Subtitles section Play video
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Here's an idea-- "Adventure Time" is
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popular because of nostalgia.
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(THEME MUSIC)
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"Adventure Time"-- come on and grab your friends--
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is a kids' television show on the Cartoon Network.
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It stars Jake the Dog and Finn the Human
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and was created by bearded human Pendleton Ward,
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pictured here wearing some awesome glasses.
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It's set in the magical land of Ooo
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and its many kingdoms which are home to Candy People, animals,
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and a whole cast of generally weird but also
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adorable characters.
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My personal favorite is the Shnow Golem.
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As one might suspect, the general thrust of "Adventure Time"
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is adventures.
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Finn and Jake are best buds who go
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on all manner of moral, ethical, and totally
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and totally mathematical escapades.
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Finn, you're terrible at math.
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Aww.
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They rescue princesses, fight giant monsters,
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protect the innocent, and have a strong dislike of evil dudes.
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And they are very popular, amongst not only kids, but also
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a huge contingent of honest-to-Glob growed-up
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adults.
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Now if you're a kid, "Adventure Time"
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probably looks a lot like the inside of your head--
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exciting sights, magical objects, and impossibly
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terrifying things.
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But if you're an adult, "Adventure Time"
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is like remembering your childhood.
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Fighting to be taken seriously,
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constant encounters with new and unfamiliar challenges,
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grappling with a deer that has hands.
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Creepy.
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For many adults, the core appeal of "Adventure Time"
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is its nostalgia.
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Not like Instagram filters or cassette tapes post-irony nostalgia,
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but more like classical nostalgia,
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a pain of an ache for a time past that you can't recreate.
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While we usually think of
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its roots as in culture or the arts,
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nostalgia was actually born in 1688 as a medical diagnosis
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for Swiss soldiers wishing to return home.
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It's this wily emotion that's a mix of good and bad.
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At the same time that you're fondly remembering something,
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you're also confronted with the fact
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that it's gone, or unattainable.
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From its origins, nostalgia weaseled its way
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into everything from art to politics to industrial design. You name it,
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someone thinks that the thing that came before it was better.
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Along the way, it transformed from medical nostalgia
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into poetic or romantic nostalgia,
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from a disease that could be cured with leeches
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to a feeling that could be evoked--
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by a young kid in an animal hat.
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In "Nostalgia of the Future," Svetlana Boym writes,
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"The object of romantic nostalgia
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must be beyond the present space of our experience,
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somewhere in the twilight of the past or on an island of Utopia,
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where time has happily stopped, as on an antique clock."
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I can definitely remember a twilight of the past
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with imaginary friends,
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treehouses, magical weapons, and if given the chance,
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I'd happily stop there.
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"Adventure Time" is perfectly, romantically nostalgic for childhood.
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But so are a lot of other shows, like "Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends,"
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"The Amazing Adventures of Gumball,"
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and even "Rugrats," sort of.
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What is it about "Adventure Time"
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that makes it so well-liked, especially by not-kids?
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Here's where it gets a little complicated.
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It's because at the same time we the audience are experiencing nostalgia,
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so too are the characters in "Adventure Time."
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It's nostalgia within nostalgia.
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It's a "nostalgia-ception."
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Take a look at some of the clues.
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There was a mysterious devastating mushroom war.
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A lot of the characters, especially
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Marceline and the Ice King, have this unexplained evolving
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"wish it were still the good old days" past.
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The landscape is littered with human remains and technology.
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And in certain episodes, you can even
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see a partially destroyed planet Earth in the sky.
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I mean, Finn is the last human, for Glob's sake.
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That is, unless Susan Strong isn't a fish,
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and you count the Ice King as-- uh, uh, never mind.
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"Adventure Time" is a fun, adventurous kids' show
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with a history, a potentially very dark history.
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Pen Ward has even said his favorite emotion is feeling
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simultaneously happy and sad.
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So that's a reaction he tries to elicit in "Adventure Time."
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This is called ambivalence, and it's
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what's at the root of nostalgia.
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It means you're holding onto two usually conflicting emotions at the same time.
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And "Adventure Time" does it on two levels.
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So that's four total emotions, for the folks keeping track at home.
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You see it in the settings and the relationships,
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but also in the cute but disturbing creatures,
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the comedic but dire situations,
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the childlike but nonetheless high-stakes situations.
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It's in the show, but it's also experienced by the audience.
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All these things contribute to capital-D Drama.
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Not like lowercase-D drama, which is what LSP gets herself involved in.
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Yo, guess what?
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Slime Princess is in the park, and she's, like,
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talking to a new Nice King.
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Uh, and he's like, totally single.
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Which by itself definitely doesn't make a good show,
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but combined with the creator's amazing imagination
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and character design, makes maybe the best animated show ever.
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I'm biased.
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I really like "Adventure Time."
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But seriously, I know more
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adults than kids who watch "Adventure Time," including my mom.
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So that has to mean something.
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Yes, adults watch cartoons, but that's not
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the interesting part.
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The interesting part is that most of the cartoons adults watch
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are made for adults.
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"The Simpsons," "Bob's Burgers," "Family Guy," "South Park,"
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even most anime-- adult situations, adult humor,
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and maybe with the exception of anime, very little emotional depth.
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But man, when Finn hugs the Flame Princess wrapped up in a tin-foil burrito?
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It's too much.
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It's just-- it's just too much.
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"My Little Pony" is maybe the only other close comparison,
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but its popularity is because of a whole other thing--
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that we talk about in a video that you should watch.
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"Adventure Time" is maybe the closest television comes to classic fairy tales,
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exhibiting a combo of terror and humor,
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excitement and fear,
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that are the very hallmarks of childhood.
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Or maybe I just have a playground crush on Marceline.
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What do you guys think?
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Does "Adventure Time" make you kind of sad,
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and is that why you like it?
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Let us know in the comments.
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And if you're feeling ambivalent about subscribing,
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you could just subscribe.
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Or not.
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Whatever.
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Yes, I grew a silly mustache.
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Let's see what you guys had to say about YouTube and education.
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We were really lucky to hear from Brady of Periodic Videos
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fame about last week's episode.
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He sent us this clip.
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Hey there, Mike.
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I saw your video.
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It's so hard to measure or not whether YouTube
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is making people smarter.
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We all drown in viewing statistics,
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but what do they tell us?
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I'd like to show you some photos.
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This is Eddie from Arkansas, and his Christmas present
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was a signed photo from the scientists on the Periodic Videos channel.
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And this is Eduardo from Italy.
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His 10th birthday wish was to come to the University of Nottingham in England
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and meet his YouTube heroes.
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And we seem to have countless stories like this,
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new things coming up all the time.
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Now, this shows that these people are listening,
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they're really engaged.
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And if they're listening this closely,
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they must at least be on their way to learning.
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Thanks so much, Brady, for sending us that awesome clip.
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Mc7738 is a high-school biology teacher
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who says that YouTube is indispensable in the classroom,
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especially considering how dry a lot of the textbooks are.
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If my high school experience is any indication,
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that sounds-- that sounds about right.
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Euclids Paradox makes a really good point,
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that YouTube allows you to introduce yourself
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to a lot of different ideas without getting super invested in spending a lot of time
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which is really interesting,
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and a good point.
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To all of our Lithuanian fans, a big lavas.
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Did I do OK? Did I do all right?
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Let me know.
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To Chris Chance, I think if anybody should be thanking anybody, it should be us to you.
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But it's good to know that you enjoy the show,
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and that you find YouTube a great resource for learning.
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To Jill Suda, I was in college before YouTube was a thing,
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and it was probably pretty similar.
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Far fewer cat videos, though, which is, I imagine,
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a huge part of the college experience now.
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And if you're curious about the music
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that you've been listening to, this
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is GraveArcadeOfficial's remake of the five-minute-long video
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where all I said was "GIF" and "JIF."
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If you would like to listen to it or download it,
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click on my face.
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(MUSIC PLAYING)