Where is leekspin from




















They're still going strong in Here are some of the best text posts gaining recent popularity. We invited them to sit down with us and recap everything from the early days of Schmoyoho to the present day, as well as getting to the bottom of which Gregory Brother was truly the master of memes among them.

Know Your Meme is an advertising supported site and we noticed that you're using an ad-blocking solution. Read Edit History. About "Leekspin" , also known as "Loituma Girl" , is a flash animation loop of a female anime character twirling a stock of spring onion, often referred to as a leek or a negi, while set to the Finnish folk song "Ievan Polkka" Eva's Polka.

Origin The loop animation was originally taken from a scene in the second episode of the Japanese anime series Bleach , titled "A Shinigami's Work", where it shows character Orihime Inoue twirling a leek stock while showing off her groceries to protagonist Ichigo Kurosaki. Spread The flash site immediately gained popularity with anime fans and other parts of the net, with it being shared on anime forums and blogging sites like Myspace , LiveJournal, GeoCities , and also on 4chan as form of bait-and-switch.

Top entries this week. Notable Examples Images. Search Interest. Latest Editorial And News. Meme Kubo Troll. Recent Videos Add a Video. Leekspin is also known as Loituma Girl, which consists of a small flash or gif animation of a female anime character spinning an onion. The question that does not want to remain silent, is this a green onion or a leek? In Japanese when searching for negi onion you can easily find this viral object from Miku but leek is leek in English The Leekspin meme was created from a scene from the Bleach anime where the character Orihime appears spinning a leek.

Leekspin is a simple animation without music, but it managed to make a huge impact on the English and Japanese internet around the s. Both animation and music Ievan Polkka managed to make a big impact on the online community, especially in Russia. In the video below we can see the first version of miku's music:. In May a website called leekspin came up with this flash animation.

After searching online for awhile, it turns out this song is called Ievan Polkka. This version was performed by Loituma in From Wikipedia:. The song is sung in Savo , the eastern dialect of the Finnish language , making it even more comical for Finns.

The intermezzo, which was used in the Flash movie, is just phonetically inspired gibberish with some Finnish words in it. It is not the part of the original song by Eino Kettunen, but rather is introduced by Loituma. A flash animation including this song has gained popularity on the internet. The cartoon consists of a 4-frame animation of an anime character twirling a leek to a second loop from the song.

Like many other such cartoons, it is set to loop continuously. Within a few days, tens of thousands of pages directed to the possible origin or had the file uploaded on their own webspace. For the cartoon the second half of the fifth stanza four lines and the complete sixth stanza eight lines have been used; apparently they have no meaning and are therefore not included in the official lyrics.

This is overlooked in most cases by the users who post the lyrics, often causing confusion. By now there are multiple videos and remixes of the song which have been inspired by the flash cartoon. An awesome thing about this group is they perform as a capella which always has this cool aspect to it.

Nuapurista kuulu se polokan tahti jalakani pohjii kutkutti. Ieva was smiling, the fiddle it was wailing as people crowded round to wish her luck. When he took her home, when the dancing was over her mother angrily waiting they found. Travel to the east and travel to the west but Ieva and I are going to make a match. As you can see, the 4th stanza is the lyrics being sung. However there are 7 stanzas in the original Finnish lyrics and only 6 stanzas in the English lyrics, which indeed points to the fact the 4th stanza is gibberish.

Saliville hippies bushing stumps The snout drops to his chili. He was wet everybody And the voice of a violin came upon him. This does not bother wetness Who is the one who falls from the lie. And this will not hurt you Who is the one who falls from the lie. There was a ringtone after that I got one I get caught. This is not a tenderness that is disgusting What the hell are you talking about? The piston picks even though the west is here But I will not forsake the sword, Because this is not the case with kainous damage How do you dance from the wrong guy.

Saliville hippies bushing stumps The sneaky drops of a slut. As a finn I can say that it is indeed gibberish. I have no idea what a kurikka or a kivikka are though.

You can hear similiar random intermezzo in other a cappella songs as well. This whole cartoon was extremely confusing to me though :p At first it sounded like an Esperanto song, but then I hear a few finnish words and similiar pronounciation, and finally it is an anime girl.



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