Biography:András Arató
András Arató | |
---|---|
Born | András István Arató 11 July 1945 Kőszeg, Kingdom of Hungary |
Other names | Hide the Pain Harold |
Alma mater | Budapest University of Technology and Economics |
Known for | Internet meme |
Spouse(s) | Gabriella Andrásné Arató |
Children | 1 |
Awards | János Urbanek Prize Déri Miksa Award |
Website | hidethepainharold |
András István Arató[1] (born 11 July 1945) is a retired Hungarian electrical engineer[2] and model. Best known for becoming an Internet meme, Arató has been in and out of the stock photo and advertisement industry as a model since disclosing his identity. Arató's modelling for stock photography garnered attention as soon as 2011, coming to be known in meme culture as "Hide the Pain Harold" due to his overall facial expression and seemingly fake smile.[3][4][5]
He took up travelling to foreign countries such as Turkey and Russia for recreational purposes and kept a blog about his life and travels. The photos associated with such travels are said to be the cause of Arató's fame. While vacationing in Turkey, Arató decided to upload personal vacation photos onto social media site iWiW, which were noticed by a photographer.[4][6]
Personal life
Born in 1945 and hailing from Kőszeg, András Arató was raised in the era of the Iron Curtain.[2] He has stated that a major part of his childhood was a gargantuan chestnut tree growing in his hometown.[7] He would reminisce about it as if it were a tree of wisdom in his town as many do of landmarks in their own lives. Not much else is currently known about Arató's teenage and pre-university years. In 1969, Arató graduated from the Budapest University of Technology and Economics under the Faculty of Electrical Engineering.[8] After retirement, he worked as a DJ for a local radio station for five years.[9] In 2019, he became the advertising face for Coca-Cola in Hungary.[5] In 2020, Arató starred in the Hungarian edition of Masked Singer (known in Hungary as Álarcos énekes), broadcast on the TV station RTL Klub.[10] Arató lives in Budapest with his wife Gabriella and his son.
Hide the Pain Harold
While Arató was on holiday, he was taking photos of his trip, uploading them to social media.[11] Not only his friends saw his photos, but also a professional photographer, who contacted him saying that he was seeking a model and offered him an invitation to a shoot. Arató accepted the offer and the photographer took some photos, which both he and Arató liked. He was invited for more shoots and over a hundred stock photos were made. He agreed for the photos to be used for this purpose, with the exception of photos of topics about politics, religion, and sex, as he felt those topics are sensitive to many people.
Arató later looked himself up on Google Images and saw photos of himself as a doctor, coming from a hospital's homepage. A few months after, he looked himself up again and discovered more photos, including one of his face pasted on all four faces of Mount Rushmore. These were the early stages of an Internet meme. The photographer who took the stock photos had asked him to smile, and many internet users perceived his smile as fake, masking sorrow, ultimately giving him the name "Hide the Pain Harold". Arató stated that during the photoshoot he became tired of smiling too much.[1][4][12][13][14]
At first, Arató was unhappy about people adding funny text to his photos, stating he was not really a "funny guy". Arató realised he did similar things while he was in school, like drawing on pictures in his course books of the Hungarian poet John Arany, making him look like a pirate. He stated that closing down a webpage would not really work, as the meme content could soon respawn, so after six years, he accepted his meme status. He hoped that everyone would forget about using his photos, but that did not happen. Firstly, Internet users from the United States started posting photos of Arató, then the practice spread to Europe, and later on, the rest of the world.
An Internet user found out Arató's true identity and emailed him, stating that there were many users who believed that he was not a real living person. At first, Arató ignored the user's request, but after getting more emails with the same request, he agreed to upload a picture of himself on his Russian fanpage, holding a sign saying "Я ЖИВ" ("YA ZHIV", Russian for "I AM ALIVE"). After a few hours, the photo had been seen by over ten thousand users as well as the international media.
Works
- On 13 May 1999, he published his report on Lighting Technology.[15]
- Lighting lexicon / [ed. András Arató et al.] ; [intermediate a] Lighting Company. Budapest, 2001. 136 p.
- For operators of interior lighting : : addition to the publication "Lighting Technology" / [... it's all set up. John the Great] ; [... interede. András Arató et al.] ; [ed. EGI Energy Management Limited Company]. Budapest : EGI, 2001. 46 p. or 46 p.
- He co-authored the Street Lighting Manual. Spend. MEE Lighting Society, Foundation for Hungarian Lighting Technology, 2009. 310 p. or partly colored.
Awards
- In 2002, Arató won the János Urbanek Prize.[16] The Hungarian Electrotechnical Association (MEE, short for the Hungarian Magyar Elektrotechnikai Egyesület) awards the János Urbanek Prize yearly, which is given to a member who, within the framework of the Association life, has an outstanding theoretical or practical activity in the field of lighting technology.[17]
- In 2010, he won the Déri Miksa Award from the MEE.[18]
See also
- Heartbreaking: The Worst Person You Know Just Made A Great Point
- List of Internet phenomena
- List of Hungarians
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 "Hungarian TV Interview with Harold". 1 March 2016. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QHVJD7k1km8.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 "Kőszegen született, mémes világsztár lett belőle – Hide the Pain Harold" (in hu). 18 October 2018. https://www.vaol.hu/kozelet/koszegen-szuletett-memes-vilagsztar-lett-belole-hide-the-pain-harold-2584154/.
- ↑ "What it's like to become a stock photo meme" (in en). 1 July 2017. https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/interviews/hide-the-pain-harold-meme-gif-interview-model-real-name-arato-andras-thumbs-up-stock-photo-a7835076.html.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 Arató, András (September 2018). "Transcript of "Waking up as a meme hero | Andras Arato | TEDxKyiv"" (in en). https://www.ted.com/talks/andras_arato_how_the_internet_made_me_into_a_meme/transcript.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 onBRANDS (6 September 2019). "A COCA-COLA HAZAI REKLÁMARCA LETT HIDE THE PAIN HAROLD" (in hu). https://onbrands.hu/marka-es-trend/2019/09/reklam/a-coca-cola-hazai-reklamarca-lett-hide-the-pain-harold.
- ↑ László, Szily (1 March 2016). "Hogyan lett egy budapesti nyugdíjasból Hide The Pain Harold, a netes világsztár" (in hu). https://444.hu/2016/03/10/hogyan-lett-egy-budapesti-nyugdijasbol-hide-the-pain-harold-a-netes-vilagsztar.
- ↑ Arandria (3 October 2012). "Mindennapi csalamádé: A kőszegi óriás gesztenyefa". https://arandria.blogspot.com/2012/10/a-koszegi-orias-gesztenyefa.html.
- ↑ Dániel, Bóna Samu, Szilli Tamás, Lengyel-Szabó Péter, Simor (1 September 2019). "András, aki 72 évesen lett világsztár: Haroldként" (in hu). https://index.hu/video/2019/09/01/arato_andras_hide_the_pain_harold_portre/.
- ↑ "András Arato" (in en-US). https://tedxkyiv.com/en/speakers/andras-arato/.
- ↑ Zrt, HVG Kiadó (8 March 2020). "Arató András, azaz Hide The Pain Harold volt az RTL Klub Szörnyecskéje" (in hu). https://hvg.hu/kultura/20200308_Arato_Andras_azaz_Hide_The_Pain_Harold_volt_az_RTL_Klub_Szornyecskeje.
- ↑ Perrie, Stewart (11 March 2018). "Man Behind Hide Your Pain Harold Reveals He Was Devastated By The Memes". https://www.ladbible.com/community/interesting-man-behind-hide-your-pain-harold-reveals-he-was-devastated-by-memes-20180311.
- ↑ Media, Deen (2 May 2018). "Behind the meme: Hide the pain Harold". https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZKZL77D5hEA.
- ↑ ""Waking up as a meme-hero" TEDx Kyiv, TEDx Talk from Andras Arato". https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FScfGU7rQaM.
- ↑ "Hide the pain Harold, the Hungarian internet sensation" (in en-US). 2 January 2018. https://dailynewshungary.com/hide-pain-harold-hungarian-internet-sensation/.
- ↑ "Világítástechnika". http://mek.niif.hu/00500/00572/html/.
- ↑ "Arató András | PIM Névtér" (in hu-HU). https://resolver.pim.hu/auth/PIM657492.
- ↑ "A MEE díjai". http://www.mee.hu/cikk/dijak.
- ↑ "Magyar Elektrotechnikai Egyesület". http://www.mee.hu/files/files/dijazottak_oroklista_2016.pdf.
External links
- András Arató on Facebook
- Hide the Pain Harold on Facebook
- András Arató's Travel Blog
- Hide the Pain Harold Official Webpage
- VTT winners: Pollich Prize (for Lighting Society)