Emojipedia describes it as âa pile of poo that is shaped like a soft-serve ice cream; brown in color with a friendly smile in most versions of this emoji.â
The emoji is inspired by Dr. Slump, a Japanese animation character from the 80s.
âHowever, it wasnât always so welcomed amongst emoji-fans,â writes Amanda Vanschaick in a 2017 blog post mentioning that âpeople were not impressed.â
âGmail held the strongest path of resistance against the emoji, stating that they felt people would be offended by the vulgarity of the emoji,â she says. âIt took the persuasion of the creators of the emoji, Darick Tong, Darren Lewis, Takeshi Kishimoto, and Katsuhiko âKatâ Momoi, to get the poo-moji on to Gmail.â
At the time, the creators were all from Google. Tong and Lewis were Google software engineersâââTong led Googleâs emoji project; Kishimoto was Googleâs Japanese product manager; and Momoi was Google test engineer and internationalization expert.
Why Google? While the emoji project began in Japan in 1999 when Japanâs three major telecom carriersâââKDDI AU, SoftBank, and NTT-DoCoMoâââcreated their first series of small rudimentary graphics for text messages and emails, it wasnât until 2007 until 2007, when Google partnered with KDDI AU to adopt emojis for Gmail, that the emoji code was fixed to make it simple for everybody to use them. And with Google on board emojis became international.
In 2014, Fast Company quoted Tong about the beginning of the emoji project: âThe internal project name was Mojo,â they write. âThe motivation was to expand Googleâs presence in Japan and Asia. The one thing that was missing from the Gmail experience was a good handling of emoji, which is very engrained in the culture of Japan.
The article described the history of the emoji as âan international tale of drama, cultural differences, and near-disasters.â
The team of creators thought that the poop emoji âwas absolutely one of the necessary emojiâ to have in the first release for Gmail, but many at Google headquarters in California felt it was too offensive and some even were against even implementing emojis for Gmail as they would ruin the user experience.
âWe pushed hard for the poop emoji,â Lewis told Fast Company.
It passed and in 2008, Google posted about emojis in a blog post aptly titled: âA picture is worth a thousand words.â The poop emoji was included.
(Credits: Google)
âThe black and white days of text-based emails have had their day,â the post reads. âFollowing the evolutionary path blazed by colored labels, we present, in all their technicolor glory, emoticons in your mail.â
A month later, Apple began to embrace the idea and finally two years later, in 2010, emoji was officially approved by the Unicode Consortium, which meant that it was accepted industry-wide as a real language.
The Unicode Consortium is a non-profit corporation devoted to developing, maintaining, and promoting software internationalization standards and data, particularly the Unicode Standard, which specifies the representation of text in all modern software products and standards. It actively develops standards in the area of internationalization including defining the behavior and relationships between Unicode characters.
Today, emojis are part of pop culture and used as part of our language. But âitâs easy to dismiss emoji,â wrote Adam Sternbergh in a New York Magazine article in 2014. âThey are, at first glance, ridiculous.â
And the poop emoji maybe even more ridiculous than others.
Sternbergh described emojis as âa small invasive cartoon army of faces and vehicles and flags and food and symbols trying to topple the millennia-long reign of words.â
And yet, emojis have become a daily occurrence for many of us. Consider for instance the use of reaction emojis on Facebookâââeven on 360 videos within the Gear VRâs video appâââand how they have transformed the way we interact with posts, beyond the simple thumbs up emoji.
In 2015, for the first time ever, the Oxford Dictionaries Word of the Year was an emoji:
Officially called the Face with Tears of Joy emoji, đ âwas chosen as the âwordâ that best reflected the ethos, mood, and preoccupations of 2015.â The emoji won over other shortlisted words like âsharing economyâ, âdark webâ, âad blockerâ, and even ârefugeeâ and Brexitâ.
According to emojitracker, an experiment in real-time visualization of all emoji symbols used on Twitter started in 2013 by Matthew Rothenberg, an independent artist and hacker from Brooklyn, NY, the poop emoji is the 116th most used emoji on Twitter.
I analyzed the use of emojis in politics and diplomacy in a 2017 blog post here on Medium.
đđđșđž Emojis for diplomats_Storytelling via round smiley faces, thumbs up, and flags._medium.com
The poop emoji was also cited in my post, together with the toilet đœ emoji. Both were featured quite successfully in the November 2016 #WorldToiletDay campaign by the World Health Organization (WHO) of the United Nations.
Iâm glad we all look at the poop emoji as a way to engage audiences around the globe! Itâs fun, universal, and easy to implement as part of any campaign.
Happy birthday đ©!