Would you be interested in doing some Internet radio spots for us?
Pro bono publico of course. And also once we create an Internet radio station…
My answer is yes, and that goes for anyone who wants any type of voice over or voice acting. I will even use my nice microphone instead of my iPhone.
find me a recording studip and ill so do it.
This is really quite amazing.
An Italian singer wrote this song with gibberish to sound like English. It’s actually quite a great song and video, I wish there was more info on it.
This is the kind of stuff I loved when i was a communications major. This is very accurate.
I really this ‘song’. kinda catchy, even though it’s completely nonsense haha.
i could watch this all day. love me some Colbert
pile:
Movin’ out!
Goodbye 225 Park Ave South, you will be missed. Hello IAC Corp!
IAC Corp?? Doesn’t sound fun at all.
I roared with a belly laugh when I read this headline in bed earlier today. Could Capitol Records truly be this misguided? Do they not realize that if you were to sort Internet brands by those most emblematic of creativity — not piracy — that Vimeo would line up at the top? Lip-dubbing is harmless and perfectly fun, and ultimately will define the aesthetic of an Internet generation. Other than for some petty legal jockeying towards a greater strategy can I imagine why this record company would try to sink such a potentially valuable lifeline — Lip-Dubbing and Vimeo create tremendous relevance and usefulness for their catalog!
If anything better underlines my point it’s an email I received from Sean Nelson, the frontman of the band Harvey Danger, whose song Flagpole Sitta we’ve now infamously lip-dubbed:
That Flagpole Sitta video made me incredibly happy, just when I thought there was NOTHING that could make me listen to that song again. A thousand thank you’s.Capitol, you’re a bunch of goof-balls. This lawsuit is the tactical equivalent to pooping on someone’s birthday cake.
I, for one, am willing to boycott Capitol artists unless they reconsider, and I implore other labels to pivot and spur conversations with Vimeo in order to determine a simple process to give people access to copyrighted music for personal video that is satisfactory for all. Preemptive strikes simply won’t do anymore!
Please reblog, or honk, if you agree.
Oh wow. Capitol Records must be pretty desperate. Too bad they won’t win this one. Hey! This is a GREAT time to make a Lip Dub YALL! DO IT!
make sure you tag your video with lipdub.
Just try and sue me Capitol Records. Just try and take away the money that I don’t have, and never will have.
Glee. I don’t think I need to say more.