Tag Archives: Gangnam Style

How to Do the Gentleman Dance Moves from PSY's Newest K-Pop Music Video

If you haven’t heard of Korean pop sensation, PSY, then you really have been living under a rock. Or, you’ve just never run across any other human. Or, this is your first time on the Internet.

His absurdly popular music video, Gangnam Style, became the most viewed YouTube video EVER. Its catchy beat and awkward dance moves inspired millions of people to start dancing like PSY and his crew, from beautiful dance teams, to the horrible efforts of Nelly Furtado, to dance mobs across the world. Paper was even getting in on the action.

And guess what?

PSY has another sweet ass video out! It’s… more

From: http://trendy-dancing.wonderhowto.com/how-to/do-gentleman-dance-moves-from-psys-newest-k-pop-music-video-0146442/

Video: South Korean network bans Psy 'Gentleman' video for disrespecting traffic cones

By Zach Bowman

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South Korea takes the dignity of its traffic cones very, very seriously. As you’ve likely heard by now, Psy has released his long-anticipated followup to his international hit “Gangnam Style.” The new single, “Gentleman,” follows the singer as he behaves like anything but. The video has already garnered some 144.6 million views on YouTube, but the South Korean network KBS has banned the clip for one very specific reason. In the first few seconds, Psy walks up and kicks a traffic cone that reads, “No Parking.”

KBS has labeled the video inappropriate because of the cone punt, saying, “KBS‘ standards are very different from the internet, online broadcaster or cable channels. This is because network TV is watched by everyone regardless of gender and age. Infants or children haven’t fully developed a standard for judgement and tend to believe and follow what’s shown on television.”

Think of the children, Psy. You can watch the clip below for yourself. Just don’t blame us if you’re compelled to direct some violence towards an innocent cone.

Continue reading South Korean network bans Psy ‘Gentleman’ video for disrespecting traffic cones

South Korean network bans Psy ‘Gentleman’ video for disrespecting traffic cones originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 18 Apr 2013 12:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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From: http://feeds.autoblog.com/~r/weblogsinc/autoblog/~3/7a9nNlMUZPU/

YouTube videos play up the crude to appeal to youths

YouTube videos that appeal to pre-adolescents can be a stroke of genius, and perhaps no one knows that better than South Korean singer Psy.

Already credited with the most viral video on YouTube ever, Psy this weekend posted to the video-sharing platform the sequel to “Gangnam Style,” an entertainment phenomenon that has registered more than 1.5 billion views.

The new video for his song called “Gentleman M/V” already has received millions of views.

If you’re 13, you’ll love the way Psy pulls chairs out from behind beautiful women so they fall down. Other naughty things he does include cranking up a treadmill so a women falls off it, swatting the coffee cup of another lady so that she spills her drink on herself and pressing all the buttons in an elevator to delay a guy who looks like he needs to use a restroom.

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From: http://www.pcworld.com/article/2034483/YouTube-videos-play-up-the-crude-to-appeal-to-youths.html#tk.rss_all

Pyongyang rumblings have little effect on SKoreans

Outsiders might hear the opening notes of a war in the deluge of threats and provocations from North Korea, but to South Koreans it is a familiar drumbeat.

Separated from the North by a heavily fortified border for decades, they have for the most part lived with tough talk from Pyongyang all their lives. In annual defense drills, war alarms ring in their ears.

Foreigners unused to North Korean rumblings have canceled trips to the Korean Peninsula. But to get South Koreans‘ attention, Pyongyang must compete with the economy, celebrity scandals, baseball games and cherry blossoms.

At a restaurant in downtown Seoul that sells kimchi stew and fried cutlets, owner Lee Chul-je said he wasn’t worried about the threats, as news about them poured from a TV in the corner.

North Korea does this all the time,” the 65-year-old said as he dropped slices of raw meat into a tenderizer. “I’m sure things will become OK again.”

Office worker Park Geun-san is more interested in next week’s Seoul concert by “Gangnam Style” singer PSY than in the North’s dark pronouncements.

“My life isn’t affected by them,” he said. “I’m really excited about going to the concert. North Korea doesn’t distract me from looking forward to it.”

North Korea has responded with fury over U.N. sanctions following its third nuclear test Feb. 12, and over ongoing U.S.-South Korean military exercises. Among other statements, it has threatened a nuclear strike against the U.S., declared that it has scrapped the Korean War armistice, blocked South Koreans from entering a jointly run industrial park and announced that it will restart a plutonium reactor and produce more fuel for nuclear bombs.

The litany of provocations has rocketed North Korea to among the top news headlines around the world, but not always in South Korea. When North Korea vowed this week to restart the reactor, major South Korean dailies gave more space on their front pages to explaining the government‘s plans to give tax breaks to home buyers. On Naver, the most visited web portal in South Korea, the most-read news this week has been South Korean pitcher Ryu Hyun-jin’s LA Dodgers’ debut.

There is no sign of panic. At Home Plus, a major supermarket chain, no one was buying up bottled water or instant noodles. “There has been …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Gangnam Style Wine Videos: What Winemakers Do During Off-Season

By Katie Kelly Bell, Contributor

Winemaking isn’t all barrels and grapes, even winemakers know it’s smart to take a break from the stress of harvest, bad weather, critical reviews and other myriad wine industry issues. John Jordan, owner of Napa Valley’s Jordan Winery, and his team spend their scant spare time shooting video spoofs on wine reviews (and the occasional Gangnam Style winemaking parody). Following the cues of Real Actors Read Yelp Reviews series, Jordan’s team assembled a cast of winemakers to wax poetic while reading Wine Spectator reviews to the camera. Jordan’s blog (where the videos are posted) received the 2012 Best Winery Blog and the current videos were produced as entries for the Wine Spectator’s annual video contest (if you’re wondering, they didn’t win). Personally, I think they should have. The world, especially the wine world, can be such a serious place.  These people know how to have fun; who wouldn’t want to drink wine with them? Lisa Mattson, Communications Director for Jordan is careful to note that the “contest submissions are not intended to poke fun at the original authors; they are meant to be an entertaining tribute to the passion and detail noted wine critics put into their prose.” …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

How to add YouTube to your Roku box

Did you hear the news? Roku just announced a new box, the Roku 3, complete with a faster processor, dual-band Wi-Fi, and a headphone jack in the remote.

Still missing: YouTube.

It’s borderline crazy that a box that can stream every video service you’ve ever heard of—and plenty you haven’t—doesn’t support YouTube.

That’s a pity, because it means you can’t watch “Gangnam Style,” basketball’s best buzzer-beaters, or the latest Harlem Shake videos on your TV.

To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld

New York high school raises $489,000 at marathon dance fundraiser

The 710 students from South Glens Falls High School danced for more than a day: Conga lines, “Gangnam Style,” giddy-ups, hand jives and the “Harlem Shake.” Then, flushed and weary, the teens showed why this is a dance marathon with a difference.

Students cleared a path for a group who walked or were wheeled to the stage set at one end of the gym. One by one — a woman battling cancer in a stocking cap, mothers of ailing children, car crash survivors — thanked the teenage dancers who just raised almost $500,000 to help them tackle life’s challenges.

“When a community comes together to help lift financial stress, which allows a child to get the proper care and have the best chance in life, that’s priceless,” Kate LaFoy told the hushed crowd in a choked voice. Her 15-month-old daughter Alessandra has Turner Syndrome, a genetic condition. “You know how they say it takes a village to raise a child? You’re part of our village now. We are forever grateful.”

South Glens Falls High School students donated the hefty sum to LaFoy and 39 other recipients by dancing around the clock this weekend as part of an annual event in this small, weathered village just south of New York‘s Adirondack Mountains.

The dance marathon was started in 1978, the age of turntables and disco. It has morphed into a monster event consuming not only the students, but the community. Kids go door-to-door seeking donations, sponsor pancake breakfasts, collect bottles and lean on family, friends and neighbors to pitch in. Locals — many who fondly remember their own dancing days — help direct traffic, donate goods for auction, paint faces or cut hair to raise money.

And they open their wallets — something not so easily done in this village of about 3,500 souls still struggling to find its economic footing. Paper mills once powered by the Hudson River have shuttered and residents have a median household income of $47,587, lagging behind the national figure of $52,762.

The weekend’s record $489,716 easily topped the $395,352 collected last year, maintaining a trend of growing tallies. Some well-heeled colleges raise money into the seven figures with their annual dance marathons but you’d be hard-pressed to find any high schoolers pulling in this kind of dough.

“You’re raised in the South Glens Falls community, you’re expected to dance in the marathon dance,” said senior Carly Weller, a member of the student committee that organizes the dance and selects recipients, all local. “And after you do it once, you’re hooked.”

This dance marathon is different from the old endurance contests in which the last exhausted couple on the floor escapes the tap on the shoulder to win. The teenage dancers get a couple of hours to sleep, plenty of food and drinks and some other breaks from Friday night to Saturday night. There are costume parades and opportunities to chill out on the gym floor.

But it’s still grueling.

“Definitely sleep during sleep break, drink lots of water, (use) deodorant,” said senior Blake Snyder. “Deodorant …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

NY high school raises $489K with marathon dance

The 710 students from South Glens Falls High School danced for more than a day: Conga lines, “Gangnam Style,” giddy-ups, hand jives and the “Harlem Shake.” Then, flushed and weary, the teens showed why this is a dance marathon with a difference.

Students cleared a path for a group who walked or were wheeled to the stage set at one end of the gym. One by one — a woman battling cancer in a stocking cap, mothers of ailing children, car crash survivors — thanked the teenage dancers who just raised almost $500,000 to help them tackle life’s challenges.

“When a community comes together to help lift financial stress, which allows a child to get the proper care and have the best chance in life, that’s priceless,” Kate LaFoy told the hushed crowd in a choked voice. Her 15-month-old daughter Alessandra has Turner Syndrome, a genetic condition. “You know how they say it takes a village to raise a child? You’re part of our village now. We are forever grateful.”

South Glens Falls High School students donated the hefty sum to LaFoy and 39 other recipients by dancing around the clock this weekend as part of an annual event in this small, weathered village just south of New York’s Adirondack Mountains.

The dance marathon was started in 1978, the age of turntables and disco. It has morphed into a monster event consuming not only the students, but the community. Kids go door-to-door seeking donations, sponsor pancake breakfasts, collect bottles and lean on family, friends and neighbors to pitch in. Locals — many who fondly remember their own dancing days — help direct traffic, donate goods for auction, paint faces or cut hair to raise money.

And they open their wallets — something not so easily done in this village of about 3,500 souls still struggling to find its economic footing. Paper mills once powered by the Hudson River have shuttered and residents have a median household income of $47,587, lagging behind the national figure of $52,762.

The weekend’s record $489,716 easily topped the $395,352 collected last year, maintaining a trend of growing tallies. Some well-heeled colleges raise money into the seven figures with their annual dance marathons but you’d be hard-pressed to find any high schoolers pulling in this kind of dough.

“You’re raised in the South Glens Falls community, you’re expected to dance in the marathon dance,” said senior …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

YouTube and the Challenge of Video Ads

By 24/7 Wall St.

YouTube Logo

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RT‘s one minute, 24 second footage of the Siberian meteor blast has gotten almost 30 million pageviews in six days, an extraordinary number according to the Russian TV channel. Total views of all videos of the event are even more impressive. But what stands out as much as the number is the lack of advertising that accompanies the content. In a nutshell, this is YouTube’s challenge to garner enough revenue to make it an important contributor to the revenue of parent Google Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOG).

RT said in a press release:

The blast, which hit Russia’s Chelyabinsk region on the morning of February 15, became the most watched video event of all time with 138 million views, and the fastest video event ever to hit 100 million views, according to VideoMeasures, an online measurement company. More than 400 videos across several online platforms were tracked in this calculation.

That one minute, 24 second clip does not open with an advertising message of any kind, despite how long it has been posted. Neither do most of the other widely watched clips of the event. Some advertiser somewhere must have seen some benefit is all of these “eyeballs,” but no one at Google, or any other firm that could profit, made any money.

The YouTube problem could stem from several things. Among them is the “CNN problem.” Big events draw large audiences. But the shows that cover them often do not run many ads, or when they do, CNN likely cannot capture high rates from advertisers who have not committed upfront to extra expenditures. Or worse, YouTube has no capacity at all to get to major advertisers quickly with the opportunity to reach millions of people fast.

With the exception of music videos, many of the most popular videos on YouTube do not have ads that run with them. Take all those new “Harlem Shake” videos.

But all is not lost. “Gangnam Style” starts with an ad.

Filed under: 24/7 Wall St. Wire, Internet Tagged: GOOG

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Andia Winslow's Viral #TheFitCycle Are Smartest, Sexiest Workout Videos Ever

By Anthony Wing Kosner, Contributor

Some viral videos succeed because they are funny or shocking, but the best succeed because they expose viewers to a new idea that they want to share. In a trivial way, perhaps, that’s what happened in a big way with Gangnam Style. Who knew you could dance like a horse? In a more serious—but still wildly entertaining—way, a new video sponsored by The American Heart Association’s Go Red for Women program demonstrates a new idea about how to get active. “Follow Your Heart” (above) shows New York trainer Andia Winslow making her way from her apartment in Spanish Harlem to the subway station at 110 Street en route to Grand Central Station, as it turns out, to retrieve a lost smartphone (with a heart on the screen) from a mystical older woman dressed in red. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Video: Gangnam Style and Swagger Wagon influence makes it to local Hyundai dealer ads

By Jonathon Ramsey

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Parkway Hyundai Gangnam Style local car commercial - video screencap

It used to be that a wild car dealership commercial meant a screaming frontman in a hideous suit making terrible puns and begging for you to help him out of some terrible predicament having to do with surplus inventory. No more – as production values have increased so has the number of commercials to so unusual that you spend the first few seconds trying to believe what you’re seeing.

Parkway Motors and Parkway Hyundai of Wilmington, North Carolina have added to the pile of commercials that make us say, “Hey, now that’s interesting….” The Parkway Motors video joins a genre that blew up with the Swagger Wagon ad for the Toyota Sienna from almost three years ago, the recent Fiat 500L ad “The Motherhood” also part of the same club. The second, for Hyundai, “borrows” from Psy’s “Gangnam Style” to move the kind of metal for “when you want to look cool, cruising in style.”

You can check them both out below.

Continue reading Gangnam Style and Swagger Wagon influence makes it to local Hyundai dealer ads

Gangnam Style and Swagger Wagon influence makes it to local Hyundai dealer ads originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 07 Jan 2013 12:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Autoblog

Korean Singer PSY Buys Gangam Style-Condo

By Zillow, Contributor Source: IMDb How do you buy a condo “Gangnam Style?” Pay for it in cash. Apparently Korean pop star Psy bought a condo in the exclusive Blair House on Wilshire Boulevard in Los Angeles for $1.249 million and paid for it in cold-hard cash, according to celebrity juggernaut TMZ. Psy was already a phenomenon […]
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

New Year's gunfire, firecrackers injure 400 in Philippines

More than 400 people were hurt by powerful firecrackers and gunfire in New Yea’s Eve celebrations in the Philippines, down 17 percent from a year earlier but still high enough to make it one of Asia‘s most violent parties to welcome 2013.

Health Secretary Enrique Ona said Tuesday that the 413 wounded and hurt included a child who was hit in the head by a stray bullet fired by an unidentified person at the height of New Year‘s revelry in suburban Caloocan city in metropolitan Manila. The 7-year-old girl is fighting for her life.

“The bullet’s still embedded in her head,” Ona told a news conference. “It looks like she may not be saved.”

Police said another child was accidentally hit by a shell fired by a homemade shotgun and died during celebrations in Mandaluyong city, also in the Manila region, but health officials said they have not received the details of the incident and could not immediately include the death in their casualty list.

Ona said the 17-percent drop in gunshot wounds and firecracker injuries “is still not enough.” As an example, he said one man had his hand blown off in an accident while lighting a huge, prohibited firecracker called “Goodbye Philippines,” while at least eight people were hit by celebratory gunfire.

Many Filipinos, largely influenced by Chinese tradition, believe that noisy New Year‘s celebrations drive away evil and misfortune. But they have carried that superstition to extremes, exploding huge firecrackers and firing guns to welcome the new year despite threats of arrest.

Although the number of injuries has tapered off in recent years, largely due to hard economic times and government scare campaigns, the figures remain alarming.

The scare campaigns include television advertisements with doctors displaying brutal-looking surgical saws and cleavers used in amputating hands and fingers of firecracker blast victims. Also in December, a top health official danced in schools and other public areas to South Korean rapper Psy’s Youtube hit, the “Gangnam Stylevideo, to get attention and preach against firecracker use, specially by children.

The large number of firecracker injuries came despite a police crackdown that led to the arrests of more than 300 vendors and users of illegally huge firecrackers in Manila and elsewhere ahead of New Year‘s Eve.

The crackdown, however, was marred by an incident where several policemen were seen on video helping themselves to boxes of confiscated illegal firecrackers shortly after these were shown to reporters at a news conference in the capital over the weekend. The policemen could face administrative charges or dismissal.

Source: Fox World News