Kansas State University student Greg Peterson
and some friends were unwinding at a drive-in restaurant when LMFAO's song
"Sexy and I Know It" came on the radio. He groaned.
But as the chorus droned on, the 21-year-old
found inspiration. He switched "sexy" to "farming" as he
began rapping. Then he started coming up with lyrics. It would be fun, he
thought, to do a video parody with his brothers when he returned home to the
family farm in central Kansas.
Peterson said the brothers aimed the video at
their city friends on Facebook because
they "hardly knew anything about the farm." They ended up educating
the world. "I'm Farming and I Grow It" video has become an Internet
sensation with more than 3.2 million views since it was posted June 25 on YouTube.
Its success has been hailed by farm groups,
documented by newspapers and even won the brothers a whirlwind trip to New York
City for a television appearance on Fox News Channel's
"Fox & Friends."
Peterson said he and his family have been a
little bit overwhelmed by all the attention and he's doing "some normal
things" now to keep sane. On a recent morning, he was out swathing — or
mowing — the prairie hay used to feed the family's cattle.
"I am just trying to rest my brain a
little bit and get back to, you know, this is reality," he said by
cellphone. "This is something I can understand, whereas when I was in New
York, everything was just hitting my mind, and it was kind of like, 'I can't
believe this, I can't believe this.'"
The 21-year-old Kansas State University
senior isn't the first to parody LMFAO's club hit. Spoofs include "Elmo
and I Know It," which features the popular "Sesame Street"
character, "I'm Average and I Know It," and "Santa and I Know
It." Most have only a few thousand hits, although the Elmo version has
garnered roughly 12.7 million hits in about seven months.
Peterson's 3:32-minute video begins at the
break of dawn with him and his brothers, Nathan, 18, and Kendal, 15, walking across
a field of golden wheat that sways gently in the wind. The scenes then shift
rapidly to the song's beat, showing the brothers doing chores, driving combines
and tractors and jumping on hay bales. It ends with the three walking off into
the sunset across a field where the wheat has been harvested.
One scene shows Peterson feeding cattle as he
raps, "When I step to the bunk, yeah, this is what I see: All the hungry
cattle are staring at me. I got passion for my plants, and I ain't afraid to
show it, show it, show it. I'm farming, and I grow it."
Peterson, who's majoring in agriculture
communication and journalism and minoring in music performance at Kansas State,
said the video was produced with iMovie and GarageBand software. His
11-year-old sister, Laura, shot some of it on the family farm near Assaria.
Steve Baccus, the president of the Kansas
Farm Bureau, said what the Peterson brothers did on their own is exactly what
agriculture groups have been trying to get other farmers to do — use social
media to show consumers the real faces of agriculture.
Individual farmers and industry groups have
started using Twitter,
YouTube and other social media in recent years to counter the messages put out
by tech-savvy environmental and animal rights groups concerned about everything
from water quality to the size of cages chickens are kept in.
"We think it is a great way to
communicate with the consumer and give them an idea of what exactly goes on in
agriculture on the farm," Baccus said. "We are being painted by some
different groups in a pretty nasty vein, and that is not at all true. I think
we need to get the message out there is another side of agriculture."
He said he loved the Peterson brothers'
video: "I liked the way they incorporated humor into it, and I just
thought they did a fantastic job."
The Peterson brothers have posted other videos about the
family farm on YouTube, and Peterson said they'll make more. He keeps his iPod
Touch with him as he farms, occasionally pulling it out and filming
things.
"That doesn't take any extra time, or
really any extra thought," he said. "It is just like, 'This is what I
am doing. So I will continue to make those kinds of videos.'"
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