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Archive for April, 2011

Sexy Celebrities Eating in Public, ‘Is That a Thing?’

Jack Schafer writes a sporadic column for Slate which aims to highlight and chide lazy and inaccurate reporting by some of America’s most acclaimed sources of news. It’s called Bogus Trends and it calls BS on everything from a New York Times Styles Section exposé on 30-something New Yorkers insisting on hiring bartenders for small apartment parties to a Boston Globe piece asserting party-throwers are starting to exclude pets in their invites to a CNN article claiming kids are getting high on Tussin (which they are, but the evidence CNN uses is subpar).

Taylor Orci’s new Slate V web series is kinda like Shafer’s Bogus Trends except it’s in video, focuses on pop culture, and bunks as well as debunks news items from all the tabloid magazines and websites you are too embarrassed to admit you read.

In the latest installment of Is That a Thing?, Orci investigates the age old gossip rag trend of discussing and depicting female celebrities eating food (which, because they eat food, too, makes those female celebrities just like us!):

I like it! Kinda! At least in concept. I’m always a fan of diving into the minutia and applying an analytical lens to pop culture. And Orci does that. She showcases recent press coverage of DIPE (or Documented Instance of Public Eating) and speaks with Jeremy Walker, the film publicist who coined the phrase and embraced the phenomenon to his marketing advantage. But that analysis only accounts for about half of the four-minute-and-twenty-six-second episode.

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President Obama Live from Facebook on 4/20

It’s 526 days until the next US Presidential Election, but it’s never too early to start campaigning (especially when you have a 43% approval rating).

President Barack Obama began his 2012 reelection efforts on Monday April 4 with targeted texts, an e-mail blast, and a YouTube video (which, judging by the number of likes and dislikes, has an approval rating of roughly 46%).

The President will continue his 2012 reelection campaign at a fireside chat with a potential audience of 500 million individuals worldwide on a day when college coeds and aging hippies are sure to be high on hope.

President Obama will host a Facebook Townhall event on 4/20 broadcast live from the Facebook HQ in Palo Alto, California. The social network’s CEO Mark Zuckerberg and COO Sheryl Sandberg will also participate in the meeting, which promises to “discuss the tough choices we must all make in order to put our economy on a more responsible fiscal path, while still investing in areas like innovation that will help our economy grow and make America more competitive.”

The event is officially called “Shared Responsibility and Shared Prosperity” and Obama will rock politics (and probably try to do a little early rocking of the vote) at 1:45PM PT / 4:45PM ET. You can catch the action and submit questions to the President via facebook.com/WhiteHouse or WhiteHouse.gov/live.

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Quick Clicks: CuteRoulette, ‘Halo: Operation Chastity’, ‘Kids React’, ‘Ask Milly’

Online video and web series news worth clicking today:

CuteRoulette may be littered with cat videos, but we have to give it a temporary pass, as it officially sucked away at least 45 minutes of productivity out of our day. The simple creation of NYC-based firm Hard Candy Shell is so darn adorable it can even seduce an awwww out of our one-eyed janitor Lew. They had us at Monkey and Puppy (below).. [CuteRoulette]

Too late for Charlie Sheen? Not for six year-olds. The Fine Brothers‘ weekly series Kids React continues to mildy abuse children today by making them watch the first Charlie Sheen interviews just a week after sitting them down for the full Rebecca Black vid. My favorite little kid in this series is easily becoming Morgan Bertsch (pictured above) who just seems to love life a little more than the others. Some of these kids even have respectable YouTube channels of their own, like the 21k+ subscriber Lia Marie Johnson. [TheFineBrothers on YouTube]

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Royal Wedding Live Stream Up For Grabs?

With the much-anticipated royal wedding between Britain’s Prince William and Miss Catherine Middleton fast approaching on April 29th, Tubefilter has been receiving reports that broadcasters have been scrambling to sell the live streaming rights to the ceremony—with little success.

So today the Royal Household announced that it will be live streaming the entire ceremony itself, via the YouTube channel TheRoyalChannel, the official channel of the British monarchy.

The feed will be taken from the BBC ,without a broadcaster’s commentary. According to the YouTube Blog, “The live stream will begin at 10:00am BST (9:00am GMT, 2:00am PT, 5:00am ET) on Friday, April 29, and will follow the wedding procession, marriage ceremony at Westminster Abbey and balcony kiss.”

The Royal Household is taking advantage of YouTube’s latest foray into live streaming, which includes hundreds of content partners, including a kickoff of The Digitour live from Google HQ. Staff at Clarence House and St. James’s Palace will provide a live commentary with historical information, interesting links, additional photographs and video footage as well as an integrated Twitter feed.

We’ll see how this decision affects NBC’s broadcast plans for the wedding, along with Entertainment Tonight and The Insider who has partnered with Livestream to integrate the live stream into

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Latinos Take on Hipster Brooklyn in ‘East WillyB’

If The Burg is for Lovers, it’s also, according to East WillyB, for Latinos.

The new comedy series about a diverse community in Bushwick (or East Williamsburg) hopes to capitalize on both the popularity of Brooklyn among web series and the growing Latino market online.

Premiering last week at a packed screening at Anthology Film Archives, sponsored by Licor 43, East WillyB centers on Willy Reyes, Jr., the self-proclaimed Nuyorican “King of Bushwick.” Willy owns a bar catering to Latinos in a community on the verge of gentrification. His ex-girlfriend and business partner wants him to upgrade the bar to cater to the coming influx of hipsters, but Willy would rather not.

The series humorously explores the complexities of gentrification: from the people within the community who accept the trend to the real estate agents who re-brand neighborhoods, all while giving audiences a big cast of crazy characters.

Creators Julia Grob, an actress, producer and Brown University graduate, and Yamin Segal, a filmmaker and NYU alum, created the series to target a “new generation” of Latinos: English-speaking, educated and raised in multicultural communities.

“It was important for us to come out as the trends were emerging,” Grob said, adding that the bulk of the Latino population in the US is young and the Spanish-language programming of Univision is seen as for the older generation.

The two producers spent time in LA pitching the show to networks but were told they were too “early.” Coming out with the show independently allowed them to get ahead of the trend.

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Yahoo! Going After TV Dollars With More Original Series

Yahoo! is launching seven to ten new original series this year and may be planning an upfront event to go after TV ad money.

Adweek reports that recently appointed SVP of Yahoo! Media Networks Mickie Rosen is aiming to build up a slate of programming around a central demographic or theme, like cable and the TV networks, and is considering holding an upfront-styled event this year for its advertisers.

In fact, Erin McPherson, VP & Head of Video Programming and Originals at Yahoo!, touted, “Our shows reach more uniques in a given month than visit Hulu, and rival some cable networks.”

Yahoo!’s new slate will focus less on “wrap up” shows (like Prime Time In No Time, which celebrated its 500 millionth view last month) and more on original content, including scripted shows.

This week Yahoo!’s gossip site omg! will premiere Inside & Out, a celebrity-driven health series focusing on beauty, fitness,

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The Best Passover Video on the Internet

If you’re hoping the Canadian crew behind Epic Meal Time prepared some gastric monstrosity equally nauseating and delicious for you to recreate at your Passover Seder, you’ll be quick to remember how much bacon Harley Morenstein, Alex Perrault, and Sterling Toth use in their culinary creations and realize these dudes definitely aren’t kosher and most probably aren’t MOT.

After you’ve indulged your disappointment with a viewing of Turbacon you’ll scour the web for an hour or two to come to realization that entertaining Passover videos, be them about recipes or other aspects of the Jewish holiday, aren’t the internet’s forte. Some of the best filmmakers and comedians in the world have had a Bar/Bat Mitvah, but for better or worse none of those best filmmakers or comedians choose to make videos on or about Passover.

What we’re left watching are embarrassing covers of pop songs your mother forwarded you via e-mail, reruns of Feed Me Bubbe, animated biblical stories made into edutatinment, and instructional videos that look more like infomercials. And this:

Aish.com, the self-proclaimed “world’s largest Jewish content website” produced Google Exodus, a screencast version of how the story of Passover would’ve went down if Moses and Ramses II had those new superfast Comcast internet connections.

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Encyclopedia Dramatica Closes, Sanitized OhInternet Launches

If 4chan is a veritable petri dish of internet meme generation, then sites like Encyclopedia Dramatica and Know Your Meme would become its quasi-scientific journals. Then came capitalism. Know Your Meme, just three years old was acquired for seven figures last month by Ben Huh’s sprawling online empire of memes, I Can Haz Cheeseburger, followed this weekend by the abrupt closing of ED to launch a cleaner, safe-for-work wiki called OhInternet.

It came without notice to the site’s loyal contributors, who found themselves redirected to the new OhInternet site on Friday morning. And it’s likely that the seven-figure exit by Know Your Meme’s Andrew Baron and co. may have been the final straw for a site deemed too offensive—and at times racist—for and serious attention from mainstream suitors. Some praised it as one of the last bastions of uncensored discussion on internet culture, while others wrote it off as overrun by bigoted trolls.

ED’s primary contributor, and ringleader Sherrod DeGrippo told Geekosystem the biggest difference between OhInternet and Dramatica is that the new site has moved towards “a more toned down content style and a streamlined design: Shock for shock’s sake is old at this point and we’re looking forward to the future and how things are evolving … when you put user experience first, the language becomes highly important and that’s what we’ve done.”

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