- BACKSTREET BOYS I WANT IT THAT WAY PARADY LIP SICN MOVIE
- BACKSTREET BOYS I WANT IT THAT WAY PARADY LIP SICN FULL
"It's just something to do when you are bored," he says. And he's now working with friends on more spoofs. Sebastian's friends liked the first video enough that he put up another soon after that. So he made a parody of the MTV reality show "Made," which sends specialized trainers to transform average high schoolers into prom queens or basketball players.īecause YouTube works seamlessly with, the social networking site with 77 million registered users, Sebastian and millions of people use the site to host videos for their friends to watch and enjoy on MySpace. Sebastian Carandang, a 15-year-old Naples High student, started making videos of him and his friends skateboarding, but quickly decided they could get a more creative. "If there's something going on with young people, you can find it there." "YouTube is amazing," says Montana Miller, an assistant professor at Bowling Green State University who specializes in monitoring youth culture. VIDEO: Two Chinese Boys' "I Want it That Way" lip-sync.VIDEO: Judson Laipply's "Evolution of Dance".VIDEO: Sebastian Carandang's "Made" parody.
BACKSTREET BOYS I WANT IT THAT WAY PARADY LIP SICN MOVIE
The site's quick rise to a powerful force in pop culture has movie studios, TV networks and music executives looking at the site as a way to create buzz for their products. But unlike Napster, which was ultimately shut down by the federal court system, YouTube has cooperated with copyright holders to eliminate offending material. Like that original music-sharing service, YouTube has had some run-ins with copyright infringement issues. YouTube's sudden surge has led some to call the site the new Napster. Uploading videos takes only a few seconds if you have a broadband connection, and viewing videos is as simple as a click of a mouse.
With more than 12 million people visiting every month, viewing nearly 50 million videos, the site has found a way to harness the online video medium more creatively than even powerhouse companies like Google, Microsoft and Yahoo. Like millions of people worldwide, Garito, 28, turned to, a Web site dedicated to helping amateur Spielbergs, Lucases and Coppolas share their masterpieces with the world.įounded a year ago and really only up and running for about six months, YouTube has become the sort of phenomenon only possible in the Internet age. With his masterpiece complete, the question became what to do with the finished product. He threw in a couple of scenes of him goofing around the house and then tossed the unedited footage into his computer.Ī couple of keystrokes later, his editing program helped him cut the raw video down to a tight five minutes. He set up his camera and recorded 10 minutes of frolicking poolside with his girlfriend, Toni-Leigh Firenze, at his mother's North Naples home. "We'd been goofing off around the pool," he said. He had the music (Daddy Yankee's "Gasolina"). Something about capturing even the most mundane acts on film made them seem so much more important.Įarlier this year, when he bought a new digital video camera, he noticed it came with some editing software. Recipe for adorable, right there.There's something about video cameras that has transfixed Michael Garito since he was a kid.
Put those two things together and combine them with his equally crazy in love (see what we did there) bride, and BAM. The best part, though, has got to be the groom: A) He looks like he’s having a blast, and B) it’s so clearly for the love of his life. The groomsmen get major points for being totally game for it, especially since a number of them flew in from way the hell far away for the wedding and had to learn the routine at the last minute. Next, they did their best Backstreet Boys impression with a lip sync to “I Want It That Way” and continued on to what the Huffington Post tells me is a Persian dance number (FYI we’re pretty sure the groom is Persian himself) and lastly, they finished up with a grand finale of Bruno Mars’ “Marry You” (of course). Here’s how it went down:įirst, they opened with Beyonce’s “Crazy in Love” before moving on to “Bootylicious” by Destiny’s Child.
BACKSTREET BOYS I WANT IT THAT WAY PARADY LIP SICN FULL
The wedding in question saw Sean and Ariana Rajaee saying their I dos to each other in Los Angeles on June 21 - and during the reception, the groom broke out a little surprise for his new wife with a little help from his groomsmen: A perfectly-choreographed dance routine full of awesomeness. This video is currently making the rounds, and it’s kind of the perfect thing to be watching on a sunny summer Friday. I may not totally understand Uber weddings or bridesmaid butt photos, but one wedding-related story I can get behind this week is dancing, lip syncing groomsmen.