A photo of a brown egg (@world_record_egg) became the most-liked Instagram post in history on January 13, 2019, surpassing Kylie Jenner with over 55 million likes.
On January 13, 2019, an Instagram account with the handle @world_record_egg posted a single photograph of a plain brown egg against a white background with a caption stating its intent to become the most-liked post in the platform's history, surpassing Kylie Jenner's then-record of approximately 18 million likes for a birth announcement photo. The account had zero followers when it posted. Within 10 days, the egg had surpassed Jenner's record. By the time attention peaked, the post had accumulated over 55 million likes, a figure no other post had reached. The account was created for the sole purpose of this attempt.
## The Account, the Person Behind It, and the Reveal
The @world_record_egg account was created by British advertising creative Chris Godfrey, working with agency professionals Alissa Khan-Whelan and Ben Cullen. Godfrey stated in subsequent interviews that the project cost approximately $300 to execute, covering the egg photograph and minimal promotion. No paid advertising was used. The spread was entirely organic, driven by the clear and shareable premise of the post itself.
The account later revealed its purpose in a Super Bowl advertisement in February 2019, using the egg character to deliver a message about mental health awareness in partnership with Hulu and the Crisis Text Line. The advertisement showed the egg cracking under pressure and directed viewers to a mental health resource. The pivot from internet stunt to public health messaging surprised many observers and added a layer of narrative the initial post had not signaled.
Godfrey's identity remained unknown for several weeks after the post went viral, a period during which speculation about the account ranged from celebrity pranks to corporate marketing campaigns. The simplicity of the concept and the complete absence of brand signals made it difficult to categorize.
## What the Egg Record Reveals About Platform Dynamics
The world record egg post is frequently cited in social media research as a case study in virality mechanics. The post succeeded because its premise was immediately legible, the stakes were clear (beat Kylie Jenner's number), and participation required nothing from the viewer except tapping a like button. The threshold framing transformed passive viewership into active participation in a measurable goal.
Instagram's like count was visible in real time, which created a feedback loop: as the egg approached Jenner's record, news coverage drove more viewers to like it, which generated more news coverage. This dynamic, sometimes called a "milestone cascade," is difficult to engineer deliberately and is more commonly observed in charity fundraising drives and crowdfunding campaigns.
The record has since been surpassed in terms of likes on other platforms, but within Instagram, the egg post remains the most-liked single image in the platform's history. Instagram itself later removed public like counts from posts in many countries as part of a mental health initiative, which has made replication of this specific type of record attempt structurally harder.