Hijacking home videos

The_Guys_Hijacking_Home_Videos

Here’s a cute little idea.
Finnish animation studio Anima Boutique have developed a series of episodes called The Guys. They get people to send in their home videos, which they re-interpret, import their animated characters (The Guys) into the scenes and re-publish on their website. 
They’re all short, they’re all silly, so they all have potential to become your daily 10 seconds of nonsense.  On your mobile of course .

David Lynch’s Interview Project

David_Lynch_Interview_Project

David Lynch embraces the internet yet again. On June 1 the director/artist will launch Interview Project,  a website that will release a series of 3-5 minute portraits of people that his crews met on a 20,000 mile road-trip round America. 
Watch the trailer and Lynch’s own little Lynch-style plug on the Interview Project website. Entertainment Weekly also has a preview of the first episode.

Would have been great if Lynch himself had interviewed all these people; the extraordinary meets the ordinary meets the extraordinary. Still, this looks like a nice piece of human content being dripfed into our digital brains over the course of a year.

the hyde tube

MrHyde

A lot of production companies are understandably a little nervous these days. Trying to keep up with the rapidly dwindling commercial budgets. Pondering whether they should bother making that 5K music video. Trying to make sense of ‘that digital thing’. 

So it’s inspiring to see the people at Paris-based Mr Hyde moving into interesting territory with the start of their online film festival called The Hyde Tube. Now, setting up an online video festival obviously isn’t that special, but the company are selling it as a talent-spotter place for agencies, labels,… i.e. their clients. 

I can see why they’re doing it. [Read more]

the year of online video

2008 was the year when I started thinking that my background in television/video/moving image was a bit of a burden. By nature, I’ve always been interested in change and the not-so-traditional side of things, so I couldn’t help thinking that people with an education and/or experience in digital media started to get a big advantage in the communications industry. Everyone started a digital agency and told clients they needed Facebook apps and a blog or two.  

Obviously, that’s all very true and useful and what not, but 2009 is set to be the year of video. On the digital platforms of course.
Groundswell‘ already mentioned video as an integral of any good communications strategy, and more and more industry people and blogs are talking about it. What got me thinking was this article on Video Insider, bigging up the importance of video. I particularly agreed with the bit where it mentions that it’s time to be creative with online video. [Read more]

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