Impossible Is Nothing is a 2006 video résumé by Aleksey Vayner (born Aleksey Garber, â January 23, 2013), a student at Yale University. It became an Internet meme after circulating widely online.
In October 2006, Yale University student Aleksey Vayner applied for a job with UBS, an investment bank. A UBS employee shared the application materials with colleagues, reportedly due to its exaggerated self-presentation. The video was posted on various blogs, then YouTube, where it became an immense viral Internet phenomenon.
The video opens with Vayner giving a lengthy response to a question from an offscreen voice. Using a considerable amount of business jargon, Vayner praises himself and shares his various insights on success, talent, and overcoming adversity. Interspliced with the interview are clips of various feats purportedly performed by Vayner, including bench pressing, skiing, playing tennis, ballroom dancing, and karate-chopping a stack of bricks. The video ends with a dedication to Radomir KovaÃÂeviÃÂ and a credits sequence.
Vayner's job application includes:
Vayner sent a cease-and-desist letter to IvyGate, which instead published the message and challenged him to pursue legal action. One blog, IvyGate, became famous due to its disputes with Vayner. When Vayner emailed a cease-and-desist letter demanding that IvyGate remove "Impossible is Nothing" links from its website, the blog instead published the threat and taunted Vayner to sue them. In further investigating the incident, IvyGate learned and published that:
Other investigating publications learned that Vayner had variously claimed the following:
Rumpus Magazine, a Yale University tabloid, had already exposed Vayner as a possible fake before attending Yale.
The Internet meme surrounding "Impossible Is Nothing" spread in typical fashion: by word of mouth on blogs and by Internet, then covered both as a meme and a human interest story by major newspapers, which further accelerated growth. After the first phase of popularity, blog posters and others began adding their own fanciful contributions to Vayner's legend. These include several classic meme features:
Vayner did not receive a job offer from UBS or any other bank, so he took a leave of absence from Yale.
In January 2008, Vayner set up a website promoting his book, Millionaires' Blueprint to Success.
Cracked.com, an Internet humor site, pointed out that his book is extremely similar in layout and content to a book titled Secrets of the Millionaire Mind by T. Harv Eker in their article "Where Are They Now: Six "Stars" From Embarrassing Viral Videos," about the aftermath of several viral videos.
Vayner appeared in Winnebago Man, a 2009 documentary about Jack Rebney, whose profanity-laced outtakes from a Winnebago industrial film also became an Internet meme.
On 23 January 2013, the Ivy League blog IvyGate reported, and Gawker.com later confirmed, that Vayner had died of unknown causes. A relative later said he had been told that the 29-year-old Vayner apparently had a heart attack after taking medicine of some kind.