Found on b3ta.com
"Eye of the tiger" on dot matrix printer from MIDIDesaster on Vimeo.
Benny Hill theme & how it's done from MIDIDesaster on Vimeo.
Found on b3ta
Found on b3ta
Chris Cohen said he was on the case, and bingo;
Found on b3ta, then several times in my Facebook newsfeed
However, Blur's Song 2 was the first time I'd created one just for fun, and put my name to it, and the last week has been quite a ride.
The video has now had over 763,000 views, it was created on Monday 28th January, uploaded over night, made live on Tuesday 29th January after agreeing to Blur's copyright on the track (YouTube's T&C's). I then started the seeding.. firstly uploading to b3ta of which I've been a active member for years, this got it started and it was quickly featured on the b3ta homepage (yay), which was picked up by usVsth3m, then it went mad The Metro (and was featured on Page 2 in the paper Wednesday 30th, The Guardian, Gigwise, NME (my elbow once featured in the NME), The Independent, Time Out, Huffington Post, Digital Spy, Shortlist, Contact Music, The Poke, The Mirror, The Telegraph, The Canary Wharf website, Gizmodo, LBC, BBC America (thanks Fraser!!) and The Sun. At some point during Wednesday, through a mutual friend, I contacted Blur's management to notify them, and hope they'd be ok with it.. a few hours later the response came back "Thought it was really funny actually - all good! We've tweeted it and will add it to the site". *phew*
It was also played on air, and discussed on BBC Radio Two with Jo Whiley, BBC Radio One with Fearne Cotton, part of a daily feature on BBC Five Live with fellow listeners calling in with their own machines singing happy songs, including a washing machine that does Abba, chatted about on XFM, who's photocopier likes to sing Wu Tang Clan's Gravel Pit, and Sky News, who asked for an interview.
It also featured on ITV's This Morning on Thursday 30th (Philip Schofield commenting that it was 'just genius', but most people were more excited about Holly Willoughby saying my name) and the first episode of the second series of the award winning The Last Leg on Channel 4, the hosts finishing the show performing the track with a ticket barrier and oyster card on Friday 31st. It ended the week as The Metro's "most shared".
The stats behind the video were interesting, though I'm not going to reveal all here, the day with the most views was Wednesday, the day of all the radio coverage. The site providing the most referrals was not Facebook or Twitter.
One of the highlights of the week, whilst in a brainstorm with the creative director of Ogilvy & Mather, who had included the barrier in one of his ideas, not knowing I was in the room. Another highlight was watching 30-40 French exchange students queueing up to go through the happy barrier, each singing as they went through. Oh, and one last one - a colleague (who shall remain nameless) attempting to take credit for the idea, and the video - whilst I was in the room. Amazing the bullshit some people come out with.
There will be a new video..