

Borat Meets David Letterman and talks about his hobbies, his former wife etc...
Warning: Do not watch this video more than two times in one day. Excess viewing may result in humming the addictive chorus until epilepsy sets in. As music videos go, it is a perfect storm of YouTube popularity--an endlessly catchy tune, a simple yet original execution (how many times did they have to rehearse that eight-treadmilled routine until they got it right in one long take?) and a proud trumpeting of a low-budget ethos.OK Go - Here It Goes AgainOK Go3 min 4 sec - Aug 7, 2006OK Go, Dancing on Treadmills Buy the album at iTunes: http://doiop.com/ohno/itunes More OK Go: http://okgo.net http://myspace.com/okgo (music_video)
Retro games like Centipede, Asteroids and Frogger are recreated using stop motion and, erm, toys and food and stuff!
Very odd video of Japanese dancing girls teaching English, the choice of sentences is hilarious.
"Happy Mornings" is a craaaaazy folgers commercial with dancing singing glowing ocean people.
What would happen if the starship Enterprise encountered the Death Star? Watch to find out...
can barely contain my joy at finding this video! It is simply THE BEST: Cute animation, robots, animals, dinosaurs, superheroes, hustle-and-bustle, and PIE.
This is the kind of stuff I love to find on Google Video. Strange, funny, and amateur. A teacher performs his "Quadratic Rap" for his students, cracking them up and teaching them at the same time. Looks like phone camera video.
The funniest 6 minutes you will ever see! Remember how many of these you have done!
For this video, the artist practiced 3 months in a row to learn to sing Led Zeppelin's most famous song--entirely backwards. "The Stairway at St.Paul's" is based on the hysteria that surrounded certain music recordings of the 60s and 70s. Some rock bands like the Beatles, Judas Priest and Led Zeppelin were supposed to have put hidden messages in their records that could only be heard when played backwards. These messages though, would subconsciously be picked up by the listener who would then react in response to them. In this way the band Judas Priest ended up in a court case because their records had "induced" children to commit suicide. Also, the Beatles were supposed to suggest through their records that Paul McCartney, one of their main band members, had died in a car crash and was replaced by a look-a-like. The most famous example though, is Led Zeppelin's "Stairway to Heaven," a song about a woman buying herself a way in to heaven. The mystic lyrics seem to urge us to follow the right path in life. But as one line in the song already says, "sometimes words have two meanings," and so, when played backwards, this song is supposed to urge us to worship evil. It's time to dive in to your record-collection and find out if it was all true. But first let us watch this video. So turn up the volume and remember the first time you smoked a cigarette