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Google, Web

Google Street View: The Movie, A Buddy Comedy

Google Street View: The Movie, A Buddy Comedy
Google has photographed nearly every street in America, and it's working on expanding Street View to the rest of the planet. Ever wonder how Google put together this impressive and intrusive feature for Maps? Well College Humor would like to imagine it started with two pasty, humanoid blobs hired by Google to take a road trip across the entire country.

Minus the Gumby like appearance (and bizarrely slow beard growth) of the characters, we hope that if Google had actually tossed two complete strangers in a car together and asked them to take the world's longest road trip and photograph every single street, they would have been smart enough to turn it into a reality show. Fox or ABC would gobble that crap up.

The highlight for us? When Evan cries and pleads to stop as Mike drives past his mother on the street. Mike's one word reply: "Google..." Watch the video below. [From: College Humor]

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Audio/Video, Web

21st Century Broadway: 'Web Site Story'


The Internet has changed basically everything -- most prevalently, the dating habits of its users -- and the College Humor crew decided to take on romance. The team reimagined the world of 'West Side Story' as if it had happened in the Web-obsessed age of 2009. 'Web Site Story' follows the story of Tony and Maria, a couple that met through Facebook, tweets about their lives, and sends each other E-vites for secret balcony meetings. Clicking mouses replace the original's classic finger-snapping routines, and the mini-musical hooked us with lines like "Pandora, I've just found a site called Pandora /I'm suddenly equipped like I'm hanging out in hipster bars."

Fans of the video can follow the writer and director Sam Reich on his Tumblr for behind the scene info and insider College Humor updates. [From College Humor, via Urlesque]

Computers, Social Networking

When Twitter Hits the Streets

Right now there seem to be two camps of people: those who use Twitter, and those who think it's a sign of an inflated ego and poor mental health. Whether you're the type of person who posts your daily minutia 140 characters at a time, or the type who shakes your head at the craziness of it all, you can probably appreciate the above video from CollegeHumor, which shows what happens when random Twitter comments break out of the Internet and hit the streets. [From: CollegeHumor, via Mashable]

Cell Phones

Cell Phones Become Rude Cartoon Characters in New Web Video


Ever wonder what some think your choice of cell phone (or cell phone accessory) says about you? You could ask your friends, or you could just check out this video called "Cell Phone Reunion" that anthropomorphizes today's (and yesterday's) most popular cellies, giving them all distinctive -- and some abrasive -- personalities. We'll let you guess which one plays the role of smug braggart.

Computers, MySpace

Fun Facts About Facebookers Revealed

College Humor Surveys Facebookers
Comedy Web site College Humor has taken it upon itself to prove what we all already suspected: Social networks are just there to embarrass you. College Humor recently asked 26,000 users of the social networking site Facebook (about 1 for every 1,000) a series of questions about how and when they use Facebook. Here's what if found:
  • Only 90 percent of men and 96 percent of women have read every book on their favorites list
  • Almost half of men and women admit to drunken Facebooking at least occasionally
  • Well over 60 percent of men and women have used Facebook to stalk an ex
  • 15.5 percent of men have ... um ... pleasured themselves to Facebook
As terrifying as some of that may be, we can't help but imagine that asking the same questions of MySpacers would have even more horrifying results.

From Tech Crunch and College Humor

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