Evan Coyne Maloney is one of the best independent filmmakers out there. Not only does he almost guarantee hilarity, but he makes intelligent points as well. This video is a bit long (ten minutes) but interesting and worth a watch:
Tag: funny videos
Sunday Funnies: Postseason Edition
Baseball’s postseason started this week, which means it’s time to buckle down. No one knows this better than the Dodgers’ hitting coach, who hit .417 in his only postseason action. He might have won a softball championship as well, if he hadn’t gotten kicked off the team:
Sunday Funnies: That camera isn’t on, right?
Indiana Congressman Baron Hill didn’t want footage of “his” townhall meeting to wind up on YouTube.
So… it wound up on YouTube:
Sunday Funnies or Saturday Scary?
I’m not sure if this is supposed to make me laugh or cower. It does a little of both:
Sunday Funnies: The effect of flagging poll numbers
Sunday Funnies: “Remembering” Woodstock may be problematic…
More than just a festival, Woodstock came to symbolize the music scene in the 1960s and 1970s in all its freewheeling glory. I wasn’t around for any of it, though, so I have to rely on the somewhat hazy stories of folks who lived through it:
Sunday Funnies: Don’t you forget about John Hughes
John Hughes passed away this week. Most people remembered him for inventing the “teen comedy” genre with movies like Ferris Bueller’s Day Off and The Breakfast Club. I’ll remember him for National Lampoon’s Vacation and Christmas Vacation and more most of late and equally great John Candy’s filmography.
Either way, the types of movies that John Hughes made were not Oscar grabs – they were usually lighthearted but with a sentimental, emotional side. They were funny and accessible, and made for great entertainment not only for families, but for kids growing up as well. In that way, Hughes’s films matched the 1980s perfectly because that was the peak of the video rental industry. Even if you didn’t see the Breakfast Club or Planes Trains and Automobiles in the theater, it made for great home viewing with a bunch of friends over at someone’s house or as a family bonding event.
You might say that in the field of local home entertainment HE WAS A GOD! But that line’s been written already – by Hughes himself:
Don’t even ask how this fits into the Cash for Clunkers program
I guess it’s been out since May, but I just caught this neat demonstration of the growth of the National Debt in terms of a road trip.
Sunday Funnies: Wait, health care isn’t funny… is it?
The Independence Institute is taking on Obamacare with this video, which highlights the need for individual choice in health care and has someone getting hit by a bus: