In addition to that, the Webmaster posted some, ah, remarkable explanations about September. This post included the trailer for the Great Pumpkin horror movie that, alas, did not actually come out.
Note: If this is your first time to TotalFluff, please visit this brief explanation. Thanks!
Greetings, readers!
My apologies for posting yet another YouTube Video to this blog, now making it five times in a row that the post has been a video, but I found this to be very impressive.
It is a new music video that is making the rounds on the internet
Although I am not particularly taken with the music itself, the video performance aspect of it is incredible. There are many performers, and they all seem to be synchronized.
Furthermore, I appreciate the “digital” effect the designers were able to achieve with the umbrellas. That is quite cool.
I also admit to being intrigued by the devices the four main performers were moving on. What is that device? How does it work? Is it as much fun as it appears?
However, I do not understand how the music video itself ties to the choreography. When the four colors came in at the end, it looked almost like a Windows Logo, but the colors were out of order. (And besides, tying the Windows Logo to a song where the lyrics are “I won’t let you down” ad nauseum seems a little… wrong. Unless they were trying to be ironic.)
I suppose that at a meta-level, it is impressive that everybody got the choreography correct. Maybe they were singing to each other about not letting each other down on this take?
Outside the meta-analysis, though, I really do not understand the link. It seems to me that any song with a very strong beat would have “worked” (from a choreography mapping perspective), and some might have worked better. If there were lyrics about twisting through the elements of time, for example, that would have flowed nicely with the music video’s choreography. Or some sort of reference to time and rhythm. As it stands, however, I do not think the song did the technology and synchronization justice.
Note: If this is your first time to TotalFluff, please visit this brief explanation. Thanks!
Hi, Fluffsters!
Today’s fluff is the first of four parts.
There is a fantastic YouTube “series” out. It’s called “Animator versus Animation.” Recently, the creator made part four. So I am going to be directing you to each of these for the next parts of this series.
Here’s the first part! (Trust me. Watch it.)
I love the way Alan Becker breaks the fourth wall with this one. Don’t you? I mean, seriously. You can tell that the animator is having trouble with his mouse. There are consistent rules within the movie. It’s cute and whimsical. And the sound effects are perfect!
Note: If this is your first time to TotalFluff, please visit this brief explanation. Thanks!
Greetings, readers!
I have once more encountered something quite bemusing in your world. In this particular case, it is a personal piggy-bank equivalent… in the shape of a bust of Karl Marx.
Personally, I think it is quite ironic to celebrate the man who desired to abolish property by making him a storage container for… private property.
Note: If this is your first time to TotalFluff, please visit this brief explanation. Thanks!
Greetings, readers!
If you are neither a Whovian nor someone who does Halloween, my apologies. This post will not be the most inspiring for you.
For those of you who do appreciate Doctor Who, however, I am here today to share another idea for how to make a Doctor Who themed Halloween Party.
This idea is inspired by series 6. (Of the reboot, of course.)
It will not take too much preparation, just a little bit of “sneak” talent. Basically, take a black marker, and sneak tally-marks onto people.
Also, if possible, put random items into their pockets, or by their hands.
If you can do this without being noticed (maybe in a completely darkened room, holding your “target”‘s hand?) this has the potential of being adequate for a Halloween Party. For a bonus, if you could either stop the clocks at 5:02pm without anybody noticing, or just get all the clocks in your house to skip ahead to some time (after you have put tally marks on your guests, of course) that could increase the effect.
Alternatively, you can randomly disappear, and then come back, claim “no memory” of where you just were, and have tally marks on you.