YouTube serves up some gems
Today, hundreds of millions of video clips are viewed every day on YouTube, and tens of thousands of new videos are uploaded. Favorites get passed around on e-mail lists and picked up by mainstream media.
Amid the junk and idiocy gestating on the wildly successful site are some real gems. Some are surprising, some are sweet, others are dramatic. Most are just plain fun.
YouTube itself included some of these sites in its year-end video roundup. Its formula included an evaluation of view counts, most shared, most discussed, top rated and general popularity.
Here are some of our favorites:
• Fans of Michael Jackson's famous "Thriller" dance video must check out the effort by 1,500 inmates of the Cebu Provincial Detention and Rehabilitation Center in the Philippines. In "Thriller (original upload)" prisoners have remade the popular 1983 video directed by John Landis.
Byron Garcia, a security consultant for the Philippines government, originally uploaded the video and takes credit for starting the unique program of choreographed exercise routines for the inmates. In December 2007, Time magazine ranked the video fifth in the top 10 list of most popular viral videos. www.youtube.com/watch?v=hMnk7lh9M3o
• Dance is big on YouTube, and an extraordinary number of people mistakenly believe their pets are good at it. However, "Snowball Our Dancing Cockatoo" is impressive and worth a look. www.youtube.com/watch?v=N7IZmRnAo6s
• The best of the dance-themed clips is "inspirational comedian" Judson Laipply's "Evolution of Dance," a six-minute romp through decades of music and movement. www.youtube.com/watch?v=dMH0bHeiRNg
• More than 24 million computer users have checked out "Battle at Kruger," a dramatic confrontation between a herd of water buffalo, a pride of lions and a couple of crocodiles at a water hole in South Africa's Kruger National Park. A family shot this video footage while on safari and provides commentary up until the surprise ending. www.youtube.com/watch?v=LU8DDYz68kM
Recent comments
the Paul Potts video is 4:10 minutes long, not 3:37
netlurker | Feb. 5, 2008 at 7:04 a.m.


