

They had looked foolish after underrating What’s the Story (upon which Oasis played to 250,000 people across two nights at Knebworth), and were aware that Britpop’s luster was starting to tarnish. It might sound like damage control, but if anyone was engaged in that, it was the British music press. It’s almost as if there were stratospheric amounts of cocaine involved at every level of the operation. Even label staff were forbidden to enter the office at certain hours, lest they overhear the album, and at one point, Creation got a specialist in to check whether their phones had been tapped by Murdoch rag The Sun. They called the police on three local radio stations that broke the embargo for lead single “D’You Know What I Mean?”, and pulled a raft of exclusive tracks from the BBC Radio 1 Evening Session after it was deemed that DJ Steve Lamacq hadn’t layered enough jingles over the songs to deter home-tapers. Ignition brought lawsuits against nascent fansites that carried any trace of copyrighted material. Journalists issued with a cassette of Be Here Now had to sign an absurd contract stating that they wouldn’t talk about the album while in bed with their partner. You can see why the powers that be were trying to manage expectations.

The new record was also encumbered by what may have been the greatest millstone in pop music history: the double success of 1994’s Definitely Maybe and 1995’s What’s the Story (Morning Glory), which had already been minted as era-defining classics. The pair of them could barely leave their houses for the throngs of paparazzi camped outside.
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with his pockets full of cocaine, described by police officers as “an unkempt man, obviously the worse for wear.” The following January, Noel Gallagher left the nation clutching at pearls after declaring drug-taking to be as normal as having a cup of tea. Two months later, he was arrested on London’s Oxford Street at 7.25 a.m. If you want something beautifully bizarre, this is the video for you.Never mind that in September of ’96, Liam Gallagher had bailed on their diabolical MTV Unplugged performance before walking out on an American tour because, he claimed, he needed to buy a house. Things get psychedelic when Brody becomes an inter-dimensional space god, his face imprinted onto the Obamas, polar bears and the pope’s hat. BRODYQUEST is a Lemon Demon project that is pleasing in its simplicity and strangeness – we get to see Brody go about his daily life as a cardboard cutout-esque figure, playing with his starfish friends by the seaside and then becoming a rock star by walking into the sun and coming back out with star-shaped guitar and glasses. Neil Cicierega is a long-standing youtuber famous for Potter Puppet Pals and his musical output as Lemon Demon, which includes epic classic ‘The Ultimate Showdown’ and his marvellously rude parody of ‘ The Song of the Count’. He Man – What’s Going OnīRODYQUEST is, as uploader NeilCicierega puts it, ‘the best day of Adrian Brody’s life.’ Background information: Adrian Brody is an actor who is most famous for being the youngest receiver of a Best Actor academy award, at age 29, for his role in The Pianist. Accompanying game for extra fun: count how many times they say the word ‘kyun’! 4. It might be the rampant enthusiasm of their dancing and facial expressions, it might be the tasteful and timeless costumes and sets, but there’s something about this music video that just refuses leave your brain after watching it. Kimi Ni Mune Kyun (YMO)īecause no list of bizarre things is complete without a contribution from Japan, here is pop band Yellow Magic Orchestra‘s 1983 single Kimi Ni Mune Kyun (which translates loosely to ‘I have a crush on you’) from their album Naughty Boys. If you enjoyed this one I recommend some of Gertilish’s Lupin dubs, this for fans of Toy Story and this if you like Friends.

This video is my favourite youtube poop, it always makes me laugh.
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Youtube poop is a niche genre that can be spotted by a few tropes that are usually involved: taking a clip from a film or TV show, adding strange distortion (of video and audio), repetition, rewinding, speeding up or slowing down, inserting quotes and other popular culture references… they’re quite silly videos made for fun, though some can be quite disturbing.

An under-appreciated (by view count) masterpiece, Mr Banks Has A Mental Breakdown was created by talented ‘youtube poop’ (also known as YTP) creator Gertilish.
