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Man Sends Viral 'Love Letter' to Long-Distance Girlfriend

ByKI MAE HEUSSNER
December 01, 2010, 11:50 PM

Dec. 2, 2010— -- Handwritten love letters sent by post are so yesterday. If you want to show affection in the digital age, you upload an original love song to YouTube and let it arrive virally.

Or at least that's what you do if you're a Los Angeles ad man with super-musical roommates.

To show his long-distance girlfriend Alexis how much he loves her, Walter May, 31, a commercial director and editor, spent about two nights and a Sunday afternoon writing and producing a bare bones (though still impressive) music video with his roommates, members of the band The Daylights.

On Monday, they uploaded the video, called "I Hope This Gets to You," to YouTube. But it wasn't until late Wednesday, after the video already had about 140,000 views, that Alexis finally saw the video.

That's because her video-savvy Valentine didn't tell her that he made a pixilated present for her. He said he wanted the video to reach her "organically."

He said he blocked her on Twitter and messaged all of their mutual friends asking them to hold back on sharing the video via social media.

"I want it to come from a stranger, rather than somebody we both know," he said.

(News stories, incidentally, aren't out of bounds either, he said.)

Ultimately, it seems, May's experiment worked -- well, at least that's what the adman tells us.

At about 2 a.m. ET Thursday, he tweeted out to his friends and new fans, "WE DID IT!!! SHE LOVES IT!!! Thank all of you for the support. Amazing what we can do together! YOU made the world a little smaller tonight."

"The whole idea was that with all of this technology now, it doesn't take that much to feel close to someone anymore," May told ABCNews.com in an interview Wednesday (before the big reveal). "Long distance relationships now are not what they used to be."

May said he wrote the words to the song with his roommates, but that several of the lines are specific to moments in his relationship with Alexis (their first kiss, for example). At the very end of the video, the hands which mouth the words to the song, and punctuate the piece with clapping, form the letters "L-E-X" in an extra-personal nod to his girlfriend, he said.

The video, which has been retweeted by May's friends, strangers and even singer Katy Perry, is winning over romantics. But the so-called "digital love letter" is having a tougher time with the cynics.

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