Archive for the 'Video' Category

Margaret Cho on Logo

I think Margaret Cho’s piece during her hosting of Outfest (a show) on Wisecrack (a standup comedy series) on LOGO (a tv network) was hilarious. She manages to describe and define the issues about which she’s joking in a way that no other contemporary comedians around seem capable. The video is definitely worth watching, unless you are a huge fan of the Pope’s dresses. In that case you might find this a little bit on the offensive side. I don’t think Cho’s a huge fan of the Pope’s input on social matters. In case you’re in that offended camp, you may want some boules Quiès.

Margaret Cho on LOGO

SE:SA Like It Like This ft Sharon Phillips

Not only is this song killer, but the dancing is amazing. You can just make out the roots of Dee-Lite’s classic ’Groove is in The Heart’ underneath the new melody they’ve got going on here. It’s a perfect post-summer, winter warmer type of song that you need when you get to a club and want something to come on that isn’t a Britney Spears remix or some hard-house vibe that actually rumbles your whole body. It’s also not trying to be some sort of Eric Prydz rip-off with lots of girls in short bikinis wearing skirts, but truely has an interesting range of characters doing some great moves. Plus, fantastic video editing. Inexpensively, but well done.

From the Get Weird Turn Pro blog:

This track by Hamburg’s Se:Sa (aka Skye ’n’ Sugastarr), in collaboration with Mousse T, is going to be huge and features an excellent vocal contribution from Sharon Phillips, who you might have last heard on the Trentemoller track ‘Want 2 Need 2′.

Youth Obsessed?

It’s funny how you read, so often, about the gay culture of youth. We’re, apparently, consumed with the concept of staying young forever with cremes and pills and gyms and every single type of tonic you could ever hope for. The image, I presume, comes from all those pumped up bodies you see in gay magazines. I bought one today, they’re there. There is a culture of youth. Some people clearly believe it. But it’s ironic for me to point to that link because it’s a gay guy saying how gays are youth obsessed.

I come to this topic through a rather roundabout route. Gayclic, a wonderful french gay-themed ‘news’ video blog linked to GLAAD’s media campaign titled ‘Be an Ally & a Friend‘. It was promoting the idea of being an ally to people coming out on National Coming Out Day (October 11th). Be supportive by being respectful. That’s all. On their website there are a couple other video links which I decided to check out, one of which led to David Mixner, an LGBT activist, speaking at the Empire State Pride Agenda 2007 annual dinner. It’s a New York gay-rights charity.

He recounts, tragically, how as a result of the AIDS epidemic sweeping through his community, killing all his friends, he gave 90 eulogies

“We thought that freedom was very close at hand… and then came AIDS… But you gotta remember what it was like. I lost 296 friends. I gave 90 eulogies in two years. And I lost the man that I loved most in my life, for 12 years. We were not treated by dentists, nurses wouldn’t touch us, homecare workers wouldn’t come to our homes, doctors wouldn’t treat us, insurance companies told us we had brought this upon ourselves.”

It makes me stop and think. Perhaps, yes, gay culture is youth-obsessed. But perhaps that’s really only because almost all of the older generation were killed off by AIDS. Those who are still alive, those who lived through 1982 and onwards as out gay men and women are the lucky ones. The fact that they survived is enormously lucky, and in the same breath perhaps terrifying in how many of their nearest friends and loved ones died around them. So we are like a culture culled of all its patrimoine. How can you ever have an awareness of heritage without any elders. What other society has ever so publicly lost so much of a generation? Wars kill men but often leave their wives and lovers back home. This destruction, the destruction of an gay AIDS pandemic took homes and ruined neighbourhoods just like a war. It’s a certain way to create a ghost town, to tell people that by behaving as they had been behaving will lead to almost certain death. Nobody’s going to go to that bar. It takes homes because, as David Mixner says, sufferers had to sell them for their health care treatments, because it was fundamentally their own fault. But then also, there are no lovers or wives left behind because those lovers were the victims buried in the last funeral you attended or the last hospital visit you went on.

But today, this is interesting because Mixner spoke at a dinner that made me think that perhaps as a culture we’re not so gratuitous in our obsession with youth. We know nothing better. It’s those in their early 40s now who might be the first not to know the AIDS epidemic. They are the bearer of a culture’s heritage because there is nobody else to do it.

Part one of his speech is above. Youtube has the rest.

US Politics: Not Hillary, No Longer Barack, but Mike Gravel is the New Star.

Subtitled: Gravel’s Got Rocks!

Senator Mike Gravel sounds a bit like a sage Al Gore who’s been around the block a couple times and is sick and tired of the hypocrisy and weakness of potential leaders. He’s bold and old and comes across as a granddad with an opinion. Perhaps, at times, a little long-winded, he’s quickly becoming my one-to-watch of all the US Presidential candidates. I hope he’s paid due attention and supported by the people as much as he’s trying to empower them.

Three videos of his thoughts; the first is a short clip from an interview on MSNBC, the second from a speech he gave in New Hampshire: “We should be guided by Eisenhower’s warning that an inordinate emphasis on military power breeds a culture of militarism that threatens all vital areas of our society.” and the third from the debate amongst Democratic candidates for the presidency on April 26th in South Carolina.





The full transcript of the debate in South Carolina is avaible from MSNBC. More videos of Senator Gravel are avaible via Google Video

More at www.gravel2008.us
and http://www.nationalinitiative.us

Cameraphone sur une courroie transporteuse

Un de les choses le plus drole que j’ai vu dupuis longtemps: quelqun a mis leur cameraphone sur le courroie d’un restaurant de sushi au Japon. Personne a fait rien sauf faire signe de la main. Ahh, une ville sans les voleurs! Le meilleure truc, je pense, est quand l’appareil va dans la cuisine. Chouette!

J’ai vomi dans mes cornflakes

Si tous les enfants veulent devenir astronautes, c’est pour se barrer de cette Terre où ils devront vivre toute leur vie…

Seriously amazing video. The voiceover is a bit odd, but the visuals (especially if you don’t understand french) are amazing! I especially like the bit with the pigeon. If that’s not an incentive to watch, I don’t know what is!

//If this video disappears from YouTube, email me.

The entire Sopranos storyline in just 7 Minutes

Who has the time for all those seasons. No matter how good it is. If you miss the beginning, there’s no chance of catching up! This should help. Plus, it’s hilarious, which is always good. I love the deadpan voiceover with the clips. Someone did a bloody good job on this. I can’t imagine having to go through a boatload of episodes to find hundreds of half second clips that show the whole timeline of the show. This had better not get pulled for copyright infringement. I’d say it’s the perfect example of a fair use. Well maybe not perfect example but it’s a good video anyway!
via Defamer: Short Ends: Seven Minutes In The YouTubes With Tony

CONDOM news: Nouvelles des Préservatifs

This like Ségolène Royal’s words, comes from the gay blog gayclic.com. It’s excellent stuff and slightly less politically charged than Andy Towle’s Towleroad.com The condom industry could really do with a bit of innovation and it’s interesting that it’s coming from a developing country. Link to Pront Condoms South Africa

Ségolène Royal’s Straight Answer

More Al Gore

Ok, so it’s like Al Gore day here today or something, but I just was watching this Spike Jonze documentary/campaign video of Gore before the 2004 election, and it’s just too interesting to not pass on. It’s a touching look into the Gore family, sitting having a meal with the family, walking on the family’s property, and generally being with the family and moving past the politics. I admire Al Gore’s ethics, morality and intelligence so much that I dismiss all accusations of him being a boring guy. I worry if people think political leaders should be able to spout wisecracks more easily and readily than policy opinions. Gore’s a serious guy with real concerns, rather than trying to change the world one joke and ‘normal guy’ anecdote at a time, however this two part film is great at showing the largely unseen side of the man; the jovial, lighthearted, off-topic guy. Use the link to view part two.

YouTube: Unseen Al Gore Part 1
YouTube: Unseen Al Gore Part 2

via Gristmill at Grist Magazine