I have to go with Trilo on this. I've never even heard of the song or the video before until I was visiting my dad, who said "Check this out!" and had it up on his computer. He said "Man, if I'd have known Burning Man was like that I'd have gone every year." All of the photos and videos I've showed him over the years didn't anything near that reaction.EB wrote:
One Cat In The Hat video DID NOT MOVE THE NEEDLE. Sorry. Wrong. Thanks for playing. Here's an edition of the home game.
The difference between this video and the ones that I've showed him in the past is, it fascinated him. He still watches it. In previous years, unless you had high-speed internet for uploading, downloading, people had no way to view things like this. Until last year, for example, his entire community was still on dial-up.
If you don't think video has power, consider the band DEVO. I never listened to that shit. I hated it. But there aren't many people in our culture who couldn't describe a DEVO hat.
Clearly, THIS video had a mind-control effect. All your tickets are belong to us!
(If 1% of a million viewers decided to buy a ticket, that's ten thousand tickets. You could add another 5K just for those who bought extra tickets for their partner.) While it certainly isn't what's responsible for the problem, it could -certainly- have moved the needle.
