Vlogs are the thing
In one vlog, or video web log, a guy runs into the fog.
In another, a guy chats to a camera placed in his refrigerator and then shuts the door.
One of the most successful vlogs, Rocketboom.com, features attractive Amanda Congdon, a 23-year-old actress who anchors a brief spoof-like newscast that highlights quirky stuff on the Internet and makes some left-leaning social commentary on the daily news.
Such brief video clips are the latest rage on the Internet and are beginning to generate cash for their creators by attracting advertising and sponsorships.
First came Web cameras, then blogs - or online Web diaries - podcasting and now vlogs, which are taken with digital video cameras and posted on blogs.
"What I've seen over and over again is just how different a medium video on a blog is than television," said Michael Verdi, creator of Node 101, a nonprofit group that teaches video blogging at the Blue Star Arts Complex. "It keeps getting written about in terms of television."
But it isn't television.
"One of the things about television and film is that they are not participatory," Verdi said.
People like vlogs because they can interact with them, Verdi said. They can comment on them, e-mail the creators and send them to their friends.
For more on vlogs please visit Freevlog
Or Michael Verdi
Or Rocketboom
And one of the best blogs around is vlogmap. Here you can find all kinds of blogs near and far.
The secret vlog injection is also totally cool.
In another, a guy chats to a camera placed in his refrigerator and then shuts the door.
One of the most successful vlogs, Rocketboom.com, features attractive Amanda Congdon, a 23-year-old actress who anchors a brief spoof-like newscast that highlights quirky stuff on the Internet and makes some left-leaning social commentary on the daily news.
Such brief video clips are the latest rage on the Internet and are beginning to generate cash for their creators by attracting advertising and sponsorships.
First came Web cameras, then blogs - or online Web diaries - podcasting and now vlogs, which are taken with digital video cameras and posted on blogs.
"What I've seen over and over again is just how different a medium video on a blog is than television," said Michael Verdi, creator of Node 101, a nonprofit group that teaches video blogging at the Blue Star Arts Complex. "It keeps getting written about in terms of television."
But it isn't television.
"One of the things about television and film is that they are not participatory," Verdi said.
People like vlogs because they can interact with them, Verdi said. They can comment on them, e-mail the creators and send them to their friends.
For more on vlogs please visit Freevlog
Or Michael Verdi
Or Rocketboom
And one of the best blogs around is vlogmap. Here you can find all kinds of blogs near and far.
The secret vlog injection is also totally cool.
