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Podcasters raise $41,000 to save podcasting

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Podcasters around the world have united, rallying around a pretty important cause: saving podcasting as we know it.

The threat's not that far off, thanks to a company called Personal Audio, which claims it created the very notion of a podcast. It's commonly accused of being a "patent troll," meaning it patents an already existing technology or tries to patent with vague language, then creates a business model on demanding money from those who use that technology.

Back in 1996, Personal Audio filed a claim on an "apparatus for disseminating a series of episodes represented by media files via the Internet as said episodes become available." It's used that to justify already suing a few podcasts, like The Adam Carolla Show, plus big guys like CBS and NBC. It also demands money from independent podcasters like WTF's Marc Maron, who called the scheme"extortion."

Thankfully for podcasts and those who love them, the Electronic Frontier Foundation is stepping up to help by fighting Personal Audio in court. But that involves steep legal fees, so the EFF's asking for donations—something podcasters, who don't have a lot to give in the first place, are helping rustle up.

Soon after the EFF called for donations Thursday evening, both Maron and Jesse Thorn, host of Maximum Fun, each gave a grand.

And though they didn't flash any cash, plenty other luminaries urged followers to join in, ranging from tech podcasters …

… to comedian and frequent podcast guest star Patton Oswalt.

"We're thrilled by the level of support," Daniel Nazer, a staff attorney at the EFF, told the Daily Dot. "The podcasting community is very passionate about what they do," Nazer said, "so it's probably no surprise to see folks speaking up."

Indeed, the fundraiser had reached its $30,000 goal in less than 10 hours. So far, almost $41,000 has been donated, with the additional funds going "to fight stupid patents like this one."

Image via Yagraph/Wikimedia Commons


#NoFilter: Backstage with YouTube's "Amazing Trinity"

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If you drew a Venn diagram of Hannart Hart, Grace Helbig, and Mamrie Hart, you’d have a delightful mix of alcohol, bad puns, YouTube, and roundly in the center, friendship.

On stage and on-screen, the popular vloggers have mastered the art of mixing business with pleasure. The three women often appear on each other’s YouTube series, and with #NoFilter, they’ve taken their online success on the road.

“We all love each other very very much, and make sure to have each other’s backs,” notes Hannah Hart (no relation to Mamrie), backstage at the Gramercy Theatre in Manhattan, after another sold-out stop on the tour. “and I think that the foundation for the show was nothing but pure, unadulterated friendship.”

The show, which Helbig describes as “80 percent scripted, 50 percent unscripted,” jumps from prepared numbers to audience interaction segments, and spontaneous skits the attests to their background in improv comedy. They read YouTube comments, invite participants onstage, and interact with fans both real and virtual. This is one performance where the audience is encouraged to record.

“I just want to film this moment,”  the trio sings in their opening number.


Photos via mydrunkhart/Tumblr

What’s perhaps most notable about the show is the window it provides into real-world of YouTube. Along with Jenna Marbles, Hannah, Helbig, and Mamrie—or the “Amazing Trinity,” as their fans call them—are the leading ladies on the Google-owned video-sharing network, with a combined audience that rivals that of some network television shows.  

Hannah, 26, gained her fame literally overnight, after knocking back a bottle of wine and filming what was intended to be the only episode ever released of My Drunk Kitchen, in which she attempts unsuccessfully to make grilled cheese. The series has become so popular since that IndieGoGo-funded tour, which served as the impetus for #NoFilter, its original $50,000 goal, as fans begged for her to take her act on the road, preferably near them.

Helbig and Mamrie both entered the YouTube vlogging fray more deliberately than Hannah. The former is the 27-year-old star of the popular vlog Daily Grace, where she dishes comedy in lieu of advice and occasionally imitates famous people, while Mamrie (pronounced like “Mame”) started her channel, You Deserve a Drink, just over two years ago and has seen her popularity steadily rise behind an endless stream of bawdy puns and creative cocktails gleaned from her 10 years of bartending on the side.

The trio’s brand of comedy combines classic sketch-comedy techniques—Helbrig and Mamrie studied improv together six years ago in New York—with half-cultivated personas that are vehemently au naturel at any cost. Self-deprecation, social awkwardness, inappropriate drunkenness, and a semi-permanent state of inarticulation are all celebrated here.    

“She is one part French fries, two parts vodka,” Hannah says about Helbig. It’s a descriptor that could apply to any of them equally—at least while onstage.

What makes the show particularly unique is their collective embrace of fan culture. Hannah regularly read comments and welcome new viewers to her show, while both she and Mamrie can be found frequently reading and liking posts on Tumblr. For #NoFilter, they’ve found a way to transition that level of interaction to their routine.

For their grand finale, they slip into animal costume onesies and act out a piece of fanfiction—an original story written by a fan that imagines the three in different sexual relationships, in this case a piece that pairs Hannah and Hart together. There’s no shortage of such material (see Hartbig, Hartsquared, Mace, Hartosexuals, Gracists).

Helbig recently told the Boston Globe that they had been “bewildered” by the phenomenon. She indicated that working the fanfic performance into the show had actually increased the amount of fanfic written about them.

At the Gramercy Theatre show, the reenactment stings, as Mamrie labeled this particular fanfiction a “really strange and never-going-to-happen relationship,” an act that actually made its way back to the author of the piece and led to a personal apology from Mamrie.

“I don’t know if it’s good that we’re supporting it or if it’s bad,” Helbig to the Globe, “but it’s a good time.”


Photo via feyminism/Tumblr

It’s also smart marketing, part of an ongoing grassroots method of building their fanbase.

“There’s a question we get asked a lot,” says Hannah, “about what it’s like to be a ‘woman in comedy.’”

“Ugh,” echoes Helbig.

“We don’t see it as being ‘a woman in comedy,’” says Hannah. “We see it as being ourselves and producing something entertaining.”

Helbig goes a step further. “It’s much harder to be a man in comedy than to be a woman.”

When I ask about the recent dustup over Good Morning America’s portrayal of Jenna Marbles, they’re quick to call it an overreaction.

“I think if it was Matt Lauer and NigaHiga, it wouldn’t have been an issue,” Hannah says.

“It was just a misunderstanding between two people who clearly didn’t get along,” Helbig says. “Like if you misquoted me, which won’t happen, because we’re BFFs.”  

Hannah immediately darts forward to offer me an invisible friendship bracelet.

The gesture serves as a fitting reminder of what really binds these three women.

“It’s always fun to sit offstage and hear one of us make a joke we haven’t heard before,” Hannah says.

“The best part of a show,” Mamrie tells Hannah and Helbig, “is making you guys laugh, as much as, hopefully, everyone else.”

“There’s breathing room,” Helbig replies. “It’s so much fun.”

Illustration by everafteralibis/Tumblr

The top 8 moments in Scripps National Spelling Bee history

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Could you use that in a sentence?

281 spellers from around the country competed over the course of three days at the annual Scripps National Spelling Bee this week, each vying for the chance to become the Spelling Bee Champion. After a series of intensive testing (which included two computer-based tests), 13-year-old Arvind Mahankali emerged as the winner as we tuned in to watch these kids spell words we didn't even know existed.

But it's not always about the winner.

Children are put in the national spotlight during Bee Week—many of them for the first time—and what they’ll do is never predictable.  Whether it’s misspelling a word, mishearing the pronunciation, or missing the word completely, some of the better moments over the years have been the ones unplanned.

Here's our look at some of the best moments in Bee history on YouTube.

1) Arvind Mahankali wins 2013 Spelling Bee

Mahankali had finished third in each of the past two spelling bees, but this time he was victorious. After clinching the title by spelling the word "knaidel," the confetti dropped down on him where he stood still and took the moment in.

2) Caleb Miller's "Precious" Talent

Spelling Bee semifinalist Caleb Miller didn't make it to the finals of the Scripps National Spelling Bee, but he revealed that he can imitate Smeagol's voice from the Lord of the Rings trilogy, and even spell out the creature's favorite word.

3) The judges show Arrested Development some love

Sriram Hathwar was charged to spell the word "catachresis." After asking the judges for the definition and the word in a sentence, one judge used Tobias Fünke as an example. Catachresis is the "use of the wrong word for the context,” so Arrested Development fans can attest to its accuracy.

4) Evan O'Dorney's CNN Interview

For 2007 Spelling Bee Champion Evan O'Dorney, the most-watchable moment came after he claimed the title. In an interview with CNN's Kiran Chetry, the winner (who is autistic) corrected the pronunciation of his name, told her to ask his mom what she thought, and noted that he wasn't surprised at his win.

5) Spelling Bee "Troll"

Chris's word was "heron." He then spent the next two minutes asking the judge to repeat the word and said just about every other word that remotely sounded like "heron" before spelling it correctly. He insisted that he wasn't trolling, but rather he couldn't hear what the judge said in the first place.

6) "Num Nut"

The judges gave eighth grader Sameer Mishra the word "numnah," but he initially heard something similar (and more insulting), which got some laughs from the crowd. Upon clarification of the word's pronunciation and that he and the judges weren't insulting each other, Mishra's relief is apparent.

7) "Negus"

According to the video's description, neither Andrew Lay nor the judges pronounced "negus" correctly, and his discomfort showed as he asked for the word to be repeated. He was shocked to find out he nailed the spelling by sounding it out.

8) "Euonym"

If YouTube had been around when Rebecca Sealfon won the Scripps National Spelling Bee in 1997, she would have been a viral hit. Her "elaborate rituals" kept people watching during the earlier rounds. It was her enthusiastic spelling of "euonym" that won her the title, and even the commentator couldn’t keep his composure.

Photo via BoomFiyahX/YouTube

Remembering Hampsterdance, the first meme turned movie

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If you're reading this on the Internet, you already know who Grumpy Cat is. With the scowling sourpuss already gracing T-shirtscoffee mugs, and the screen of anybody who's supposed to be working, the recent announcement of an in-development Grumpy Cat: The Movie shouldn't actually come as that much of a surprise.

Sure, there's the obvious question of how to stretch one feline facial expression into 70-ish minutes of wholesome entertainment, but in our cynical era of brand-driven family films, when a household name is the key to getting the green light, there must be Internet memes far less deserving of a film adaptation. In fact, there's one in particular you've definitely heard of.


 

Before the word "meme" itself was even a meme, another Internet fad had a similarly unlikely journey from email forward to feature-length narrative, but not without some growing pains along the way.


 

Created by art student Deidre LaCarte in 1998, Hampsterdance always existed in a place of legal dubiousness. LaCarte didn't own the original music from which she derived the hamsters' iconic, looping backing track, so she had no legal protection when savvy DJ's reverse-engineered the hamster's hook into their own derivative worldwide hits, danced to by actual human beings.

It was perhaps in the shadow of this missed opportunity that she sold her domain names and—to be somewhat generous—characters to a company called Abatis, Inc. in 2002. Still chasing the then-perceived economic windfall of one of the Internet's first true phenoms, (a 2001 interview with Abatis president Bill Porfido refers to the property as "the next chipmunks"), Abatis enlisted a firm called Unreal Productions to give the generic dancing .gifs a modern CGI redesign. In 2004, the world was introduced to the reimagined, rechristened Hampton Hampster and his bandmates Dixie, Fuzzy and Hado, on a relaunched website featuring new music, merchandise, and of course, a movie.

Unfortunately, no clips or trailer are currently available for the direct-to-DVD How the Hampsters Saved Winter, but the official synopsis describes the film as "a snowy adventure where they help make a family's dream come true." The link to purchase the film leads to a print-on-demand DVD publishing service informing you the product is no longer available.

While the scarcity of the film does seem to imply it to be a commercial failure, it is worth noting that the instinct behind the obvious Chipmunks comparison wasn't necessarily that far off. In 2007, the far more famous musical rodents were given their own CGI film makeover, spawning two sequels and another perennial renaissance of pitched-up pop hits.

It remains to be seen whether Grumpy Cat: The Movie is another internet meme that overestimated its shelf-life, or the next Garfield: A Tail of Two KittiesHere's something to keep us distracted while we wait to find out.

Fans react to Game of Thrones' most shocking event

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It's a nice day for a Red Wedding.

One of the most shocking scenes in George R.R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire series played out during Sunday night's episode of Game of Thrones. What started out as the wedding of Edmure Tully and Roslin Frey turned into [SPOILERS! SPOILERS!] an absolute slaughterfest as Robb, Catelyn, and Talisa (along with most of Robb's bannermen and his direwolf) died in a matter of minutes at the hands of the Freys and Boltons, all while Arya was helpless a couple hundred yards away.

Readers of ASOIAF knew the Red Wedding was coming. And now TV viewers finally know why the book's readers had such a range of emotions while reading A Storm of Swords (or almost stopped reading altogether).

It's schadenfreude in the most loving way possible: we may be gleeful at your reactions, but now we can finally talk to you about it.

Reddit's r/gameofthrones is doing one better. In anticipation of the Red Wedding, they encouraged fellow book-reader redditors to secretly tape the reaction of TV viewers and post them on YouTube in what's known as Operation WaW (Weeping and Wailing).

"If it is any consolation, you have witnessed one of the greatest moments of television history," TMWNN wrote. "The only equivalent examples I can think of have become famous: The ending of The Prisoner, Colonel Blake's death on MASH, and Bobby Ewing in the shower on Dallas."

Redditors secretly (and some not so secretly) taped their loved ones as they watched the closing minutes of "The Rains of Castamere" in attempt to make to cheer Game of Thrones fans (and themselves) up with reaction videos.

And try they did. Some of the video recorders could barely keep their composure when filming while the TV viewers who noticed they were on camera had trouble deciding whether they should be angrier at the show or their friends.

Redditors naturally got a kick out of the whole ordeal while trying to process the Red Wedding themselves.

"My favourite part of all of these videos is the non-reader turning to their friend recording it," i-like-tea wrote. "YOU KNEW THIS WAS GOING TO HAPPEN?!"

As the show rolled its credits in silence, Twitter was in the midst of a meltdown—one new account's even retweeting everyone's reactions—in what I like to call the five stages of Red Wedding grief.

1) Shock

2) Sadness

3) Anger

4) Minor Existential Crisis

5) In Need of Comfort

And if that doesn't help, just remember: it gets better.

Well, sort of.

Photo via GameOfThrones/YouTube

Jon Marco chases a girl through every classic '80s movie

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Man loses his dream girl, spends ages chasing her, and then eventually gets to step up and save the day.

Sometimes life feels like it's just one big '80s movie. For Jon Marco, that's the premise of his newest music video.

It's a loving homage to the classic '80s films we still watch today. Note the characters' outfits, the background settings, the sound of the music, the scenery. 

Originally channeling Marty McFly, he wakes up to find Rhianna leaving his room with a Hoverboard. Luckily for him, he has one of his own.

In the process of chasing her down with the Hoverboard, a bicycle, a trampoline jump, and a series of sock slides, Marco manages to duplicate some of the most iconic scenes from 19 different '80s movies.

Some of the references don't make sense in the context of the video, but we still love the nostalgia attached to it. For example, there's no real reason to have Marco come out of a pool in a red bikini or lift Rhianna in a lake, but we let it slide since it's from Fast Times at Ridgemont High and Dirty Dancing.

The Back to the Future trilogy is the connecting thread. Referenced at three different points throughout the video, Marco also channels Marty McFly with a guitar riff of "Johnny B. Goode" and George McFly when his lady needs rescuing.

Like most '80s movies, the video manages to have a happy ending: Marco finally saves Rhianna from the hands of Biff Tannen just in time to attend the Enchantment Under the Sea dance.

He must have remembered his childhood motto: Goonies never say die.

H/T @joshgondelman | Photo via Jon Marco/YouTube

YouTube captions of Taylor Swift lyrics vs. Taylor Swift lyrics

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It's no secret that YouTube's automatic closed captioning function is pretty much a disaster. But if you put one of your favorite songs to the test, it might not come out the same way you here it.

For some artists, it's actually a mass improvement.

Rhett and Link have already made a number of caption-fail videos over the years, singing the YouTube captions to different songs, videos, and phone calls. Now they now have a new artist in sight: Taylor Swift.

Swift has become known for her biting song lyrics (and to whom some of them refer), but when Rhett and Link put five of her biggest hits through YouTube captions, she doesn't come off as harsh as expected.

"An angel any snakes to me, in Armenia one is only," they sang in place of "I Knew You Were Trouble."

Think "misheard lyrics" but for the written word. Swift doesn't really want you to be a gnome with her, but it would make for an interesting music video in place of "You Belong With Me." And instead of a love story, it's just a slow story.

It's the last captioned song, "We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together," that finally makes Rhett and Link pause. No matter the context, "hitting ant kidders" doesn't sound too appealing.

H/T: What's Trending | Photo via rhettandlink/YouTube

Your favorite movie scenes turned into breathtaking cinemagraphs

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Luke Skywalker lifting the TIE Fighter from the swamp in The Empire Strikes Back. Vito Corleone petting his cat in the opening of The Godfather. There are those special movie scenes that film buffs can't help but watch over and over again.

Reddit user t3chn0ir is one of these cinephiles. And to satisfy his silver-screen addiction, he has mastered the art of the high-resolution, perfectly looping GIF animation, also known as cinemagraphs. These GIFs blur the line of beginning and end. They often only have one animated element, accomplished with Photoshop's masking feature. The process is tedious, but with enough attention to detail, the results can be stunning.


 

"My goal is to capture great moments in movies in cinemagraphs so they last forever," t3chn0ir wrote on Reddit, where his GIFs have collected more than 300 comments and reached the front page. "Sometimes that turns out really great sometimes not so great. Twenty-five percent of ideas I have for cinemagraphs don't even make the cut, even if I put already several hours into them. This one turned out not that great but good enough, so I decided to post it. It still captured that moment for me."

T3chn0ir's GIFs have been viewed on Imgur, a free photo sharing website, more than 135,000 times. Check out all 40 animations below.

GIFs by T3chn0ir | Photo via whatculture.com


The "Teen Wolf" premiere, narrated by "Teen Wolf" fandom

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Last night was a big night for Teen Wolf fandom: The long-anticipated third season finally arrived.

Naturally, on Tumblr, there was a high volume of intense fan reactions. But we decided to take a different route, and accepted a challenge by Twitter user @classlicity to try and make sense of the actual plot of the show without actually having seen the episode.

Would it work? Can all that squee actually translate into a meaningful understanding of this series?

In fandom, we have a little thing called "fannish drift." Fannish drift is what happens when all of your knowledge about a fandom that you'd otherwise know nothing about comes from other people in that fandom. Before most of LiveJournal closed up shop and moved to Tumblr, LJ user pocky_slash celebrated fannish drift every year in a hilarious way: with the "Not My Fandom" fest, where participants were invited to write short fics in a fandom they weren't in based on what they thought they knew about a fandom. 

Since fannish drift is often like playing a game of telephone, the results were often hilarious.

Most of what I know about Teen Wolf has been gleaned through fannish drift. As such, it's probably incredibly inaccurate and increasingly outdated.

Here's what I'm pretty sure is the general plot of Teen Wolf

  • Scott gets bitten in the pilot so now he's a hot werewolf who has to try and keep his girlfriend's parents, who are, naturally, werewolf hunters, from killing him. 
  • Meanwhile, showrunner Jeff Davis has to find a way to have Scott's best friend, Stiles, fall in love with Scott's werewolf pack bro, Derek, before the show ends, so the fandom won't spontaneously light itself on fire. 
  • ALL OTHER PLOT POINTS ARE IRRELEVANT. (I kid, I kid.)

Here's what I think I know about how last season ended (again, based purely on fannish drift):

  • Scott's pack leader got ousted so now Scott could eventually become the leader, but for the moment, DEREK IS THE ALPHA NOW.
  • Jackson turned into an ugly lizard and escaped to the WB's Arrow, but that's okay because Colton Haynes once went to a Halloween party in blackface so his existence is one less thing for Teen Wolf fandom to be divided on.
  • Scott successfully avoided detection by Allison's parents but Allison is starting to hunt herself and she has a kickass bow and arrow because everyone's a Katniss now.
  • The Winklevoss twins' latest V.C. startup failed so instead they came to Scott's high school to seduce Danny into a life of evil.

fytwinning

  • Scott has a huge man-crush on his new werewolf buddy Isaac.
  • Lydia inexplicably failed to take over the world through the power of science and awesomeness.
  • Stiles inexplicably failed to make out with anyone.

So. Will all that SUPER-ACCURATE KNOWLEDGE carry over into an accurate reading of last night's episode? Let's find out. Here's what the fans are saying:

simplystiles

My guess: If this were fanfic, Scott would clearly be going into a sudden and unexpected heat induced by a chemical reaction due to the arrival of his one true alpha/omega soulmate bond, but instead he's just gotten the same black band tattoos on his arm that Derek has. You know, the ones that mean... things. 

everything-and-nothing-great:

Teen Wolf was good last night but parts of it looked dumb, like when the twins were running after the motorcycle, did a frog jump off each others backs and morphed into each other. I cringed.

My guess: the Winklevii are competing in a cross-country sack race when they're interrupted by Derek sexily riding a motorcycle, who crosses the finish line just ahead of them, leaving them to collapse in an exhausted Winklepile of defeat.

My guess: the POWER OF STEREK reached through this woman's phone and converted her to the OTP before she'd ever seen the show, like some kind of magical aphrodisiac.

yeahnahman:

OOOOH THAT IS A BLOW TORCH SON.

My guess: Lydia, having grown tired of kicking everyone's ass at math and science on a daily basis, joins shop class in the wake of Jackson's departure to prove that she don't need a man to do her welding for her.

wormachine:

OH MY GOD ALPHA PACK ARE YOU SERIOUS RIGHT NOW

SCOOOOTT NOOOOOOOOO.

My guess: Because Scott is a polite and chivalrous guy, instead of battling it out with Derek over who gets to be the alpha in their pack, he suggests that they share the role. Only you know how it is, if you share with one alpha, you have to share with them all, so it becomes less of an alpha "pack" and more like an alpha co-op. Also the Winklevii are probably evilly involved somehow. Evilly.

bite-me-derek

My guess: Dylan O'Brien and Tyler Hoechlin went to Jeff Davis and said, "Hey, can we have a few scenes every week where we just gaze into each other's eyes for no reason?" and Jeff Davis said, "I love my job."

gorgoneions:

he has a leather jacket, that can only mean one thing

My guess: Break out the poodle skirts! The alpha pack has gone Grease!

kentsu13

My guess: Kali, the newest addition to the alpha pack, tells Isaac how many more seasons he'll have to wait before Sterek happens.

Keep waiting, Teen Wolf fans!  It's gonna be a long, wonderful season. 
 

Illustration by certainlylostfamegal/deviantART

Ain't no cure for the summertime feels

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Picture, for a moment, Tumblr as it might have existed in the late '50s. Charlie Parker, pausing before he picks up his sax to snap a picture of the audience from the stage: "I'd like to dedicate this next set to all my Yardbirds." Coltrane taking improv solo suggestions via his Tumblr inbox the night before playing Birdland. Miles Davis' landmark album, So What? YOLO.

These are the visions unwittingly invoked by the latest, greatest Internet meme we've seen. And even though it's not on Tumblr, it's ironically enough about Tumblr. Or, at least about Tumblr feels.  

Ken Lowery, one half of the awesome parody @FakeAPStylebook, had no idea what he'd cottoned onto when he and his friends declared they'd come up with "the worst" idea for a Twitter meme:

Tumblr has popularized"all the feels" as a shorthand for overwhelming emotion, so intense it can't possibly be expressed in a two-syllable word like "feelings."

Lowery and friends might have just had an inside joke that went no further than their Twitter followers; but then comic blogger Christopher Bird, a.k.a. @MightyGodKing, took the joke and ran with it—straight back in time.

Obviously, we love this, not just because it's a great meme but because of what it says about how two things that at first might seem like polar opposites are really anything but. We've already learned that Tumblr language has all the same mechanics of love poetry.  With its wry, self-aware mix of irony, poignancy, humor, and emotion, can the blues be that far removed?  

If BB. King were on Tumblr, would he, too, be singing, "Everyday, everyday I have the feels?"

We’d like to think so.

Photos via Mightygodking

"Little Horribles" is more than just a lesbian "Girls"

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"This is the best webseries I've ever seen, and I've only seen five minutes of it," was YouTube user TheBermuda's response to the newly launched Little Horribles, a comedy about queer women and dating relationships.

Produced by Awkward Black Girl's Issa Rae (who has a cameo in Episode 1), Little Horribles carries the same brand of deadpan humor, moments of social awkwardness, and hilarious misunderstandings. Rae also helped promote the endeavor to her hundred thousand followers.

But the real star of Little Horribles is its creator, writer, sometimes-director, and star, Amy Rubin. Her character, also named Amy, is a thirty-something lesbian attempting to navigate the muddy waters of dating and relationships in Los Angeles. As the show's website puts it:

Hailed as the “Lesbian Girls” (by some lesbians in Silverlake) the show rips apart and laughs in the face of those painfully uncomfortable moments that no one wants to remember, but everyone does.

Little Horribles isn't the first webseries to find success recently for looking at queer relationships. This year's EastSiders also gained critical acclaim for its just-wrapped first season. Like EastSiders, Little Horribles is set in Los Angeles' queer-friendly Silver Lake neighborhood.  But unlike EastSiders, Little Horribles has a small-town community vibe, a kind of “Hey, gang! Let's put on a webseries!” feel, whether it's from the "everyone pitched in to help" cast and crew listings, or the way the production embraces its impromptu style.

It's also refreshing to see Rubin baring her skin in ways that aren't glorified for the camera or presented as anything but a real woman with a real body who just happens to be walking around half-naked.

Rubin's production company, Barnacle Media, most often does public service announcements for political action groups and other organizations. But so far the only political overtones in Little Horribles are in its representation. While it has no problem piggy-backing on the comedic style of Girls for comparison's sake, it's already got a more diverse cast than Girls.

There will be plenty of time to draw more comparisons between Little Horribles and that thing you love. But for now, with only one episode out, you can just enjoy the comedy.

Photo via Little Horribles

You can now watch "Arrested Development" in chronological order

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This seems inevitable,  but it’s still mindblowingly awesome that someone took the time to do it: Some amazing soul on Reddit has recut all of Arrested Development Season 4 to make new episodes that are in chronological order. The consensus so far is that the versions of the episodes edited by redditor morphinapg are superior, funnier, and easier to understand.

The new season has had mixed reviews, but one thing everyone has been in agreement on is that you have to watch more than once to comprehend everything that’s going on and to fully get all the jokes.

“I did as much as I could to make these feel like real episodes,” morphinapg wrote in the post. “I made sure to separate the episode by storylines, rather than looking for specific times. I also included the opening theme, which I modified myself, and also the "on the next Arrested Development" as well as the credits (although the credits for episodes 1-11 are just a repeat of S04E01's credits).”

Morphinapg also edited the narration, sometimes cutting it all together to make smoother transitions.

“For large scenes with multiple perspectives I would make sure to not have any duplicate things happening in the background, which did require a few cuts here and there, but nothing major. Most of that only happened in the police station scene, most other scenes were linear enough to easily be edited,” the redditor wrote.

“I tried to keep as much original editing as possible, unless chronology required a split. The music does occasionally sound weird between edits, but for the most part I think the edits, and the episodes themselves, work pretty good for what I had to work with. I can't 100% guarantee the accuracy of my ordering, but I feel like I did a pretty good job. I did allow occasional slight backtracking, if placed at the beginning of an episode, but it doesn't affect the chronology very much.”

Holy cow, that’s a lot of work. If anyone ever doubted AD had dedicated fans, just imagine this user slaving over their computer all to re-edit an entire series of a TV show, for free.

There is one small thing Morphinapg would like in return, though: “If there are any people here who worked on AD, I have made a Blu-ray with my episodes on them and would love to send you a copy. I'd love to hear what people who have worked on the show think of my episodes.” 

H/T Reddit | Screengrab via Netflix

Meet the mind behind the Tetris bitmap printer

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Reddit user Michael Birken has elevated Tetris from classic video game into a platform for making amazing bitmap art.

On Tuesday, Birken, who goes by zeroone on the site, submitted a lengthy description of what he calls the Tetris Printer Algorithm to r/programming. Birken's creation essentially takes an expanded Tetris playfield—21x42 as opposed to the more traditional 10x20 field—and uses it as a canvas to draw famous characters from other classic games with Tetriminos. Birken's algorithm rotates, positions, and drops "a predetermined sequence of pieces" in a manner that allows certain color blocks to remain, eventually forming the images. 

The redditor also posted a YouTube clip to r/geeks that puts his Tetris Printer Algorithm into action. Among the characters created are Mario, Link from Zelda, and Samus Aran from Metroid

The r/programming post has collected 1,188 karma points and elicited the praise of other Reddit users.

"And people say Developers can't impress Developers! Consider me impressed!" redditor DrunkMC declared.

For his part, Birken explains that the idea of the project came to him while working on art projects with Post-It notes, footage of which can be seen on his YouTube channel.

"A repetitive task like that puts your mind in a Zen-like trance as your muscles carry out the work," he explains. "Acting as a human printer made me think of things like this and how they could be achieved."

Amazingly, the programmer/artist displays a sense of humility when it comes to his bitmap art, dismissing them as ephemeral and largely meaningless.

"I put a lot of time into pointless projects," he notes. "Someone has to do them. Check out my Web page and YouTube channel for other consumers of my brief existence."

If you've got time to kill, we recommend that you do. 

Photo via Michael Birken/YouTube

Taylor Swift comments get dramatic reading in YouTube Comment Theater

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You can find inspiration anywhere these days—even the comments on YouTube.

Since launching last month, the YouTube Comment Theater has scoured the notoriously trollish comments section of popular music videos to find the perfect scripts for their dramatic performances, reenacting comments from the videos of Justin Bieber, Katy Perry, and One Direction (among others).

Their April 23 video featured a comment-turned-monologue about an erection posted by MrBlister27 on Taylor Swift's "We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together."

But then that video got enough comments that it earned its own YCT interpretation.

This time, the dramatic reading comes from a common occurrence in the YouTube comments: an argument between users, acted out by Tim Dorsch and Jay Wells L'Ecuyer in an over-the-top fashion.

MrBlister27 found the video in which his comment was used and decided to explain his reasoning. He was angry while riding home from school one day.

Another commenter, however, wasn't having it.

"you were angry so you wrote a poem about your genitalia?" johnnyxcasanova asked. "Were you angry because your dick isn't that big?

The argument stopped at MrBlister27's profanity-laced reply, but the actors' portrayal of the YouTubers and their words were enough to convey the message.

Photo via theYCTchannel/YouTube

Miley Cyrus's new twerk campaign is about to get a lot of kids in trouble

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Pop goddess Miley Cyrus has a new song out. It's an edgy, somewhat celebratory tune about partying and it's called "We Can't Stop." In three days on YouTube, the song has already collected more than 3.7 million views.

Those 3.7 million views exist only for an audio version; Miley's official music video comes later. To make it, however, she's turning to her hordes and hordes of fans to help her come up with the right content. 

#FanMade is the official hashtag bestowed upon the pop star's new music video movement, one geared towards getting all her fans to twerk for the camera. 

"Send me your best twerk videos to my new song and I will put a video together of all my favorites," she wrote on her Facebook page. Below the messaging lies all the necessary ingredients (webcam, video upload link, submit link) to submit your video to Miley.

That's sort of the full extent of the campaign's messaging. Make a twerk video; send it to Miley. If she likes it, your ass might get a spot in a music video. 

This plan is all but a sure thing to backfire. Twerking, for those still delightfully unaware, is a name bestowed upon a rather promiscuous dance move, one that challenges individuals—mostly women—to stand with their backs to the camera (or stand on their hands with their feet against a wall) and shake their butts back and forth in a repetitive manner. 

Basically, this.

The move has gotten students suspended and one teacher fired, infuriating a whole slew of overprotective fathers in the process. Considering that Miley Cyrus maintains a young fan base, chances are that we'll see a few more kids getting in trouble real soon. 

None of the videos submitted for #FanMade have made their way into the world of public consumption quite yet. They're all being stored for vetting on Miley's behalf. While we wait, let's take a look at the most popular twerk video on YouTube, a music video for Lady's "Twerk" that's been seen more than 5 million times. Objects in the mirror may be closer than they appear. 

Photo via Miley Cyrus/Facebook


YouTube's "Awkward Black Girl" to play Nina Simone in new movie

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Issa Rae has made the rare jump from YouTube star to Hollywood actress.

It was announced on Wednesday that Rae, creator of the YouTube comedy series The Misadventures of Awkward Black Girl, will be playing acclaimed avant-jazz songstress Nina Simone in an upcoming film about Lorraine Hansberry.

Hansberry was a black playwright who gained prominence thanks to A Raisin in the Sun, a play that was largely based on her family's experience in segregated Chicago. She was also best friends with Simone. Hansberry will be portrayed by her granddaughter Taye Hansberry. Also joining the cast is Jaleel White, who is best known for his role of Steve Urkel in the TGIF sitcom Family Matters. White will depict black intellectual James Baldwin.

The casting is the latest in a string of good news for Rae. In June 2012, musician Pharrell Williams fully funded season 2 of her Shorty Award-winning series. Later this fall, Rae will also make her television debut as writer and coproducer of the upcoming ABC sitcom I Hate L.A. Dudes.

Photo via iamOTHER/YouTube

Freddie Mercury was even more amazing than you realized

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Every evening, the Daily Dot delivers a selection of links worth clicking from around the Web, along with the day's must-see image or video. We call it Dotted Lines.

The weird world of YouTube videos about YouTube

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What inspires some of the funniest videos on YouTube? That's easy: YouTube itself.

Since its inception, YouTube has gradually added features and tricks that video creators and viewers alike can use to enhance their experience on the site, from on-screen annotations to closed captioning.

Then there’s the headache that is a YouTube comment section, littered with crude insults, vulgarity, and enough typos to make email spam read like poetry. Put it all together and there’s a lot of material for enterprising vloggers to work with.  

For proof, look no further than Taylor Swift. This week, Rhett and Link created a medley of her hits based on YouTube’s automatic closed captioning, while user MrBlister27 has turned the comments on Swift’s "We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together” into a dramatic reading.  

We scoured the massive video-sharing site for some of the best examples of YouTube's meta-humor.

1) “SAYING FUNNY COMMENTS TO PEOPLE WHILE WEARING A BLACK SUIT”

Do comments like "My anus is on fire" and "Will you have sex with me?" hold the same power in real life that they do online? Gary Garcia of overboardhumor dons a black suit and hits the streets of Los Angeles to find out.

2) “ORLANDO JONES reads YOUR Comments - The Prime Cut”

Actor and comedian Orlando Jones applies his smooth and sexy voice to several comments made on videos produced by Machinima.

3) “YouTube Comment Song - YOUR COMMENTS! (Explicit) - Roomie”

YouTube musician Roomie addresses some of the comments on his videos in song form. Thanks to the Internet, we can now rest easy knowing that we live in a world where "Now that's peace shit" can be effectively worked into a song.

4) “Exclusive! leaked! how to make viral videos!”

What good is a YouTube video if it doesn't go viral, earning millions of views and being glossed over by morning television personalities several months after the novelty has worn off? YouTuber runawaybox details some of the ingredients that go into making a successful viral video, including "use catchy or misleading titles" and "appeal to sex." Apparently, it worked: This video has over 2 million views.

5) “More Fun With YouTube Closed Captions In My NJ Snow Storm Video”

Thanks to the occasionally effective magic of voice recognition, YouTube and Google Translate have conspired to create automatic closed-captions for your videos. YouTuber TheArchfiend applied the technique to old videos of his and comments on the translation results.

6) “Christmas Carol CAPTION FAIL”

Famed comedy duo Rhett and Link took the ineffectiveness of the closed-captioning feature a bit further. After seeing how it transcribed popular holiday carols, the pair sang the carols with new lyrics.

7) “Fun with annotations”

Annotations take the whole concept of "commenting on YouTube videos" to a whole new level by allowing people to add text boxes onto the video itself. Comedy duo chickenfriedcomedy pokes fun at this feature by reacting to annotations appearing in their video address.

8) (More) “Fun with annotations”

In-video annotations do not need to be limited to mere text! YouTuber Anthony Rose has fun with crudely created blank text boxes cleverly positioned at key points in the video.

Illustration by Fernando Alfonso III

Samuel L. Jackson vs. Bryan Cranston: Who does Walter White better?

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Samuel L. Jackson isn't done with Reddit just yet.

Breaking Bad is set to return August 11 for its final half-season, and its writing/production staff has already teased Reddit with an AMA. Now the Pulp Fiction actor is riding the buzz, performing Walter White's now-classic "I am the one who knocks" speech to raise money for the Alzheimer's Association.

Compare that to Bryan Cranston's version:

On May 29, Jackson promised r/movies subscribers that he would read the best 300-word monologue submitted by a redditor as part of a charity deal. On May 31, Jackson kept true to his word.

Now he wants to take things to the next level: voicemail.

"If we break $175k, I will record 3 people's voicemails!" Jackson posted in a June 5 thread on r/movies.

Redditors gathered in the thread to discuss the contest, Jackson's latest monologue, and, of course, various voicemail greetings that they would love to hear Jackson record. They all featured some string of mothaphukkas.

In the thread, Jackson explained that upvotes did not matter this time around. It's all about the donations.

"To explain, we are at $155k, if we break $175k we are randomly choosing 3 donors and I will record their voicemails for them!" he wrote.

The current contest, which again benefits the Alzheimer's Association, is scheduled to close at 7PM Eastern Time on June 6.

 

The Daily Dot's subreddit, r/dailydot, highlights the most interesting and important discussions from around the social news site every day.

Read more here.

Photo via PrizeoTV/YouTube

Touring the world's most thrilling roller coasters—on YouTube

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Buckle your seatbelts. Lower your harnesses into place. Keep your arms and legs inside at all times. Ready?

OK, press "play."

As the summer season approaches, traveling carnivals and amusement parks will once again open their doors to the annual influx of thrill-seekers. While many of the country's amusement areas create lasting memories for their attendees, few people remember the many frustrations that accompany such trips until it is too late.

Expensive admission prices. Long lines that snake through boring queues in oppressive heat. Unexpected ride malfunctions. Ride operators who repeat the same thing over and over in the same exact tone of voice. Fellow riders with weak stomachs.

Thanks to YouTube, however, we now have a way to avoid these problems. Many people—and their cameras—braved the elements to shoot front-row perspectives of some of the best rides in the world. This summer, save a few bucks and let a maximized YouTube window deliver the chills of some of the world's best roller coasters.

1) Kingda Ka

Kingda Ka is a steel roller coaster located at Six Flags Great Adventure in Jackson, New Jersey, a town almost equidistant to New York City and Philadelphia. When it opened in 2004, it broke several records and remains the world's tallest coaster (standing at a mind-blowing 456 feet) as well as the coaster with the longest drop. It is rumored that the skylines of both New York City and Philadelphia can be seen from atop its hill on very clear days.

2) Cyclone

The Cyclone has been a staple of New York City's historic Coney Island amusement park since 1927. It is one of the very few roller coasters that has been declared a National Historical Landmark and has been immortalized in media ranging from The Wiz to Grand Theft Auto IV. Experience the ride on one of the country's most well-known roller coasters without the hassle of plane tickets or subway fares.

3) Colossus

If the ride up and down the many hills of the Colossus roller coaster looks familiar, you aren't imagining things. The coaster, located at Six Flags Magic Mountain in Valencia, California, has appeared in several popular movies and television shows. It is the roller coaster ridden by Chevy Chase, John Candy, and family in the closing scenes of National Lampoon's Vacation and is also seen in the opening credits sequence of the ‘90s ABC sitcom Step by Step. The coaster dates back to 1978.

 

4) Jet Star

Most of the roller coasters featured on YouTube can actually be ridden. The Jet Star coaster, however, is an exception. The roller coaster, which was located on the edge of the Casino Pier in Seaside Heights, New Jersey, was swept into the Atlantic Ocean during Hurricane Sandy. Pictures of the coaster sitting upright in the waves became iconic images of the storm's force and, in May 2013, the ride was completely demolished and removed. Today, it survives only in video format, its proximity to the water a frightening foreshadowing of its eventual fate.

5) Formula Rossa

Let's travel internationally for a moment and visit the United Arab Emirates. The Middle Eastern country is home to Ferrari World, which boasts the Formula Rossa roller coaster. The ride holds the world record as the fastest roller coaster, clocking in at 149 MPH.

6) Takabisha

Our next international stop will take us to Fuji-Q Highland in Fujiyoshida, Japan. There, we will be riding Takabisha, which holds the world record for steepest roller coaster. It drops riders from its 141-foot initial hill at an angle of 121 degrees.

7) Space Mountain

Back in the United States, we will visit perhaps one of its most beloved amusement parks that does not need a half-dozen flags to mark its territory. Space Mountain, located at Disney World in Orlando, Florida and also at Disneyland in Anaheim, California, it’s renowned for being an indoor roller coaster. Riders speed through the darkness, rounding a series of unexpected turns while being entertained by the occasional flash of light.

8) Spongebob Squarepants Rock Bottom Plunge

We'll stay indoors for the time being and travel to a place that is just as heavily commercialized as any given Disney theme park: a shopping mall. The Spongebob Squarepants Rock Bottom Plunge is one of two coasters inside the massive Mall of America in Bloomington, Minnesota. Roller coaster riders are used to seeing other rides, the sun, and the insides of their eyelids while making their way through the many twists, turns, and drops. The Spongebob Squarepants Rock Bottom Plunge is also the only coaster we know of that offers a view of a mall food court.

9) Zoomerang

Zoomerang, located at Lake Compounce in Bristol, Connecticut, is just one of many "boomerang"-style coasters scattered around the country's amusement parks. The unique layout of such attractions causes riders to be pulled backwards up to the top of a hill. They are released and sent through a series of inversions, including a perfect loop. They again ascend the hill, reach the top, and are released. This time, they travel backwards—through the inversions again—before completing the ride.

10) The Smiler

Finally, we will take a ride on the Smiler, a brand-new coaster located at Alton Towers in Stafford, United Kingdom. The roller coaster holds the record for the greatest number of inversions and is the world's second-leading inducer of vomit (Justin Bieber's music still holds the top ranking in that category). YouTube lets you ride through the Smiler's 14 inversions without having to stumble off to the nearest restroom line afterwards.

BONUS! The Zipper

As an added bonus, we will disembark from our harnesses and crawl into the cage of the Zipper ride. A staple of many traveling carnivals, the Zipper is basically a ferris wheel driven to the brink of insanity. Its cages are flipped, flopped, and otherwise spun, leaving you with an intense dizziness and many inverted views of hastily-assembled amusements.

Photo via Jennifer C. / Flickr

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