Gulf News

The real story behind the egg that broke the internet

Chris Godfrey’s post has more than 52 million likes

- By Jonah Engel Bromwich and Sapna Maheshwari

When Chris Godfrey learned in early January that the record for “likes” on an Instagram post was held by the celebrity and businesswo­man Kylie Jenner, he took it as a challenge. He remembers thinking: “Could something as universal and simple as an egg be great enough to beat that record?”

It could! Just nine days after the thought, that record was cracked. Godfrey had beaten Jenner’s post about her infant daughter with a simple picture of an egg. The original egg post now has more than 52 million likes — her post is shy of 19 million — and the egg’s account now has more than 10 million followers.

Why an egg? Godfrey explained: “An egg has no gender, race or religion. An egg is an egg, it’s universal.”

Godfrey, a 29-year-old advertisin­g creative who works at the & Partnershi­p in London, and the two friends he has enlisted to help him with the account have now delivered their second act. It is a commercial produced with and aired on the streaming service Hulu, timed to take advantage of the annual Super Bowl ad extravagan­za. In it, the egg shares a story about how going viral has affected its mental health.

“The pressure of social media is getting to me,” the egg discloses in the commercial, after introducin­g itself. “If you’re struggling, too, talk to someone.”

The ad then directs viewers to the website for the nonprofit Mental Health America. The creators say that mental health is the first of several causes that the egg — which they and their fans call Eugene — will come to stand for.

“People have fallen in love with this egg, and Eugene the egg wants to continue to spread positive messages,” said Alissa Khan-Whelan, 26, one of the friends working with Godfrey.

After the birth of the egg on January 4, Godfrey stayed anonymous. But he, Khan-Whelan and another friend, CJ Brown, 29, agreed to speak to The New York Times to tell their story and explain their intentions.

“We felt that the time was right to come out,” Khan-Whelan said. “We can put any speculatio­n to bed.”

There has been a lot of puzzlement about how a picture of an egg created an Instagram frenzy. Some speculated that the account’s creator had paid influencer­s to spread the word. Others even took credit for growing the egg’s audience.

Godfrey says that such claims are untrue and that the account’s growth was “completely organic.” No one person helped the egg’s rise in popularity and no single account or group of accounts helped it to explode.

They did note a demographi­c that embraced the egg immediatel­y.

“I think it was perhaps the younger generation,” Godfrey said. “In the schools and stuff, it started to spread. It sort of spread through playground­s.”

He noticed that interactio­ns with young people would peak between 3 and 4 in the afternoon, “when school was out.”

Khan-Whelan recalled seeing “amazing videos of kids in their class going ‘Miss, miss, have you liked the egg?’”

Marketers agreed that the youth had been key to the egg’s success. (Instagram technicall­y requires users to be 13 to create an account, but that rule is often disregarde­d.) Margaret Johnson, chief creative officer of the agency Goodby Silverstei­n & Partners, only became aware of the egg account after realizing that her 12-year-old son had liked the image. She then sought out more informatio­n about it.

“What a great thing for them to do and kind of hijack the Super Bowl through social, and hammer home a responsibl­e message,” she said.

The egg’s audience was also amplified by Godfrey’s decision to incorporat­e usergenera­ted content into the account’s Instagram stories, where posts expire after 24 hours. The egg’s main Instagram feed stayed spare and mysterious, while Godfrey shouted out followers in its stories, helping to infect his growing audience with a sense of team spirit. (The hashtag #EggGang was quickly adapted to describe the account’s fans.)

The team behind the egg declined to talk about the money it has been offered or the big names it has come into contact with, preferring to keep the attention focused on Eugene.

“We’ve had plenty of amazing offers and opportunit­ies that have come on to the table,” Khan-Whelan said. “So many. We’ve not really been sharing details because we don’t think this is about us. This is about Eugene the egg and what the egg can do.”

“People have fallen in love with this egg, and Eugene the egg wants to continue to spread positive messages.” ALISSA KHAN-WHELAN

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