You've seen it on a mug, a bumper sticker, a T-shirt, your emoji keyboard. But do you actually know where it came from?
In this episode, we trace the full journey of the Smiley Face — from a ten-minute sketch by a Worcester commercial artist named Harvey Ball in 1963, to one of the most recognisable images in human history. Harvey charged $45, never trademarked it, and gave the world something it didn't know it needed.
We cover the full arc:
⭐ 1963 — How a morale problem at an insurance company accidentally produced a global icon
🌍 1970s — The Have a Nice Day explosion, Franklin Loufrani's SmileyWorld, and how one image went truly global
🎵 1990s — Acid House ravers, grunge kids, and the dead-eyed subversion that made the Smiley complicated
💛 Harvey Ball's legacy — World Smile Day, the World Smile Foundation, and what it means to create something generous
This is a story about design, pop culture, and one genuinely good man who just wanted to make people feel a little better.
Part of the MEMORY LN MUSEUM Archival Series — Objects of Feeling.