Quantcast
Channel: DailyDot Entertainment Feed
Viewing all 7080 articles
Browse latest View live

Arnold Schwarzenegger has a farting problem

$
0
0

If you’re a fan of both the ludicrous action films of Arnold Schwarzenegger and unapologetic potty humor, then today should feel like Christmas: YouTube’s DistractotronChannel just delivered a four-minute reel of the ex-governor’s finest onscreen moments—masterfully mixing fart sound effects into each one. Not impressed? You will be.

Yes, between Ah-nold’s strained faces and clunky line deliveries, not to mention the bemused reactions of his many co-stars (Carl Weathers in Predator is especially but justifiably alarmed), this montage proves that a sophomoric joke done well can get the better of anyone.

IFrame

I think we all now have a pretty good idea what TheExpendables 3 is about.

Photo via DistractotronChannel/YouTube


This is the primer you need on the Central Park jogger case

$
0
0

After two and a half decades, one of America's most notorious criminal cases is closing. The case of the Central Park jogger, which saw five men wrongfully incarcerated and subsequently exonerated for Trisha Meili's rape and beating, will be settled in New York for a reported $40 million sum.

It's a fittingly sensational end to a sensational story of innocence, corruption, and class divides. But those new to the case—either too young or too far away to have been paying attention when it unfolded in 1989—might need a refresher of its details, of what made it such a remarkable failure of the criminal justice system. For that, we turn to The Central Park Five, a 2012 documentary by Ken and Sarah Burns and David McMahon. It's currently available for streaming on Netflix, on DVD from PBS, for purchase on YouTube, and is absolutely essential viewing. 

This review originally appeared in the Austin Chronicle in April 2013.

•••

Late Eighties New York was a city of schism: black vs. white, rich vs. poor, haves vs. have-nots. After a decade of Wall Street boom and the introduction of crack cocaine to the urban core, the wedge between rich whites and poor blacks was driven deeper than ever.

So then, when a white female jogger turned up raped and brutally assaulted in Central Park the same night that a pack of young black hoodlums was admittedly terrorizing other pedestrians and cyclists in the area, the New York Police Department—and, in turn, the city—was quick to turn on five young minority kids from Harlem: Yusef Salaam, Raymond Santana, Kevin Richardson, Antron McCray, and Kharey Wise. In the bow on top of the case, all five confessed to having committed the crime.

Trouble was, all five were innocent.

In Ken Burns' latest documentary (with co-directors Sarah Burns and David McMahon), The Central Park Five, which premiered last week on PBS and comes out on DVD today, just after the 24th anniversary of the case, the notable director slowly unfolds the details of the case, painting a picture of a frantic New York, five confused kids, and a criminal justice system intent on immediately—and publicly—apprehending a suspect in the case. Though the NYPD officials involved in the case did not comment, Burns includes interviews with all five of the boys (now in their mid-30s), as well as reporters who covered the case and who knew well the political climate in the city at the time. And, in typical Burns style, he intersperses archival footage from the trials in a compelling and infuriating patchwork.

The case itself is quite unique, but some of its particulars—the interrogations and subsequent confessions, the mismatched timelines, the unfortunate aftermath—are universal frustrations with the criminal justice system to this day. While DNA evidence has undoubtedly improved in recent decades, the technology wasn't at issue at the time. No, as one puts it: "Confessions are irresistibly persuasive." And the exhaustion the boys faced after hours upon hours of brutal interrogation is mirrored in that of Juror No. 5, who finally relented, saying "I was wiped out … I found some cockamamie excuse to vote guilty just to get out of there."

It's an immensely sad tale of five kids who lost their youth and a total of 38 and a half years of their lives to criminal injustice – a sadness capped off by the epilogue, which states their civil rights lawsuit against the city remains unresolved to this day.

You can count on Ken Burns to deliver a heartrending and compelling tale, but with a case like this, even the facts alone are sufficiently depressing.

Correction: An earlier version of this story republished an error about the nature of the 1989 crime against the Central Park jogger. This version has been corrected to reflect the nature of the charges brought against the Central Park Five.

Photo via PBS/YouTube

The 'reverse' sounds of SomeKindaWonderful

$
0
0

In Spotify Essentials, the Daily Dot curates custom playlists created by some of our favorite artists and writers. In this installment, SomeKindaWonderful discusses the influences informing its self-titled debut, available now for preorder.

Singer Jordy Towers:

We went ahead and called this playlist the "Reverse" playlist. One because it’s the name of our new single, and two because I had to make a ‘reverse’ move in my career in order to move forward as an artist. I left sunny L.A. (and my solo career behind) to go to one of the coldest damn places on Earth, Cleveland, Ohio, where I met these guys and we formed this band. “Reverse” was the first song we made and the first song we've released. Hope you like this mix which kicks off with reverse and goes through some of the songs that have really influenced who I am today.

Guitarist Matt Gibson:

I grew up mostly listening to stuff from the ‘60s and early ‘70s, while playing mainly blues guitar. The Beatles are by far my favorite band, and a large reason why I began to pursue music when I was a kid, so it was hard to only include two by them. I love when you can put a song on loud in your car and really feel what the song is about.  When a song can take you to another world with a groove or emotion, that’s a super powerful and beautiful thing. Artists like Paul Simon, Van Morrison, or Bob Dylan always do that to me and it's what I always try to do when creating music myself.

Drummer Ben Schigel:

I grew up in a family with a strong background in music, and it definitely affected my musical tastes.  My older brothers got me into the classics like the Police and Genesis. As I grew older I got really into recording and loved Steely Dan and Michael Jackson for their amazing-sounding records.  I always had a love for hard rock/metal for its high intensity and good ol’ rock n' roll vibe.  I always surround myself with all genres of music and think it helps keep an open mind when creating music.

Catch SomeKindaWonderful on tour now or on Twitter

Season 4 of 'Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee' refines the idea of brand loyalty

$
0
0

In an interview last year, Jerry Seinfeld explained why his webseries, Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee, would not, despite its success, be making the transition to television. TV talk shows are merely “promotional vehicles for the industry. They're not talk shows, per se, they're kind of setup talk shows. 'I'm gonna ask you this, then you say that.'"

Despite his own show’s blatant product placement (which is probably excusable because someone’s got to pay for this, right?), his guests seem to want to be there. It's not just the completion of another step of the publicity circuit. There are “no notes” and the good stuff “comes up because I’m really curious,” and is foregrounded by deft, snappy editing that zeros in on the best 11-20 minutes of what must be hours of shooting. There doesn’t have to be a set episode length so you know you're only getting the good stuff.

In its fourth season, the series has inspired seemingly every corporate concern to want their own celebrity-led copycats, which are neither as funny nor as well conceived. It’s amazing that something that was only first seen in July 2012 has already attained a status where it doesn’t have to change, and if it did, followers would be outraged. That’s a thing called brand loyalty, something I’m sure Acura is well aware of.

And it hasn’t really changed. The show has a new, consciously cheesy theme song and it launches season four with a guest who is neither a comedian nor very funny: Sarah Jessica Parker.

Why Seinfeld started the series with SJP is unclear. Waiting in the wings are episodes with Aziz Ansari, Jon Stewart, and George Wallace (indeed the show has quickly become a requisite on comedic resumes), so this is hardly a permanent, thematic shift for the program. But it is a nice change of pace. Although CICGC often finds itself in earnest territory, there is always a faint tension caused by both parties searching for a comedic vein or punchline. They are still performers after all.

SJP laughs a lot unnecessarily and it seems initially that she will be the butt of the episode’s joke. Seinfeld often matches a featured classic car with his guest (Chris Rock got a 1969 Lamborghini Miura, “a screaming, piercing black car,” in Rock’s words), and Parker gets a 1976 Ford Country Squire, apparently her own, that Seinfeld doesn’t like: “It’s big, wasteful, got stupid fake wood-panelling … LTD on the side. You know what it’s limited to? How many of these damn things we can sell”.

But it’s an isolated event in an epsiode that focuses on parenthood, and arcs into a conversation about their own insecurities as providers for their progeny. For a while, Seinfeld becomes the guest on his own show. Driving down the Long Island Expressway, where Harry Chapin died in a VW Beetle, Seinfeld becomes reflective and muses about how his song "Cat’s in the Cradle," “messed up a lot of dads." 

As an episode it’s probably more poignant than funny, but that shouldn’t worry regular viewers because the same pacing and editing from previous seasons is still present. And so is Seinfeld. His upcoming guests have plenty to look forward to.

Screengrab via Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee

The soundtrack to MisterWives, an NYC pop band to watch

$
0
0

InSpotify Essentials, the Daily Dot curates custom playlists created by some of our favorite artists and writers. In this installment, MisterWives curates its “favorite movie jams.” 

Amélie has a strange feeling of absolute harmony. It’s a perfect moment. A soft light, a scent in the air, the quiet murmur of the city. A surge of love, an urge to help mankind overcomes her."

This feeling that is narrated in the classic story of Amélie is one we all felt. Music is that absolute harmony (pun most definitely intended) that is probably the closest thing us humans have to magic. It is in all that we do and is the universal language that helps release the roller-coaster of emotions we experience. 

Life without a soundtrack is a very monotonous one... as is a movie without a soundtrack! If we're not writing/recording/or touring, you can probably find us all on our couch, eating some sort of vegan dessert watching movies together on our projector. Music and movies "go together like lamb and tuna fish" (name that movie!), so we created a playlist that contains songs from soundtracks of a few of our favorite films!

"We're really doing it though, aren't we buddy?" is by far the most overused quote from our all-time favorite movie Dumb and Dumber. This phrase has marked many milestones in our career. It's been said when we first signed our record deal, to our first tour, first sold-out show, the release of our EP, single of the week on iTunes, playing shows in the U.K., and all the crazy incredible experiences we've been fortunate enough to have.  

However, things weren't always peachy keen for MisterWives. When we first started off we spent many days laughing hysterically at life's bullshit screaming, "We got no money, we got no jobs, OUR PETS HEADS ARE FALLING OFF!" 

Luckily, our cats still have their heads!  

You can listen to MisterWives’ new album, Reflections, and its companion piece, Reflections Remixes, now on Spotify. 

Screengrab via MisterWives/YouTube

Now even Pearl Jam is covering 'Let It Go'

$
0
0

Just when you thought it was safe to get back in the Internet, someone else is covering Frozen’s indomitable, Oscar-winning song, “Let It Go.” Only this time, it’s not a traffic reporter’s rendition or an adorable baby who cries when she hears the song. Now, Pearl Jam is covering it.

During a Friday night concert in Milan, Italy, the band segued from their song “Daughter” into the chorus of “Let It Go,” and it was pretty seamless. I could also see this working with “Even Flow.”

My 15-year-old self and 30-something self are very conflicted right now.

Photo via Man Alive!/Flickr (CC BY 2.0)

How much does 'Orange Is the New Black' mirror real prison life?

$
0
0

As we’ve collectively binged on Orange Is the New Black season 2, certain storylines and characters resonate more than others. We all have our favorite OITNB character because we relate to some aspect of that character sketch. Do we know these women in our real lives?

One of the most important aspects of the show is how it tells their stories. We don’t just get the backstories; we see the women interacting with one another in humanizing ways, and flashbacks reveal less about what landed them in prison and more about the parts of themselves they don’t necessarily show to the other inmates. The structure of the prison mirrors the narrative latticework of the prisoners’ lives.

As the focus moves away from Piper Chapman (Taylor Schilling), season 2 expands the storytelling, and the hierarchies: Vee, Red, and Gloria are positioned as “mother” figures. Vee (Lorraine Toussaint) is Litchfield's ultimate hustler, able to change masks with terrifying ease, and the prison economics of OITNB parallel to the personal storylines. As Vee says to rival importer Red in the “blackout” episode, “You just tried to strangle me with plastic wrap so you can sell mascara in jail.”

In that same pivotal episode, activist prisoner Brook Soso cheerfully undercuts it all: “We’re all just women having a shared experience of deprivation.”

Last summer, show creator Jenji Kohan explained how the character of Piper was her “Trojan horse”:

“You’re not going to go into a network and sell a show on really fascinating tales of black women, and Latina women, and old women and criminals. But if you take this white girl, this sort of fish out of water, and you follow her in, you can then expand your world and tell all of those other stories. But it’s a hard sell to just go in and try to sell those stories initially.”

Alexis Sturdy is co-founder of Wesleyan’s Center for Prison Education, which offers courses to inmates. When she was attending college at Wesleyan, she started volunteering at York Correctional, a women’s prison and state facility in Connecticut, as well as a juvenile detention center.

At the women’s facility, she ran a reading group, and eventually lobbied for Wesleyan courses to be offered to male and female inmates. York is also where author Wally Lamb ran his writing workshop for years and where Sturdy met with Piper Kerman, who was incarcerated at a federal prison in Connecticut, a few times while she was there. She sees Orange Is the New Black as a way to talk about prison abuses on a more mainstream scale.

“It’s unfortunate it took the naive white girl storyline to make the show happen, but at least it’s happening,” she says. “I think they do a great job with the interpersonal storylines, and how they ally with each other.”

The real jail where OITNB is filmed was recently spotlighted for its inhumane and unsanitary conditions. We asked Sturdy a few more questions about how OITNB mirrors the realities of prison.

That was one of the more interesting things to me: the interpersonal dynamics, but also the power dynamics between the prisoners, and the hierarchies that form. Did you see much of that?

Yeah, and it was hard for me to see exactly where people got their power from. There are people who exist in the facility who seem to exist outside all of that, and keep to themselves, and I appreciated when Piper tried to do that in the first season. I really felt for her, but I think it’s almost impossible to exist in prison and be comfortable and not play into those dynamics.

The character of Vee is sort of a matriarch, and this hierarchy immediately forms beneath her, and plays into those dynamics.

Yeah, and it comes in different forms. I also knew a mother-daughter relationship inside prison. The staff [on the show] is written so well, and how the correctional officers really live for this power dynamic. There’s that scene from last season where the two COs got to a bar and they’re still obsessing about the women.

Do you think there should be male correctional officers in a women’s prison?

Ideally, no. I think that would remove the opportunity for sexual and physical violence, but the female officers aren’t much better.

It’s still a position of power.

I found in my six years going in and out of prisons, I had watched really young, seemingly kind officers take that role, and be diverted by the power. And I think there’s so much to be said about where correctional officers are coming from. For a lot of them, it’s the highest-paying job in their neighborhood. My idea for prison reform would be to fix the correctional officer culture.

You mentioned that the sexual violence storylines resonated with you. What other storylines?

It was small, but it was my favorite scene last season. When Piper’s boyfriend comes to visit her the first time, and the officer’s dragging her feet, “Oh, you have to do this paperwork. Oh, you should have done this.” Another degrading thing we do to prisoners is forcefully cut ties from family, in ways that I think the show portrays, and how nearly impossible it is to visit, specifically in a federal prison. You could be from Florida and be sent to a prison in Wisconsin. It’s been proven by every study ever done that the best way to help someone re-enter society and not reoffend is to have ties to their family.

Another story that resonated from last season was how quickly Taystee came back to prison. When our students are released, it is a struggle to get on your feet, because there’s no… You’re put so far back. No one wants to hire ex-cons or rent apartments to ex-cons; your family hasn’t kept in touch with you, and they’re underserved by plenty of resources as well. You’re returning home to communities that are cycles for incarceration. ... Officers bringing in drugs is also a very real problem, and drug use inside prisons. There are no addiction services, and then COs bring it in and make a killing.

Were there any individual stories that stayed with you?

In the men’s and women’s prison, an overwhelming majority were victims of pretty heinous crimes in their life, in their childhood. In their application essays … the women are way more willing to open up about themselves, and maybe that’s from being in an all-female environment, but I know the women’s stories way better than the men. They’ll tell you about their crime within three hours of meeting you.

One of the women in Wally Lamb’s [book], Robin Ledbetter, I don’t remember the specifics of her story, but there were abusive, addicted parents. [Ledbetter is currently serving a 50-year sentence for killing a cab driver when she was 14.] We were starting our first class, and going around doing college icebreakers, “I’m Lexi, I’m from Cooper City, Florida. I’m a sociology major.” Robin goes next, and she’s like, “I’m Robin, I’m from York Correctional.” That answered just floored me, but if I moved somewhere when I was 14, I’d say I’m from that place too. Those are your formative years. And a high percentage of our students have been incarcerated since they were teenagers.

What are the most pressing issues that need reform in prisons?

Each state calls their prison system something different, but in California, the prison system has rehabilitation in its name. The prison system has boomed, and it’s so expensive. And somehow none of the money or resources have gone to the main idea, which is rehabilitation. It depends how you frame this politically, right? I’d say, “You need to help get them the resources to help them get back on their feet.” But I’m sure there are people who’d say we don’t owe them anything. They committed a crime.

Education is the biggest component of it, and mental health services. Programs on the outside to help them re-enter society. The thing I always end up saying in conversations about prisons is, it’s such an oxymoron, because if it worked, it’d put itself out of business, and no correctional officer wants to lose their job. And I think the show does a good job of showing that [in] all these communities in rural upstate New York or rural Connecticut, the prison is its main employer. And if it shut down, that entire district is out of a job.

One other thing I’ll say about the power dynamic is that our program has always had a hard line of admitting people with all lengths of sentences. We have lifers in our program, and we think that’s really important because, first, we wish this was a service everyone in the prison could get. But a great byproduct of that choice is that we have people in all ranks of the hierarchy, and a lot of times the leaders, or so-called matriarchs or patriarchs, if they’re in our program and are getting a college education, then we see all their disciples applying.

Photo via Rennett Stowe (CC BY 2.0) | Remix by Jason Reed

USA vs. Portugal: The day Americans finally discovered soccer

$
0
0

Something beautiful happened online last night: America started to care about a soccer. Putting aside their obsession with ‘handegg’ and Donald Sterling-ball, the U.S. community on Twitter all rooted for Team USA as they valiantly fought against Portugal.

While the end result was a draw, the U.S. fans clearly won out. With costumes including a fan dressing up as former President Teddy Roosevelt.

Others to simply went mad with joy at a goal.

While the fans at the stadium went literally wild, Twitter was also abuzz with America’s new-found interest in the beautiful game and tried to understand it.

When the going got tough, and Portugal equalised in the very last few seconds of injury time, however, the mood turned ugly.

Some were just confused.

But at least Buzzfeed was on side to console the upset American fans.

Screenshot via ESPN


Watch John Oliver destroy Dr. Oz over 'magical' weight-loss products

$
0
0

At this point, John Oliver has become an expert at eviscerating almost anything he discusses, and now he’s set his sights on Dr. Mehmet Oz.

Congress ripped Dr. Oz a new one earlier this week for his “flowery” language and the various claims he made about weight-loss aids on his TV show, and Oliver devoted more than 16 minutes of his 30 minute show—practically an eternity in YouTube time—to shedding light on the U.S.’s problematic lack of restrictions for dietary supplements, a matter in which Dr. Oz is only a symptom.

“The industry is essentially supposed to police itself,” Oliver explained. “That’s like one of those porn sites that asks you to enter your own age, which basically just ends up teaching children how to subtract 18 from the current year. It doesn’t work.”

Oliver shows him just how easy it is to pander to your audience without having to spout out dangerously misleading medical information.

All you need is George R.R. Martin, a puppy, and a tap dancing Steve Buscemi, and you can easily pander to your audience without offering terrible drug advice.

It’s practically a miracle cure.

H/T Gawker | Screenshot via Last Week Tonight with John Oliver/YouTube

Lana Del Rey's death wish gets a response from Frances Bean Cobain

$
0
0

Earlier this month, singer Lana Del Rey gave an interview to the Guardian, in which she discussed fame, music, and romanticizing the deaths of Amy Winehouse and Kurt Cobain. She told the interviewer, “I wish I was dead already.”

Del Rey has a new album out, Ultraviolence, a follow-up to 2012’s debut Born to Die. That statement was latched on to and circulated as part of the LDR persona, the “sad girl fantasy.” It also makes for a great headline, which the Guardian took advantage of. Later, Del Rey responded on Twitter, saying the interviewer's questions were “calculated.” (She then deleted the tweets.)

Frances Bean Cobain, daughter of Kurt Cobain and Courtney Love, also responded, tweeting at Del Rey and warning her not to romanticize death.

Of course, people thought it was an attack on Del Rey, who’d already attempted to distance herself from the Guardian article.

At this point, we've perhaps buried Del Rey under an avalanche of thinkpieces. Lindsay Zoladz’s recent piece about the “sad girl fantasy” as it’s existed online is a good read. When male artists express sadness or hint at depression, we as a culture often elevate them and their manpain. When women do it, we tend to cut them down or categorize them as weak. She offers an alternative: “Maybe the answer is to glamorize neither strength nor weakness, sadness nor happiness, but search for the many alternatives in between.”

Correction: An early version of this article misstated the timeline of Lana Del Rey's Guardian interview.

Photo via Jaguar MENA/Flickr (CC BY 2.0)

Popular Vine star under fire for Daytime Emmys red carpet rape joke

$
0
0

Last night, the Daytime Emmys Awards took place in L.A., and the show was hosted by Kathy Griffin, which already insured there would be some offensive jokes. Four popular social media “experts” were also hired to interview nominees on the red carpet: Brittany Furlan, Jessica Harlow, Lauren Elizabeth, and Meghan Rosette.

This year’s show was livestreamed instead of broadcast, which further allowed for unedited questions. The hosts did not disguise the fact that they knew very little about the soap stars on the red carpet, and instead commented mostly on their appearance.

Harlow asked Lawrence Saint-Victor from The Bold and the Beautiful what it was like “to be a black man on a soap opera these days.” Then Furlan, a popular Vine star, and Elizabeth attempted to hit on Ryan Paevey from General Hospital, with a series of bad detective/investigator come-ons. As he started to leave, Furlan said, “We’re going to get you away from us before we rape you.”

Viewers of course took to Twitter to voice their dissent:

Neither Furlan nor the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences has commented on the incident.

Screengrab via livestream.com 

Robin Thicke reveals his depressing texts in a weirdly sad new video

$
0
0

Robin Thicke is working really hard to get estranged wife Paula Patton back. Case in point: his new music video for a song literally titled "Get Her Back.”  

Thicke once again finds himself cooing into a camera with a gorgeous model lurking in the background, but this video also features something a little different: recreated text conversations, possibly similar to those between Thicke and Patton after their split.

“I wrote a whole album about you,” says one. (That album, Paula, drops July 1.) The response? “I don’t care.”

The video offers a plethora of (really sad) clues as to what led Patton to walk away from the decade-long marriage:

Thicke sheds some tears and ends his video with one final text: “This is just the beginning.”

Good luck with that, Mr. Thicke. Looks like you might need it.

Screengrab via RobinThickeVEVO/YouTube

Vimeo to debut Aaron Swartz documentary 'The Internet's Own Boy'

$
0
0

Vimeo has been promoting its Vimeo on Demand service as a way for independent filmmakers to get exposure and sell their own work. On Friday, it’ll debut The Internet’s Own Boy, Brian Knappenberger’s documentary about programmer and activist Aaron Swartz, the same day the film opens in theaters. According to Vimeo, it’s the “only service where fans can buy the film to own and the download will be DRM-free with a Creative Commons license.”

Swartz, a cofounder of Reddit, Creative Commons architect, and critic of the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA), was arrested in 2011 for downloading academic journals from digital nonprofit library JSTOR, and he faced felony charges, even after returning the materials. Shortly before his trial started, he took his own life in January 2013, at age 26.

The Internet's Own Boy chronicles Swartz's ascent in the world of technology as a child prodigy, his vision for the future of the Internet, and the legal pressure that ultimately, and heartbreakingly, caused his downfall. 

 

Participant Media, the parent company of TV network Pivot, is working on a campaign for the film. Both Participant and Pivot focus on social justice issues in their programming and distribution, and they’re taking Swartz’s case a step further. A spokesperson for Participant explained:

“Aaron Swartz’s death shows why allegations of attorney misconduct must not go unchecked, so building on the release of Internet’s Own Boy, Participant’s social action campaign will drive discussions within the legal community around this case, educate legal students, and provide advocacy options for those looking for change. Our program includes a petition sponsored by the Project on Government Oversight for better oversight of attorney/prosecutorial misconduct, events and screenings with the Legal Community (ABA, NACDL, etc), and a curriculum for law schools due out later this year.

“We are also rolling out a program next month to 'Donate a Tweet' that pushes for Eric Holder and the Department of Justice to watch the film and respond with a public comment.”

Pivot will air the film later this year, and you can pre-order on Vimeo now. 

Photo via takepart.com

'The 10 Commandments of YouTube' is essential reading for content creators

$
0
0

YouTube fans often approach their community with a religious zeal, so it’s only fitting that Frederator Studios’s recent ebook release about conquering the video space has a biblical flair. The 10 YouTube Commandments lays out the channel’s guide to YouTube domination in 2014, from authenticity to managing collaborations.

The studio may be best known for its TV series like Adventure Time, but the Frederator team has also built an impressive YouTube offering with more than 1.2 million subscribers on their Cartoon Hangover channel for projects like Bravest Warriors and Bee and Puppycat. Matt Gielen, director of programming for the company and author of the ebook, outlines Frederator's 10 key tips for content creators looking to make a mark in the YouTube space.

The tips range from the obvious—creating good content tops the list—to the nuanced, such as tips for creating effective thumbnails that delves into the specifics of word placement, color, and the types of faces that work the best. Instead of simply telling readers what to do, Frederator shows actual engagement graphics that illuminate how the strategies they promote have affected their own programming choices.

Spoiler alert: The final commandment, in true DIY fashion, is to forget the previous nine rules and pave your own way. Despite that, the ebook’s release on the eve of VidCon makes it key pre-reading before the hoards of content creators, brands, and fans descend on Anaheim, Calif.

The 10 YouTube Commandments is available for download on Amazon, iBooks, Barnes & Noble and Kobu.

Illustration via Wikimedia Commons | Remix by Fernando Alfonso III

Zach Braff's snoozing Broadway audience leads to 'Weekend at Bernie's' prank

$
0
0

If you're a live theater performer, you might think you've seen it all. But as Zach Braff proved on Jimmy Kimmel's show last night, there's always something new on Broadway.

In the case of a recent performance of the new Braff-headlined musical Bullets Over Broadway, one woman was not ready for her closeup, and the result was a combo of every actor's worst nightmare and a family's hilarious Weekend at Bernie's prank on their own relative.

On Jimmy Kimmel Live last night, Braff shared his experience of spending the whole first act of a recent performance watching a woman on the front row slumbering peacefully away, much to his chagrin. 

At intermission, Braff sent her a Red Bull and a note begging her to try to wake up. From there, it's sunglasses all the way down.

Yikes! If the new Susan Stroman musical is that hard to slog through, the audience at the St. James might want to brush up on their theater etiquette, courtesy of Broadway reviewer Chris Caggiano:

Sorry, Braff.

HT The Wrap | Photo via NYWaterway


Here's the leaked 32-page YouTube contract for indie labels

$
0
0

YouTube’s music subscription service is finally set to launch—and the problems have already begun.

Last week, we were thrown into a vague panic when headlines started warning of the impending disappearance of certain “indie” acts from the site, if they didn’t agree to YouTube and parent company Google’s terms. Even though it’s known YouTube would be debuting this service, fans quickly cast Adele and Radiohead as two martyrs of this coming indie-cleanse. What would we do if we couldn’t find “Someone Like You” at 3am?

There were also stories about how YouTube's widely reported bullying tactic might not be entirely accurate. YouTube is indeed launching a music-streaming service later this year, in hopes of competing with sites like Spotify and, more recently, Amazon, which debuted a streaming service for Prime customers earlier this month.

Spotify, Pandora, Beats Music, and Amazon are just a few of YouTube’s competitors as the service enters the ever-growing marketplace, which was most recently joined by T-Mobile’s questionable music-streaming program. If bands and labels don’t join YouTube's premium service, clips could stay up, just without ads and monetization. Vevo allegedly won’t be taking down any videos, either. YouTube revealed that labels representing 95 percent of the industrylabels like Sony and Universalhave signed up.

Last week, Billboardobtained an early version of the licensing contract being offered, which found that YouTube’s “payment percentages are lower than the combined 70 percent in revenue (approximately) that the interactive, premium component of services like Spotify or Rdio pay to labels and publisher rights owners, according to label and digital service sources.”

“The main beef with YouTube is the company's take-it-or-leave-it approach, which they say includes an onerous and negative most-favored-nation clause. If any major label or major music publisher agrees to any rates for the YouTube service that are lower than the rates set forth in the YouTube contract, Google will have the right to reduce the indie labels' analogous rate accordingly.”

Yesterday, Digital Music News published the entire 32-page contract sent to indie labels, which illustrates some of the practices in question, and the rates going forward. 

It also drops in a convenient "covenant not to sue" clause.

Understandably, this contract has angered some in industry. Last week, Alison Wenham, CEO of Worldwide Independent Network stated:

“Put simply, by refusing to engage with and listen to the concerns of the independent music sector YouTube is making a grave error of commercial judgment in misreading the market. We have tried and will continue to try to help YouTube understand just how important independent music is to any streaming service and why it should be valued accordingly.”

When asked for comment or clarification on the matter, YouTube sent back a form letter:

“Our goal is to continue making YouTube an amazing music experience, both as a global platform for fans and artists to connect, and as a revenue source for the music industry. We’re adding subscription-based features for music on YouTube with this in mind—to bring our music partners new revenue streams in addition to the hundreds of millions of dollars YouTube already generates for them each year. We are excited that hundreds of major and independent labels are already partnering with us.”

Some have pointed out that labels like Beggars Group, and all its satellite labels (Matador, Rough Trade, XL, Young Turks, 4AD), could be part of this takedown. When reached for comment, Beggars declined to comment on the matter. Believe Digital, which is considered an indie distributor, claimed it signed a contract with YouTube back in February, after months of negotiations. So why are some contracts negotiable and some aren't? 

These are the growing pains of transitioning from one model to another, in an era of overwhelming choices in streaming music content. This transition is a unique one: Most streaming services offer a new home you’ve never seen, but YouTube is attempting to build around an existing platform, within the walls of Google. Is forcing labels to join going to be successful? Have we all forgotten the failed Google Plus integration?

It sounds like Google and YouTube haven't really thought this transition out too well, and that doesn't bode well for the service. Perhaps this early-stage uproar will serve as a catalyst for smaller labels to rethink their relationship with YouTube, and how they can thrive moving forward. Perhaps it will force YouTube to think about how it engages with its artists. Perhaps there's someone out there dreaming up a service that will do what YouTube's aims to, but better. 

Illustration by Jason Reed  

Hank Green provides a pre-YouTube history of Web video

$
0
0

BY SAM GUTELLE

Hank Green is the co-founder of VidCon, which means he’s awfully busy right about now. Nonetheless, he has managed to find some time to educate his viewers on the early history of the online video world. In his latest video on the Vlogbrothers channel, Green noted a handful of pre-YouTube viral videos and discussed the ways they influenced future efforts.

As Green explains, the first viral video was the “Oogachaka Baby“, which spread via email in 1997. For Green, though, online video kicked into high gear in 2000 with the launch of Homestar Runner, which he claims “remains the best online video project in history.”

After mentioning a few other early Internet classics, such as The End of the World and Neil Cicierega’s “animutation” videos, Green arrives at Ze Frank‘s the show, which he calls “the most important video series of all-time.” According to Green, the show‘s two-way nature (in which Frank interacted directly with his viewers) has had a lasting impact. “Pretty much everything you watch on YouTube these days is either directly or indirectly influenced by Ze Frank,” he explained.

The video is a nice history lesson for Green’s viewers, some of whom are too young to remember the pre-YouTube Internet. For the rest of us, it’s a nostalgic trip back to the Albinoblacksheep era.

With his pre-YouTube monologue out of the way, Green will return to preparations for VidCon. He’s not the only member of his family making headlines; his brother John has a date with Stephen Colbert.

Screengrab via vlogbrothers/YouTube

A cappella wizards Pentatonix are Hollywood-bound

$
0
0

Pentatonix have taken over YouTube with their covers and their original songs ever since winning the third season of The Sing-Off, and now they’ve been cast in Pitch Perfect 2, according to Entertainment Weekly.

The five-member group will play a rival a cappella group to the Bardem Bellas, which included stars Anna Kendrick, Rebel Wilson, and Brittany Snow among others, as they go through another school year after winning a national title.

Pentatonix's Scott Hoying stressed that while it’s obvious that he and the other members are in the film, they’re not playing themselves, and and fellow member Mitch Grassi promised fans that they’re “going to love it.”

Hoying, Grassi, Avi Kaplan, Kirstie Maldonado, and Kevin Olusola spent one day on set performing a song that they arranged themselves

“They gave us a song, and we arranged it and sent it back, expecting them to say, ‘You need to change this, this, and this,’” Hoying told EW. “But they came back and said, ‘Great, that’s it!’ That was really cool.”

The original Pitch Perfect movie sparked a growing interest in a cappella among fans (and “Cups” covers), and Pentatonix became involved thanks to fan tweets to producers and the efforts of mutual friends. Many members of the cast are also fans of the a cappella group.

Fans had an inkling that Pentatonix would be in the film after the group posted a photo to Instagram with the caption, “Some aca-awesome things are happening :)”

We’ll have to wait until 2015 to see the actual performance, but it’s sure to be aca-amazing.

H/T Entertainment Weekly | Photo via Abby Gillardi/Flickr

'Minecraft' creator drops $46,300 on eBay for rare Aphex Twin album

$
0
0

Last week, a “lost” 1994 album from electronic musician Aphex Twin, recorded under the name Caustic Window, was distributed to fans who threw in $16 each for a digital copy of the album on Kickstarter. It was also uploaded to YouTube, which was sort of a slap in the face for those who threw down dollars for it, but hey, the Internet moves quickly. 

The album was also put up for bid on eBay, and on Monday it was finally purchased for $46,300. The original asking price, when the album first appeared on Discogs in April, was $13,500. The lucky winner of the double album? Markus "Notch" Persson, developer of the video game Minecraft.

Minecraft is very successful, so it’s not surprising Persson had $46,300 ready to drop. You could look at this as a bit of unintentional synergy: The hours you’ve spent playing Minecraft helped its creator purchase an obscure electronic double album, so the geek circle is complete. Looks like some players have already toyed with the idea of adding Aphex Twin to Minecraft.

Earlier today, the man behind the Kickstarter campaign wrote on We Are the Music Makers, the forum where the idea originally started: “My daughter was blown away that the guy who made the game she endlessly plays bought a record off her dad for 46K."

A portion of the bid will go to charity.

H/T A.V. Club | Photo via cheriorbit (CC BY 2.0) | Remix by Jason Reed

Jon Cozart tops the Billboard Trending 140—with last year's single?

$
0
0

Within hours of the release of Jon Cozart’s new video, “After Ever After 2,” the track has not only racked up praise and views from his more than 1 million YouTube fans, it’s also achieved a nascent honor—topping the new Billboard Trending 140 Chart, which tracks songs shared in real time on Twitter.

Since launching the Trending 140 the end of May, the chart has been dominated by stalwart social media musical darlings (and mainstream powerhouses) like Justin Bieber, Katy Perry, and Lana Del Rey. Songs are included in the chart through a variety of factors—including links to platforms such as Spotify, Vevo, and iTunes; hashtags #nowplaying or #np with the song/artist name; or terms like “music,” “track,” or “listen” tweeted along with the song title. Cozart’s new track has been getting voracious love from his fans and fellow YouTubers all day on Twitter.

Interestingly, Cozart’s appearance on the chart is for “After Ever After,” the original Disney parody that he released in March 2013. Either Billboard isn’t tracking the "2" in his title correctly or release of the new song has lead to an uptick in listeners giving the original a spin and winning it a chart position; Billboard hasn't respond to a request for comment on the matter. But either way, Cozart’s current social media musical dominance is evident. 

Cozart rocketed to virtual overnight success in 2013 when the Austin college student released a Harry Potter parody that earned him millions of views and over a million subscribers to his Paint channel. The most recent video chronicles what happens to Disney heroines like Mulan, Tiana, and Cinderella after their stories end. Cozart is sporadic with his video updates—his account spans four years but only hosts 18 videos—building in a bigger hype for his releases that could account for the chart bump. Whatever the formula, the one-man barbershop quartet is getting attention beyond the confines of YouTube with his work. Could we see an all-YouTube music chart in the future?

Screengrab via Paint/YouTube

Viewing all 7080 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images