How to feature any video on your YouTube Channel

Today, after a conference call I was left scratching my head wondering how could someone else’s video (not one of your own uploaded videos) be featured on your YouTube channel. What to do? I turned to Twitter’s collective knowledge and within a couple of hours someone sent me a screenshot with the explanation.

Here is the list of steps, indicated on the following screenshot (click on it for a large version):

(1) Click on the edit link at the top of your YouTube channel.
(2) Select “Other” in the Featured Video dropdown menu.
(3) Paste the URL of the video you want to feature.
(4) Click the Save Changes button and voila!

YouTube ads: An Intrusive user experience!

After I saw the video of Michael Jackson’s daughter crying at his memorial today, I saw this:

What is wrong with this picture? At least a couple things!
1) From a human standpoint, I find it pretty insulting how commercialized things have become around MJ after his death. There are not 2 but 3 ads appearing in the end frame for this video of his daughter crying her dad’s death…
2) You can’t get rid of the ads to be able to click on the video that is sitting directly behind them. So, they are killing the user experience to make a buck, basically. Reminds me of the popups of the early days…

Help End Global Poverty

In the year 2000, world leaders set the Millennium Development Goals and promised to end extreme poverty by the year 2015. We only have 7 years left — now is the time to urge leaders to keep their promise to the world’s poorest citizens.

Celebs like Will.I.Am, Scarlett Johansson, Fergie, Bono and John Legend are already adding their names to the campaign — now it’s your turn.

It’s easy — just upload a video to www.youtube.com/inmyname stating your name, your home country, and your message telling world leaders to end poverty. Be as creative and compelling as you like. Then, together, we’ll create a mash-up of the best videos and broadcast it to world leaders at the United Nations General Assembly.

You can learn more and upload your video now at www.youtube.com/inmyname.

YouTube Supports Captioning!

I learned about this today, through the Google Nonprofit Newsletter:

“If you’re a non-profit organization with global membership, or you have members who are hearing-impaired, YouTube is making it easier for you to communicate. A few weeks ago, YouTube launched a new captioning feature which allows people who would not otherwise understand the audio track in a video to follow along. You can add captions to one of your videos by uploading a closed caption file using the “Captions and Subtitles” menu on the editing page. To add several captions to a video, simply upload multiple files. If you want to include foreign subtitles in multiple languages, upload a separate file for each language. There are over 120 languages to choose from and you can add any title you want for each caption.

To find out more about the new captions feature and view examples of them in use, read the full blog post here.”

Very exciting news for hearing-impaired folks! I am very glad to read this.

Microsoft to Eat Up Yahoo!?

I was just reading about the possibility of a friendly takeover of Yahoo! by Microsoft.

My first reaction was one of amazement, not only at the action but the dollar figure attached to it: potentially $50 billion. But, as I think more about it, and reading other people’s comments, what comes to mind is: for the first time in quite a while, the playing field may level since Google started turning into the 900-pound gorilla it is now.

What will happen to the Yahoo! products we’ve learned to love (Flickr, del.icio.us, Yahoo! Mail) after a takeover by MS? If they are smart, hopefully they’ll cross-breed with existing “equivalent” MS products, to bring in better and friendlier web practices.

On a side note, how’s this for interesting news too? Buried within an announcement made by Yahoo! yesterday, they leaked that “Flickr will ‘soon’ allow users to upload videos in addition to photos.”

I cannot agree more with the statement Business 2.0 makes about this move: “The comments most people leave [in YouTube] are unintelligent. Flickr users, on the other hand, have more to say, and are more active in adding notes, comments, and tags to other people’s photos.”

YouTube, Google:
Better shape up! :)

Thoughts, anybody?

Web 2.0 and Democracy

I just learned about a fascinating initiative involving celebrity blogger Jeff Jarvis, who recently set up a YouTube channel called PrezConference, to provide a platform for people to ask video questions to presidential wannabes and get them to (hopefully) answer them. It remains to be seen (as of today) how it turns out, but the sole idea deserves credit as one that is spinning Web 2.0 on itself in the benefit of democracy.

Here’s his invitation video:

Google Sued For $1 Billion

Google got sued today by Viacom, for $1 billion.

Viacom alleges that about 160,000 unauthorised clips of its programmes have been loaded onto YouTube’s site and viewed more than 1.5 billion times.

This happens at an interesting time, not too long after Joost’s deal with Viacom, and it’s the first interesting lawsuit (there were other minor ones) to knock on Google’s door, since they acquired YouTube last year.

More to come, I am sure… at the very least, more time spent on Google’s side to try to filter things better before they go live. Or not?

Maybe, if it makes more sense (who knows!) for them to settle, than to pay people (or design AI systems to analyze content prior to going live), they may just choose to keep doing things they way they have been doing them: reacting after the fact.

Jorg: Is the YouTube Star a Full Sailor??

We published this article in Propeller on Monday. It was written by Christine Baker, our super-talented writer/editor. It was in regards to the work by Brett Novak, a design student at Full Sail and his ultimate creation, Jorg.

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On YouTube, even a talking thumb can stick out from the crowd.
At Full Sail, he’s an unassuming Digital Arts & Design student who drives a motorbike that sometimes runs. Across the globe in South Korea, however, he’s the creator of a popular YouTube video called “Crazy Eyes,” which has been featured on a Korean primetime variety show that translates to mean “Exist or Not!”

The student, Brett Novak, made “Crazy Eyes” while experimenting with AfterEffects before coming to Full Sail. “Crazy Eyes” features Novak’s friend, Eric Kopecky, whose eyes Novak altered to look like they were moving in opposite directions simultaneously.

On “Exist or Not!” Koreans citizens, celebrities and even optometrists were asked to weigh in on whether or not the boy in “Crazy Eyes” could really move his eyes like that. Several tried to mimic Eric’s eyes, to no avail. At the end of the show, Eric and Brett revealed the truth and the effect was explained.

The popularity of the show and the uproar over the video was surprising to Novak. “I was expecting a 30-second showing, but it’s like the entire segment.”

Besides his “Crazy Eyes” fame in South Korea, Novak’s YouTube sensation Jorg (a talking, dancing thumb with a superimposed face, minus the nose) has brought Novak even more attention. The first of the three Jorg videos has logged more than 1 million views since its debut in 2005.

On Friday, Jorg appeared on an episode of the BBC show “Money Programme,” which was investigating YouTube and the rise of do-it-yourself TV. For the show, “Money Programme” ran a documentary-style interview with Jorg, soliciting the famous thumb character’s thoughts on YouTube and the future of television. The piece also includes post-audio work by RA student Patrick Forrest.

Novak also was asked back on “Exist or Not!” for a Korean New Year episode, which includes a new version of “Crazy Eyes.” On the show, he wishes a happy new year to the show’s viewers – which represent about 15 percent of the Korean television audience. “Happy New Year!” Novak said in Korean. “You could be a star like me.”

The Origin of the Thumb
Novak is the man behind the camera and digital effects, but he shares some of the fame with pals Eric Kopecky and Nico DeRobertis. Kopecky is the face and voice of Jorg, and is featured on “Crazy Eyes.” The actual thumb in the Jorg videos belongs to DeRobertis, although Kopecky’s thumb was used as a stand-in for the BBC special due to distance and time constraints.

Novak is modest about all of the attention. “It’s so crudely done; it’s so badly done!” Novak says of the “Crazy Eyes” video, which he made two years ago. Similarly, the first two Jorg videos are hand-animated, he says.

“There’s a guy named Steve Oedekerk who’s been doing the thumb stuff for years,” said Novak. “He did like the Bat Thumb and The Blair Thumb project.” Novak says Jorg was inspired in part from Oedekerk’s material. “The character is ours, but the actual, literal animation, that’s been done.”

The Hand (and thumb) of Fate
It was, in fact, the fun of experimenting with AfterEffects and making videos for YouTube that led him to seek out Full Sail, where he has been able to hone his skills, Novak said.

He points out that there’s quite a difference in quality between his first videos and his work now, and some people have noticed.

“I got a couple of comments from people that feature this stuff that were like, ‘Wow, you’re really cleaning up – giving Oedekerk a run for his money!’”

Novak’s goal is to continue to develop his skills in video, web design and motion graphics, which he has already put to use on non-YouTube projects such as a music video for the Canadian metal band Kittie and work for Lands End and multimedia company Xenopod, Inc.

As for Jorg, it seems that his star is still rising, thanks to YouTube.

Digital Arts & Design Program Director Bill Galbreath commented that Novak’s experience is a perfect example of how fast art and culture circulate around the world these days. “It points out why it is important to do good work, to reach for your passion and to deliver an interesting piece. You never know when someone from the other side of the world will call you and invite you to tell your story to an eager audience you never knew existed.”

- Christine Baker