Ketchup Masterpiece Heinz TopThis Commercial
By ElectricAsylumArt
A painting of the Mona Lisa done in ketchup and french fries
By ElectricAsylumArt
A painting of the Mona Lisa done in ketchup and french fries
A video detailing the evolution of viral videos as they go from originals to jedi mash-ups.
Watch out Leroy Jenkins, here comes the LAWGIVER and his 4-Wheels of Fury!
From Tetricide. REally good stop action animation - don’t quite know how these guys do it.
These are from Brookers. Pretty interesting. She has lots so if anyone wants to watch more it might be good to include at least one of her videos.
And Bush is the only one who can defeat them!
Saddest video I have ever seen on YouTube :-(! Makes me cry like a little girl.
Really funny video that teaches you something important but also sells you stuff!
Cell phone cinema sort of - counter surveillance of a cop arresting a 13 year old for skateborading.
For some reason this just cracked me up.
The french have suddenly started growing wings
Don’t Tase me bro
September 7th, 2007 at 10:37 am We have long had concerns about foundations funding media conglomerates to provide public service content. So, the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation’s recent award of $700,000 to MTV was troubling for us. The grant, part of Knight’s News Challenge awards, was so MTV can create “a Knight Mobile Youth Journalist (Knight “MyJosâ€) in each of the 50 states and the District of Columbia to report weekly – on cell phones, and other media – on key issues including the environment, 2008 presidential election and sexual health.†Viacom’s 2006 revenues were $11.5 billion. Don’t you think there’s enough left over to pay for the mobile journalism program! The idea that MTV should be subsidized for contributing to public service is wrong-headed. Besides, MTV is engaged in such mobile activities to help build up its brand so it can earn more online advertising dollars.Journalism foundations such as Knight–and J-Schools–should be holding the media industry’s editorial feet to the fire, shaming them to spend more money on serious journalism. Knight should not be funding media conglomerates whose owner resides comfortably in Beverly Hills. Meanwhile, it what raises some interesting questions about “insider funding,†we note that Viacom’s MTV VP Ian Rowe serves on the Knight Foundation advisory committe for journalism. Rowe is quoted in the Knight Foundation press release announcing its News Challenge grants as a grantee spokesperson.
Now Knight is again teaming with Viacom’s MTV to give away $500,000 to support “young people who have ideas for pushing journalism into the digital age.†It’s called the “Young Creators Award.†We hope all the money has come from Viacom. By the way, Knight and media beat reporters should be asking what MTV is doing with the data it can collect from mobile users. Will it engage in targeting for its other products? In what ways are the Knight supported work designed to build up the commercial role of MTV? How much is such pro-social ad campaigns worth to Viacom’s bottom-line?