http://www.collegehumor.com/video:1830262
Not the most accurate representation of Wikipedia that I've seen (at least they know about our notability policy), but I laughed all the same.
-- Foxy Loxy http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Foxy_Loxy
foxyloxy.wikimedia@gmail.com wrote a null message in this thread: news:ftbaaynz78c9agmq5qUYAxe124vaj_firegpg@mail.gmail.com
I nominate [[professor kitzel]]. I saw them all, and I would swear they are longer than five minutes. They say time flies when you're having fun. It's a total mystery. Maybe my ten year old brain expanded all of the information to half an hour. Maybe Americans got short-changed at the border.
I was just indicating that video is a bit boring in [[professor kitzel]], because only the professor is animated, and that is a necessity in distant history--a lot of stills on paintings while a historian reads. They *should* be remixed with classical music on one side while the historian reads on the other. I am too busy with my own stuff to do it.
Subject-Was: "Professor Wikipedia"
"Jay Litwyn" brewhaha@freenet.edmonton.ab.ca wrote in message news:gs9gul$l08$1@ger.gmane.org...
I was just indicating that video is a bit boring in [[professor kitzel]], because only the professor is animated, and that is a necessity in distant history--a lot of stills on paintings while a historian reads. They *should* be remixed with classical music on one side while the historian reads on the other. I am too busy with my own stuff to do it.
Okay, so someone opened this thread on a tangential subject, and I am the sole contributor in a short howto on remakes. The neat way to do it would be to beep the slide changes, so that anyone caught imagining what the reader is saying...sees changes in illustration. Then, to do it very professionally, get a live orchestra, so that choosing pieces for timing with the slides and the total length of presentation is child's play. To me it would not be anything like that. Some disc jockeys at the CBC might be able to do a good job.
The crude way to do it would be just to turn the radio onto a classical station on your left, while the TV's balance is way over on the right -- forget about any correlation between music and story. Do not be surprised or upset if children fall asleep and make up their own version of the story. I *like* this crude way. The professor's theme song might actually be a good way to wake kids up. "Lohruh, Regruntled", has about the same beat as that theme song.
The elaborate way to do it would be to get artists to animate things throughout, and that would probably end up in a complete remake -- total other animal that does not demand imajination. _______ http://playscreen.com/SherLok