Just saw BouncE's show "Insane in the Brain" -- this short film was shown as part of the show. There was a lot of stage action that filled the slow middle section of this movie. All kicks off around 3:50 -- if you don't watch at least that long, you're not going to get this.
Social proof in action. Must see Benjamin Ellis's post on this (he's done all the hard work I was planning to do for a preso) http://bit.ly/3cYm8D
Proving once again that even the YouTube video meme pool is prone to the lazy nostalgia/remember the 2000s format... but still makes satisfying viewing. Ah well.
Featuring Scratch Perverts and Foreign Beggars. More information Neurosonics Audiomediacal Laboratories site. (via Jon Lee)
This couldn't speak more to my generation. 1500 hours of Lego-based stop animation celebrating 8-bit culture by Swedish band Rymdreglage (via Viral Video Chart)
I didn't know about Buffalax (the YouTube user) or Buffalaxing (the verb) but here's the first example of the art that I've seen. A definition? "A song in a non-English language that has been given subtitles based on what the foreign words sound like ... is said to have been Buffalaxed. This word comes from a genius on YouTube whose username is Buffalax." I'm now off to watch some of Buffalax's oeuvre.
The Puppini Sisters mostly sing three-part harmony versions of eighties and modern songs. But this is one of their own -- a blues number.
This Kenny Frankland video won the Music Video category in Aniboom's 2008 awards.
Manchester-based Kenny Frankland does CG animation under the name "Tin Spider Studios" (the music is Mistabishi on Hospital Records)
Because Kerry hadn't seen it. This is a very cleverly inter-cut video that puts Dan & Scroobius in front of the X Factor judges (and somehow avoids copyright infringment!)