Showing posts with label Comedy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Comedy. Show all posts

Monday, December 21, 2015

Super Happy Fun Time Hour with Robot and Old Man

YASSSSSSSSS LET ME SPEND YOUR MONEY AND EAT YOUR HONEY
BE MY SUGAR DADDY CRAIG FERGUSON

http://youtu.be/syYQvMX5e5E

How the eff is he so multi-talented?!??? He can sing, he can dance, he can make double entendres with almost any statement, he has written a novel and some movies, he can act, he's so SEXY even though he's like, old as my mom, and so HANDSOME, and loves his wife and kids like nothing else, he's just... So... Perfect.ㅠㅠㅠㅠㅠ Yes I know I have a tendency to develop crushes on older men who are (SO DAMN) taken, but duh you see that it's part of the charm!!! I don't want to put in the work of building/raising/making/training a man how to be in a committed relationship, I just want to snatch a man who comes ready-made by some other unfortunate bitch. Lol


Bonus: another man who I'd marry in a heartbeat, with no hesitation at all. (One can dream .....ㅠㅠ)
http://youtu.be/Qur8HLHbm5A

Missing Jon Stewart (and fake news in general)

Gawd I miss this man so much. I should have illegally recorded all the episodes when they did the month of zen thing. I miss hearing his voice every night and admittedly The Daily Show was my primary source of news for some time. (If they discussed something during the show that i felt was interesting or important, I would look further into it, but otherwise I really did not use any other means of knowing what was happening in the world.) There is still no other show quite like it.. Sure late night shows  tinker with topical political issues from time to time, but never with the depth and seriousness with with which TDS has been doing for 17 + years. I love Last Week Tonight with John Oliver for the same reason. These shows discuss issues that I really care about in a manner that doesn't make me depressed. I have adored Trevor Noah as a comic for quite some time but as host of TDS? I can't, because my standards for TDS has already been set to JStew. He is doing a really great job but the show definitely is not what it used to be when Jon was hosting it (esp. with all the old correspondents moving on to greener pastures..). I feel that TDS lacks the authority it had built up over the past 16 years, and at the moment it looks to me like just a group of smart kids poking fun at the news in a lighthearted manner and not ready to face any bad consequences. Maybe they'll build up their credibility and authority over time.

Here's a throwback to one of the most memorable episodes of Jon's last couple of months as host of TDS. http://digg.com/video/jon-stewart-no-words-huckabee-daily-show-urgh
Is it possible to explode and die because you like something so much? This takes me pretty close.

Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Craig Ferguson animation voice-overs + etc.




맙소사 싱크로 대박 ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ


This is soooooo adorable.



ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ Owl ㅈㄴ 밉상 캐릭터ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ




하 나 진짜 미치겠다....... I think i'm falling in love



"He really kind of, steals the movie!"



No subtext whatsoever. LoL


OMG this. Is. PRECIOUS. (from about 4:12~)

Wednesday, September 9, 2015

new tv crush(es)

okay I haven't written on my blog for a long while.
Over the summer I've developed two new celebrity crushes, and both of them have these things in common: they're both tv show hosts, and they're MUCH older than I am....
.......Am I actually into older men or does this only pertain to these two individuals (hopefully the latter)?

Anyhoo,

They are: Jon Stewart (I know!!!! Where have I been in the past 16 years?!???) and Craig Ferguson (somewhat unlikely, I know).




Jon Stewart is, well, a quintessential specimen of what  Koreans these days call "뇌섹남". And if you look at his photos from back in 1999, man... he's actually pretty hot.

And Craig Ferguson.... there's a channel on Youtube called Craigandtheladies or something like that. He seriously "끼 부려" to all the female guests on his show (in particular, Marion Cotillard, whom he just swoons over). And at first it just looks inappropriate, but when you watch video after video of his interviews, you start to find that quality of him to be quite... endearing! And the whole 'badass who's been through a lot but now has sobered up' thing is so, so attractive, you know.


Sunday, June 14, 2015

Steve Byrne (creator of Sullivan & Son), Eddie Huang (creator of Fresh Off The Boat)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve_Byrne

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sullivan_%26_Son

Sad to hear that the show's been cancelled :(
There's been talk of Koreans being the Irish (or Italians) of Asia, so the idea of a real-life Irish-Korean man as the star of a tv series itself was interesting to me...
But why is it so hard to make a successful show with an Asian-American character as the lead???

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eddie_Huang

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eddie_Huang#Fresh_Off_the_Boat
Yeap the show got way too corny after the first few episodes. I think I would enjoy reading the book more.



Monday, April 20, 2015

[2012.09.17] 박정현 (Lena Park), 8집 인터뷰 (백지연의 피플인사이드)

[2012.09.17] 박정현 (Lena Park), 8집 interview show (MC: 백지연)

https://youtu.be/33nbRxT5Jaw?t=18m35s

내말이 이말이여.... 느그들이 나의 힘듦을 손톱의 때만큼이라도 이해하겄냐?!???
내가 미국 토크쇼 보면서 웃는거, 미드 보면서 재미있어 하는거 되게 대단한 거라고...

Wednesday, April 15, 2015

[Devex] Could comic fundraising campaigns be the antidote to donor fatigue?

https://www.devex.com/news/could-comic-fundraising-campaigns-be-the-antidote-to-donor-fatigue-85927

Could comic fundraising campaigns be the antidote to donor fatigue?

By Gabriella Jóźwiak 15 April 2015

How many times has a global development fundraising appeal made you laugh out loud, or even smile? Comedy or uplifting stories are rarely used by nongovernmental organizations to promote their work, mainly because poverty and the other issues they seek to alleviate simply aren’t funny. In an era where public support for international aid is declining, isn’t it time NGOs tried new tactics?

But changing the way organizations publicly present development is not a new agenda.
Since 2013, for example, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation’s Narrative Project has been working with some of the world’s largest NGOs to change the way the sector talks about itself. It’s research revealed the public is tired of charities’ constant focus on suffering, which makes people feel beneficiaries are helpless “others.” It also revealed individuals don’t believe poverty can be alleviated, because appeals rarely report positive impact.

Yet many international NGOs continue to use traditional fundraising approaches that perpetuate such messages.

One organization campaigning for change is the Norwegian Students’ and Academics’ International Assistance Fund. SAIH, which supports education and advocacy projects in southern Africa and Latin America, hit international headlines in 2012 after releasing a spoof fundraising appeal asking Africans to donate radiators to freezing children in Norway.

The Radi-Aid video quickly went viral and has amassed almost 3 million views on YouTube. It parodied the 1984 Band Aid single “Do They Know It’s Christmas?” and implied if the only images of Norway broadcast around the world showed people struggling in harsh winters, others might well believe it was a country in need of support.

Awarding the best and the worst

The success of the comic music video prompted SAIH to launch annual awards for the best and worst global development appeals. This, SAIH President Jørn Wichne Pedersen explained, is part of its attempt to end negative and unhelpful portrayals of people in the “global south.”

“Fundraising should not be based on exploiting stereotypes, and if there are poor people in the video, they should be portrayed in a respectful manner,” he added. “We’d like fundraising videos to be creative to wake up people. I would love to see, for example, videos portray the changes people are doing, and what needs to be done more of, to show the true development that’s happening.”

Pedersen said comedy is a useful tool because it prompts people to share messages, particularly on social media. In addition, he noted that positive messaging motivates people to take action.
“When you have laughed you’re more likely to believe in a new perspective — the walls you have built around yourself are lowered and you start reflecting,” he suggested.

Last year, the awards nominated Oxfam for a Golden Radiator Award for an appeal video that showed the positive impact its rice growing programs have in Liberia. The woman featured on the film smiles through much of the clip and is portrayed as a capable individual.

Voters, who could choose the winner through an online poll, gave the top award to Save the Children U.K.’s “Most Shocking Second a Day” video. Although this one was not lighthearted, Pedersen said it worked because it closed the gap between people’s experiences in Syria and a Western audience.
However, the jury was highly critical of the videos nominated for Rusty Radiator Awards — those considered perpetuating negative stereotypes. It said Concern Worldwide’s Hunger Stops Here video promoted “every stereotype about malnutrition, and tries to encourage giving and donation out of guilt.” It was left “speechless” by Save the Children USA’s “The Most Important ‘Sexy’ Model Video Ever” and described Feed a Child SA’s advert as “completely ‘White Saviour.’”

Pedersen said the awards are growing every year. SAIH also hopes to keep raising awareness on improving development appeals by producing communications guidelines. This autumn it plans to host international civil society organizations at a conference to agree good aid communications protocol.

Go further: Buttress humor with a serious message

Some development NGOs have used comedy or alternative fundraising appeals successfully for several years. Comic Relief is among the best known, having raised more than a billion pounds since 1988. It is known for its Red Nose Day appeal, which includes a televised night of comedy and entertainment. This is punctuated with short films portraying need in developing countries.

Comic Relief CEO Kevin Cahill said the formula has worked for his organization, but warns that getting the balance “between being entertaining and telling the important stories of the people benefiting from donations ... is a huge challenge.”

Cahill said in recent years the charity has made a more conscious effort to focus on progress, positive change and transformation in developing countries. This year the appeal day in March featured a project in a clinic in eastern Uganda, where local people, community leaders and district authorities had worked together.

“That project really showcased the skill, knowledge and commitment of local people to make a difference,” he said. “This was a really important step for us at Comic Relief, in giving those affected a voice and a profile.”

But advertising agency Different Kettle Creative Director Dave Sturdy believes Comic Relief needs to go further.

“The way it presents [its beneficiaries’] stories is very hard and goes against what a lot of organizations are trying to do,” said Sturdy, whose clients include Amnesty InternationalGreenpeace and Oxfam. “I find it uncomfortable. It plays on guilt because ultimately you want people to support, and horror is a good way to get them to give, but it’s not doing much in the long term to help them have a broader understanding.”

Sturdy’s advice for NGOs is to use approaches that humanize beneficiaries. He says shocking images can push people’s emotions and make them donate, but such tactics do not turn people into long-term givers. He advises charities use softer communications to people who are already supporters.

“If you don’t, people will dread every time they get a mailing and not open it because it will depress them,” he said.

The best way to use comedy, Sturdy suggested, is to follow it with a serious message.

“You have to have a good reason for why you’ve done it,” he said, citing a leaflet his company produced for Amnesty, which was distributed at a lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender march in the U.K.

“It was a big leaflet with a long truncheon on the front — the immediate thing was a bit of a nob gag,” he explains. “But underneath was a slogan: Gay is not a stick to be beaten with. We were having our humor but at the same time underlying a message, which made it quite powerful.”

He also said charities can use comedy to address difficult subjects in a direct way. Ten years ago he worked on an Amnesty legacy fundraising campaign where instead of trying to speak delicately about supporters leaving donations in their wills, comedian Michael Palin said: ‘‘One day I’ll be dead as a parrot but my beliefs will live on.” By referencing his famous Monty Python sketch, the actor diffused any potential offence.

Amnesty also has a long history of working with comedians. For more than 15 years it has held shows at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in Scotland — one of the largest arts and comedy events in the world. Andy Hackman, its head of community organizing, events, human rights education and artist relations, said the approach helps the organization reach a broad audience and is the perfect frame for stories about freedom of speech.

The charity works with artists by handing them information about individuals who are suffering human rights abuses, and allows them to create material based on their stories. For example, for many seasons the subject was Burmese comedian Zarganar, who spent 11 years in prison after mocking the Burmese government’s response to a cyclone.

“The Edinburgh festival wouldn’t be allowed in lots of places around the world,” Hackman said. “It’s a way of introducing notions of human rights and turning them from concepts a bit of reality for people.”
Amnesty trusts the comedians not to offend or denigrate other’s free speech, but also does not censor what they produce.

“Our job when we’re briefing people is to make sure they understand that context,” he explained.
Far less common in development is using comedy within program delivery. One of the few NGOs to do this is Clowns Without Borders, which travels to crisis areas around the world to perform comic shows.
“We partner with relief organizations and local community groups to address the psychosocial needs of a community in crisis,” board member Anne Olivia Eldred explained. “We interact with communities in a variety of ways, with performances and parades, workshops and classes.”

Eldred said the organization depicts its beneficiaries authentically as experiencing joy as a result of what the charity delivers, as well as “the context those big smiles are happening in. … We work with brilliant, strong, resilient people in really bad situations, and try and portray them as brilliant strong resilient people in really bad situations that we can help with,” she explained. “Development organizations could benefit from showing more complete pictures of their beneficiaries.”

What are your thoughts on using comedy or uplifting stories in fundraising appeals? Let us know by leaving a comment below.
Read more international development news online, and subscribe to The Development Newswire to receive the latest from the world’s leading donors and decision-makers — emailed to you FREE every business day.








Thursday, February 12, 2015

Steven Yeun & Conan Visit A Korean Spa - CONAN on TBS

Steven Yeun & Conan Visit A Korean Spa - CONAN on TBS
http://youtu.be/k70xBg8en-4

LoL!!!!! this is comedy gold!

Who wrote (and sang) the song at the end? It's friggin' GENIUS!
Whoever it was, s/he really deserves some credit! That was some serious hilariousness oh man...
That song was like, the funniest thing I've seen on Youtube so far in 2015.

Friday, February 6, 2015

Rehearsal Scraps: Conan Grills The Ithaca College Interns - CONAN on TBS

How DID this happen? Lol
Scraps: Conan Grills The Ithaca College Interns - CONAN on TBS
http://youtu.be/Cc0Yk38KnAw

Published on Oct 11, 2012
How'd we get so many people from the same school? More CONAN @ http://teamcoco.com/video


Tuesday, January 27, 2015

Johnny Yune

자니윤 미국 활동시절 스탠드업 코미디

http://youtu.be/mtOJT4gnvrk

Dick Clark's Live Wednesday Show 01 Johnny Yune Comedy Performance

http://youtu.be/6fx3i4Stx98

NBC '자니카슨쇼' 동양인 최초 출연자! 자니윤_채널A_그때그사람 15회

http://youtu.be/JsG5gPlIugU
How a Japanese-Korean comedian got a 20-minute block on the Johnny Carson Show and got his big break . . .

He went on to host The Johnny Yune Show, "the first locally produced Korean-language variety show in America"
http://youtu.be/17MlGVQ1eSg

And wrote, produced, and starred in movie series, "They Call Me Bruce"
http://youtu.be/kUv57oisqDM
"They Still Call Me Bruce" Trailer http://youtu.be/XMrtsnBTmOE

The amazing Korean-Catskillian performs in San Francisco at the Jews on Vinyl Revue at the Contemporary Jewish Museum.
http://youtu.be/5VsYCnYVbnY 

He went back to Korea and made his own late-night talk show, giving many young Korean comics their big breaks into showbiz
최고 MC 남희석의 데뷔 무대 '자니윤쇼'_채널A_그때그사람 15회
http://youtu.be/rOspXAwp6Iw

Friday, November 21, 2014

Maysoon Zayid

Maysoon Zayid: I got 99 problems... palsy is just one

http://youtu.be/buRLc2eWGPQ
Published on Jan 3, 2014
"I have cerebral palsy. I shake all the time," Maysoon Zayid announces at the beginning of this exhilarating, hilarious talk. (Really, it's hilarious.) "I'm like Shakira meets Muhammad Ali." With grace and wit, the Arab-American comedian takes us on a whistle-stop tour of her adventures as an actress, stand-up comic, philanthropist and advocate for the disabled.

Maysoon Zayid performs at ATFP Fourth Annual Gala

http://youtu.be/SxgIqiYCAbI

Comedian Maysoon Zayid Pushes Forward Through Laughs on The Queen Latifah Show



Saturday, May 17, 2014

[Comedy] Brad Williams: Coming Up Short

I'm not entirely sure how jokes on being an autism parent led to jokes on being a midget... but this guy is really damn funny, if you don't mind that many of his jokes are about sex. I mean, he's a 21-year-old male born and raised in the USA, what other topic could be more interesting to him..

Midgets are Happiness!

And here's the entire playlist of his show, "Coming Up Short"




[Comedy] It's an Autism Thing: Let me help you understand

Comedian Scott Long has a daughter who is on the autism spectrum. He wrote a show about living as a family with an autistic child. You can watch a sample of the show here:
http://www.itsanautismthing.com/comedy-clips/

He and his daughter Maddie post weekly videos called "Happy Monday" (if you have experience with people with developmental disability and how frustrated they can be with weekends because there's no set schedule, you would understand why Maddie calls Mondays "Happy"). Maddie has quite a lot of fans!
http://www.itsanautismthing.com/2013/09/happy-monday-with-maddie/

And here's the most recent Happy Monday video, for Mother's Day:
http://youtu.be/X0ykNqG5SiA

You can search Scott Long and Youtube, and there are many videos of him making tons of jokes about topics that have nothing to do with being the parent of a child with autism.