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0h 10m video Transcribed May 26, 2026 Watch on YouTube ↗
Intermediate 4 min read For: General audience interested in history, photography, and pop culture.

AI Summary

This video explores the history of selfies, from ancient sculptures to modern-day smartphone photos. It argues that self-depiction has existed for millennia, but the term 'selfie' and its cultural significance emerged only recently.

[00:01]
White House selfie ban lifted

On July 1, 2015, visitors were allowed to take selfies at the White House. The host claims to have taken an illegal selfie in 2014.

[00:41]
Oldest known self-portrait

A sculpture by Pharaoh Akhenaten's chief sculptor Beck, over 3,000 years old, is the oldest known self-portrait.

[01:19]
First-wave selfies

Unintentional or automatic self-resemblances, like reflections in water or animal self-awareness.

[02:18]
Second-wave selfies

Intentional self-depictions, from hand stencils to Renaissance paintings.

[02:48]
Third-wave selfies: photography

Robert Cornelius took a self-portrait in 1839, often called the first photograph selfie, but Henry Fitz Jr. also claimed that title.

[04:01]
Earlier lost selfies

Hippolyte Bayard claimed a self-portrait from 1837, but it's lost. Other earlier examples may exist.

[05:18]
Mirror selfies

The earliest known mirror selfie is from around 1846 by M.V. Lobethal. A 1900 mirror selfie of an unknown woman is noted.

[06:15]
Outstretched arm selfie

Joseph Byron took the oldest known arm-extended selfie in 1909.

[07:11]
Anastasia Romanova's selfies

The youngest daughter of Tsar Nicholas II took personal selfies in the 1910s, pioneering photography as social behavior.

[09:02]
Early selfie sticks

Examples from 1925, 1934, and 1940s show people using poles to take group selfies.

The selfie has a long history, but its modern form and cultural impact are recent. The video traces the evolution from ancient self-portraits to the social media-driven selfie phenomenon.

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Study Flashcards (9)

When was the White House selfie ban lifted?

easy Click to reveal answer

July 1, 2015.

00:01

Who is credited with the oldest known self-portrait?

medium Click to reveal answer

Beck, a sculptor for Pharaoh Akhenaten, over 3,000 years ago.

00:54

What is a first-wave selfie?

medium Click to reveal answer

Unintentional or accidental self-resemblance, like footprints or animal self-awareness.

02:04

What technology ushered in the third-wave selfie?

easy Click to reveal answer

Photography.

02:48

Who took the first photographic selfie in 1839?

medium Click to reveal answer

Robert Cornelius (or Henry Fitz Jr.; the exact first is disputed).

03:03

What is contrastive focus reduplication?

hard Click to reveal answer

Repeating a word to focus on prototypical examples vs. edge cases (e.g., 'date date').

04:27

Who took the earliest known mirror selfie?

medium Click to reveal answer

M.V. Lobethal, around 1846.

05:18

Who took the oldest known outstretched arm selfie?

medium Click to reveal answer

Joseph Byron in 1909.

06:15

Why is Anastasia Romanova significant in selfie history?

medium Click to reveal answer

She pioneered photography as social behavior, sharing personal selfies with friends.

07:53

🔥 Best Moments

😂

Illegal White House toilet selfie

The host admits to taking an illegal selfie on a toilet in the White House, adding humor and shock value.

00:28
💡

Three deaths quote

A poignant reflection on mortality and photography's power to preserve memory.

05:49
🤯

Anastasia's execution

The tragic end of a teenage selfie pioneer, contrasting her modern behavior with her historical fate.

08:08

Full Transcript

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[00:01] Hey, Vizos! Michael here. On July 1st of 2015, a long-standing ban was lifted. Visitors were finally allowed to take selfies at the White House.

[00:16] This is the first legal selfie ever taken on a White House tour. But, a year before the ban was lifted, in February of 2014, I met with the President.

[00:28] and secretly took an illegal selfie while on the toilet in the left wing. Thanks, Obama. Why am I admitting to this crime now? Well, it's time for the truth.

[00:41] Who took the first selfie? Really? Very few people would call this a selfie, but it is the oldest known self-portrait,

[00:54] a depiction someone made of themselves that includes head and shoulders. It was sculpted more than 3,000 years ago by Pharaoh Akhenaten's first chief royal sculptor,

[01:06] a guy named Beck. Next to himself, Beck sculpted his wife, Taharit, making this also a contender for oldest known us-y. But the roots of the selfie go back further than this.

[01:19] We have been making things that resemble ourselves ourselves in whole or in part, intentionally or not, for as long as there's been cause and effect. Just looking into a pool of water creates a kind of selfie, a primitive, ephemeral one that you

[01:37] can't preserve or send to anyone, but it is undeniably an image of the self made by the self. Even the earliest life forms on earth were capable to some degree of self-discrimination. They could

[01:50] differentiate themselves from the environment around them. They have inside them, in some chemical form, a crude, pre-conscious sense of themselves. I call things like that a first-wave selfie.

[02:04] First-wave selfies are unintentional, automatic, or accidental resemblances something makes of itself in whole or in part, like prehistoric human footprints, or the mental images animals have of their own bodies.

[02:18] The first big leap in selfie history the second wave began with the first intentional depictions of oneself Second wave selfies include everything from Shogun Kade 32 hand stencil print to the paintings of Jan von Eich and Judith Leister

[02:36] But in the 19th century, self-depiction changed in another major way. A technology emerged that allowed likenesses of the self to be made faster and with less skill

[02:48] that seemed more accurate, less mediated, and more indexical than ever before. Photography ushered in the third wave selfie. In the fall of 1839, outside his family's lamp and chandelier store in Philadelphia,

[03:03] 30-year-old Robert Cornelius stood completely still for about 15 minutes in front of a camera he'd built using a modified opera glass and a sheet of silver-plated copper.

[03:16] The result was a significant image. It can be found on his gravestone in Philadelphia's Laurel Hill Cemetery. The Smithsonian calls it the first selfie.

[03:28] But they also don't. In that same fall of 1839, a man named Henry Fitz Jr. took a photograph of himself in Baltimore. Smithsonian Magazine and pretty much everyone else has called Cornelius' selfie the first.

[03:45] But in their archives, the Smithsonian called Fitzjr. the first. The reason for this confusion is that, honestly, we don't know which of these came first. All we can be sure of is that neither of them is the first.

[04:01] Ippoly Bayard, a Frenchman, wrote of taking a photo of himself in 1837, two years before these. But it's been lost. And other, even earlier examples may have been lost as well.

[04:13] Because these are photographs people took of themselves, it's largely uncontroversial to call them selfies. But, you know, they're not like selfie selfies. If you've seen my video, Is Cereal Soup?, you know what I just did there.

[04:27] Contrastive focus reduplication. That's when you repeat a word in order to focus on prototypical examples in contrast to edge cases.

[04:39] For example, we went on a date last night. But, you know, it wasn't a date date. In that statement, I'm contrasting what I did last night, which might have been a date, to a true date date, which is obviously a date.

[04:54] Okay anyway the point is no one called these selfies when they were taken They were photographic self The word selfie wouldn even exist for another 160 years after they were taken

[05:06] So at some point between this and this, our relationship to self-depiction changed, and our vocabulary had to exchange to discuss it.

[05:18] What rough beast emerged to make the coinage of selfie necessary? Let's keep going. Around 1846, Czech photographer M.V. Lobethal took the earliest known selfie with a mirror.

[05:34] This, of course, would become a classic selfie technique. Mirrors provided an easy, early way to capture the self with a camera. But in my opinion, this mirror selfie from around 1900 is the most arresting.

[05:49] I think you've died at least three times. once when your body stops living, again, usually sometime later when your name is spoken for the last time.

[06:01] But now, thanks to photography, more and more of us are able to save ourselves from the third, the last time an image of you is seen. The identity of this woman is unknown.

[06:15] That makes it the oldest known selfie taken by a person whose name we have forgotten. This is the oldest known example of the classic outstretched arm selfie technique. It was taken by Joseph Byron in 1909.

[06:30] Images like these were a significant step toward the eventual fourth wave selfie. The presence of a camera or arms or poles in the shot, evidence of how it was made, are hallmarks of the modern-day selfie stereotype.

[06:46] For example, a 2013 ad campaign for the Cape Times reimagined famous historical photographs as selfies, and in every single one, an arm connecting the subject to the camera was used.

[06:59] Five years after Byron's armed selfie, Anastasia Nikolajna Romanova, the youngest daughter of Tsar Nicholas II, and great-granddaughter to Britain's Queen Victoria and Prince Albert,

[07:11] took this photo of her selfie. She was 13 years old at the time, So many have claimed it to be the first selfie ever taken by a teenager. But that's not true.

[07:23] In 1852 61 years earlier British chemist William Henry Perkin took this photo of himself when he was just 14 However even though Anastasia wasn the first teenager to take a selfie in another way she was

[07:41] Unlike Perkin, whose shot feels like a self-portrait, she took pictures that feel much more like we today would call selfies. The photos she took were personal.

[07:53] She sent them to friends to share her mood and daily life. Here she is posing the fake novelty teeth in 1915 or 16. Four years after taking this famous selfie, her camera was confiscated.

[08:08] And not long after, Bolshevik revolutionaries executed her and her entire family together in a basement. Conclusive evidence of her death in 1918 wasn't uncovered until 2007.

[08:22] Although her work was cut short, she pioneered the use of photography as a social behavior, as a way to communicate, not just commemorate.

[08:34] She has been called the Kardashian of her day. But despite her influence, she was more of a trendsetter for hairstyles than photography. She didn't usher in a worldwide shift in behavior where young people everywhere started taking selfies.

[08:50] Camera manufacturers didn't rush to make self-portraiture easier. And articles weren't written about how great or how scary it was that young people were taking pictures of themselves.

[09:02] Though the modern-day selfie still wasn't born, it continued to gestate and kick within the womb. One such kick was the use of sticks and poles to activate a camera's shutter.

[09:16] In 1925, newlyweds Arnold and Helen Hogg used a long pole to take this picture. In 1934, Helmer Larson used a fallen tree branch to snap this selfie with his wife, Nanny, in Sweden.

[09:31] On Reddit, Kuch37 shared his grandfather using a selfie stick in the late 1940s. Here's one from 1957. And going back to 1920, here's Joseph Byron taking a handheld photograph with others.

[09:47] I mention this image because a second camera captured how it was taken, giving us an early depiction of what is now the recognizable human selfie pose. Now, what I think makes this image so significant is...

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