
       AP
Dodson has started a website, where he entertains, sells T-shirts and asks for donations between media appearances.
New  York - Antoine Dodson’s dramatic reaction to a local crime has spawned  the most-watched YouTube video of the year, excepting music videos. 
When Dodson, a 24-year-old  Alabama student, gave an angry TV interview about an attempted rape  against his younger sister, he became a viral hit. When a video turned  that rant into an auto-tuned song, Bed Intruder Song, Dodson became a  fully fledged internet sensation. 
The Bed Intruder Song is  the top YouTube video of the year, the Google Inc-owned company  announced. YouTube added the view counts for two versions of the video,  which put its total at over 61 million views. 
YouTube separated  commercial music videos from their top-10 list. Otherwise, all the top  10 videos would have been by either Justin Bieber, Shakira, Eminem,  Rihanna or Lady Gaga. With more than 406 million views, Bieber’s video  for Baby trumped all others. 
The Bed Intruder video was  remixed by New York musicians Evan and Michael Gregory who are also  known for their Web series Auto-Tune the News. 
The song charted on iTunes, with profits being split between Dodson and the Gregorys. 
The  second most-watched video was another made-for-YouTube riff: a parody  of Ke$ha’s Tik Tok by the musical sketch Web series Key of Awesome. More  than 50.6 million have watched the mock version of the popular pop  song. 
In the third most-watched  video, a potential new pop star was born. In it, 13-year-old Greyson  Chance (who has been compared to Bieber) sings Lady Gaga’s Paparazzi  while playing piano at a sixth-grade music recital. 
The top 10 also included: a  video from the Annoying Orange series; a viral ad from Old Spice; the  hysterically happy “double rainbow” guy; OK Go’s video to This Too Shall  Pass; the trailer for the Twilight film Eclipse; Jimmy Kimmel  surprising a three-year-old Bieber fan with the young star; and a  stunt-driving video by Ken Block. 
Mia Quagliarello, YouTube  community manager, noted that several of 2010’s top videos were made by  people or companies that attempt to create YouTube videos for a living. 
YouTube shares advertising revenue with uploaders who are “partners”. 
Many of the amateurs who helped build YouTube have gone pro. 
“More  and more people are seeing YouTube as a place they can make it in their  career,” said Quagliarello. “We try to give them the tools and the  financials to make that happen.” – Sapa-AP 
No comments:
Post a Comment