For a compulsive online quiz-taker like Chrissy Noh, the temptation was too great to resist: ``Which sandwich are you?''
After
answering a series of unscientific, seemingly unrelated questions,
which included selecting her favorite doughnut from a lineup of frosted
pastries, the New Yorker had her answer (grilled cheese). And she's not
the only one who's comparing herself to sandwiches lately.
A
recent explosion of silly online personality quizzes, most of them
created by the young social media mavens at Buzzfeed.com, has Americans
talking about which of the 50 states they really ought to be living in
and which Harry Potter character they really are. Buzzfeed says the
quizzes are smashing traffic records and generating more Facebook
comment threads than any viral posts in the site's history.
Experts
say the phenomenon isn't surprising given the age-old fascination with
that central question, ``Who AM I?'', and a desire to compare ourselves
with others in a social media-obsessed society.
On
a recent snowy day, the 37-year-old Noh admitted that she and several
friends spent the afternoon taking quizzes and texting each other screen
shots of the results. ``It turned into an all-day group text message
fest, where it was just picture after picture of, oh, what rapper are
you?'' she says, laughing. ``What career should you actually have? Which
sandwich are you? Which member of One Direction should you marry?''
Personality
quizzes have been around for decades, gracing the covers of women's and
teen magazines with questions designed to lure us in. Nor are they new
to the Internet, where online quizzes can be found aplenty on sites like
Zimbio.com, among others. But the recent wave of quiz popularity can be
traced directly to Buzzfeed's New York City headquarters, where a team
of about 100 content creators have been producing one to five quizzes
every single day for the past two months.
The most popular quiz, ``Which State Do You Actually Belong In?'', has generated about 41 million page views.
``For
our most viral quizzes, the results have to be meaningful in some
way,'' says Summer Burton, BuzzFeed's managing editorial director.
``It's not that they are scientific. It's just that what they say means
something to people as far as their own identity.''
A QUIZ FOR EVERYONE
A
scroll through the ``QUIZZES'' page on Buzzfeed.com reveals a
bewildering assortment, many infused with pop culture references. Which
celebrity cat are you? Which pop diva? Which ``Girls'' character? What
career should you actually have? Which generation do you actually belong
in? What kind of dog would you be?
The
intense push to pump out as many quizzes as possible started a couple of
months ago after Buzzfeed editors realized that a quiz called ``Which
`Grease' Pink Lady are you?'' ranked among the most-trafficked posts of
2013. Then, in mid-January, a quiz called ``Which city should you
actually live in?'' went viral, and the whole venture just took off like
wildfire, Burton says.
The ability to create a
quiz was encoded into Buzzfeed's in-house content management system a
little more than a year ago. Essentially any staff member has the
autonomy to create one. There are no specific rules regarding
quiz-making, but each one follows the same age-old general format: You
start with the results and work backward based on general personality
traits that go with each answer.
``If you take
a `Parks and Rec' quiz and you get Leslie Knope, then you're very
enthusiastic,'' Burton says. ``It's almost like you pick three or four
adjectives, and then those kind of go into figuring out what the answers
for each question are going to be. And assigning them to a result.''
Staff
members generate the quiz ideas themselves and create the entire thing
on their own, though they do receive an edit and feedback before the
quizzes are published.
The trick to creating
an addictive personality quiz is similar to the art of writing a good
horoscope. It has to be broad and all-encompassing yet make people
believe the answer applies to them personally. We know there's little
substance to them, and yet we can't seem to stop taking them.
What
makes these online quizzes so alluring is that they can be
instantaneously shared with hundreds of friends on Facebook for instant
feedback, says Denise Friedman, who teaches psychology at Roanoke
College in Salem, Virginia.
``In our age,
we're constantly reflecting on who we are, and technology has really
changed the way we interact,'' Friedman says. ``I think we are
constantly engaging in social comparison and thinking about where we
stand.''
`A WAY TO KILL TIME'
John
Egan, 50, who lives in Austin, Texas, says he gets sucked into the
quizzes partly because he's curious about himself, and because he
wonders how his answers will stack up against his Facebook friends'. But
the quizzes have little staying power in his brain.
``It's
kind of this momentary thrill, if you will, and then you move on. And
it's like a shiny object: `Oh, there's another quiz!''' he said.
The quizzes are overwhelmingly upbeat and lighthearted in nature, a calculated decision by the people engineering them.
``Quizzes
are an investment of someone's time,'' Burton says. ``So it feels like
it would almost be mean for someone to go through the process of taking
the quiz and have it say, `You're really cynical and negative and nobody
likes being around you.'''
And you can take
them over and over until you get the answer that validates your own
assumptions about yourself. Noh says she may have taken the ``Which
rapper are you?'' quiz quite a few times until she was satisfied with
the result.
``I kept getting Eminem, which I
was unhappy about,'' she says. ``I was like, `I really want Kanye, so
I'm gonna answer these questions until I get Kanye West.'''
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