YouTube Poop, most commonly known as YTP, is a type of video mashup created by editing pre-existing media sources for mainly humorous purposes and occasionally contains mature content. YouTube Poops are traditionally uploaded to YouTube (hence the name) but may be mirrored or uploaded on other video sharing websites like Newgrounds, Vimeo, Dailymotion (usually for reasons involving copyright), or Vidme.
Video YouTube Poop
History
The first known YouTube Poop to exist is "I'D SAY HE'S HOT ON OUR TAIL" by SuperYoshi, created on December 22, 2004, less than 3 months before YouTube's domain name was first activated. It was not, however, uploaded to YouTube until November 27, 2006, and SuperYoshi stating that it was originally uploaded to the now defunct Sheezyart.com
At the end of the decade, cutscenes from games released on the Philips CD-i platform (Most notably, Hotel Mario, Link: The Faces of Evil, and Zelda: The Wand of Gamelon) were an incredibly common source in YTPs, as their cheesy and egregious nature made them ripe for satire.
In 2009, a YouTube Pooper named HurriCoaster uploads his second YouTube Poop, which is a YouTube Poop of Spongebob Squarepants (specifically the episode "Shanghaied"), and is considered the birth of Spongebob YouTube Poops (specifically under the title name of "Spingebill")
Maps YouTube Poop
Techniques
In a typical YouTube Poop video, visual and auditory effects are used to alter the underlying work. Some of these videos may involve completely or partially repurposing sources to create or convey a story, while others follow a non-linear narrative, and some may contain no storyline at all. Alternatively, a YouTube Poop may consist solely of an existing video repeated in a slowed or remixed loop. In many cases, YouTube Poops utilize a bizarre sequence of elements that may entertain, confuse, or irritate, depending on the viewer. Associate professor of cultural anthropology at Kansas State University, Michael Wesch, has defined YouTube Poops as "absurdist remixes that ape and mock the lowest technical and aesthetic standards of remix culture to comment on remix culture itself".
Media sources of YouTube Poops include television shows, movies, cartoons, commercials, video games, and other videos obtained from YouTube or elsewhere.
Many YouTube Poopers nowadays resort to creating in professional video editors such as Vegas Pro or other related software, for more complex edits, while a few YouTube Poopers, keeping their visual and audio effects minimal, resort to sentence mixing and jokes in their creations, as they may have minimal software features (such as iMovie)
YouTube Poop is often derivative in the sense that the work of one artist (or "pooper") is sometimes used as the underlying work for another video. Lawrence Lessig, Professor of Law at Harvard Law School, referred to this behavior as an example of "call & response" within a remix culture. Alternately, two YouTube Poopers may engage in "YTP Tennis", wherein the same video is remixed back and forth, or two or more YouTube Poopers may engage in a "YTP Collab", where multiple edited videos are patched together into one large video, at most times alternating between different creations throughout the duration of the video.
Copyright and fair use
Due to the use of copyrighted materials and the manner in which these sources are depicted, YTPs may be removed from YouTube following a DMCA complaint. However, political scientist and author Trajce Cvetkovski noted in 2013 that, despite Viacom filing a copyright infringement lawsuit with YouTube in 2007, YouTube Poops such as "The Sky Had a Weegee" by Hurricoaster, which features scenes from the animated series SpongeBob SquarePants (in particular, the episode "Shanghaied") and Weegee (a satiric caricature based on Nintendo's Luigi as he appears in Mario Is Missing), remained on YouTube.
The law in the United Kingdom does allow people to use copyrighted material for the purposes of parody, pastiche, and caricature without infringing on the copyright of the material. Copyright owners are only able to sue the parodist if the work contains hateful or discriminative messages. If the case is then taken to court, it will be down to a judge to decide whether the video meets these criteria.
Individual Responses
Individuals involved in YouTube Poops sometimes make efforts to take YouTube Poopers' videos down because mature and defamatory content is prevalent in them, especially if they have a large audience of children watching their work. Children's poet Michael Rosen (who claims to have "become a cult" among YouTube Poopers) initially attempted to take his videos down, but after a few frank discussions with YouTube Poopers, he decided to allow the videos to stay online, comparing the remixes to the use of photo editing software in a later interview. Rosen issued a warning on his website, saying that:
He put a similar warning on his YouTube channel's about page.
See also
- Anime music video
- Downfall (2004 film) § Parodies
- Netdisaster
- Vidding
- Weird SoundCloud
- Faces of Evil and Wand of Gamelon
References
Source of the article : Wikipedia