Something I forgot to mention before, I went with my family to the Field Museum at Chicago in late March 2005 and in one part of the building they were conducting radio interviews and I decided to do one for the hell of it and they asked me various personal questions about myself like my interests and hobbies and I mentioned the horror films I was into like Star Crystal(which i'd watched earlier that day)I'd love to be able to get my hands on that old interview.
A few years ago in community college I also took a public speaking class and everyone in the class got sent unlisted youtube videos of their speeches, I unfortunately didn't save mine and forgot the name of the Youtube channel they were posted on so i'm not sure if they even still exist.
I made a few plush videos when I was really young, lol. There was one where I left in my mom calling me up for a bath, that'd be funny AND horribly embarrassing to see again. Lost to the fucking ether tho.
Post by generalironbeak on Jul 22, 2023 1:19:36 GMT
Not sure if this was really qualifies, but I guess I’ll mention it.
When my PBS station first started airing ZOOM in 1999, it didn’t premiere until several weeks after it did on most other stations, and was a Sunday morning show. It didn’t become part of the weekday schedule until June, but when it did (according to what I’ve researched), it started with the first episode (rather than pick up at episode 121, the episode most stations aired that day, it began with the first episode. Also, it simply aired the season going from one episode to the next, unlike other stations, which would air the season in increments of four episodes, so you’d be able to see the same episode within the next week if you’d missed the initial showing.
I thought that was what my station was doing when I saw the season in late 1999, but apparently not. However, because I recorded over both my one ZOOM episode from that day and the “Dragon Tales” episode after it (DT seemed to follow the same morning schedule, with the same episode airing the following afternoon), it’s impossible to say. To confuse matters a little more, some research I’ve done has shown there was a Dragon Tales marathon on my station on 9/6/1999 that preempted ZOOM that day, but it looks like the show aired the preempted episode the following day, which wasn’t usually the case on my PBS station.
Not sure if this was really qualifies, but I guess I’ll mention it.
When my PBS station first started airing ZOOM in 1999, it didn’t premiere until several weeks after it did on most other stations, and was a Sunday morning show. It didn’t become part of the weekday schedule until June, but when it did (according to what I’ve researched), it started with the first episode (rather than pick up at episode 121, the episode most stations aired that day, it began with the first episode. Also, it simply aired the season going from one episode to the next, unlike other stations, which would air the season in increments of four episodes, so you’d be able to see the same episode within the next week if you’d missed the initial showing.
I thought that was what my station was doing when I saw the season in late 1999, but apparently not. However, because I recorded over both my one ZOOM episode from that day and the “Dragon Tales” episode after it (DT seemed to follow the same morning schedule, with the same episode airing the following afternoon), it’s impossible to say. To confuse matters a little more, some research I’ve done has shown there was a Dragon Tales marathon on my station on 9/6/1999 that preempted ZOOM that day, but it looks like the show aired the preempted episode the following day, which wasn’t usually the case on my PBS station.
I mailed a recipe to Zoom around 2001 and they apparently wrote back. I'm not sure if it ever aired though.
Last Edit: Jul 22, 2023 1:40:02 GMT by jimhaggerty
Not sure if this was really qualifies, but I guess I’ll mention it.
When my PBS station first started airing ZOOM in 1999, it didn’t premiere until several weeks after it did on most other stations, and was a Sunday morning show. It didn’t become part of the weekday schedule until June, but when it did (according to what I’ve researched), it started with the first episode (rather than pick up at episode 121, the episode most stations aired that day, it began with the first episode. Also, it simply aired the season going from one episode to the next, unlike other stations, which would air the season in increments of four episodes, so you’d be able to see the same episode within the next week if you’d missed the initial showing.
I thought that was what my station was doing when I saw the season in late 1999, but apparently not. However, because I recorded over both my one ZOOM episode from that day and the “Dragon Tales” episode after it (DT seemed to follow the same morning schedule, with the same episode airing the following afternoon), it’s impossible to say. To confuse matters a little more, some research I’ve done has shown there was a Dragon Tales marathon on my station on 9/6/1999 that preempted ZOOM that day, but it looks like the show aired the preempted episode the following day, which wasn’t usually the case on my PBS station.
I mailed a recipe to Zoom around 2001 and they apparently wrote back. I'm not sure if it ever aired though.
In 2018 or 2019 i walked into the middle of a tv interview with the town major,to this day i have no idea what event this happened on and that did it air Outside of this i have a lot of video/music work before and after 2018 that i never uploaded
Aside from that "Not Perfecto Party" video I previously talked about, other videos on my closed old YouTube account were "The Dangerous Video in the World", the very first video I uploaded and is basically an edit of the video "Letters From Our Friends" by AbsoluteBillion (so basically a YTP of a YTP), an edit of a sketch-based Flipnote which involved my attempt to recreate that boat scene in "The Mr. Men Show" with Mr. Lazy and Mr. Scatterbrain during the two bits where "Chacarron" played as well as inserting Day and Night (from that Pixar short) into what I believe is the segment where a person is waiting for a basketball he threw to come down, and I think it also had a stop-motion Lego short called "A Bad Day at the Pool" which one of my sisters originally made and that I applied Speakonia voices to.
Last Edit: Jul 22, 2023 13:59:11 GMT by YouTubeFan43
I was thinking about this the other night! I was thinking about obscure lost media - how sometimes it can be as simple as someone's youtube art project.
I did some very amateur claymation videos as a child. They're still on my channel, just delisted. I wonder if anyone out there ever tried to find them years later? I also did a few "Let's Plays" (if I can even call 'em that haha), also delisted.
The local community art school where I lived flimed several local commercials and one anti smoking psa between 2007 to 2013 one of which featured a girl that was in the same class as me. They use to air a lot on the local stations and I could point out kids I went to school with but all the ads the art school did are lost and probably weren't well archived. Unfortunately I can't even ask the girl I was in class with as she passed away last year.