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Tag Archive for: YouTube

Alleged Cannibal’s Online Trail: Violent Pics, Weird Tweets, QR Codes

0 Comments/ in Facebook, Social Media, Twitter, Uncategorized / by Sam Laird
June 1, 2012





Before confessing to killing and eating another man’s heart and brain, Morgan State University student Alexander Kinyua left a digital trail on social media and other corners of the Internet.

His online presence paints a picture of a deeply disturbed young man fascinated by violence and warfare.

The 21-year-old Kinyua reportedly admitted to police this week that he killed a 37-year-old man who was living with Kinyua’s family, then chopped him to pieces, ate the man’s heart and munched on parts of his brain before dumping the rest of the body in a trash can.

The incident came shortly after another man in Miami ate half of a homeless man’s face off.

Kinyua’s posts to Facebook, Twitter and YouTube in recent months offer a bizzarre and macabre window into his mind. Kinyua started a Twitter account in early December with the handle @COREeye67, according to a Baltimore Sun investigation into his online activity.

His first original tweet, on Dec. 9, read simply and cryptically: “FIRST PRINCIPLES OF COSMIC COMMAND.”

He then tweeted 34 principles in a row, each individually numbered, and capped off the spree with this message: “STAY TUNED FOR MORE AS YOU PONDER EACH TWEET DEEPLY. REVIEW, REFLECT, SEARCH OUT ITS MEANINGS WHICH ARE SURELY THERE.”

On Dec. 10, he tweeted more than a hundred messages, seemingly at random, to businesses and celebrities. Most of them read “AWESOME JOB” or “COME HELL OR HIGH WATER!!!! KEEP ON KEEPING ON!!!”

He posted his last tweet on Feb. 25. Earlier that day, he replied to a tweet by Parenting magazine in which he referenced a friend who is “a veteran exorcist.”

On Facebook, Kinyua’s profile picture depicts a pair of lions mating. His gallery of cover photos include a painting of a shackled and shirtless man fighting off bears, an image from what appears to be an Alien vs. Predator scene, and the cover of writer Sophia Stewart’s The Third Eye.

On May 17 of this year, not long before his alleged act of cannibalism, he posted a pair of QR codes, each with the caption, “CRACK TEAM ALL DAY, ALL NIGHT!!!”

Kinyua currently has 96 Facebook subscribers. He joined Facebook on December 11, 2008.

Kinyua’s YouTube account, also under the handle COREeye67, has been deleted by the company because of third-party complaints over copyright infringement. According to the Baltimore Sun, he left comments on videos posted by the National Association of Pershing Rifles, a non-profit ROTC group.

He also had a self-published podcast on the website blogtalkradio.com, called Warrior Syndicate Radio. His profile picture there is a head shot of him apparently slathered in war paint.

The show’s description reads: “Warriors skilled in combat or warfare, especially within the context of a tribal or clan-based society coming together to form a syndicate learning portal for Warrior Clans.”

Check out the gallery below for a look at Kinyua’s online life. And let us know in the comments: is a social media trail like this useful for understanding the mind of an alleged killer?


@coreeye67





Kinyua started a Twitter account in early December with the handle @COREeye67. This tweet was from early March, before the alleged crime was committed.

Click here to view this gallery.

More About: cannibal, Facebook, Social Media, Twitter, YouTube



Spider-Cat Defies Gravity [VIDEO]

0 Comments/ in Uncategorized, viral videos / by Christine Erickson
June 1, 2012

Cats tend to be sneaky animals, always getting into mischief. Seven year-old Piggy, however, appears to have superpower strength that allows her to climb down the fridge. Think about the kind of trouble she could get into.

SEE ALSO: Cats in Space: The Feline Frontier [VIDEO]

According to the video’s uploader, LowkeyFlix187, this is a daily routine for Piggy, though it’s not explained where she learned the trick.

Relax everyone — it’s just your friendly neighborhood Spider-Cat.

More About: cats, viral, viral videos, YouTube

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Clever Public Service Announcement Addresses Online Privacy [VIDEO]

0 Comments/ in Uncategorized, viral videos / by Christine Erickson
June 1, 2012

The need for Internet anonymity has been hotly debated since the World Wide Web took form in the early 1990s. Today, social media and more widespread usage of technology have contributed to greater transparency around online identities.

While this allows people to verify each other online, it also raises concerns about the erosion of privacy.

The adage “On the Internet, nobody knows you’re a dog” came from a New Yorker cartoon caption in 1993. Now this stop-motion video, inspired by that cartoon, serves as a humorous PSA for Internet anonymity.

What are the benefits and drawbacks of being anonymous on the internet? Do you prefer using your real identity or being anonymous? Let us know in the comments.

More About: online anonymity, online identity, viral, viral videos, YouTube



Rejoice! Now You Can Use a Banana as a Keyboard

0 Comments/ in kickstarter, trending, Uncategorized, viral videos / by Christine Erickson
June 1, 2012

Tired of your boring keyboard? Two final-year PhD students at MIT have created a contraption that will jazz up your online life a bit.

The MaKey MaKey is an invention kit that turns everyday objects into touchpads. The project was launched on Kickstarter, where it’s asking for $25,000. Though it still has 11 days to go, the project has already received $358,379 in funding.

“We believe that everyone is creative, inventive and imaginative,” write the students on their Kickstarter page. “We believe that everyone can create the future and change the world. So we have dedicated our lives to making easy-to-use invention kits.”

Raffi may have coined the “banana phone,” but these guys have brought the fruit to the 21st century — by turning it into a keyboard. Does it sound a-peel-ing to you? (Sorry.)

More About: kickstarter, trending, viral, viral videos, YouTube



Sony’s PlayStation Vita has a YouTube app headed its way by the end of June

0 Comments/ in Uncategorized / by Richard Lawler
June 1, 2012

Image

Assuming all that gaming, Facebooking and Tweeting isn’t enough action for your PS Vita, Sony announced tonight it will get a YouTube app by the end of the month. Considering the built in web browser doesn’t handle HTML5 or Flash video, native apps are still necessary to fill out its video streaming lineup. The company’s US blog hasn’t posted any pics yet, but Engadget Japan has a few screen grabs of what it will look like. Check after the break for another pic, while we wonder what other surprises Sony has planned in the run up to E3 2012.

Continue reading Sony’s PlayStation Vita has a YouTube app headed its way by the end of June

Sony’s PlayStation Vita has a YouTube app headed its way by the end of June originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 01 Jun 2012 01:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Engadget Japan  |  sourcePS Blog  | Email this | Comments

Google springs for .lol, .youtube domains, we wonder if it’s going TLD .crazy

0 Comments/ in Google, Uncategorized / by Jon Fingas
June 1, 2012

Image

Google just can’t wait until ICANN reveals custom domain name bids in mid-June to say what it’s trying to buy — and it’s clear that Mountain View went on a shopping spree. Some of the top-level domains in the land grab are ones you’d expect safeguarding Google’s prized possessions, such as .google, .youtube and .docs. Others make us fear for the future of Internet memes. Google claims that it’s bidding for TLDs such as .lol to explore their “interesting and creative potential,’ but we have a hunch it’s just taking the addition of LOL to the dictionary a little too seriously. The company does assuage our fears with a promise to prevent TLD abuse. If we ever see omgwtf.lol become a reality, though, we’ll know Google has gone off the .deepend.

Google springs for .lol, .youtube domains, we wonder if it’s going TLD .crazy originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 31 May 2012 21:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceGoogle Official Blog  | Email this | Comments

Animated YouTube Series Launches Low-Budget Kickstarter for Full-Length Film

0 Comments/ in kickstarter, Uncategorized / by Christine Erickson
May 31, 2012

Note: This video contains language that’s NSFW

Animation studio Six Point Harness launched an ambitious Kickstarter campaign on Thursday for a film version of its hit YouTube series “Dick Figures.”

The YouTube series — which features two dysfunctional stick figures, “Red” and Blue” — is part of the Mondo Media family and has more than 115 million views. Six Point Harness is relying on those fans to decide the film’s length, intending to produce a feature-length film at most.

“Our audience has been begging for this, so it was only natural that we would reach out directly to our fans on YouTube to help us fund the growth of Dick Figures,” says Brendan Burch, CEO of Six Point Harness Studios.

The campaign for Dick Figures: The Movie will remain open for 47 days with an initial target goal of $250,000 for a half-hour special. If the funding surpasses to $500,000, the film will be an hour long, and for $700,000 the team will produce a full-length feature film.

Most animated full-length features require a production budget north of the millions. According to Burch, the team originally wanted $600,000, but Kickstarter was concerned about how low they set the budget. In fact, this may be one of the lowest production budgets for an animated full-length feature film.

“Our no frills, no fees, pure cost budget is around $680,000,” says Burch.

According to Burch, given that the film is successfully funded, distribution will likely reach YouTube’s rental program, among several other digital platforms that cater to the show’s hyper-connected audience — ranging from 13 to 24 years old.

SEE ALSO: How Entrepreneurs Are Using Kickstarter to Fund Their Dreams

“Our audience has grown up online and they are super savvy online, so most of our distribution plan would be digital,” says Burch, who also notes that they are not ruling out a theatrical release.

YouTube recently implemented support on crowdfunding platforms like Kickstarter and Indiegogo, making for a powerful partnership. Sites like Kickstarter and YouTube have become a vital way for filmmakers to gain recognition and fundraising.

“Now our viewers are one click away from investing in Dick Figures and helping us take this property to the next level,” added Burch.

The film has been in discussion for some time. Burch says that the creators Ed Skudder and Zack Keller have been offered film deals in the past, but they were turned down because of creative control and business issues.

“We just wanted to make sure that we weren’t ever going to compromise what our fans are going to expect from us,” says Burch.

The fans have subconsciously been taken into serious consideration throughout the entire planning process — from deciding on production methods, to distribution, and even contributing to the plot.

The video shown above serves as a teaser for the film, which is currently an outline, not yet a full script. As a YouTube series, “Dick Figures” incorporates fan reactions into each episode.

However as a film, Burch says that four seasons of unanswered questions from fans will be revealed.

More About: kickstarter, mondo media, YouTube

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Visualized: Sauber F1 cutaway car is half the vehicle it used to be (video)

0 Comments/ in Social Media, Uncategorized / by James Trew
May 31, 2012

Visualized: Sauber F1 cutaway car is half the vehicle it used to be (video)

Ever wondered what goes on inside a Formula 1 car? No, we’re not talking about Jenson Button’s delicate elbow movements, we mean inside the car. Well, it turns out that we’re not the only ones, and fortuitously for us, some people with the actual means to find out — the Sauber F1 team — have done the noble thing, and cut one in half. Yes, a real F1 car. Cut in half. It took two years to achieve, but from tip to tail, it’s all there on display. That precious steering wheel you see drivers carry with them? Halved. Clever layered fuel system for lower center of gravity? Carved open. They even bring a driver in, the only thing to remain intact. Race on past the pit stop break for the visuals.

Continue reading Visualized: Sauber F1 cutaway car is half the vehicle it used to be (video)

Visualized: Sauber F1 cutaway car is half the vehicle it used to be (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 31 May 2012 09:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Grand Prix  |  sourceSauber Motor Sport (YouTube)  | Email this | Comments

Can ‘Call Me Maybe’ Work as Job Recruitment? [VIDEO]

0 Comments/ in Social Media, Uncategorized / by Samantha Murphy
May 31, 2012

A New Jersey public relations firm has embraced the “Call Me Maybe” voice-dub trend by posting a choreographed video to YouTube — as a part of an effort to look for job candidates.

The catchy song from Carly Rae Jepsen has been endlessly covered over the past few weeks, but this is the first time we’ve seen a business use the hit song to reach job applicants.

Litzky Public Relations, a boutique PR agency in Hoboken, New Jersey, aims to attract young staffers with pop culture and social media knowledge.

“With two open positions and tons of recent grads entering the job market, Litzky PR wanted to connect with potential candidates in a unique, engaging format that allowed our agency to stand out from the crowd,” Michele Litzky, president and founder of Litzky Public Relations, told Mashable.

SEE ALSO: ‘Call Me Maybe’ Parody Features Digital Obama, Romney [VIDEO]

The video starts with an employee — who carries publications such as Advertising Age and PRWeek — entering the firm’s office building, while lip-syncing the lyrics to Jepsen’s song. The clip then shows staffers dancing and singing along throughout the office — from meeting rooms to in front of the coffee machine — as well as on the streets of Hoboken.

“By using the power of social media and tapping into a pop culture phenom, we are connecting with candidates where and how they live,” Litzky said. “The video immediately communicates our playful office culture and showcases the pride each employee takes in being a ‘Litzky Lady.’”

Ironically, despite the song’s lyrics, the firm doesn’t actually want candidates to call. At the end of the video, an employee holds up a sign that says, “No calls, please. Visit LitzkyPR.com/jobs.”

What do you think of the strategy to lure potential job candidates? Is it all good fun, or a sign of trying too hard? Let us know your opinion in the comments.

More About: Call Me Maybe, Entertainment, Music, PUBLIC RELATIONS, Social Media, viral, YouTube



Fred Armisen Wants You to Be Serious for 30 Seconds

0 Comments/ in Social Media, Uncategorized, viral videos / by Christine Erickson
May 31, 2012

Comedian Fred Armisen, celebrated for being funny on SNL and Portlandia, is requesting that Internet users do the complete opposite.

Armisen introduced a project called “Be Serious For 30 Seconds.” He asks users to submit videos to YouTube, whether scripted or improvised, that are totally serious — they must contain no humor and must last 30 seconds or less. The title of the project must appear somewhere in the submission titles.

He’s included a few other oddly specific rules.

  • Rule 1: It has to be serious.
  • Rule 2: It has to be 30 seconds or less.
  • Rule 3: No more than two people in it.
  • Rule 4: At least one five-second dramatic pause.
  • Rule 5: At least one cutaway to an object.
  • Rule 6: Do your best acting.
  • Rule 7: It needs to have a door slamming.

Although the project has requirements, Armisen says “Be Serious For 30 Seconds” is not a competition, but rather, a collection of serious videos. He then shares his own version of the project, alongside his Portlandia costar Carrie Brownstein.

SEE ALSO: Portlandia Stars Talk Twitter and the New Face of Comedy

Users are getting really creative with their submissions. We’ve gathered five noteworthy picks from the competition to give you an idea. Do you think this is really just a collection of serious videos, or does Armisen have something else up his sleeve?


1. Spaghetti




This video dramatizes an overcooked dinner and dirty dishes.

Click here to view this gallery.

More About: Portlandia, Video, viral, viral videos, YouTube

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Talented Sisters Cover ‘Call Your Girlfriend’ With Plastic Tubs [VIDEO]

0 Comments/ in Uncategorized, viral videos / by Stephanie Haberman
May 31, 2012

Amazing young musicians aren’t new to YouTube. Performers such as Sophia Grace, Ethan W. and this adorable Ukulele player have frequently made us smile and astounded us with their talent.

However, Lennon and Maisy Stella may just take the cake.

In the above video, the Stella sisters cover “Call Your Girlfriend” by Robyn with no accompaniment — except for percussion played with empty margarine tubs.

The performance, which is actually a cover of a cover, is currently on the front page of Reddit and is quickly going viral. The original cover was performed by Erato.

12-year-old Lennon also has some incredible guitar chops for someone her age, highlighted in the “I Won’t Give Up” cover below. Her sister Maisy is 8.

These Stella sisters definitely have their groove back. Do you think they’re destined for the big time? Let us know in the comments.

More About: viral videos, YouTube



Adorable Kids Try to Read Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious [VIDEO]

0 Comments/ in Uncategorized, viral videos / by Brian Anthony Hernandez
May 30, 2012


Like Mary Poppins swooping in to bring joy to children, two volunteer English teachers recently descended on a rural Cambodian school for three weeks, at one point challenging young students to recite a 34-letter word.

Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious, wrote Mathieu Cuvelier and Lucy Crook.

The word — popularized by the 1964 Disney flick Mary Poppins — initially stumps the ABOUTAsia Schools students. But as the above clip from marketing agency The Viral Factory shows, the children eventually learn how to say the challenging word.

SEE ALSO: Boy Ages From Birth to 9 in 127 Seconds [VIDEO]

More About: Children, education, Movies, viral videos, YouTube

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Soccer! Lasers! Stormtroopers! The Best Goal Celebrations Ever [VIDEO]

0 Comments/ in Uncategorized, viral videos / by Sam Laird
May 30, 2012

What happens when you take the best goal celebrations from soccer stars, then add Stormtroopers, laser beams and other effects along with a rocking Led Zeppelin soundtrack? Pretty much the best YouTube sports video of all time, that’s what.

In the video above, CGI has added all kinds of surprises to the standard post-goal revelry. The editing is so slick, it almost looks real. Except that we all know Stormtroopers have no place on the soccer pitch and players don’t usually light joints immediately after scoring. But still.

The mashup has gone mega-viral on YouTube, racking up more than 1.2 million views since being posted Sunday. It appears to have been created by a French ad agency called Buzzman.

Check it out for yourself and let us know what you think in the comments.

More About: sports, viral videos, YouTube

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Got a Problem? Rub Some Bacon on It [VIDEO]

0 Comments/ in Social Media, Uncategorized, viral videos / by Christine Erickson
May 30, 2012

You know what’s really great about the Internet? The fact that two guys can make videos about taxidermy and bacon, and both become instant viral hits.

YouTube celebs Rhett and Link are responsible for Chuck Testa’s Ojai Valley Taxidermy commercial. They also made a hilarious roller skating ad.

This time, the two may have outdone themselves by creating a humorous anthem to bacon — which is, apparently, a cure-all snack.

More About: Entertainment, Food, Video, viral, viral videos, YouTube

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How Stan Lee Became a Social Media Superhero [EXCLUSIVE]

0 Comments/ in features, Social Media, Twitter, Uncategorized / by Sam Laird
May 30, 2012





Excelsior! At 89 years-old, comic book legend Stan Lee shows no signs of slowing down. In fact, the creative force behind iconic Marvel characters, including Spiderman, Iron Man and the Incredible Hulk, is more digitally connected than many whippersnappers half his age.

Lee will launch his own comic convention — Stan Lee’s Comikaze, Presented by POW! Entertainment — in September. The event is partnering with the location-based social engagement app Buzzmob to provide exclusive content to fans at the show, as well as connect those unable to attend.

Mashable recently sat down via Skype video chat with the Generalissimo himself, as well as with Comikaze CEO Regina Carpinelli. We talked comics, tech and social media — areas in which Lee also excels.

On Twitter, he’s amassed about 280,000 followers and tweets regularly from his home and office computers. (“I wear out a keyboard a week,” says @therealstanlee. “That’s how hard I hit them!”) He also just launched a new YouTube channel, Stan Lee’s World of Heroes.

Buzzmob, meanwhile, will give Comikaze a sophisticated level of social and mobile interaction. The app functions as a mini-social network for fans in attendance, letting them see who else is nearby and what else is going on at the convention, while simultaneously allowing Lee and other organizers to send out timely contests and notifications. But that’s not all — comic book fans who can’t make it to Los Angeles for the show can check in for a digital experience.

“It doesn’t matter if you live in Cambodia or Temecula,” says Carpinelli. “We want everyone to be a part of the show.”

Read on to see why Lee and Carpinelli partnered up for Comikaze, how Lee practically invented social media (you’ll be surprised), and his thoughts on how technology has changed the world of comic books. Also, stay tuned for one more upcoming treat — the entire Skype conversation in video form.


Q&A With Stan Lee


So what’s your first convention going to be like?

Lee: It’s going to be fan-tastic! I’ve always wanted to have my expo, my own comic con. But that’s not my business — I don’t know how to run them. Then I met Regina! She said, ‘Stan, how would you like to be a part of Comikaze?’ I had been to the first Comikaze, and it was wonderful! So I said, ‘By all means.’ Not only am I part of it, she put my name in front! It’s now Stan Lee’s Comikaze.

I’m real excited about this — it’s going to be a fan convention. The fans are everything, they’re going to be thrilled, they’re going to see new things they haven’t seen before. It’s going to just be the most fun convention there has ever been.

Carpinelli: And tickets are only $15! It’s jam-packed with amazing guests. Stan invited Todd McFarlane, and Elvira’s coming and doing all kinds of interactive content…

Lee: The Mistress of the Dark!

Carpinelli: We’re all about our fans and doing something awesome for our community. Eventually we’re going to take over the world.

Lee: Why haven’t we already?

What’s Buzzmob’s social integration going to bring to the table? How’s that going to help Comikaze?

Lee: We’re going to accommodate all the people who can’t make it, and we’re going to be in touch with them on the web! We’re going to have all sorts of things on the web for people to participate. I’m going to let Regina talk about it because, for one thing, she’s prettier than than I am, and my throat is getting hoarse.

“Keeping up with technology is really important. Anyone can have a regular convention. We want to change how conventions are made.”

Carpinelli: If you’re at the show as an attendee and you log in, you get exclusive content: downloads, contests with magical gifts and prizes. If you’re in a panel room, but there’s something else going on, you could still be following that on your phone. But the greatest thing is, if you can’t be at the show because you live far away, you can still log in and get special stuff and see videos and photos. It’s just like being at the show — but on your phone.

There are also two websites you want to go on. One is ComikazeExpo.com. Then Stan has an amazing site called TheRealStanLee.com. Stan is such a tastemaker, and he’s always at the front of technology.

Lee: No, no — she didn’t say I’m wearing a pacemaker. I am a pacemaker!

Carpinelli: A tastemaker!

Lee: Oh — a tastemaker. Okay. Well, I’m a pacemaker, also.

That seems like a pretty cutting edge approach for a comic convention. Why did you guys feel like it was so important to introduce that mobile, social element?

Carpinelli: Keeping up with technology is really important. Anyone can have a regular convention. We want to change how conventions are made.

Lee: We want to change how the world goes on! See, we can’t bear the thought of one human being missing out on all this wonderment. That’s why, through Buzzmob, if we can contact everyone in the world through the web and let them be part of all these great things we’re doing, it’s almost as if we’re performing a great public service, you see.

I think we shouldn’t have to pay taxes, because what we do is for the good of all mankind. I’d say more, but I’m getting all choked up emotionally.

Carpinelli: I keep trying to get Stan to run for president.

Lee: How about King of the World? President seems so local.

Was it easy or hard for you to get into Twitter, and why do you keep up with it so diligently? Not every 89-year-old man is doing that.

Lee: I always try to be out there somehow. One of my big fears is that somebody anywhere in the world might forget me, and I must never let that happen.

Twitter was easy to get into. When I was doing the comics, I had a column called “Stan’s Soapbox” that ran every issue of every book, and I would just talk about anything I felt like — of course, I made it incredibly entertaining and knowledgable for the readers. But Twitter is the same thing.

Twitter’s only the beginning of your social media expertise, though. What’s up with your new YouTube channel, Stan Lee’s World of Heroes?

Carpinelli: What is going on is they have all these fantastic, fabulous shows. There’s Stan’s Rants, where Stan complains about things — and it’s amazing. There’s Cocktails With Stan, where he sits with Jenna Busch, and they have drinks and interview these amazing people.

Lee: But we never drink too much! For our younger viewers out there, one sip and that’s all we have.

Carpinelli: There’s also an awesome show called Adrianne Curry’s Super Fans. She’s this beautiful model, reality show host — and huge, giant nerd. You can send in your videos and tell Adrianne how nerdy you are and why you are the biggest super fan, then she shows up at your house and looks at all your nerd stuff.

Lee: Somehow I feel like the conversation is never as interesting when it’s not about me.

Carpinelli: Elvira also launched an interactive web series with us, called Elvira’s Horror Hunt. Amateur filmmakers can send in their horror films. The winner gets flown out to L.A. and gets a screening of their movie with a red carpet premier at the Vista Theatre. The next day, they’ll be a guest at Stan Lee’s Comikaze.

Lee: I hope everyone is taking copious notes. There may be an exam!

Here’s a question from our reader, wdeg: “You’ve had an incredible career and could easily be kicking back on an island somewhere enjoying the fruits of your labor. So, why aren’t you retired? What keeps you getting up motivated every morning?”

“Most guys say, ‘I can’t wait to retire so I can do what I really want to do’ — play golf and so forth. But I’m already doing what I really want to do!”

Lee: I wouldn’t dare retire, because when I think of all the enjoyment that I bring to people out there, I know I couldn’t deprive them. It wouldn’t be fair for me to not let them enjoy me as much as humanly possible.

Carpinelli: Stan’s a giver.

Lee: That’s right. And I love the fans and want them to know I’m always there for them. See, most guys say, ‘I can’t wait to retire so I can do what I really want to do’ — play golf and so forth. But I’m already doing what I really want to do! Please don’t make me have to spend time on the golf course. That would be like a prison sentence!

This one’s from another Mashable reader and fan of yours, Manny Redruello: “If Twitter and social media had been around during the early stages of your career, how do you think you would have used it then?”

Lee: Well, I didn’t have Twitter, but I had my column and we had letters pages in the comic books, where readers would write letters. You know the reason I wear glasses now? Because I strained my eyes! I read every damn letter and answered as many as I could. I was writing to them and they were writing to me, and it felt like I had a million friends all over. So that was my Twitter in those days.

And I never thought of them as fans — they were friends. Everyone who writes to us and tweets to us now — these are friends of ours, and you’ve got to be good to your friends. You can’t be on the golf course when your friends need you.

Carpinelli: It’s amazing to see how gracious he is to his fans, and how they respond. I’ve seen people cry when they meet him. It’s fantastic.

Lee: You notice when people say nice things like that, I never interrupt? I let her talk and talk. About people crying to meet me, though — I hope that isn’t taken the wrong way.

Carpinelli: They’re tears of joy!

“Everything changes. Everything advances. To me, most of the changes are improvements. We can’t live in a way where we say, ‘I like the old stuff better!’”

A number of readers had questions along these lines: How have you seen technology change comic books over the past couple decades, and do you think it’s been good for the industry?

Lee: When it comes to stories, no change at all. We could write a good story today that was like an old story — there’s no difference. But some of the comic books have a whole new look now — they look like beautifully illustrated tablets. They look like paintings, rather than just regular comic book drawings, and it’s the addition of the computer coloring and computer lettering.

There are some purists who feel that we ought to go back to the old comics, that they were more like real comics. But everything changes. Everything advances. To me, most of the changes are improvements. We can’t live in a way where we say, ‘I like the old stuff better!’

It’s impossible to go back to yesterday — you have to keep moving along with today and tomorrow. To me, what makes the arts so much fun is that they keep changing with the times….Hey, that was a great speech!

Thumbnail image courtesy Gage Skidmore, Flickr.

More About: Entertainment, features, Marvel, Social Media, Stan Lee, Twitter, YouTube

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Kid Wakes Up After Anesthesia, Hilarity Ensues [VIDEO]

0 Comments/ in trending, Uncategorized, viral videos / by Christine Erickson
May 30, 2012

What is it about children on anesthetics that makes parents run for their camera? The drug-induced babble from “David After Dentist” was the first to go viral, and now we have Matt. Meet the boy who finally understands what David was yelling about in 2009.

The video features young Matt in the hospital, just waking up from anesthesia. He seems to be taking it well, except for the fact that he is “dizzzaayyy.” A few other hilarious moments in the video are when he asks “Why are there two of you?” and a very adult-like “what’s up, man?” to his father.

SEE ALSO: What to Expect When Your Kid Becomes a Meme

Wait for Matt’s final honest statement in the video, and tell us, how do you think he’ll react to this in the future?

More About: david after the dentist, medicine, trending, viral, viral videos, YouTube



Paul Simon Wants Your Instagram Travel Pics for #Graceland25 [EXCLUSIVE]

0 Comments/ in features, Uncategorized / by Matt Silverman
May 30, 2012




Paul Simon Graceland Instagram


The opening track on Paul Simon’s 1986/87 album Graceland, titled “The Boy In The Bubble,” is an ode to the “miracle and wonder” of modern technology.

“Staccato signals of constant information
a loose affiliation of millionaires
and billionaires, and baby
These are the days of miracle and wonder
This is the long-distance call
The way the camera follows us in slo-mo
The way we look to us all.”

In the ’80s, it was the rise of 24/7 broadcast media, a burgeoning telecommunications industry and medical breakthroughs like “the baby with the baboon heart.”

Twenty-five years later, we live in a new era of miracles: instantaneous peer-to-peer communication, real-time global information networks and unfettered access to limitless media. Technology is, once again, turning the status quo on its head and sparking revolutions around the world, figuratively and literally.

It’s a poignant time for the re-release of Graceland, a pivotal album in Simon’s career. Not just a commercial and critical success, it’s notable for introducing world music to many American ears, and Simon experimented heavily with electronic drums and synthesizers — a new creative direction for him at the time.

The anniversary collector’s edition comes in a fancy package, and contains exclusive, unreleased material. But more than that, Simon’s team is tapping into digital media with the hope of reaching a new and socially engaged audience.

“When I first met with Sony Legacy to discuss this project, we all agreed that we wanted to find some creative ways to breathe new life into a classic record, and to reach a younger demographic,” says Elliot Fox of Sneak Attack Media, the agency that assisted with the digital campaign. “We all felt that the ideas and music on Graceland have the potential to live on forever, and people of all ages just need a chance to interact with them.”

Their key point of entry: Instagram.

Paul Simon Graceland Tour

The #Graceland25 contest launches today, and the team wants to see Instagram travel photos from fans. With the #Graceland25 hashtag, simply share the best Instagrams of your journey to Facebook, Twitter or Tumblr, and you could win the 25th anniversary box set, a Yamaha acoustic guitar and other prizes. Those familiar with the record know that travel and rebirth are important themes, and this collection of “vintage” visual travelogues is fitting, according to Fox.

“Instagram provides a simple yet profound means of expression — to share an experience or emotion through a photo,” Fox tells Mashable. The agency will use the web tool Statigram to collect the entries and pick the winners.

But there’s more to the digital campaign. Sony Legacy aims to explore the rich history behind the creation of the album, much of it recorded in South Africa with local musicians during the apartheid regime. It introduced American audiences to artists like Ladysmith Black Mambazo, and mired the release in international politics.

“Sony Legacy had so much historical information and interesting content from the making of this album, and we all felt that an interactive tab would be the most exciting way to share it,” says Fox. They plan to utilize the platform Thinglink to tell the visual story of the album’s creation, and integrate it into Legacy’s Facebook page on June 5.

Thinglink allows brands to create interactive layers on top of static images. Users who mouse over “hot spots” on the historical timeline will get additional information, links, music and videos that offer rich context. “Thinglink makes it so easy to share multiple pieces of content, and to allow people to interact with it,” says Fox.

To top off their social campaign, Sony looked to YouTube, often the primary destination for young music fans. Cover song videos are big, and the label tapped some indie rock heavyweights to perform their renditions of Graceland classics. Guest artists include Givers (see below), Oberhofer, Bosco Delrey, Brett Dennen and more to be announced.

“The band Givers from Lafayette, Ala. contributed a cover of the song ‘That Was Your Mother.’ They were able to bring in legendary musician Dickie Landry to play saxophone on their cover,” says Fox. “Landry is actually credited with playing saxophone on the original version of the tune for Graceland. The outcome was pretty astonishing.”

Does Graceland have a special place in your musical memory? Do you think it still speaks to today’s connected generation?

More About: Entertainment, features, instagram, Music, Paul Simon, YouTube

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‘Visual Novel’ Channels the Web, Social Media, Arab Spring

0 Comments/ in Facebook, Social Media, Twitter, Uncategorized / by Joann Pan
May 29, 2012




Kapow! By Adam Thirlwell


Could this be the craziest novel you’ll ever read in print?

The unconventional layout of Kapow!, from author Adam Thirlwell, features upside-down and spinning text. That’s intentional. It’s supposed to reflect the noisy confusion of stories from the Arab Spring, as they emerged online.

The novel Kapow! tells the story of Arab Spring in 2011. London-based writer Adam Thirlwell and the design team at publisher Visual Editions dreamed up the concept.

Thirlwell manages “to bring to paper how most of us digest on screen,” according to Visual Editions co-founder Anna Gerber.

The unusually formatted novel features large typography, pull-out pages and wordplay. The aim of these visual digressions: to represent what it’s like to follow the protests and demonstrations in the Middle East and northern Africa via links, tweets and YouTube.

“I thought it was the perfect form to describe the way you were able to find out about these things through various social media,” Thirlwell tells Mashable.

Though the book is based on real events, it’s a work of fiction. The setting is clearly Cairo, Egypt, but the city’s epicenter Tahrir Square is never mentioned.

Thirlwell’s unnamed protagonist is semi-autobiographical. The narrator is also a London-based writer learning about the revolution in 2011. The story takes off when the narrator meets a taxi driver named Faryaq whose family lives in Egypt during the revolution. He comes to learn about a “marriage that’s hijacked by public events.”

The project took six months of planning, three months of writing and three months of editing to complete. “I found it fascinating to mimic the way one’s attention is constantly being distracted or changed by what you’re looking at,” Thirlwell says.

SEE ALSO: Can Augmented Reality Save the Printed Page?

Thirlwell spent months looking at blogs featuring day-to-day updates from revolutions. He focused primarily on blogs and YouTube.

“Within the revolution they were using Facebook, Twitter and everything,” he says. “YouTube, I think, is in a way the most interesting because if you suddenly upload a video, it has an instant impact in a way that any article about that doesn’t.”

He wrote the story as the Arab Spring movement was unfolding last winter. Videos, images and blogs posts were available almost immediately after events happened.

“[The web] is working to mobilize a huge amount of people very fast,” he says. “To the bystander, like the American or British person observing the revolution, it becomes a way of actually seeing what you otherwise wouldn’t be able to see.”

Of course, Mideast revolution is still being documented online. Last week, news of Syria’s #HoulaMassacre spread widely across Twitter before news organizations were reporting about the incident. The U.N. reports 49 to 100+ residents of Houla were killed.

This Thursday, news from Egypt about the country’s presidential elections is expected to light up Twitter and other social networks.

Check out some images from Kapow! on Amazon. And let us know in the comments: would you read this? Does it do a good job of representing the cacophony of the Internet?






Click here to view this gallery.

Images courtesy of Visual Editions

More About: Arab Spring, books, Facebook, Social Media, Twitter, YouTube



Follow the Texas Primary on Social Media

0 Comments/ in Social Media, Twitter, Uncategorized / by Alex Fitzpatrick
May 29, 2012





Mitt Romney may very well mathematically seal the deal on the Republican presidential nomination Tuesday evening. The state offers him enough delegates to breach the threshold of 1,144, considered the “magic number” needed to firm up the nomination.

With all of his rivals either out of the race or not campaigning in the state, it looks as if Romney will indeed pass that mark in Texas. However, Texas Representative Ron Paul remains on the ballot and has a strong following in his home state, potentially creating a minor roadblock for Romney’s eventual nomination.

Meanwhile, a separate contest will determine the Republican candidate for an upcoming Senate race. The two major contenders are David Dewhurst, Texas’ lieutenant governor and Ted Cruz, former solicitor general. If no candidate wins Tuesday’s primary with a majority, it will go to a runoff election between the pair with the most votes.

President Obama is also facing a primary challenge from multiple candidates, including a Tennessee lawyer who got 42% of the vote in the Arkansas primary — but it’s not likely he’ll beat Obama in the Lone Star state.

Throughout the night, politicians, journalists and voters will use social media to rally support, tell the story of the Texas primary and discuss the night’s events. Follow along as Mashable collects the best examples of social media use throughout primary night in Texas:

Thumbnail image courtesy of iStockphoto, Henrick5000

More About: 2012 presidential campaign, barack obama, Mitt Romney, Politics, Social Media, texas, Twitter, US, YouTube



Oops: BBC Mistakes ‘Halo’ Logo For United Nations Emblem [VIDEO]

0 Comments/ in Social Media, Uncategorized, World / by Alex Fitzpatrick
May 29, 2012

The BBC got ahead of itself last week — by a few hundred years.

In a segment about the international community’s efforts in conflict-torn Syria, the BBC wanted to show the logos of human rights group Amnesty International and the United Nations. It got the right Amnesty logo, but in place of the UN emblem, it used that of the “United Nations Space Command,” a fictional government agency from the popular Halo video game series.

“BBC News makes every effort to ensure the accuracy of all images broadcast, however very occasionally mistakes do happen,” a BBC spokesperson told Eurogamer. “Unfortunately an incorrect logo was used during a segment on last week’s News at One bulletin and we apologise to viewers for the mistake.”

According to the Halo Nation wiki, the UNSC “serves as the military, exploratory, and scientific agency of the Unified Earth Government,” which was formed in the twenty-second century. In that case, the BBC should’ve saved this story for later — quite a bit later, really.

For reference, here’s the actual UN logo, adopted on October 20, 1947 — in the twentieth century, for those keeping track at home:





More About: bbc, halo, Video, viral, World, YouTube



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