Christian Bale Tantrum on Terminator Set: Now Video!
We’ve all heard the Christian Bale audio of his Terminator Tantrum. Now the folks from ShadowCastPictures bring you this wonderful parody… see the video. Courtesy of Inside Online Video.
We’ve all heard the Christian Bale audio of his Terminator Tantrum. Now the folks from ShadowCastPictures bring you this wonderful parody… see the video. Courtesy of Inside Online Video.
Here’s a classic example of brilliant advertising creative executed horribly online. According to MediaPost: Priceline.com has changed the way it uses spokesman William Shatner in its ads; rather than playing himself, he has morphed into the character of chief negotiating officer. Here’s a memo to the Priceline folks: First, ingenious idea to have Shatner in…
I give you… Planet of the Pugs.
No knocking Kevin MacLeod from Incompetech.com. He’s saved us from many default musical loops and countless copyright infringements. But now and then, we need a bit of variety. And here are some additional options for music, sound effects and even video footage. To help you return to this post, I’ll add the words Helen Keller….
If you or I were cool we’d be at the “Video on the Net” conference right now. Maybe Steve Garfield will give us an update of highlights.
I’ll tell you the economics of online video… charging $250.00 clams for a white paper about the space. Probably the only company mentioned in Advertising Age’s report that’s making money is Advertising Age. Someone buy it, and send me a peek.
I try to be fairly objective on this blog, but I really have no sympathy for whining photographers that hire attorneys because their photos appear for a second in a popular YouTube video. The photographers, like the writers striking, are under the delusion that they’re being deprived of their rightful income. The reality is that…
Here’s a classic example of brilliant advertising creative executed horribly online. According to MediaPost: Priceline.com has changed the way it uses spokesman William Shatner in its ads; rather than playing himself, he has morphed into the character of chief negotiating officer. Here’s a memo to the Priceline folks: First, ingenious idea to have Shatner in…
I give you… Planet of the Pugs.
No knocking Kevin MacLeod from Incompetech.com. He’s saved us from many default musical loops and countless copyright infringements. But now and then, we need a bit of variety. And here are some additional options for music, sound effects and even video footage. To help you return to this post, I’ll add the words Helen Keller….
If you or I were cool we’d be at the “Video on the Net” conference right now. Maybe Steve Garfield will give us an update of highlights.
I’ll tell you the economics of online video… charging $250.00 clams for a white paper about the space. Probably the only company mentioned in Advertising Age’s report that’s making money is Advertising Age. Someone buy it, and send me a peek.
I try to be fairly objective on this blog, but I really have no sympathy for whining photographers that hire attorneys because their photos appear for a second in a popular YouTube video. The photographers, like the writers striking, are under the delusion that they’re being deprived of their rightful income. The reality is that…
Here’s a classic example of brilliant advertising creative executed horribly online. According to MediaPost: Priceline.com has changed the way it uses spokesman William Shatner in its ads; rather than playing himself, he has morphed into the character of chief negotiating officer. Here’s a memo to the Priceline folks: First, ingenious idea to have Shatner in…
I give you… Planet of the Pugs.
No knocking Kevin MacLeod from Incompetech.com. He’s saved us from many default musical loops and countless copyright infringements. But now and then, we need a bit of variety. And here are some additional options for music, sound effects and even video footage. To help you return to this post, I’ll add the words Helen Keller….
If you or I were cool we’d be at the “Video on the Net” conference right now. Maybe Steve Garfield will give us an update of highlights.
I’ll tell you the economics of online video… charging $250.00 clams for a white paper about the space. Probably the only company mentioned in Advertising Age’s report that’s making money is Advertising Age. Someone buy it, and send me a peek.
I try to be fairly objective on this blog, but I really have no sympathy for whining photographers that hire attorneys because their photos appear for a second in a popular YouTube video. The photographers, like the writers striking, are under the delusion that they’re being deprived of their rightful income. The reality is that…
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I still suspect it was all a viral marketing campaign for the new Terminator… because that was when I heard about it for the first time.
Also, Christian Bale got quite some bonus points in my book with this verbal ass-kicking that he did.. I am not really sure what makes everyone snicker at the audio/parodies though.
Okay- I confess. I only did this to get good Google rankings for Christian Bale searches.
Christian Bale? As in the Christian Bale parody? A parody of Christian Bale blowing up at the PA DA MIA? That’s Christian Bale all right. Jeez, Christian Bale.
the Family Guy rip was funnier
@jan SO agree.
it takes 1:09 to get to the joke. it should’ve taken 7 seconds tops. Both my parody and my pal Kevin’s were superior to this. Mine ended up airing on E! while Kevin Brueck’s has like 250,000 views. Check ’em out!
Yours was based off someone else’s creativity, and wasn’t that good. It has 1/3 of th hits that this one does…
@5: Yeah, Family Guy was great. This blows.
I’m starting to lose faith in mankind. Most people on all these baords are bitter, frustrated, angry, snot nosed teenagers with nothing better to do than rip on other people’s creativity, because they’ve never done anything creative in their life except play warcraft and jack off into a different colored sock every day…
@10: I’ll have you know i am so far from being a teenager that I could be one 3 times over. I just didn’t care for this video. I am entitled to my opinion. I am also creative. Perhaps not in video, but in many other facets of my life.
“This blows” is not “I didn’t care for this video.” “This blows” is “I’m angry with myself and disappointed in my life, so I need to deride someone else because they actually got off their butts and did something other than surf the internet…”