Flight Videos
Flight or Invisibility with Sam Tripoli
from Metacafe Videos on November 07, 2009
Duration: 59
Duration: 59
Sam Tripoli's thoughts on flight or invisibility: Flight. Say bye-bye to airline secuirty lines Ranked 3.60 / 5 | 0 views | 0 comments Click here to watch the video (00:59) Submitted By: Babelgum Tags: Babelgum Comedy Super Interview Comedy Power Comedians Invisibility Flight Mass Debaters Leggett Sam Tripoli Categories: Comedy
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Flight or Invisibility with Rebecca Corry
from Metacafe Videos on November 07, 2009
Duration: 62
Duration: 62
Rebecca Corry's thoughts on flight or invisibility: Invisibility! You can catch people talking shit Ranked 3.60 / 5 | 0 views | 0 comments Click here to watch the video (01:02) Submitted By: Babelgum Tags: Babelgum Comedy Super Interview Comedy Power Comedians Invisibility Flight Mass Debaters Leggett Rebecca Corry Categories: Comedy
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Flight or Invisibility with David Koechner
from Metacafe Videos on November 07, 2009
Duration: 64
Duration: 64
David Koechner's thoughts on flight or invisibility: Invisibility is not for sensitive people Ranked 3.60 / 5 | 0 views | 0 comments Click here to watch the video (01:04) Submitted By: Babelgum Tags: Babelgum Comedy Super Interview Comedy Power Comedians Invisibility Flight David Koechner Mass Debaters Leggett Categories: Comedy
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Tim Barrus: Response to Ridley Scott
from popular posts - blip.tv (beta) on November 06, 2009
Duration: 36
Duration: 36
http://vook.tumblr.com Tim Barrus: Response to Ridley Scott What I hear is a question being posed: Can a film clip or an entire scene contain repeated iconic images throughout the entirety of the clip, or scene, that would have the same narrative effect (visually) that poetic refrain does at an auditory level. Gospel music does the same thing. Yes, you identify Genocide as the place where I am employing that trick the most. But I do NOT see it as a trick. It's only a trick when the writer wants to provoke but does not really know how or why -- even if he might know with what. Example: In this clip we have added in a visceral set of images and repeated them throughout the clip as if to suggest that the visual action in the clip has multiple consequences. To that end, we've added a the suggestion of a foreign language (Spanish voices whispering) in the background, and only have sound effects juxtaposed around that so as not to subtract any of the power of the visual narration where repetition is employed almost as a hypnotic. You are interested in knowing if I think the technique (it is more than just a trick) could work as well in the paradigm of the VOOK as it does in fiction, poetry, and film. My response is that it's about what's in the writer's head -- if he uses repetition to soothe, make a point, or say look here, look over here. It's about analogy. It's about focus. With images, it's also about time because if you are repeating an image, the audience is always being pulled back to that one central point in time as the story unfolds. I would say that the technique is applicable to any way you want to dramatize the story. The Greek chorus was always repeating itself.
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Tim Barrus: Nino in the Hall
from popular posts - blip.tv (beta) on November 06, 2009
Duration: 2
Duration: 2
http://vook.tumblr.com
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Top 10 Funny Music Videos of the 2000s: The Song Parodies
from Spinner on November 06, 2009
Duration: 0
Duration: 0
Filed under: Video, The Hit List Ever since 'Weird Al' Yankovic instructed the public to 'Eat It,' music videos have been ripe for mockery. And rightly so: The line between hip and hilarious is a fine one, indeed. For comedians, the rabid pursuit of cool on constant display in music videos is easy pickings. And maybe it's because comics secretly want to be pop stars, but some of the funniest material of the the past decade has been song spoofs. Here are the top 10 funny music video parodies of the 2000s. 10. 'Like a Boss,' the Lonely Island In this 'Saturday Night Live' digital short, Andy Samberg is asked in a job performance review by Seth Rogen what he does in the office all day. Samberg recounts a day in the life of "The Bawss," from the mundane to the profane. What begins as a sly send-up of rappers' tendency to proclaim their position at the top of the food chain warps into sordid romantic humiliations and unnatural relations with a giant drug-induced fish. (NSFW)
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