shawshankraj
12.04.10, 15:10
"Charlie Bit My Finger"
was never meant to be anything more than a family flick. But the Internet's hive mind saw something it liked and catapulted the clip, which depicts a laughing British baby gnawing on the finger of his crying brother
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_OBlgSz8sSM&feature=player_embedded
"Evolution of Dance" (My Fav.)
From the robot to the chicken dance to the twist (but curiously stopping short of the Macarena), inspirational comedian Jud Laipply does it all in this 6-min. dance sequence. Moving seamlessly between eras, Laipply has been viewed more than 138 million times for a reason
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dMH0bHeiRNg&feature=player_embedded
"David After Dentist"
More than 57 million people have seen 7-year-old David DeVore's backseat trip from the dentist's office after oral surgery. The medication seems to have left David in a higher state of consciousness: he spouts lines like "You have four eyes" and "Is this gonna be forever?" Some critics called the video exploitative — arguing it took advantage of a child for laughs — but in interviews, David said he wasn't bothered by the attention and that his classmates thought the clip was funny. Once the world had seen David, his father set up a website selling T-shirts featuring David's classic question, "Is this real life?" And it's paying off: the DeVores have made nearly enough to cover David's (eventual) college education.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=txqiwrbYGrs&feature=player_embedded
"Here It Goes Again"
wasn't OK Go's first taste of Internet fame — the band got mainstream attention for its video for "A Million Ways," a low-budget backyard dance routine. But "Here It Goes Again" — perhaps better known as "that treadmill video" — grew big enough to even get acknowledgement from the Grammys. The band took home the trophy for Best Short-Form Music Video in 2007 for the clip
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oPmhTCaDkGA&feature=player_embedded
"Rickroll"(Many People surely have seen this video..)
The trick goes like this: you are sent an e-mail or instant message with a link to something seemingly cool. But when you click, all you get is singer Rick Astley's 1987 video for "Never Gonna Give You Up." Huh? The bait and switch originated on the online forum 4Chan, when a user promised a video-game trailer and instead led readers to Astley's '80s-tastic track. The trick, dubbed Rickrolling, spread like wildfire in 2008; Astley, clearly in on the joke, even performed his signature song during the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade that year.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oHg5SJYRHA0&feature=player_embedded
"Leave Britney Alone"
Chris Crocker had been consistently video blogging from his grandparents' house as a way of coping with being an openly gay teen in the American South. But when he posted a tearful rant defending his idol Britney Spears after her disastrous MTV Video Music Awards performance in 2007, he became a household name. "Anyone who has a problem with her, you deal with me," he cried. And some people did — though Crocker gained temporary fame, he also dealt with homophobic YouTube comments and even death threats.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kHmvkRoEowc&feature=player_embedded
U can find rest Video here:
Charlie Bit My Finger - YouTube's 50 Best Videos - TIME (http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1974961_1974925,00.html)
was never meant to be anything more than a family flick. But the Internet's hive mind saw something it liked and catapulted the clip, which depicts a laughing British baby gnawing on the finger of his crying brother
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_OBlgSz8sSM&feature=player_embedded
"Evolution of Dance" (My Fav.)
From the robot to the chicken dance to the twist (but curiously stopping short of the Macarena), inspirational comedian Jud Laipply does it all in this 6-min. dance sequence. Moving seamlessly between eras, Laipply has been viewed more than 138 million times for a reason
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dMH0bHeiRNg&feature=player_embedded
"David After Dentist"
More than 57 million people have seen 7-year-old David DeVore's backseat trip from the dentist's office after oral surgery. The medication seems to have left David in a higher state of consciousness: he spouts lines like "You have four eyes" and "Is this gonna be forever?" Some critics called the video exploitative — arguing it took advantage of a child for laughs — but in interviews, David said he wasn't bothered by the attention and that his classmates thought the clip was funny. Once the world had seen David, his father set up a website selling T-shirts featuring David's classic question, "Is this real life?" And it's paying off: the DeVores have made nearly enough to cover David's (eventual) college education.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=txqiwrbYGrs&feature=player_embedded
"Here It Goes Again"
wasn't OK Go's first taste of Internet fame — the band got mainstream attention for its video for "A Million Ways," a low-budget backyard dance routine. But "Here It Goes Again" — perhaps better known as "that treadmill video" — grew big enough to even get acknowledgement from the Grammys. The band took home the trophy for Best Short-Form Music Video in 2007 for the clip
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oPmhTCaDkGA&feature=player_embedded
"Rickroll"(Many People surely have seen this video..)
The trick goes like this: you are sent an e-mail or instant message with a link to something seemingly cool. But when you click, all you get is singer Rick Astley's 1987 video for "Never Gonna Give You Up." Huh? The bait and switch originated on the online forum 4Chan, when a user promised a video-game trailer and instead led readers to Astley's '80s-tastic track. The trick, dubbed Rickrolling, spread like wildfire in 2008; Astley, clearly in on the joke, even performed his signature song during the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade that year.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oHg5SJYRHA0&feature=player_embedded
"Leave Britney Alone"
Chris Crocker had been consistently video blogging from his grandparents' house as a way of coping with being an openly gay teen in the American South. But when he posted a tearful rant defending his idol Britney Spears after her disastrous MTV Video Music Awards performance in 2007, he became a household name. "Anyone who has a problem with her, you deal with me," he cried. And some people did — though Crocker gained temporary fame, he also dealt with homophobic YouTube comments and even death threats.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kHmvkRoEowc&feature=player_embedded
U can find rest Video here:
Charlie Bit My Finger - YouTube's 50 Best Videos - TIME (http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1974961_1974925,00.html)