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Warner, White House Join YouTube

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at 9/19/2006 8:01:54 PM, Andrew Phillips said:
I’m a big fan of web-videos YouTube is practically my homepage. But anyone who has ever tried to use its search feature knows that the only videos you can find are the ones that people have submitted. When Google introduced their Video Search I was encouraged, thinking, maybe I’ll finally be able to find those rare gems (outtakes from the Tovak episode of Star Trek, etc.). But that Google feature only searches the videos available on Google’s own server, not the on web. Tovak hasn’t got a home on my PC yet… But I recently found out about a new video search engine, ClipBlast, which unlike Google, YouTube, etc. searches ALL the videos on the net. (But, like them, is totally free.) Every single one available to you easily. www.clipblast.com is the site for any video search find Tovak a home or download the latest “Better Know a District” from The Colbert Report (“silent T” of course). And unlike YouTube or Google, ClipBlast also has important news and information videos, from CNN to the BBC and rare interview clips, etc. You can find even high quality video, something difficult on YouTube, almost impossible on Google. So, find Tovak a home and give clipblast a try. You won’t be disappointed.



Tuesday, September 19, 2006

Warner, White House Join YouTube

Sep 19 2006 1:50PM | Permalink | Email this | Comments (1) |
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What do Warner Music Group, Sen. Ted Kennedy and The White House all have in common? They've all joined the YouTube bandwagon in the last couple days.

Warner Music will put up its library of music videos, artist interviews and behind-the-scenes content that YouTube users can then mash into their own uploaded shorts on the site.

Sen. Ted Kennedy put up a YouTube video urging net neutrality.

And, perhaps the most entertaining/disturbing?, the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy is putting up 30-second say-no-to-drugs PSAs on the site.

Surely, some mashup of the anti-drug PSA’s with some drug-appropriate song from the Warner catalog can’t be far off, no?