

What happens when you put a slice of ham in a CD Player? Watch it to find out!
A message from Blue Man Group about Global Warming.
Chris Cunningham - well known for his incredible beat edited music videos - pairs up once again with Richard D. James - a.k.a. Aphex Twin - to show off this mix of beast & machine.
A japanese robot turns from a car into a arms-and-leg robot. More than meets the eye.
CBS ran an incredibly powerful story tonight that brings you to your feet and just keeps on giving each and every minute into it. Jason McElwain, an autistic high school basketball team member in Rochester NY, served as the coach's assistant and spirit leader for several years. On the final game of the season the coach let him finally put on a jersey with the rest of the team. Watch what happens then... CBS Evening News, Feb 23, This is one of those rare stories that makes you drop everything and share it with everybody.
Desiree Bassett, a 13 year old girl in Worcester, MA, totally rules on guitar. Amazing tapping solos, hard rock covers, etc. She is so f*cking fast!
Hilarious Robot-Chicken-like spoof on Star Trek. Check out Spock's rockin' crib!
Groundbreaking fire choreography from the Phoenix Projekt To Max Raabe's cover of Oops, I Did It Again by Britney Spears. Featuring Tubatron!
Perhaps the two last movies you would think could be mashed up... mashed up.
Guess what.. i got a fever...and the only prescription is more cowbell.
This piece was commissioned by the experimental sound collage group Negativland for the video compilation, "Our Favorite Things," soon to be released. The track had been cut by Negativland several years before, an audio document of their problems with copyright/trademark issues concerning their "U2" album. Many years and a painful settlement later, they had successfully transformed their experience into even more art, and a little activism besides. This little piece, made on Disney equipment after hours when no one was looking, remains quite popular. San Francisco experimental filmmaker Craig Baldwin has been kind enough to include it in "culture jamming" programs he has organized throughout the US and Europe. Several times has it been used in conferences and on panels about copyright for the legal profession. And it's fun, to boot. The statute of limitations has apparently run out on this piece, and it is now considered perfectly legal. What a relief!
a video that explains why discrimination on the Internet is a problem and will continue to be as long as net neutrality rules are not enforced.