Youtube Nyan Cat 10 Hours

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Nyan Cat The Game! Instructions: click continue in the box below (or wait 10 seconds to start automatically) Move = Arrow Keys Shoot = X To restart: enter name (or just double click enter to continue.) note# if your having problems restarting game, reload webpage from browser. .READ. Nyan Cat 10 Hours Do You Accept The Challenge?? KittyFX (plz note i didnt make this 8D). A 10 Hour YouTube video is just a short clip looped continuously for 10 hours. It all started with a Youtube user named TehN1ppe who uploaded the first 10-hour video on 29th April, 2011 which was Nyan Cat 10 Hours which as of writing this, currently has 46 million views. Nyan Cat for 10 Hours then, is not an extreme version of the mindless and conformist entertainment found in Nyan Cat. It is not, of course, for those of us who just cant get enough of Nyan Cat. SUBSCRIBE TO ANIMEME! THIS SONG: BUY OUR LIMITED EDITION SHIRTS!

By Nikhil Sonnad

Reporter

Some Donald Trump insults are so mesmerizing that you have to watch them again and again. Now you can, for 10 hours straight.

The Independent Journalism Review has put together a video of that length, made up of nothing but Trumpisms.

It’s not 10 distinct hours, but roughly seven minutes repeated over and over. “[John McCain] is a war hero because he was captured!” Trump is seen shouting a minute and a half in to the video. Then again after eight minutes. And at 15 minutes, and so on, every seven minutes until 9:54:30.

Why does this exist? In fact, there are hundreds of 10-hour videos on YouTube. Like the Trump video, they’re usually just one short thing, over and over. It started in 2011, when YouTube user TehN1ppe discovered that the length limit on videos had been extended, and uploaded 10 hours of Nyan Cat. (There is now a 1080p version, naturally.)

These became extremely popular. “Nyan Cat 10 hours” has 45 million views, and another 4.5 million if you count the 1080p version.

That popularity inspired many more patience-testing videos. TehN1ppe alone went on to make several more lengthy smash hits. Ten hours of an installment of Fukkireta, a Japanese music video series, has 10 million views.

“Epic sax guy,” a looped section from a performance at Eurovision 2010, has 10 million views on TehN1ppe’s page, and another version has 17 million.

Obviously, these numbers don’t mean every one of these people have watched the entire thing. YouTube is vague about how many seconds count as a “view.” But that’s still a lot, especially considering YouTube periodically removes fake views.

Nyan dog 10 hours

What’s more, some people actually have watched all 10 hours. In the description for the Fukkireta video, TehN1ppe writes, ”I actually listened whole video o_o.” There are even 10-hour videos of people watching all 10 hours of a 10-hour video. Consider “Nyan Cat 10 HOURS REACTION VIDEO!” which itself has 1.5 million views.

Or “Reaction to Nyan Cat 10 HOURS REACTION VIDEO!” in which somebody watches—for 10 hours—10 hours of the guy above watching a 10-hour video (250,000 views).

Ten hours seems to be the magic number. Search YouTube for “9 hours” or “11 hours,” and it’s mostly bland videos intended to be played in the background, like calming nature sounds, yule logs, and white noise.

You might be saying, at three layers of Nyan Cat videos and reaction videos, 10-hour videos are unbelievably out of hand. But very, very long videos are not pointless.

The most basic function they serve is to prolong something that is shorter than it deserves to be. In 2013, for example, Daft Punk released a 15-second teaser for their then-upcoming album Random Access Memories. The teaser featured one of the freshest grooves in recent pop memory—a snippet from their to-be hit Get Lucky—but it was over quickly. So why not simply loop it for 10 hours?

And there is beauty and discovery in repetition. Twentieth-century composers such as Terry Riley and Steve Reich made music by cutting up magnetic tape and reconstructing it in an infinite loop. Their musical contributions are built on repetition. Reich’s Piano Phase is nearly the exact same pattern repeating for about 20 minutes. He wrote of his famous piece —a repeating clip of a disturbing quote from a boy beaten by police in the 1964 Harlem Riots—”by not altering its pitch or timbre, one keeps the original emotional power that speech has while intensifying its melody and meaning through repetition and rhythm.”

Youtube

I’ve been listening to “Epic sax guy 10 hours” for the past 40 minutes or so, and I am starting to see every nuance in it. Maybe if I watch Trump insults for 10 hours, I’ll finally figure out what makes him tick.

BornOctober 19, 1993 (age 27)
Stockholm, Sweden
NationalitySwedish
Occupation
Height6 ft 7 in (201 cm)
Musical career
Instruments
  • piano
  • drums
  • vocals
YouTube information
Channel
Years active2015–present
Genre
  • Music
  • comedy
Subscribers3.96 million
Total views366.59 million
100,000 subscribers2017
1,000,000 subscribers2018
Updated: 30 November 2020

Seth Everman (born 19 October 1993) is a Swedish YouTuber, social media personality, and musician, best known for making comedic piano videos and parodies,[1] often maintaining a straight face in a deadpan manner. He has a large following across multiple social media platforms including Twitter, Tumblr and Instagram, and is one of the most subscribed YouTubers in Sweden.[2] He has jokingly said that he has a net worth 73 million dollars.[3]

Personal life[edit]

Create A Nyan Cat

Everman was born and raised in Stockholm, Sweden. He is an only child and grew up in an apartment with his parents in downtown Stockholm. He attended a school for classical music from the age of 5 until the age of 18, where he studied percussion.

Youtube Nyan Cat 10 Hours Original

He is a big fan of Nintendo games, and many of his videos contain references to these games, or the physical games themselves.

Career[edit]

Before creating content on his SethEverman YouTube channel, Everman had gone viral on multiple occasions ever since 2006. Many of these videos didn't show his face, but one of them that did was a viral video titled 'Nyan Cat 10 HOURS REACTION VIDEO! (yes, I actually watched it for 10 hours)' published on 6 December 2011 on a channel called TheGamePro. The video received over 1,5 million views and was re-uploaded onto his SethEverman channel titled 'my old secret videos' on 3 April 2018, accumulating another 1.8 million views.[4][5]

In September 2015, Everman published a mashup on his Tumblr account of Drake's Hotline Bling combined with Nintendo 64 classics such as The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time, Super Mario 64 and Mario Kart.[6][7] This post was his first viral video under his SethEverman name, accumulating over 600,000 notes on the platform. In November 2015, he uploaded his first video on the SethEverman YouTube channel titled 'How to make a Zelda necklace'.[8] The first video to go viral on the SethEverman channel was 'When you're a classical pianist but you listened to hip hop once', posted 13 February 2016. In the video he turns Beethoven's 'Für Elise' into Eminem's 'Mockingbird' and 'Moonlight Sonata' into Dr. Dre's 'Still D.R.E.'.[9]. The video has received over 24 million views as of 27 June, 2020.[10]

In November 2019, Everman became the person with the most liked YouTube comment and the first comment to hit 1 million likes.[11] The comment reads 'i'm the bald guy' and was left under the music video for Billie Eilish's 'bad guy'. The comment currently has 3.3 million likes, as of 16 November 2020.[12] In December 2019, Everman received a customized award from YouTube for achieving the most liked comment on the platform. He created a video of him unboxing the award where he also talks about his thoughts on the matter.[13]

10 Hours Of Nyan Cat

His most popular video to date is 'how to create billie eilish's bad guy' (uploaded 13 April 2019) which has accumulated over 69 million views as of September 24, 2020.[14]

In June 2020, he made another parody video called 'how to create the weeknd's blinding lights' (uploaded 25 June 2020) which has accumulated over 10 million views as of August 25th, 2020.[15]

Cat

References[edit]

  1. ^Karabuda, Effie. 'Svensken Seth gör succé – med sin spelmusik-parodi'. Aftonbladet. Retrieved 27 June 2020.
  2. ^'SethEverman's YouTube stats (Summary Profile) - Social Blade Stats'. Socialblade. Retrieved 2 July 2020.
  3. ^'SethEverman's net'. Twitter. Retrieved 13 June 2020.
  4. ^SethEverman. 'my old secret videos'. YouTube. Retrieved 27 June 2020.
  5. ^'Nyan Cat 10 HOURS REACTION VIDEO! (Yes, I actually watched it for 10 hours)'. YouTube. Retrieved 27 June 2020.
  6. ^Gore, Sydney (10 October 2015). 'Drake's 'Hotline Bling' Gets A Video Game Upgrade'. The Fader. Retrieved 27 June 2020.
  7. ^'im onto you drake < Seth Everman'. Tumblr. 30 September 2015. Retrieved 27 June 2020.
  8. ^'How to make a Zelda necklace'. YouTube. Retrieved 27 June 2020.
  9. ^Shobe, Michael (6 October 2016). 'Für Elise and Moonlight Sonata Like You've Never Heard Them'. WQXR. Retrieved 27 June 2020.
  10. ^SethEverman. 'When you're a classical pianist but you listened to hip hop once'. YouTube. Retrieved 27 June 2020.
  11. ^Karlsten, Emmanuel. 'Seth Evermans kommentar är världens mest lajkade på Youtube'. Breakit. Retrieved 27 June 2020.
  12. ^'Billie Eilish - bad guy - YouTube'. www.youtube.com. Retrieved 2020-11-16.
  13. ^SethEverman (20 December 2019). 'how i got the world's most liked YouTube comment'. YouTube. Retrieved 27 June 2020.
  14. ^'how to create billie eilish's 'bad guy''. YouTube. Retrieved 24 September 2020.
  15. ^'how to create the weeknd's 'blinding lights''. YouTube. Retrieved 4 July 2020.

External links[edit]

  • Seth Everman's channel on YouTube
  • Seth Everman on Twitter
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Seth_Everman&oldid=991517278'




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