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The Youtube video thread!

Posted: Mon Oct 15, 2007 8:12 pm
by Graham Kennedy
Post your funniest, weirdest, or generally most entertaining youtube links here! This is mine...

Posted: Mon Oct 15, 2007 8:44 pm
by Sionnach Glic
This one, for sheer effort that must have gone into it.

Posted: Mon Oct 15, 2007 9:07 pm
by Aaron

Posted: Mon Oct 15, 2007 9:16 pm
by Bryan Moore
Damn you all for having this thread! My school's online filter blocks YouTube. Of course, I am so easily distracted that this may be a blessing. :)

Posted: Mon Oct 15, 2007 10:43 pm
by celeritas
Iran So Far

i'm a fan of andy samberg SNL music video shorts.

Posted: Mon Oct 15, 2007 11:17 pm
by Thorin
Bryan Moore wrote:Damn you all for having this thread! My school's online filter blocks YouTube. Of course, I am so easily distracted that this may be a blessing. :)
Are you a teacher?

Posted: Mon Oct 15, 2007 11:29 pm
by MetalHead
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=fV1R8CdXFaM

THE ANCIENT FOREST OF ELVES!

Posted: Tue Oct 16, 2007 12:26 am
by Bryan Moore
Thorin wrote:
Bryan Moore wrote:Damn you all for having this thread! My school's online filter blocks YouTube. Of course, I am so easily distracted that this may be a blessing. :)
Are you a teacher?
Yessir. Social studies.

Posted: Tue Oct 16, 2007 12:30 am
by Thorin
I just find it quite strange you'd be on youtube. It's a very studenty sort of thing to do. I can just imagine you shouting at a load of kids for going on youtube, and then after they leave you just sitting down with a sandwich going round looking at funny videos :lol:

Posted: Tue Oct 16, 2007 12:41 am
by Bryan Moore
Thorin wrote:I just find it quite strange you'd be on youtube. It's a very studenty sort of thing to do. I can just imagine you shouting at a load of kids for going on youtube, and then after they leave you just sitting down with a sandwich going round looking at funny videos :lol:
Actually, it's quite an effective teaching tool. I teach a contemporary issues class, bits from the Daily Show, etc. can make a nice break, segue, or intro to something. Having to backdoor into YouTube is a pain, but we still do it.

Posted: Tue Oct 16, 2007 12:46 am
by Thorin
Nothing is banned on the internet at my college, but if you go on it, it's tracked and you just get banned from the college intranet. Bit of a bugger that.

But at my old school, nearly all the game sites were blocked (I did a GCSE in IT, and spent 4/5 lessons on internet games). We finally managed a way round it - open up Microsoft Frontpage, type in the link, then preview it and click on the link. It will take you to that page without the block via internet explorer (or firefox). :wink:

Posted: Tue Oct 16, 2007 12:49 am
by Mikey
Mt wife's district is TERRIBLE. She often can't get on sites from which she is trying to get resource material - even publishers' sites or similar. At her old school, they even blocked their own mail server!

Posted: Tue Oct 16, 2007 1:07 am
by celeritas
Bryan Moore wrote:
Thorin wrote:I just find it quite strange you'd be on youtube. It's a very studenty sort of thing to do. I can just imagine you shouting at a load of kids for going on youtube, and then after they leave you just sitting down with a sandwich going round looking at funny videos :lol:
Actually, it's quite an effective teaching tool. I teach a contemporary issues class, bits from the Daily Show, etc. can make a nice break, segue, or intro to something. Having to backdoor into YouTube is a pain, but we still do it.
i agree, we use a lot of youtube in med school; there's plenty of gruesome (you've been warned!) medical procedures you can watch that make it a great learning tool, like removal of a hydatid cyst from a person's brain. For those of you wondering, the cyst isn't actually attached to the surrounding tissue, so the neurosurgeon squirts saline behind the cyst to lubricate and force it out without puncturing the cyst (in order to avoid releasing billions of larval parasitic tapeworms).

Posted: Tue Oct 16, 2007 1:38 am
by Teaos

Posted: Tue Oct 16, 2007 1:48 am
by Mikey
Here's one for you, Celeritas. My brother-in-law just had an acoustic neuroma removed. The thing was 13 years old, entwined around the auditory nerve, and abutting - though not yet ingrown - the brain stem. The neurosurgeon was actually able to debulk the tumor from the inside out, leaving only the neuroma's capsule, and thereby avoiding any damage at all to any facial nerves. Normal prognosis is at least 3-6 months of partial facial paralysis, with a fair to middling chance of permanence.