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I’ve always loved remixing media, starting with music tapes years ago. Despite my best intentions, though, my efforts rarely turned out very well. Today, thanks to better software, amateurs are creating amazing remixes–particularly in video. Two examples:

First, what if Sleepless in Seattle was actually a horror movie about about a perverted stalker?


Second, what if The Shining was a family comedy?


My only hope is that content owners allow–or better, encourage–such remixing. It’s a sign of affection (at least it is in most cases).

4 Responses to “The Remix Culture”

Kramer auto Pingback[…] The diagram of Remix Culture show us how we see media and metadata flowing to and from different activities around media on the web. The corners of the matrix are meant to represent activities, not kinds of people. So, for example, a Flickr user might change her roles between creating and uploading her original photos, to enthusiastically tagging and commenting on others’ photos, to passively watching photos appear on her desktop or phone, to Photoshop to a Creative Commons-licensed photo that catches her eye and re-uploading it… The point of the diagram is simply to emphasize that each of these activities generates different kinds of metadata that potentially can be used to support the other activities • “ Remixing Media”: […]

Kramer auto Pingback[…] The diagram of Remix Culturein the website shows us how we see media and metadata flowing to and from different activities around media on the web. The corners of the matrix are meant to represent activities, not kinds of people. So, for example, a Flickr user might change her roles between creating and uploading her original photos, to enthusiastically tagging and commenting on others’ photos, to passively watching photos appear on her desktop or phone, to Photoshop to a Creative Commons-licensed photo that catches her eye and re-uploading it. The point of the diagram is simply to emphasize that each of these activities generates different kinds of metadata that potentially can be used to support the other activities. Remixing Media […]

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