The Drake and Josh Youtube Poop Collaboration (Re-upload)

Video genre consisting of edited pre-existing media

A YouTube Poop (YTP) is a type of video mashup or edit created by remixing/editing pre-existing media sources often carrying subcultural significance into a new video for humorous, satirical, obscene and profane, besides as annoying, disruptive, or dramatic purposes. YouTube Poops are traditionally uploaded to the video sharing website YouTube, hence the name.[1]

History [edit]

The video regarded as the first YouTube Poop was uploaded on the website SheezyArt, as opposed to YouTube, circa 2004; "The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3 REMIXED!!!" or what is now known as "I'D SAY HE'S HOT ON OUR TAIL" was uploaded past YouTube user SuperYoshi.[ii] It was created with Windows Film Maker and uses clips from the 1990 animated television series The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3, which has been regarded as kitsch by fans of the Mario franchise, as a primary source. Information technology exhibits stylistic and aesthetical staples of YouTube Poop, including repetition of clips for comedic outcome (the video name is a particularly campy pun spoken by Luigi that is repeated throughout the video), and critically disregarded media every bit a video source. In 2006, cutscenes from games released on the Philips CD-i platform (most notably Hotel Mario, Link: The Faces of Evil, and Zelda: The Wand of Gamelon) equally well as the animated series Adventures of Sonic the Hedgehog and the 1995 DOS game I.M. Meen [3] were incredibly common sources in YTPs, as they had been ironically acclaimed for deviating from the quality expected of their corresponding franchises.

Techniques [edit]

Media sources of YouTube Poops include television shows, movies, anime, cartoons, commercials, video games, music videos, and other videos obtained from YouTube or elsewhere.[four] A typical YouTube Poop uses visual and auditory furnishings to modify the underlying piece of work, as well as rearrangement of individual clips. The most common of such rearrangement being "judgement-mixing", a class of editing in which dialogue is rearranged or chopped up to grade new, often humorous dialogue—drawing humour from the unexpected changes to commonly well-known source dialogue. Some of these videos may involve completely or partially repurposing sources to create or convey an ofttimes self-aware story, while others follow a non-linear narrative, and some may incorporate no storyline at all, instead regarded among the lines of surreal humour and creative experimentation.[five] To this degree, a YouTube Poop may even consist solely of an existing video, sometimes modified, repeated in a slowed or remixed loop.[six] In many cases, YouTube Poops utilize a baroque sequence of elements which may entertain, misfile, or irritate, depending on the viewer.[5] Associate professor of cultural anthropology at Kansas State University, Michael Wesch, has divers YouTube Poops every bit "absurdist remixes that ape and mock the everyman technical and aesthetic standards of remix culture to comment on remix culture itself".[7]

YTP can often be derivative in the sense that the work of one artist (or, within the community, pooper) is sometimes used as the underlying work for some other video; this can be recirculated and atomic number 82 to the creation of "YTP tennis" videos, named for how they exist in rounds where the original video accumulates edits and alterations. Lawrence Lessig, Professor of Police at Harvard Law School, compared this aspect to a class of call and response, here seen as being prominent within remix culture.[eight] Another prominent type of video in the customs is known as a "collab", wherein a group of YouTube Poopers' videos are compiled to make a longer, ofttimes feature-length video. Virtually of the time, the videos featured are made exclusively for the collab and are not uploaded to YouTube prior to the collab'south release.[ citation needed ]

Copyright and fair use [edit]

Since YouTube Poop relies heavily on audiovisual cloth protected under copyright law, and the fashion in which these sources are depicted is perceived past its owners as detracting from the means in which consumers are apparently intended to access them, YTPs are known for existence removed from YouTube following DMCA complaints. Political scientist and author Trajce Cvetkovski noted in 2013 that, despite Viacom filing a copyright infringement lawsuit against YouTube in 2007 explicitly concerning YouTube Poops, in particular "The Sky Had a Weegee" by Hurricoaster, which features scenes from the blithe serial SpongeBob SquarePants (in particular, the episode "Shanghaied") and Weegee (a satiric caricature based on Nintendo's Luigi as he appears in the DOS version of Mario Is Missing), it and many others take remained on YouTube.[9]

Copyright law in the United Kingdom allows people to utilise copyrighted textile for the purposes of parody, pastiche, and extravaganza without being seen every bit infringing on the copyright of the fabric.[10] Copyright owners are but able to sue the parodist if the work is perceived equally communicating mean or discriminative letters, and modifying the intended purpose of the copyright owner's material. If the case is so taken to courtroom, judges are brash in jurisdictional terms to decide whether the video meets these criteria.[11]

Private responses [edit]

Besides copyright owners, entertainers and public figures whose likeness appears in YouTube Poops have been known to brand efforts to take YouTube Poopers' videos downwardly, because mature and defamatory content is prevalent in them, and if, for example, they accept a large audience of children watching said videos, they can create the supposition that these videos are primarily the work of these entertainers.[ citation needed ] Children's poet Michael Rosen (who claims to have "become a cult" amid YouTube Poopers)[12] initially attempted to take down videos where his poetry readings are modified, but after frank discussions with their creators, he decided to allow the videos to stay online; he compared the videos to humorous uses of photograph editing software in a afterward interview.[12] Rosen issued a warning on his website, maxim that:

Quite a few people take fun taking my videos and making new versions of them, known as 'YouTube Poops'. Many of these are not suitable for young children. I am non responsible for either the words or pictures of these.[13]

He put a similar warning on his YouTube channel'south "about" page.[14]

See also [edit]

  • Anime music video
  • Animutation
  • Cult Toons
  • Daffy Duck in Hollywood, a 1938 Merrie Melodies short with similarities to YouTube Poop
  • Downfall (2004 motion picture) § Parodies
  • Netdisaster
  • Remix album - an album with remixes, first used in Harry Nilsson'south anthology Aerial Pandemonium Ballet
  • Remix civilization - the full general culture surrounding modifying existing media into new and original artwork and others
  • Schichlegruber - Doing the Lambeth Walk, a 1942 British propaganda brusk with similarities to YouTube Poop
  • Vidding
  • Weird SoundCloud

References [edit]

  1. ^ Blackard, True cat. "Interruption Yo' Idiot box: YouTube Poop". Issue of Audio . Retrieved July 22, 2009.
  2. ^ Dormehl, Luke (March 30, 2019). "YouTube Poop is punk rock for the internet age, and you probably don't get information technology". Digital Trends . Retrieved May 29, 2020.
  3. ^ Feldman, Brian (Feb x, 2020). "How Pingas Became One of Sonic the Hedgehog's Nearly Famous Memes". Retrieved December 21, 2020 – via nymag.com.
  4. ^ Burgess, Jean (2013). YouTube: Online Video and Participatory Culture. John Wiley & Sons. p. 53. ISBN9780745675350. Archived from the original on March 3, 2017. Retrieved March 28, 2016.
  5. ^ a b "YouTube Poop: Memes and Community". Yale University, Law and Technology. November 3, 2012. Archived from the original on April 12, 2016. Retrieved November 4, 2013.
  6. ^ Van Damme, Tommy (November eight, 2013). "Tedious TV: Youtube doet het op zijn manier". De Morgen (in Dutch). Archived from the original on Nov eleven, 2013. Retrieved November 18, 2013.
  7. ^ Electronic Frontier Foundation. "In the matter of exemption to prohibition on circumvention of copyright protection systems for access control technologies" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on September 12, 2016. Retrieved November 11, 2013.
  8. ^ Lessig, Lawrence. "REMIX at Calculator History Museum". Archived from the original on August iv, 2015.
  9. ^ Cvetkovski, Trajce (2013). Copyright and Popular Media: Liberal Villains and Technological Change. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 175. ISBN9781137172372. Archived from the original on August 3, 2019. Retrieved May fourteen, 2016.
  10. ^ "The Copyright and Rights in Performances (Quotation and Parody) Regulations 2014". legislation.gov.uk. Archived from the original on January 27, 2017. Retrieved August 26, 2015.
  11. ^ "Parody copyright laws set to come into effect". BBC News. October 20, 2014. Archived from the original on September 17, 2018. Retrieved July 21, 2018.
  12. ^ a b Michael Rosen discusses the poop debacle (YouTube). LitUp666. May 29, 2011. Archived from the original on Nov 1, 2015. Retrieved Oct 25, 2015.
  13. ^ Rosen, Michael (May 29, 2012). "News - For Adults". michaelrosen.co.united kingdom. Archived from the original on March 11, 2015. Retrieved October 25, 2015.
  14. ^ "artificedesign - YouTube". YouTube. Michael Rosen. Archived from the original on March nine, 2016. Retrieved June 11, 2015.

External links [edit]

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This sound file was created from a revision of this article dated 19 August 2019 (2019-08-19), and does non reflect subsequent edits.

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/YouTube_Poop

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