December 24, 2024

‘Sharknado’ Hits The Internet, And Twitter Takes Cover

Last night, a Sharknado hit Twitter, and the Internet will never be the same.

If you don’t know what a Sharknado is, let us explain. It’s that thing where a tornado or a hurricane picks up a bunch of sharks out of the ocean and tosses them at Los Angeles. It’s also the name of the Syfy original movie that premiered last night and scored 386,000 social interactions.

But almost as entertaining as the airborne sharks flying across America’s TV screens were the tweets, GIFs and reviews that popped up in their wake.

How The Storm Started
io9 spoke with the writer of “Sharknado,” a man named Thunder Levin (let that sink in for a second), and he was kind enough to share how this beautiful meeting of ocean-based mammal and low-pressure weather systems came together. The Asylum, the production company responsible for the movie rip-offs like “Atlantic Rim” that you see in Redbox kiosks, asked him to write a movie based on the title “Shark Storm.”

“I asked if this would be a straight up movie about sharks attacking during a storm or a crazy storm made up of sharks,” Levin said. “They said it would be straight, so I declined, feeling like we’d seen enough shark movies and enough storm movies.” A month later, the Asylum approached again, this time with the title “Sharknado” and a page of notes, and he accepted.

Celebs Take Cover
After “Sharknado” made landfall, it didn’t take long for the greatest minds of Twitter shared their two cents about the natural disaster.

And when Damon Lindelof offered to write the sequel, director Anthony C. Ferrante weighed in.

When she found out that Mia Farrow was watching, Olivia Wilde set her DVR.

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