Good video. Good points.
Knocking down the wall a few pebbles at a time is often easier than pushing it over with brute force. Every time a person sees that video and agrees with it, another pebble is dislodged. Keep hammering for the light of civil rights is on the other side of the wall.
As much as I agree with the sentiments of this video, I always wonder what goes through the head of people that produce in this style. Very strange. There’s an odd form of narcissism in wanting to show yourself at different angles in an almost “let’s show people how cool I look in different poses” way.
Danny, it’s just an editing technique. TV news has been using it for years. One of the most obvious users of this trope is Ashton on Punked. It makes transitions and cutaways easier and is less boring to look at than a static, straight reading of points.
12 thoughts on “Seven reasons why gay marriage should be banned!”
Thanks almost Duluth, I loved it!
Whoops I meant to post this: https://m.youtube.com/#/watch?v=msonq5VR1ec
A great piece, thanks for sharing.
Basic human rights should never need argument, but alas…
Awesome.
I’m hoping this is a no-brainer that won’t produce 100+ contentious comments.
Resources for understanding the illness of homosexuality:
https://www.landoverbaptist.org/subjectarchive/homosexuals.html
Good video. Good points.
Knocking down the wall a few pebbles at a time is often easier than pushing it over with brute force. Every time a person sees that video and agrees with it, another pebble is dislodged. Keep hammering for the light of civil rights is on the other side of the wall.
As much as I agree with the sentiments of this video, I always wonder what goes through the head of people that produce in this style. Very strange. There’s an odd form of narcissism in wanting to show yourself at different angles in an almost “let’s show people how cool I look in different poses” way.
Very interesting and to the point … loved it.
Superb – thanks for posting it!
Danny, it’s just an editing technique. TV news has been using it for years. One of the most obvious users of this trope is Ashton on Punked. It makes transitions and cutaways easier and is less boring to look at than a static, straight reading of points.