seeks smiley face rights". BBC News. 8 May 2006. Retrieved 2006-05-09.
  18. ^ Kabel, Mark (October 22, 2006). "Wal-Mart phasing out smiley face vests". Associated Press.
  19. ^ Williamson, Richard (2006). "The last days of Wal-Mart's smiley face". Adweek. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  20. ^ "Smith v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc". Citizen Vox. 28 March 2008.
  21. ^ Loufrani v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., Opposition No. 91152145 (Filed July 23, 2002)

Category:Internet culture Category:Symbols Category:Emoticons