and we all love videoblogs that are vodcasts. lolOn 11/30/05, Andreas Haugstrup Pedersen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:On Wed, 30 Nov 2005 17:07:05 +0100, Michael Sullivan<
[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:> not all videoblogs are vodcasts ;-)I agree...and not all vodcasts are videoblogs. ;-)- Andreas--ht
On Wed, 30 Nov 2005 17:07:05 +0100, Michael Sullivan
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> not all videoblogs are vodcasts ;-)
I agree...and not all vodcasts are videoblogs. ;-)
- Andreas
--
http://www.solitude.dk/>
Commentary on media, communication, culture and technology.
not all videoblogs are vodcasts ;-)On 11/30/05, Joshua Kinberg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The videoblog, for those of you who haven't seen it, is at:> http://www.kongisking.net/kong2005/proddiary/I thought this site was great, but found it disappointing that i
couldn't subscribe.I could never
right. it's like if you make experimental film/video: it's helpful (i think) to make your work not as against something (ie "critical cinema") but as *for* something: for your own _expression_/world/people. and what i mean to say is that rather than feeling an encroachment by the "big boys", you
Jen Simmons wrote:
> Well, since King Kong is done and the marketing hype has officially
> begun, we watching people launch a film that has been promoted through
> a videoblog for a long time now. And there are bits of people, very
> famous people, talking about the behind-the-scenes videoblo
> The videoblog, for those of you who haven't seen it, is at:
> http://www.kongisking.net/kong2005/proddiary/
I thought this site was great, but found it disappointing that i
couldn't subscribe.
I could never remember to check the site, and when I did I didn't know
where to look for what I had mis
Well, since King Kong is done and the marketing hype has officially
begun, we watching people launch a film that has been promoted through
a videoblog for a long time now. And there are bits of people, very
famous people, talking about the behind-the-scenes videoblog in
super-mainstream ven