Houston Chronicle

A new emoji is no frivolous undertakin­g

- By Barbara Ortutay

We have a smiling pile of poop. What about one that’s sad?

There’s loaf of bread and a croissant. But where’s the sliced bagel?

How can our emotional vocabulary be complete without a teddy bear, a lobster, a petri dish or a tooth?

These are the kind of questions that trigger heated debates and verbal bomb tossing — or at least memos with bursts of capital letters — among members of the group burdened with deciding which new emojis make it onto our phones and computer screens each year.

And now more people are getting in on the act.

The Unicode Consortium is tasked with setting the global standard for the icons. It’s a heady responsibi­lity, and it can take years from inspiratio­n — Hey, why isn’t there a dumpling? — to a new symbol being added to our phones.

That’s because deciding whether a googly-eyed pile of excrement should express a wider range of emotions is not the frivolous undertakin­g it might appear to be. Picking the newest additions to our roster of cartoonish glyphs, from deciding on their appearance to negotiatin­g rules that allow vampires but bar Robert Pattinson’s or Dracula’s likeness, actually has consequenc­es for modern communicat­ion.

Not since the printing press has something changed written language as much as emojis have, says Lauren Collister, a scholarly communicat­ions librarian at the University of Pittsburgh.

“Emoji is one way language is growing,” she says. “When it stops growing and adapting, that’s when a language dies.”

Growing and adapting doesn’t seem like an issue for emojis. The additions for 2017 included gender-neutral characters, a breastfeed­ing woman and a woman in a hijab.

For better or worse, the expanding vocabulary has given us an emoji movie, emoji short story contests and books written in emoji — someone translated “Moby Dick” into “Emoji Dick.” In 2015, Oxford Dictionari­es declared the “face with tears of joy” emoji its word of the year. New York’s Museum of Modern art has added the original emoji set to its permanent collection.

How did we get here?

These tiny pictograph­s became a part of our online language with the ascent of cellphones, getting their start in Japan in 1999 — “emoji” combines the Japanese words for “picture,” or “e’’ (pronounced “eh”), and “letters,” or “moji” (moh-jee). At first, there were just 176: simplistic, highly pixelated icons such as a heart, a soccer ball and a rocking horse. Because none are taken away, their number only keeps growing.

“Long after you and I are dust in the wind, there will be a red wine emoji,” said Mark Davis, the co-founder and president of Unicode Consortium who also works at Google.

Anyone can propose an emoji. But for it to make it to phones and computers, it has to be approved by Unicode. The nonprofit group, mostly made up of people from large tech companies like Apple, Google and Facebook, translates emoji into one global standard.

From the proposals to the design, a bevy of rules govern emojis. To submit a proposal to Unicode, you must follow a strict format, in writing, that includes your emoji’s expected usage level, whether it can be used as an archetype, a metaphor for a symbol (a pig face, for example, can mean more than the face of a pig and represent gluttony).

There are many reasons for exclusion, too. Emojis can’t be overly specific, logos or brands, specific people (living or dead) or deities. A swastika wouldn’t be approved, either.

Each year, a new version of the Unicode Standard is released. In 2017 we got Unicode 10.0, which adds 8,518 characters, for a total of 136,690. It added the bitcoin symbol, a set of 285 Hentaigana characters used in Japan and support for languages such as Masaram Gondi, used to write Gondi in India.

And then there’s the dumpling.

An emoji takes shape

Back in August 2015, journalist and author Jennifer 8. Lee was texting with her friend Yiying Lu, the graphic designer behind the iconic “fail whale” illustrati­on that used to pop up when Twitter’s network was down. It dawned on Lee that there was no dumpling emoji.

“There are so many weird Japanese food emoji,” she said, but she didn’t understand how there could be no dumpling. After all, dumplings are almost universal. Think about it — ravioli, empanada, pierogi, potsticker — all dumplings.

The process took almost two years, including research, many meetings and a written, illustrate­d proposal, complete with research on dumpling history and popularity.

But thanks largely to her efforts, the dumpling emoji was added to the Unicode Standard in 2017 And as part of her dumpling emoji lobbying, Lee decided to join the Unicode Consortium. It was an eye-opener.

When she showed up at her first quarterly meeting of the Unicode Emoji Subcommitt­ee, she expected a big auditorium. Instead, it was just a conference room. Most there, she said, were “older, white male engineers,” from big tech companies.

The debates are as esoteric as they are quirky. Should “milk” be in a glass or a carton or a bottle? Pancake or pancakes? Many of the emoji decision-makers are engineers or have linguistic background­s, she said, but few are designers, which can mean limitation­s on how they think about the images.

As part of their efforts to diversify emojis, Lee and Lu founded Emojinatio­n, a group promoting “emoji by the people, for the people.” While it all started with a dumpling, the group also helped other food, clothing, science and animal emoji, including the woman in the hijab, the sandwich and the fortune cookie.

What makes the cut

But when they proposed the frowning poop, they met with some Unicode resistance.

“As an ordinary user, I don’t want this kind of crap on my phone,” wrote Michael Everson, a linguist and typographe­r, in a memo to the Unicode Technical Committee.

And typographe­r Andrew West wasn’t happy with a proposal for a sliced bagel emoji.

“Why are we prioritizi­ng bagel over other bread products?” he wrote. Clearly he is not a New Yorker.

Got an idea for an emoji and are willing to fight for it? It’s not too late to submit one for the class of 2019. As for 2018, stay tuned. We’ll know in a few months which ones made the cut. And while there’s a desire to be funny and quirky, the diversity of emojis is a real issue.

Amy Butcher, whose 2015 essay prompted Google to propose emojis to represent women as profession­als — and not just brides and polished nails — thinks there’s more work to do. The Ohio Wesleyan University professor would like to see interracia­l couples and a human in a wheelchair to represent a disabled person, rather than the wheelchair icon one might see on a bathroom door.

“These tiny, insignific­ant images begin to create an everyday narrative, and it’s deeply problemati­c that one might consistent­ly find their identity or demographi­c lacking, or pigeonhole­d, or altogether absent,” she said.

 ?? Google via Associated Press ?? These images from Google show emojis that it proposed to highlight the diversity of women’s careers. The Unicode Consortium added 11 of these emojis in 2016.
Google via Associated Press These images from Google show emojis that it proposed to highlight the diversity of women’s careers. The Unicode Consortium added 11 of these emojis in 2016.
 ?? Jeff Chiu / Associated Press ?? Thanks largely to the efforts of author Jennifer 8. Lee, there’s a dumpling emoji.
Jeff Chiu / Associated Press Thanks largely to the efforts of author Jennifer 8. Lee, there’s a dumpling emoji.

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