#Web Original
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
m00nb04rd5 · 2 months ago
Note
Do Kinger from digital circus
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Kinger (The Amazing Digital Circus)
64 notes · View notes
does-it-like-women · 2 months ago
Note
17776?
Tumblr media
17776 (Web Original, 2017)
Explain your reasoning in the tags!
74 notes · View notes
Text
I'd like to introduce all of you fine people to the budding franchise known as Bird Call. Obviously, I did not create this; that honor goes to a, quite frankly, wonderful man by the name of Calvin Lester. This video gives you the basics on what you need to know. I highly recommend this to anyone who likes comedy, birds, or puppets. If you want to find out more, including the full musical that this advertises for, please check out the Bird Call website, the link for which is right here:
Also make sure to check out Bird Call's TikTok, YouTube, Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook pages, the links to which can be found on the website. Of course, what Lester really wants is a TV show, so make sure to help him get one.
85 notes · View notes
weaselandfriends · 1 year ago
Text
Web Original, Recently Witnessed
In a previous post, I mentioned some web fiction I'd recently read. This time, I'll highlight some web original content outside of the literary sphere. While I have some experience with literature, I'm completely untalented in other mediums, so my assessment of this content is no better than a layman's. However, I still thought it worth highlighting.
1. Journey to EPCOT Center: A Symphonic History by Kevin Perjurer (Defunctland)
Perjurer has been putting out excellent documentary-style content on theme parks and their rides for years now, but while his production quality is consistently high, his videos often live or die based on the core level of interest his subject engenders. For instance, his video on notoriously awful ride Superstar Limo (with a general focus on notoriously awful theme park California Adventure) is an incredible watch, while his video on a random assortment of small, local Santa Claus theme parks across America isn't quite so compelling. He's no Jon Bois (of 17776 fame), a documentarian capable of rendering extraordinary seemingly the most banal of subjects.
Journey to EPCOT Center, however, is unlike anything Perjurer has ever put out before. It completely eschews Perjurer's typical voiceover narration style of documentary, instead stitching together music, audio of news reports and press releases, and dramatizations of Disney boardroom meetings to create a seamless narrative. Beyond the unique style and presentation of the piece, however, is the incredible artistry on display in several of the segments. Some of the biggest highlights:
12:00 to 16:14: A neon light animation detailing the vision and plan of EPCOT, which gradually transforms into a 3D map that the camera travels through
16:52 to 21:03: An impressively animated series of newspaper articles detailing Disney's struggles finding signatories for its world showcase; the video comments indicate some shots of the moving newspapers were created practically, with Lego conveyer belts
38:46 to 44:27: A puppet show dramatizing Disney's efforts to seek international sponsors
There are numerous other impressive, inventive, and creative segments as well, with unique animation and visual styles. The video rarely repeats the same trick twice.
The funniest part is that all of this is in service to a topic I would personally consider quite boring. EPCOT is such a Disney-buffs-only type of subject, neither Disney's greatest success nor its greatest failure. The incredible skill on display is all aimed toward depicting a fairly corporate, backroom-style story about men in suits trying to secure handshakes. There's an almost propagandistic feel to it, an extolling of capitalist bigwigs that feels completely at odds with Perjurer's visionary style.
In a way, it's reminiscent of United Passions, a FIFA propaganda film meant to make its executives look good in the wake of real-life controversy. On the other hand, though, Perjurer's exceedingly loving depiction is appropriate for Walt Disney's final passion project, Disney himself being a man who, for better or for worse, was as much of a dreamer and visionary as he was a cutthroat businessman. EPCOT, as the video tells you, was designed as an optimistic reaffirmation of the American free enterprise project, and as a complement to that vision Perjurer's video could not be more accurate. Unlike United Passions, this video was also made independently, not financed by Disney to make itself look good in the eyes of the public. Metatextually, it poses a fascinating question: Is there value to corporate art? Can a corporation create something of true beauty? Perjurer's video suggests it can.
2. The Mind Electric Animation - Lonely-Man's Lazarus by Daisy
Perjurer is probably familiar to many of my readers, so this next entry is more obscure, something I stumbled on almost by chance.
A friend of mine is big into animatics, which as far as YouTube is concerned is about setting music (usually Broadway or Disney musical numbers) to sketchy, storyboard-style art. I'm not a major Broadway fan in general, so these have never appealed to me much, although I've been shown several.
This one, though, rather generically titled "The Mind Electric Animation" (after the song it features), caught me entirely off guard. The first notable element is that the animation is monstrously more fluid than a typical animatic, though it retains the sketchy/storyboard art style and traditional animatic sensibilities toward character design (very "Tumblr," if I had to put a word on it). Secondly, the music, rather than being from Hamilton or Heathers or some other popular musical, is from the itself rather arcane album Hawaii: Part II by Joe Hawley (under the name ミラクルミュージカル). Hawaii: Part II is, as far as I can tell, a concept album detailing the story of a man who goes insane after his girlfriend is murdered (possibly by himself), with a strange secondary subtext of possibly being metaphorical for the 9/11 terrorist attacks. The lyrics are certainly open to interpretation.
The animatic combines these elements with heavy inspiration from a different concept album, potentially the most famous one ever made: Pink Floyd's The Wall, with specific nods to the film adaptation's animations for The Trial and Empty Spaces. There is no skimping on detail, with some sequences absolutely bursting with bizarre visuals. The ultimate result is absolutely trippy, abstract, and surreal, which are some of my favorite things for something to be.
Regardless, it's an impressive work of animation for a single person to make; the video description states it took 15 months, which is more time than I've spent on any one of even my longest works. The creator themselves is somewhat enigmatic from what I could tell, despite having a whole host of social media platforms. They seem to be working on a web comic, but trying to find any concrete information on what it is actually about was difficult. Nonetheless, whoever made this certainly has an abundance of creative vision and talent. Though I've seen skilled artists sit down to create something narrative before and flub it utterly (an example that comes to mind is Ava's Demon), so who knows if what is on display in this animation will make it into that web comic. Even if it doesn't, the animation by itself is incredible, so check it out.
3. The Skibidi Toilet podcast guys are for real by Mikhail Klimentov / Built By Gamers in general
Built By Gamers has been on my radar for some time (ever since seeing this video) as an absolute masterclass of performance art. The voice, the emphasis, the little oddities here and there, the way the two hosts so often ignore direct questions posed by one another, it creates something inimitably uncanny. This interview by Mikhail Klimentov, who I am familiar with primarily through his esports journalism, only adds new layers to what was already a convoluted question of irony and sincerity.
There are a few concrete insights, most shockingly to me that the creators of Built By Gamers (Todd Searle and Peter Armendariz) got their start in esports. But despite the title that seems to clearly suggest their videos are sincere, the actual interview is far less conclusive. For instance, this exchange:
It's evident to me that you guys take this very seriously. You feel as though there's a lot of craft behind these videos. Tell me about the stuff that a viewer won't see: the behind-the-scenes stuff that you're thinking about as you're working on these videos. Armendariz: A lot of people think it's ChatGPT. That's a big thing that people think that we do. But a lot of it is actually well crafted, through hours — like we'll spend hours on one script and really thinking about how we can get someone to react. It doesn't matter if it's them laughing, if it's them feeling sad, or them hating on one of us, our main goal in our videos is to get someone to feel something. The hard truth is that people don't realize how many hours we spend on one video to get that one line. I think that's what people don't really understand. We’ll spend like two hours on one line. Searle: Our tone, like how we talk — it’s on purpose. I have to get into character for it. Armendariz: Todd has a voice, bro! He didn't think he'd be good at telling stories, and I have him tell every single story because he has this campfire story voice. And sometimes he'll hit a line and I'm like, “No, no, you’ve got to hit it harder.” And we'll spend like 30 minutes trying to hit the line, or hitting the hook just the right way.
Followed immediately by:
People really don't know what to make of you guys. They don't have a sense of whether you're serious, whether you're in on the joke, whether there's a joke at all. I'm curious if you can clear that up. Searle: We want it to be everything you just said. We want people to think we're serious. We want camps of people who don't think we're serious. People who think that we're A.I. We kind of want to keep it, I guess, vague in that regard. Like we want you to believe… what we are — and that's OK. Armendariz: I think sometimes we'll play into different communities. So, like, some people will say, ‘You guys sound like you got brain surgery.’ So then we’ll make the most cringey video that's like super brain-rot, you know? We just kind of mess around and have fun.
So are they just messing around and having fun, or are they spending hours trying to nail specific lines just right? Are they sincerely trying to tell a story that gets an emotional reaction or are they just trolling, which also gets an emotional reaction? The biggest troll of the interview, targeted specifically at me, was this response:
Can you tell me what those writing principles are? Armendariz: I think a big writing principle that everyone should follow is, it's really important to show, don't tell.
People who have talked to me elsewhere know I am a massive enthusiast of the ubiquitous Mr. Beast, not necessarily because I like his content (though I do think he puts together some strong game show/Wipeout-style videos), but because of the story behind him: That he is an extreme, almost insufferable perfectionist, who analyzes video success and failure to a scientific degree, doing experiments with thumbnails, video lengths, et cetera, all to take detailed assessments of the results and perfectly calibrate his videos in mathematical fashion. It's a type of rigor that flies in the face of the casual, wastefully generous persona he cultivates in his videos proper.
I think many people have this innate idea that a work of art's quality is somehow tied to the effort expended to produce it. (Even I have it. Notice how for both of the first two entries in this post I mention the effort or time or craftsmanship of the work in question.) This is the kind of sensibility that causes a layman, who knows nothing about painting, to prefer a Caravaggio to a Rothko. But this sensibility is both conceptually and often practically wrong; Rothko, for instance, engineered his own paints, creating custom blends of materials (including non-paint material, like egg) to form paints of a perfectly specific color or gloss or sheen, a process often completely unseen by a casual glance at the finished work.
Subsequently, there's a reason they're called writer's workshops, that writing is so often described as a craft: It's an attempt to imbue writing with a sense of effort that makes it more palatable. The stereotype extends to the artist who sneers at quote-unquote "low" art, thinking "If I was willing to lower myself, I could create that slop and make millions too." In my experience, though, the people creating this "low" art are often expending absurd amounts of effort and exhibiting incredible skill to create something perfectly engineered for success. I, certainly, have found zero success in attempting to broaden my own audience, even when I make attempts at it; it's not something that's easier to do if you're just willing to try.
I also increasingly fail to believe in the stereotype of the miserable cynic artist who creates something they think is garbage because they know that'll be most popular. Those people don't last long; those who succeed in the popular sphere are people who are genuinely passionate about what they create, even if it looks like dreck to everyone else (including the millions who consume it).
I've been kicking around an idea for a story about Mr. Beast for some time now, exploring these concepts in even greater depth. That won't happen in the immediate future, but it's something to look out for.
28 notes · View notes
conjuringcutlasses · 5 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
CONJURING CUTLASSES update!
best friends forever 💜
⚔️ Read today!: Conjuringcutlasses.com
7 notes · View notes
cyber-corp · 1 year ago
Text
youtube
Finally. Max Headroom 2.
Check this out and share it around a little, this is some top-notch stuff for only about 300 views!
20 notes · View notes
makapatag · 2 years ago
Text
Tumblr media
PRINCESS MURDERS THE HERO is an ongoing web epic set in GUBAT BANWA, the Realms of War, rooted in SEAsian culture and wuxia. Witness the Hero- Murdering-Princess as she strides across the Sword Isles to achieve the enlightenment of violence.
PMTH started off as a Zelink AU in Fantasy SEAsia that eventually spiraled out of control, inspired by reincarnation, Pigafetta's accounts of Borneo, and the story of Padmasambhava.
If you're into written slick martial arts fight scenes (I practice FMA irl!) and deep SEAsian inspired aesthetics and cultures (kratons! masjids! trishulas and giant buddha statues! stilt houses and longhouses and excessive gold jewelry to hold all that merit!) check it out!
Tumblr media
It's like if POPPY WAR was SEAsian and steeped in Maharadia Lawana, Aginid, Darangen, Nagarakertagama, and then blended with a Zelink frother and spiced with a healthy dose of BLACK LEOPARD, RED WOLF and LIONS OF AL-RASSAN in a cup of LEGEND OF CONDOR HEROES
Book 1 is just about to finish, we're near its climax. Book 2 begins in a few more months-ish, though I don't plan to keep it waiting for too long as I've had a pretty long hiatus to finish Gubat Banwa from this.
Also working on a character page for this already, still WIP but it's getting there.
If you don't do The Reading then perhaps you want to do The Listening, there's an audiobook of the first Arc!
youtube
Finally a great review from Kyle Tam!
95 notes · View notes
talefoundryshow · 8 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
NOW ON NEBULA!
If you’ve encountered Justin Tomchuk’s Interface series before, you probably have one question: what IS this? Let’s explore this oddly familiar fever dream together!
10 notes · View notes
sludgebound-royal · 7 months ago
Text
Vignettes from the Sludge
Introducing my original fiction story, Vignettes from the Sludge! A collection of short tales with a metaplot guiding their recounting.
Content warnings will be added to updates as pertinent. Currently, none are so extreme as to warrant their usage. If anyone disagrees be eager to contact me so I may add them. I'm writing about monsters, I'm not trying to *be* one.
The update schedule is intended to be biweekly updates, of about 2,000 to 4,500 words per chapter. Please enjoy the Vignettes from the Sludge!!
2 notes · View notes
aathadte-official · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
Episode two of season two tomorrow at 8 AM EST!
5 notes · View notes
lostlegendaerie · 2 years ago
Text
the headless horseman is my new blorbo
8 notes · View notes
m00nb04rd5 · 2 months ago
Note
Can you do Pomni from The Amazing Digital Circus please and make sure that you will take your time okay cool beans!!!
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Pomni (The Amazing Digital Circus)
36 notes · View notes
does-it-like-women · 1 month ago
Note
Does Omniscient Reader's Viewpoint like women?
Tumblr media
Omniscient Reader's Viewpoint (Web Original, 2018)
Explain your reasoning in the tags!
93 notes · View notes
allgoodthingscomic · 2 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Jade pay attention that's not yours-
1 note · View note
gorjee-art · 6 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
a comic about cuddles
107K notes · View notes
conjuringcutlasses · 11 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Conjuring Cutlasses UPDATE! 💜⚔️
In which we meet brand new Conjurers- Harper and Minnie!
Read the latest update of my webcomic for FREE today on the Conjuring Cutlasses home site!: Conjuringcutlasses.com
14 notes · View notes