Bored Apes and the Celebrity Cringe That Helped Tank NFTs

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Ask any­one on the street about NFTs in 2023, and you will like­ly get a gri­mace. Or some kind of dis­ap­proval. With the NFT “brand” so soaked in cringe, who can blame them?

If there ever was a sin­gle moment when NFTs became “cringe,” there’s a good case to be made that it hap­pened dur­ing Paris Hilton’s appear­ance on The Tonight Show Star­ring Jim­my Fal­lon.

It was one year ago this week that the two celebri­ties met to show off their NFTs. Both Hilton and Fal­lon had pur­chased “Bored Apes” from the Bored Ape Yacht Club (BAYC) NFT col­lec­tion. A project that—even then—was syn­ony­mous with “expen­sive JPEGs.”

“The last time you were on the show, I asked you to explain NFTs,” said Fal­lon, with his usu­al plas­tic charm. “And you did so in a great way.” As a gra­cious host, Fal­lon then name­dropped Hilton as one of Forbes Top 50 Most Influ­en­tial Peo­ple In NFTs. The socialite replied with among the most banal series of words ever strung together.

Jimmy Fallon and Paris Hilton compare their Bored Ape NFTs.
Source: The Tonight Show with Jim­my Fallon

“Thank you, I’m so proud. I love being part of this com­mu­ni­ty, and being a voice and shar­ing my plat­form, and just get­ting the word out there. Because I think it’s just such an incred­i­ble thing.”

The damn­ing cov­er­age was impos­si­ble to ignore: ForbesThe AtlanticThe Tele­graphVICEThe Cut. Whether you had writ­ten about NFTs before or not, it didn’t mat­ter. This was pub­lic inter­est jour­nal­ism; two rich peo­ple talk­ing about their exor­bi­tant mon­keys. It was fun­ny, it was cringe, it was a lot of things. (Accord­ing to reports, of course.)

Was Jimmy Fallon Peak Cringe?

Peo­ple who knew my job would inevitably ask about that moment. (At the time, I was work­ing in Web3 PR.) “Have you seen Paris Hilton and talk­ing about her sil­ly mon­key,” a friend would say. Well, yes, I would reply. After all, that is my indus­try. Strain­ing every sinew in my body to hide the shame. This is not what NFTs were sup­posed to be. It is not what NFTs are. But try telling that to some­one whose first inter­ac­tion with space is via a mil­lion-dol­lar pic­ture of a monkey.

As one indus­try vet­er­an put it to me: “Near­ly every pub­licly known BAYC hold­er are the exact type of peo­ple you don’t want to be at a par­ty with. (Except Paris Hilton, she’s a doll.) The entire brand and vibe is ick to me — the exact oppo­site of what Web3 and the vision of decen­tral­iza­tion is sup­posed to be about. Not here for help­ing rich peo­ple get richer.’

That same month, reports of Justin Bieber pay­ing $1.3 mil­lion for a BAYC NFT only height­ened the ani­mos­i­ty. By the spring of last year, the celebri­ty ros­ter of the Bored Ape Yacht Club was a wall-to-wall of house­hold names. Madon­na, Post Mal­one, Tom Brady, Snoop Dogg, Eminem, Logan Paul, Tim­ba­land, Mark Cuban. One analy­sis showed this feel­ing was based on fact. Of all the thou­sands of NFT col­lec­tions, BAYC was the celebri­ty favorite. No sur­pris­es there.

Although, despite cries of “cringe” from the cheap seats, per­haps Yuga Labs (the cre­ators of BAYC) were on to some­thing. Hilton’s appear­ance on Fallon’s show coin­cid­ed with a surge in the BAYC floor price. (The “floor price” is the min­i­mum price at which an NFT can be sold.) The floor price on the day of the show was 90 ETH, but it went on to spike to 118 ETH on Feb 1. (So, at the time, approx­i­mate­ly $329,470 dol­lars.) If you lis­ten close­ly, you can hear them laughing.

Although, high­er prices do not nec­es­sar­i­ly mean peo­ple thought of BAYC as less cringe. An appear­ance on one of America’s most pop­u­lar talk shows is a bull­ish sig­nal. This a sign that BAYC is in demand, pre­cip­i­tat­ing a rise in val­ue. If you’re trad­ing NFTs for prof­it (which most do), your wal­let doesn’t care how cringe the rich and famous are.

Bored Apes And The Damage To The NFT Brand

Nev­er­the­less, exten­sive media cov­er­age of celebri­ties and their Bored Apes appar­ent­ly did lit­tle for the wider NFT brand. A Feb­ru­ary 2022 sur­vey of UK res­i­dents con­duct­ed by YouGov showed that 43% of respon­dents would feel less favor­able if a com­pa­ny began offer­ing NFTs. Only 3% of respon­dents would feel more favorable. 

There is also a stark dif­fer­ence in their per­ceived val­ue depend­ing on whether you own one or not. Accord­ing to a sur­vey by Vari­ety Mag­a­zine, con­sumer per­cep­tions of non-fun­gi­ble tokens (NFTs) have declined, espe­cial­ly among those who haven’t bought them. Most non-own­ers believe that NFTs are a poor invest­ment, with just 15% believ­ing they make a good one. In con­trast, those who own one have a very dif­fer­ent view. Two-thirds believe it’s a good invest­ment, and just 5% think it’s a poor one. Again, no sur­pris­es there.

To any­one pay­ing atten­tion, it was obvi­ous when the hype dis­ap­peared. The dis­cus­sion of “blue chip” NFTs (like BAYC) sud­den­ly plum­met­ed as we entered the sec­ond half of the year. Around the same time, sales fell off a cliff too. The talk of “com­mu­ni­ty” that accom­pa­nied the hype most­ly van­ished into thin air. Notes of opti­mism main­ly came from BAYC hold­ers and NFT die-hards.

The pow­er of cringe has meant even bull­ish com­pa­nies like Red­dit have moved away from the term NFT, instead opt­ing for the term ‘Col­lectible Avatars.’

One of the few spikes in inter­est in the sec­ond half of the year came in Novem­ber when news broke that Justin Bieber’s $1.3 mil­lion Bored Ape had fall­en in val­ue by 94%. After all, there is noth­ing quite like schadenfreude.

Disclaimer

All the infor­ma­tion con­tained on our web­site is pub­lished in good faith and for gen­er­al infor­ma­tion pur­pos­es only. Any action the read­er takes upon the infor­ma­tion found on our web­site is strict­ly at their own risk.



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