I've been looking into this... thing lately, and if there's anyone else out there still interested I'd like to check a few things...
First- pic related, the autocaptions on "here goes nothing" have changed at some point. It looks like it's just from Youtube updating their audio-recognition programs. I dunno if it's anything interesting or useful, but I'd like to get an idea of when they changed over.
Second- looking into the AOL Online thing with Chronos' channel, "Lee Watson" is an anagram of "AOL newest". I dunno if that's a coincidence or not, but his videos hinted we should check the AOL keywords for "Jurassic Park" anyway. Is that even possible anymore? This site seems to think it is:
https://help.aol.com/articles/Unable-to-access-AOL-keywords-in-Mac-UST1310
Third- I've found mentions that Chronos' videos were legitimately made on a Windows 95/98 machine, and you can tell from the codecs. Any idea how I can check this myself?
rip
Genuinely have no idea what you're talking about, is there somewhere I could look into it though? It seems pretty neat.
Here's a good place to start http://knowyourmeme.com/memes/events/the-erratas-mystery
>inb4 this thread gets smited
Woo... That's weird mate. I'll have to look around.
I remember something about Jurassic Park videos. It's been so long though, I couldn't give you the details.
>>19455570
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4gOCzVXwq4o&t=134s
rip exer erb
how does dilbert tie in to all of this?
>>19456551
You know, I can probably actually explain that... it was a trait of the "Linkin Park anime music video" genre, if you will, that some particularly poor creators would just pile up everything they can find from an image search into their video, even if that includes duplicate images and unrelated content. Except here instead of dumb pre-teens it's a dying old lady.
I got errata'd recently, would not reccomend