Old Internet Videos/Content - YouTube videos and websites that were good back in the day

I didn't see that one, but those edits reminds me a lot of The Star Wars Kid.
Fall of Edgar was basically Star wars kid for the hispanic world. Except Star wars kid sued a lot of people and claimed to be traumatized by the video getting out against his will, Edgar instead played along with it happy of his 15 min of fame and even recreated the video for a tv commercial for a cookie brand.
 
I think this (2006-04-06) is when youtube decided we want to be the next TV because after this video, everything went to shit

They launched the partner program (the worst thing to happen to "you" tube) the following year.
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( Source | Archive )
 
I think this (2006-04-06) is when youtube decided we want to be the next TV because after this video, everything went to shit
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They launched the partner program (the worst thing to happen to "you" tube) the following year.
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( Source | Archive )
This just gave me demoralizing flashbacks to the time there were ads for smart TVs that unironically used David After Dentist to sell the Youtube access features of them; then they decided to started ramming Keyboard Cat into everything and I couldn't be near a running TV without mass internal cringing.
 
Probably one of the best things to come out of Something Awful.

A prominent part of that history is the leaked nudes of his girlfriend.
Shitty things about old YT - the limits on video length, 8 minutes or whatever, is why you see old shit part 1/7 particularly if its an old upload.
It seemed to be pushed as a new way to comment on posts except you make a video responding to it instead of writing, so everyone sat at their desktop computers filming themselves and it was incredibly boring. I think the original limit was five minutes and they later introduced a paid service that let someone upload longer videos.
 
This just gave me demoralizing flashbacks to the time there were ads for smart TVs that unironically used David After Dentist to sell the Youtube access features of them; then they decided to started ramming Keyboard Cat into everything and I couldn't be near a running TV without mass internal cringing.
I... Is this real life? WHY IS THIS HAPPENNING TO ME?
 
This just gave me demoralizing flashbacks to the time there were ads for smart TVs that unironically used David After Dentist to sell the Youtube access features of them; then they decided to started ramming Keyboard Cat into everything and I couldn't be near a running TV without mass internal cringing.
I know that feeling. I remember a bank ad that did a shitty version of Ok Go On Treadmills.

Edgar instead played along with it happy of his 15 min of fame and even recreated the video for a tv commercial for a cookie brand.
That's wholesome. What happened to him after that, if anything?

Now that I think about it, the makers of Keyboard Cat and Trollface both got litigious as their popularity faded. @serious n00b said Star Wars Kid sued people too.
 
The early internet is a period I wasn't there for and yet am strangely nostalgic for regardless. It might be because it was for a short time truly a frontier were you could say whatever you wanted to say.

Nowadays forums like Kiwi are all that's left that preserve that concept. As most sites are censor heavy.

I'm a relic of those early years.
Have been active on various fora and BBs since 2001.

The environment was as you'd described - The average forum-goer back then was a lot more socially, psychologically or politically fringe - Which guaranteed that forums/BBs were quite eclectic. Long-form posts were more common then, too.

I have maintained for years that, with the ascent of social media, the robustness of those qualities began to experience attrition, due to the influx of 'normies'.
The increased popularity of the Internet and engagement from the mainstream has led to the situation we find ourselves in, IMHO. Up until perhaps 2008 to 2009, nobody truly cared what a 'bunch of weirdos online' said about anything. When the Internet becomes more integrated with the real-world, things become more 'real' and less abstract or disconnected.
Truthfully, the Internet's prime was when it was mostly populated by dissidents, heterodox thinkers and other miscellany freaks. Oh well.

On topic, some of you may remember Big-Boys.com, which was a male-centric video and image sharing site from the late 90s that popularized (and might have coined) a lot of the media tropes that still exist today (eg. 'fail' videos, 'This Week In' segments, rewarding users for their original uploads). The site was rebranded as Break.com in the mid 00s from memory.
I'd say 40-50% of the content hosted there wouldn't be allowed on Youtube now - Plenty of politically incorrect videos, unabashed sharing of scantly clad women, obscene pranks etc.
 
I have maintained for years that, with the ascent of social media, the robustness of those qualities began to experience attrition, due to the influx of 'normies'.
The increased popularity of the Internet and engagement from the mainstream has led to the situation we find ourselves in, IMHO. Up until perhaps 2008 to 2009, nobody truly cared what a 'bunch of weirdos online' said about anything. When the Internet becomes more integrated with the real-world, things become more 'real' and less abstract or disconnected.
Truthfully, the Internet's prime was when it was mostly populated by dissidents, heterodox thinkers and other miscellany freaks. Oh well.
I remember when the switch happened. There was a great moment in the Giant Bomb podcast when Ryan went to California Extreme (an arcade convention) and was casually shitposting on the internet about someone smoking pot, and was surprised when the hotel staff read the Tweet and sent security to deal with it.

The first few minutes of this clip is the story itself.
As he says later in the clip "This is real world consequences for internet bullshit.", which was a new thing to them.
 
suddenly faded out with only a few emulators being kept up to date to keep the dome from crumbling. It's the same feeling that comes up when you stumble onto an old message board or proboards forum and there's been no posts for years and even the spambots stopped posting, just an unsettling feeling like walking in will disturb the dead that remain, and if you do walk in it's just a stagnant shot of lives that moved on and might not even exist now
One of my favorite emulators, KGen, was last updated in 1997
Eventually people will say the same thing about (hot new program @byuu was working on , BSNES or Higan or Ares)
"Damn that was 23 years ago"
 
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That's wholesome. What happened to him after that, if anything?

Now that I think about it, the makers of Keyboard Cat and Trollface both got litigious as their popularity faded. @serious n00b said Star Wars Kid sued people too.
Edgar is older and still fat, his newer videos show up when you look for the fall of edgar. Seems like he tried to become a generic internet personality recently and made some videos looking back at the fall of edgar still trying to milk it so many years later.

Is kind of weird something so mundane could spontaneously become the most watched video on the whole site. Specially now that nothing on yt seems spontaneous anymore.
 
Ask A Ninja's youtube channel was one of the first ones I stumbled into.

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His library goes as far as 15 years ago, quite a trip.

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Check out the length of his videos, how simple his formula was.


That's one hell of a trip down memory lane.
 
I'm going to give a special shoutout to Liquid Generation. The site is a shell of it's former self, and seemingly hasn't been updated in around a decade(?), but the original, early 00's version of the site was entirely flash-based, and so is hard to access. Looking back at it from memory, the site really wasn't actually all that good, but the movie and music parodies they hosted struck my middle school-aged self as being suitably amusing, and so watching the ones that have been preserved on YouTube brings on the nostalgia.

The best example on their YouTube archive:


Here's another one that's conspicuously absent from the archive:


Another video, also not in their archive:


It also would appear that they were a big contributor to the trend of those pranks games which featured jump scares at the end:

An example:


(others here)

Unfortunately, sorting their YouTube channel by "most popular" reveals what they're making their residual money from nowadays:

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*sigh*
 
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