Topped easily by the 300,000+ views for this!
I hear they have decent pizza available for delivery!Oh! Hey! We forgot real estate videos!
Ohmygawd.Oh! Hey! We forgot real estate videos!
Ohmygawd.
A mounted kitchen wall telephone?
A printer in front of the fireplace?
Wood paneling from the 70s all over?
And talk about the Carsick Channel - the pan-and-scan reminds me of what small-market TV stations[*] would do with used-car dealer ads after they got portable video equipment in the 1980s, scanning over the rows of used cars. Between that and the Reservationless-Plus-type music on hold...I just can't....
[*] And Channel 41 in Kansas City when it was an independent.
Oh, I know. Believe me, I know.There are houses like that all over America.
I'm speechless.Stop being such a Rocky Mountain Coastal Elite, Mark!
I like videos where they drive through the bad parts/hoods of towns. Stuff like driving through Camden, NJ is interesting to watch.Oh, absolutely. Real-time dashcam videos are a thing:
Six and a half hours looking out someone else's windshield driving from L.A. to San Francisco. You CAN watch that. And to boombox's point, if you do, it's six and a half hours you're not watching something else (unless you're on two devices, which we can't rule out)----but is it competition with Netflix/Disney/Amazon/Max or an alternative?
The answer, since YouTube is an amalgam of user-generated and professional content, I suppose, is "both". But then, if you do apples to apples and factor out the time spent on user-generated, what does that to to YT's viewing times?
So this must be Kirk's home?Ohmygawd.
A mounted kitchen wall telephone?
A printer in front of the fireplace?
Wood paneling from the 70s all over?
And talk about the Carsick Channel - the pan-and-scan reminds me of what small-market TV stations[*] would do with used-car dealer ads after they got portable video equipment in the 1980s, scanning over the rows of used cars. Between that and the Reservationless-Plus-type music on hold...I just can't....
[*] And Channel 41 in Kansas City when it was an independent.
No. That's a flat screen on the wall.So this must be Kirk's home?
The information channel at the beach on Time Warner had these but they played Music Choice easy listening with that, so I actually watched.Oh! Hey! We forgot real estate videos!
The information channel at the beach on Time Warner had these but they played Music Choice easy listening with that, so I actually watched.
I discovered yet another show I recorded which contributes to my not having time for streaming and therefore being unwilling to spend money that I don't really have. And I have more unwatched episodes of this than anything else.
"Nancy Drew".

He’s replying to your post about real estate ads and other inanities on You Tube. And he’s replying to Mark’s comment about the waiting-on-hold music played in the background for those ads.
He’s replying to your post about real estate ads and other inanities on You Tube. And he’s replying to Mark’s comment about the waiting-on-hold music played in the background for those ads.
Respectfully, the off-topic dive on this thread was taken by you. You changed from talking about a process in viewer media - Amazon Prime ‘s decision to include ads- to banal content with banal music. You and others switched to talking about carsick videos, walking tours of cities, duck calls, and so forth. So he is just following along.
The basic idea that ties all these things together is that professionally-produced video content now has to compete for viewer attention with all other kinds of video content. The legacy gatekeepers have all sorts of bypasses now. There are some good things on those bypasses and some things that are, well, amateurish, or even just cause for head-scratching. Radio people talk about the "infinite dial"; this is similar in concept.He’s replying to your post about real estate ads and other inanities on You Tube. And he’s replying to Mark’s comment about the waiting-on-hold music played in the background for those ads.
Respectfully, the off-topic dive on this thread was taken by you. You changed from talking about a process in viewer media - Amazon Prime ‘s decision to include ads- to banal content with banal music. You and others switched to talking about carsick videos, walking tours of cities, duck calls, and so forth. So he is just following along.
Yes, exactly right ! I certainly agree. You think the production values of the amateur video content is boring. You say the background music is trite. You don't like the music, but Chimp says that he liked the background music on the real-estate ads he watched. It is just 2 different opinions. But his thoughts are still relevant to the topic, because you are both talking about amateur-produced videos.The basic idea that ties all these things together is that professionally-produced video content now has to compete for viewer attention with all other kinds of video content. The legacy gatekeepers have all sorts of bypasses now. There are some good things on those bypasses and some things that are, well, amateurish, or even just cause for head-scratching. Radio people talk about the "infinite dial"; this is similar in concept.
Imagine if every Bay Area resident were equipped with amphibious vehicles. (For this thought experiment, ignore the environmental effects.) Do you think the Bay Bridge, the San Mateo bridge, and the Dumbarton bridge would be as busy as they are now? Likewise for BART. Do you think toll and fare collections would be affected?