Talkin’ About Anime at the Open Video Conference

Been pretty busy this week (as evidenced by the lack of updates). Right now, I’m done in New York, prepping for the Open Video Conference, being held at NYU Law.

I’ll be presenting a talk on Saturday at 5:00 pm called “Online Video Culture: The Case of Fansubs, Anime Music Videos, and Copyright.” What I’m “supposed” to talk about:

The first fansubs (episodes of Japanese animation subtitled by fans, for fans) and AMVs (anime music videos, in which Japanese animation is timed to music) were produced in the United States in the 1980s in fans’ homes on VCR players. Twenty years later, these pieces of videography have proliferated across the Internet, creating an online video culture that has clashed with commercial forces as new issues of distribution and copyright have arisen. Alex Leavitt, a researcher of anime & manga studies and an analyst on the YouTomb project, will discuss the involvement of these fan groups with “illegal” production and file sharing; the videos’ ramifications on copyright law and discussions of free use; and the cultural flow of these fan-produced videos in contention with the new commercial and legal models of streaming sites (Crunchyroll, FUNimation, & Hulu) and sharing hubs (YouTube & Nico Nico Douga).

If you’re interested in awesome talks and interesting people, check out the Open Video Conference website starting on Friday at 10:00 am, because all of the talks will be streaming online for your viewing pleasure. Also, if you can’t take the time out this weekend, all of the talks will be recorded and made available to the world. Check out all the details here.

Superbowl Commercials 2009: Miller’s One Second of Fame (Read: Innovation)

Besides John Madden’s apparent fetish for “big and strong hands” (murmured at least two dozen times in four quarters) and GoDaddy’s failure to bring anything new to the table (breasts, as usual, but at least they vocalized their business as a domain seller), the 2009 Superbowl commenced in high spirits. A good game of football, with emotions escalating higher and higher to peak, thankfully, in the final two minutes.

When not watching the game, my friends and I chirped out scores for our own commercial advertisement rating game. This year, not much worthy of laughter, sadly. However, one* commercial bear discussion: that of Miller High Life.

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