Oregon Duck and Marching Band Perform ‘Gangnam Style’ [VIDEO]

Published on September 24th, 2012

Back in late August, when PSY’s viral phenomenon “Gangnam Style” was relatively underground with fewer than 100 million YouTube views (it’s now at a whopping 266 million), the University of Oregon’s duck mascot was among the first to perform a widely shared spoof of the song.

Now, of course, there’s a live version. In the video above, freshly uploaded to YouTube on Monday, the duck makes a dramatic entrance from inside a port-o-potty to perform some Gangnam-style pelvic thrusts backed by the Oregon cheerleading squad and marching band at the national power football team’s Autzen Stadium. Check out the live show from halftime of Saturday’s game and give us your review in the comments.

A video of Ohio University’s marching band doing “Gangnam Style” went viral over the weekend, and the song is sure to become a staple at college football halftime shows this fall.


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Do you get frustrated when your flash drive is out of storage space? It’s all a matter of perspective.

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On Sept. 19, 1982 the first documented emoticon was created. Over the course of the next 30 years, emoticons have gone through their fair share of changes — from AIM icons to mobile Emoji. What started as a simple textual smiley face has become a widely used form of communication rich with connotation.

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“One question: are you here ’cause you need someone, or ’cause you’re hungry?”

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Got a message for someone special? Instead of saying it with flowers or diamonds, why not say it with puppies?

Puppy Text spells out a message using images of multiple puppies aligned in the shape of each letter or number.

Symbols such as hashtags or asterisks are not available, because — as the site states when you try — “puppies don’t bend that way.”

Once the message is complete, users can share it on Facebook, via email or copy and paste a preview link anywhere else. There’s also an iPhone app available for $1.29, for sending puppy texts on-the-go.

The site claims that no puppies were harmed in the making of this service.


The Internet wasted little time zoning in on Mitt Romney’s controversial “47 percent” comment that surfaced on Mother Jones this week.

The social web’s gaggle of amateur comedians flocked to share their funniest and meme-iest jabs across Twitter, Facebook and anywhere an online audience might offer a lulz.

Los Angeles-based editorial collective Tomorrow Mag has also launched a Tumblr movement, titled WeAreThe47Percent, that curates photos of the mockingly disenchanted.

We gathered 53 percent of the most shared images and assembled them into a gallery for your laughing — or disapproving — pleasure. Check back for gallery updates, especially if #47percenting becomes a thing.


Do you get frustrated when your flash drive is out of storage space? It’s all a matter of perspective.

Take a deep breath, look at this photo, and remind yourself: at least it’s not 1990.

Imagine what this photo would look like if they tried to compare it to cloud computing.

For a bigger version of the photo, which we found on world-shaker.tumblr.com, click here.


On Sept. 19, 1982 the first documented emoticon was created. Over the course of the next 30 years, emoticons have gone through their fair share of changes — from AIM icons to mobile Emoji. What started as a simple textual smiley face has become a widely used form of communication rich with connotation.

In honor of this anniversary, we are giving emoticons their moment in the spotlight — by putting them on some of the most famous faces out there. It’s all in good fun, and we hope this gallery will bring a :-D to your face.


“One question: are you here ’cause you need someone, or ’cause you’re hungry?”


Article source: http://feeds.mashable.com/~r/Mashable/~3/FXb5fNeT1ww/

EMKWAN

Online presenter, serial vlogger, blogger and geek 2.0. YouTube and Blip channel manager. Editor of @avorah - tech, gadgets and style webcast company.

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