- published: 13 Apr 2011
- views: 35535
- author: coldtop124
3:37
Cartoon Physics
Newton got it wrong. Watch Wile e. Coyoye and Roadrunner (along with a cat and a random du...
published: 13 Apr 2011
author: coldtop124
Cartoon Physics
Cartoon Physics
Newton got it wrong. Watch Wile e. Coyoye and Roadrunner (along with a cat and a random dude) teach you real science, cartoon physics!- published: 13 Apr 2011
- views: 35535
- author: coldtop124
2:30
Cartoon Physics
Soundtrack by Joao MacDowell. Animation directed by John R. Dilworth. Production Coordinat...
published: 26 Apr 2011
author: João MacDowell
Cartoon Physics
Cartoon Physics
Soundtrack by Joao MacDowell. Animation directed by John R. Dilworth. Production Coordinator: Kasey Powers. This is something we did years ago, for the Phila...- published: 26 Apr 2011
- views: 4114
- author: João MacDowell
3:40
Laws of Motion In a Cartoon Landscape: Andy Holden trailer
Trailer for lecture performance by Andy Holden and Tyler Woolcott Next Lecture at Swedenbo...
published: 25 May 2011
author: LostToysRecords
Laws of Motion In a Cartoon Landscape: Andy Holden trailer
Laws of Motion In a Cartoon Landscape: Andy Holden trailer
Trailer for lecture performance by Andy Holden and Tyler Woolcott Next Lecture at Swedenborg House, London on Jan 31st 8pm The piece was first performed as a...- published: 25 May 2011
- views: 9459
- author: LostToysRecords
2:53
Physics Mistakes with Cartoons Jehad
Physics Mistakes with Cartoons Jehad....
published: 22 Mar 2011
author: MrSipetron
Physics Mistakes with Cartoons Jehad
Physics Mistakes with Cartoons Jehad
Physics Mistakes with Cartoons Jehad.- published: 22 Mar 2011
- views: 2216
- author: MrSipetron
1:36
Cartoon Physics Part 1 - Nick Flynn
Part of the Poetry Every Day Project....
published: 05 Aug 2011
author: OverlookAcademy
Cartoon Physics Part 1 - Nick Flynn
Cartoon Physics Part 1 - Nick Flynn
Part of the Poetry Every Day Project.- published: 05 Aug 2011
- views: 530
- author: OverlookAcademy
4:42
Cartoon Physics.
Frank 'N' Steve NEED YOU! http://www.comedyspots.tv/watch/T7iQj7zRUq The Frank 'N' Steve P...
published: 21 Sep 2012
author: middledistanceproduc
Cartoon Physics.
Cartoon Physics.
Frank 'N' Steve NEED YOU! http://www.comedyspots.tv/watch/T7iQj7zRUq The Frank 'N' Steve Page on faceybooky. https://www.facebook.com/franknstevepage.- published: 21 Sep 2012
- views: 1084
- author: middledistanceproduc
1:53
Cartoon Physics, part 1
Animation and Design by Siobhan McAlpin Fall 2008 This is part of the Poetry Everywhere se...
published: 20 Dec 2009
author: UWManimation
Cartoon Physics, part 1
Cartoon Physics, part 1
Animation and Design by Siobhan McAlpin Fall 2008 This is part of the Poetry Everywhere series, which is produced by the Poetry Foundation in association wit...- published: 20 Dec 2009
- views: 1066
- author: UWManimation
1:13
Cartoon laws of physics
University of Westminster: Digital Research Project: Year 2 (2013) Done using TVPaint and ...
published: 01 Apr 2013
author: Jivitesh Mazumdar
Cartoon laws of physics
Cartoon laws of physics
University of Westminster: Digital Research Project: Year 2 (2013) Done using TVPaint and final cut pro.- published: 01 Apr 2013
- views: 97
- author: Jivitesh Mazumdar
1:48
Manuel Santana reciting Cartoon Physics Part One by Nick Flynn at Poetry Out Loud 2010.mpg
Manny reciting Cartoon Physics Part One by Nick Flynn at Poetry Out Loud district competit...
published: 05 Feb 2010
author: santanaponceclan
Manuel Santana reciting Cartoon Physics Part One by Nick Flynn at Poetry Out Loud 2010.mpg
Manuel Santana reciting Cartoon Physics Part One by Nick Flynn at Poetry Out Loud 2010.mpg
Manny reciting Cartoon Physics Part One by Nick Flynn at Poetry Out Loud district competition at Copper Canyon High On January 2010.- published: 05 Feb 2010
- views: 955
- author: santanaponceclan
1:24
Cartoon Physics Part 1 by Nick Flynn
English Projects r Fun. (Credits Below) Credit and thanks for the reading goes to: http://...
published: 21 Oct 2011
author: KemLz
Cartoon Physics Part 1 by Nick Flynn
Cartoon Physics Part 1 by Nick Flynn
English Projects r Fun. (Credits Below) Credit and thanks for the reading goes to: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IFsbAsOM5SY Credit for the cartoon material...- published: 21 Oct 2011
- views: 384
- author: KemLz
3:15
Paul Krugman on the 'Cartoon Physics' of the 2008 Crash
Read more: http://to.pbs.org/Mllfna This marks the penultimate installment of our extended...
published: 21 Jun 2012
author: MacNeil Lehrer
Paul Krugman on the 'Cartoon Physics' of the 2008 Crash
Paul Krugman on the 'Cartoon Physics' of the 2008 Crash
Read more: http://to.pbs.org/Mllfna This marks the penultimate installment of our extended profile of economist and New York Times columnist Paul Krugman. Th...- published: 21 Jun 2012
- views: 5202
- author: MacNeil Lehrer
6:05
WAIT A SEC... CARTOON PHYSICS EXPLAINS 9/11!
The true story of 9/11 as given by our loving patriotic government. Caution, watch at your...
published: 13 Jun 2007
author: clbackus
WAIT A SEC... CARTOON PHYSICS EXPLAINS 9/11!
WAIT A SEC... CARTOON PHYSICS EXPLAINS 9/11!
The true story of 9/11 as given by our loving patriotic government. Caution, watch at your own risk, you may become offended by knowing you've had the wool p...- published: 13 Jun 2007
- views: 4875
- author: clbackus
Vimeo results:
5:17
"Near Death Experience" by Bryan Lewis Saunders & Spastic Dementia
Video for the title track of the LP, "Near Death Experience" on the French label Erratum. ...
published: 04 Feb 2011
author: Bryan Lewis Saunders
"Near Death Experience" by Bryan Lewis Saunders & Spastic Dementia
Video for the title track of the LP, "Near Death Experience" on the French label Erratum. Vocals by Bryan Lewis Saunders. Music by Spastic Dementia. (All guitar sounds were made with Marcelo Aguirre's mouth).
Based on 2 true stories, the video was created with over 3,000 self-portraits. At times 29 images per second flash on the screen. Faster than can be physically perceived. As in the story, I used them so actual pieces of my life would once again flash before my eyes almost burning them, but not in an animated cartoon like way. Because the story takes place in Hell, I mostly selected self-portraits with flames and devil horns and the ones representing pain and general anxiety. I also used some of the illustrated moments from the times when the events occurred as well as a few drawn from memory. I don't use cocaine. It is an ironic statement at the end used to convey the power of addiction.
6:59
[Looney Tunes] Duck Amuck (1953)
Duck Amuck is a surreal animated cartoon directed by Chuck Jones and produced by Warner Br...
published: 16 May 2011
author: Arnaud TISSEYRE
[Looney Tunes] Duck Amuck (1953)
Duck Amuck is a surreal animated cartoon directed by Chuck Jones and produced by Warner Bros. Cartoons. The short was released in early 1953 by The Vitaphone Corporation, the short subject division of Warner Bros. Pictures, as part of the Merrie Melodies series. It stars Daffy Duck, who is tormented by a seemingly sadistic, initially unseen animator, who constantly changes Daffy's locations, clothing, voice, physical appearance and even shape. Pandemonium reigns throughout the cartoon as Daffy attempts to steer the action back to some kind of normality, only for the animator to either ignore him or, more frequently, to over-literally interpret his increasingly frantic demands.
In 1994, it was voted #2 of The 50 Greatest Cartoons of all time by members of the animation field, losing only to What's Opera, Doc?. Historians and fans consider Duck Amuck to be Daffy Duck's magnum opus, and What's Opera, Doc? to be Bugs', so the positions at #2 and #1 are appropriate. The short was included on Looney Tunes Golden Collection: Volume 1.
A Nintendo DS game, Looney Tunes: Duck Amuck was made after it.
67:23
53rd Journalism Awards Gala (part 1)
A. JOURNALISTS OF THE YEAR
A1. PRINT (Over 50,000 circulations)
Patrick Range McDonal...
published: 18 Jul 2011
author: EDP
53rd Journalism Awards Gala (part 1)
A. JOURNALISTS OF THE YEAR
A1. PRINT (Over 50,000 circulations)
Patrick Range McDonald, LA Weekly
Comments: "Range" is an appropriate middle name. What incredibly
detailed reporting on a variety of complicated topics. What an ability to
make us feel as if we know the players. What skill in explaining messy
situations. The very essence of solid journalism.
2nd place: David Evans, Bloomberg Markets, "Duping the Families of
Fallen Soldiers"
HM: Mariel Garza, Los Angeles Daily News Editorials
A2. PRINT (Under 50,000 circulation)
Radley Balko, Reason Magazine
Comment: ―Radley Balko is one of those throw-back journalists that
understands the power of groundbreaking reporting and how to make a
significant impact through his work. Time and time again, his stories cause
readers to stop, think, and most significantly, take action.
Congratulations!‖
2nd Place: Dan Evans, Glendale News-Press
HM: Ryan Vaillancourt, Los Angeles Downtown News
A3. TELEVISION JOURNALIST
Ana Garcia and Fred Mamoun, KNBC-TV
Garcia and Mamoun shoot, write and edit compelling stories. One of
their strengths as a team is the obvious respect for their subjects, and the
ability through contacts in the community to land exclusive interviews and
opportunities. They are strong storytellers and the pieces move!
2nd Place: Antonio Valverde, Univision
Valverde has a wide range as a journalist. He is able to work with various
segments of the community to tell compelling stories. He has political
acumen and can accurately and fairly tell stories, while also reaching out
to the disenfranchised to share their stories of life in L.A.
A4. RADIO JOURNALIST
Susan Valot, KPCC
Comments: Well-rounded reports with authoritative, informed tone. Great
use of sound. Valot‘s work is some of the best we‘ve heard.
2nd Place: Brian Watt: KPCC
HM: Kitty Felde: KPCC
A5. ONLINE JOURNALIST
Daniel Heimpel, FosteringMediaConnections.org
2nd Place: Chris Hedges, Truthdig.com
HM: Robert Scheer, Truthdig.com
A6. SPORTS JOURNALIST
N/A
A7. ENTERTAINMENT JOURNALIST
Kim Masters, KCRW-FM Radio
Comments: Nice voice in both senses of the word, along with substantive
content. Covering a story about outed CIA agent Valerie Plame, she
tracked down Plame to comment on her portrayal, rather than just talking
to the actress. She also gave a lot of information on entertainment agents
that broadened the picture the public was likely to have of that
occupation.
2nd Place: Tara Wallis-Finestone, NBC LA
HM: George Pennacchio, KABC-TV
A8. PHOTO JOURNALIST
Rick Loomis, Los Angeles Times
A9. DESIGNER
N/A
B. DAILY/WEEKLY NEWSPAPERS
Over 50,000 circulations – including news bureaus and correspondents
B1. HARD NEWS
Tracy Manzer and Sarah Peters, Long Beach Press-Telegram, "Heroes foil
bank heist"
Comments: The writing was appropriately-paced for the category and
the story content. I enjoyed the writers' use of sensory details and factual
information, presented with a slightly humorous/sarcastic tone that made
this piece fun to read.
B2. NEWS FEATURE
Patrick Range McDonald, LA Weekly, ―The Parent Trigger‖.
Comments: Documents a groundswell of democracy while explaining a
new law through a real-world prism. Powerful. Incredibly well-sourced and
informative, yet provides a human touch. The story of poor minorities trying
to make a change documented how the masses can move the
establishment. Inspiring to others, this story shows what newspaper do like
no other. Bravo.
2nd Place: Thomas Curven, Los Angeles Times, ―Walking Away from Grief‖
HM: Kristopher Hanson, Long Beach Press-Telegram, ―Dangers Close to
Home‖
B3. PERSONALITY PROFILE
Steve Friess, LA Weekly, ―A Tragic Love Story‖
2nd Place: Charlotte Hsu, LA Weekly, ―Forever Scared — The Story of
Herman Atkins‖
HM: Karen Robes Meeks, Long Beach Press-Telegram, ―Murchison: A
Portrait of a Long Beach Lobbyist‖
B4. INVESTIGATIVE/SERIES
David Evans, Bloomberg News, "Fallen Soldiers' Families Denied Cash
Payout as Insurers Profit"
Comments: These articles are the soul of great investigative journalism,
uncovering a shocking system whereby the families of slain soldiers are
tricked about benefits, and where shameless insurance companies reap
big profits at the expense of those families.
Best of all, it led to immediate Congressional investigations and action.
2nd place: Beth Barrett, LA Weekly, "The Dance of the Lemons"
HM: Monica Alonzo and Simone Wilson, LA Weekly, "Culture of Cruelty"
B5. BUSINESS
Alana Semuels, Los Angeles Times, "California unfriendly to business?
Figures say no"
Comments: This is an authoritative and well-documented piece that
refutes the common wisdom of California's tax structure being unfriendly
to business.
2nd place: Beth Barrett, LA Weekly, "Barry Minkow 2.0"
HM: Donna Howell, Investor's Business Daily,
16:19
GESTALT WORK ON AWARENESS (HQ) - PART גשטאלט - מודעות - חלק 1
HQ. gestalt work on awareness, part 1. hebrew subtitles added.
BY FRANKLYN WEPNER ...
published: 13 Aug 2011
author: franklyn wepner
GESTALT WORK ON AWARENESS (HQ) - PART גשטאלט - מודעות - חלק 1
HQ. gestalt work on awareness, part 1. hebrew subtitles added.
BY FRANKLYN WEPNER SEPTEMBER 1, 2006
HOW I WORK: GESTALT DREAMWORK AS THEATER AND PROPHECY
GESTALT DREAM WORK AS PREPARATION FOR PERFORMING
Since 1975 I have been using Gestalt work on awareness, dreams and personal relationships as a way to train and direct performers. The basic principle is simple. I use the Gestalt work to peel the onion of layer after layer of social cliches, ego games and unfinished personal business, and then I do the reverse process reconstituting the onion in the form of characters or other artist structures. The existential message of the dream becomes the superobjective or action of the tragedy, and then I build up the way the performer handles the characters and the plot around that.
My usual procedure is to begin the training with three Gestalt sessions, one on one. The first session, two hours long, deals with the three zones of awareness. During the first hour I simply let him relate what he aware of, since I want to know how he operates before I start meddling with his life. This is important since overall during the Gestalt sessions we are peeling the onion of cliches and games to get to authentic action, and later we will need all of those layers to rebuild the onion as characters involved in the unfolding action of a drama. We need his cliche and game layers for the beginning of the action in Act One as much as we need his authentic action at the end of the dramatic action for Acts Four and Five of a tragic drama.
During the second hour of the first Gestalt session on awareness I attempt to guide him towards a balance of the zones of awareness: outer zone awareness of the environment, inner zone awareness of his body, and fantasy zone awareness of his daydreams. The second and third Gestalt sessions are each three hours long, and each is a typical Gestalt dreamwork session as presented by Fritz Perls in Gestalt Therapy Verbatim. The performer tells the dream in the here and now, identifies with (play acts) several of the main images of the dream in dialogues with each other, and experiences the rhythm of contact and withdrawal. That is to say, after each major dialogue of polarized sides of himself (the contact part) he is instructed to close his eyes, enter his body awareness and daydream (the withdrawal phase of the rhythm).
Since my goal is theater as well as healing, whenever possible during the Gestalt dreamwork I encourage lots of expression using sound and movements. I work with a palette of about 200 different types of recorded musical excerpts, and whenever appropriate I ask him if that image or emotional state were part of a movie what sort of music might be the sound track. Then I find something close to that in my palette of musical colors and ask him to express the mood using the music along with his vocalizing and expressive movements. While he is doing the entire session I spend most of my time jotting down near verbatim notes and making stick figures of his poses and movements, since later in the work I will feed all this back to him and encourage him to explore using it as creative material for acting, dance or whatever his medium is. Taping the session is less useful, since then I would need to spend too much time replaying the tapes. Taking notes live forces me to sort out the wheat from the chaff very efficiently, even at the cost of not observing or notating every detail.
WORKING OUT FROM YOUR CENTERS
After the three introductory one on one Gestalt sessions, session number four is for feedback and discussion of the results. I show him in my notes and diagrams all of the stages of competed and uncompleted actions, and together we search for characters in the theater literature that have similar patterns of action. Is he a Hamlet type, or an Oedipus type, for example? In contrast to the usual practice in acting classes, his first acting assignment probably will be a monologue from a serious tragedy, since I want him to begin with a dramatic action with which he can identify totally. In this process he is using his major Gestalt moments as what Michael Chekhov in his book "To The Actor" labels "psychological gestures". Perls calls them the "essences" of a patient's personality, or we can say he is working from his "centers", stretching those sounds, moves and psychological motivations in as many creative directions as he can. I monitor closely to be sure he is not faking it, the way most actors end up doing since they do not have the centers to begin with.
Before the performer begins working with others doing improvs and scenework, there is an important transitional stage in the work in which I help him get comfortable using his very personal Gestalt material freely as creative material. He needs to shift from seeing himself as a patient to enjoying the role of an artist of the
Youtube results:
4:13
Nick Flynn Reads Cartoon Physics
Nick Flynn Reads Cartoon Physics at the 2008 Massachusetts Poetry Festival (www.masspoetry...
published: 30 Apr 2009
author: MassPoetry
Nick Flynn Reads Cartoon Physics
Nick Flynn Reads Cartoon Physics
Nick Flynn Reads Cartoon Physics at the 2008 Massachusetts Poetry Festival (www.masspoetry.org) in Lowell MA.- published: 30 Apr 2009
- views: 2058
- author: MassPoetry
1:16
Cameron Smith recites "Cartoon Physics Part I," by Nick Flynn at the Maryland POL Final
Cameron Smith of St. Paul's School in Baltimore County recites "Cartoon Physics Part I," b...
published: 14 Mar 2013
author: MarylandStateArts
Cameron Smith recites "Cartoon Physics Part I," by Nick Flynn at the Maryland POL Final
Cameron Smith recites "Cartoon Physics Part I," by Nick Flynn at the Maryland POL Final
Cameron Smith of St. Paul's School in Baltimore County recites "Cartoon Physics Part I," by Nick Flynn at the Maryland POL Final, March 9 at the Baltimore Mu...- published: 14 Mar 2013
- views: 27
- author: MarylandStateArts
1:39
Cartoon Physics, Part 1
A reading of the poem by Nick Flynn. Created using VideoPad Video Editor and a large compi...
published: 29 May 2013
author: CrazyFarseer
Cartoon Physics, Part 1
Cartoon Physics, Part 1
A reading of the poem by Nick Flynn. Created using VideoPad Video Editor and a large compilation of Youtube clips. I do not claim to own any of the following...- published: 29 May 2013
- views: 19
- author: CrazyFarseer