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Australian 'Dumb Ways to Die' safety clip goes viral

The Melbourne Metro Trains video "Dumb Ways to Die" has been shared on social media since being uploaded to YouTube
Photo illustration shows the YouTube homepage displayed on a computer screen. An online video featuring cartoon creatures killing themselves in a variety of ways as part of an Australian transport safety campaign has gone viral, with almost 12 million YouTube views in a week.

An online video featuring cartoon creatures killing themselves in a variety of ways as part of an Australian transport safety campaign has gone viral, with almost 12 million YouTube views in a week.

The Melbourne Metro Trains video "Dumb Ways to Die" has been shared widely on social media since being uploaded to seven days ago and the clip and jingle have been especially popular in .

It features colourful, round dying in improbable circumstances ranging from poking a stick at a to using "private parts as piranha bait", and selling both kidneys on the Internet.

The final chorus depicts what is said to be the "dumbest ways to die"—standing on the edge of a rail platform, driving through level crossing gates and running across train tracks.

Metro Trains and the three-minute clip's creator John Mescall have been surprised by its popularity. It is already among Australia's most successful viral brand videos after just one week.

"The decision to mix a morbid subject matter with saccharine levels of cute is what ultimately made it funny I think," Mescall told Australian marketing website mUmbrella.

"Ultimately, it's an ad that doesn't feel anything like an ad. It's happy and silly and joyful and clever and more than a little odd; the intangible things that are so hard to rationalise, but so very important."

(c) 2012 AFP

Citation: Australian 'Dumb Ways to Die' safety clip goes viral (2012, November 21) retrieved 27 June 2025 from /news/2012-11-australian-dumb-ways-die-safety.html
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