Special BitTorrent Edition of Buffy vs Edward
I’m excited to announce a special BitTorrent exclusive edition of my remix video “Buffy vs Edward: Twilight Remixed“. It’s an example of fair-use transformative storytelling where The Slayer takes on Edward Cullen’s character and generally creepy behavior. Since its release at the Open Video Conference in 2009 the mash-up has been seen well over 3 million times, nominated for a Webby Award and subtitled into 30 languages by fans from all over the world.
So to celebrate the one-year anniversary of the video going viral, I’m releasing a special BitTorrent edition that includes higher-res video, better sound quality all 30 fan-subs, line-of-sight corrections and five deleted scenes that did not make the final cut (complete with audio commentary).
Download the Buffy vs Edward Special Edition torrent file here
Video formats: mp4, H.264, 720 x 405, AAC, Stereo, 48.000 kHz, 29.97 fps
Files included in the torrent:
• Buffy vs Edward: Twilight Remixed – (mp4 | 273.6MB)
• Deleted Scenes from Buffy vs Edward – (mp4 | 86.8MB)
• McIntosh Interview on Remixing – (mp4 | 92.7MB)
• About Buffy vs Edward – (txt | 4KB)
• SUBS folder – (str | 290KB)
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NOTE: You will need a BitTorrent client application to download the special edition remix – something like Transmission (MAC) or uTorrent (PC) or the super easy-to-use Miro (MAC/PC/LINUX). It’s a a simple two step process. First download this .torrent file to your computer. Second open that file with one of the above mentioned client applications and then wait for your copy of the Buffy vs Edward Special Edition to download to your computer! After you have it please seed to share with others.
UPDATE: You can also download the special Buffy vs Edward torrent file from the appropriately named kickasstorrents.com
Filed under: News | Comment (0)Talk on Subverting Gender with Remix Video
A few months ago I spoke at an event called “Subverting Gender and Sexuality with Remix Video” (organized by Anita Sarkeesian of feministfrequency.com) at California State University, Northridge. My presentation demonstrated how remix video can be used to subvert traditional social norm and mass media stereotypes around gender and sexuality. Here is a recording of that talk.
http://www.vimeo.com/13058679Earlier in the day Alexis Lothian, and Julie Levin Russo spoke about fan vidding and presented a brief history of the genre. You can find video of their talk here.
Filed under: News | Comment (0)‘What Would Buffy Do?’ Essay Wins Mr. Pointy Award
I just received the exciting news that an essay I wrote entitled “‘What Would Buffy Do?’: Notes on Dusting Edward Cullen” has won the Short Mr. Pointy Award at the fourth biennial Slayage Conference on the Whedonverses at Flagler College in St. Augustine Florida. The “Mr. Pointy” Awards are presented to the best scholarly works in Whedon Studies. The honors are given out in two categories affectionately titled the Long Mr. Pointy and the Short Mr. Pointy awards. The winners were chosen by vote of the Whedon Studies Association and I am honored to have been nominated and floored to have won this year.
I originally wrote the piece for the blog Women in Media and News: Voices as a way of detailing the reasons and process behind making my viral remix video Buffy vs Edward. Many thanks to Jennifer Pozner at WIMN for her fantastic editing notes on the essay.
Buffy vs Edward Nominated for Webby Award
I’m excited to announce that my Buffy vs Edward: Twilight Remixed video has just been nominated for a 2010 Webby Award in the Best Remix/Mashup category! Hailed as the “Internet’s highest honor” by the New York Times, The Webby Awards is one of the leading international awards honoring excellence on the Internets.
Since its online debut last summer “Buffy vs Edward” has been viewed nearly 3 million times and has been translated into 30 different languages by fans (including Japanese, Bahasa Indonesia, Haitian Creole and Tagalog). The remix was created by methodically re-editing and re-combining clips from the Twilight movie with scenes from 36 different television episodes of Buffy the Vampire Slayer.
And just for fun I thought I’d share the most recent video response to “Buffy vs Edward” on YouTube. It’s a music video by Armoured Bearcub called “In Which Buffy Slays Edward”. My favorite line from their song – “Only when Edward calls Bella his drug is she any sort of heroine!”
Filed under: News | Comments (2)
Remix by Lawrence Lessig
So I finally downloaded the free PDF of Lawrence Lessig’s book “Remix” from the internet archive, something I had been meaning to do ever since his interview on the Colbert Report which lead to a series of remix videos. I was surprised and excited to find that he talks about one of my remixed commercials poking fun at the fox news channel. Here is an excerpt:
My favorites among the remixes I’ve seen are all cases in which the mix delivers a message more powerfully than any original alone could, and certainly more than words alone could. For example, a remix by Jonathan McIntosh begins with a scene from The Matrix, in which Agent Smith asks, “Do you ever get the feeling you’re living in a virtual reality dream world? Fabricated to enslave your mind?” The scene then fades to a series of unbelievable war images from the Fox News Channel— a news organization that arguably makes people less aware of the facts than they were before watching it. Toward the end, the standard announcer voice says, “But there is another sound: the sound of good will.” On the screen is an image of Geraldo Rivera, somewhere in Afghanistan. For about four seconds, he stands there silently, with the wind rushing in the background. (I can always measure the quickness of my audience by how long it takes for people to get the joke: “the sound of good will” = silence). The clip closes with a fast series of cuts to more Fox images, and then a final clip from an ad for the fi lm that opened McIntosh’s remix: “The Matrix Has You.” – Remix by Lawrence Lessig (page 71)
Here is the original remix I made back in 2003.

Reel Grrls Workshop: Gendered Ads Remixed
Over the past few years I have been developing a series of fun workshops that use simple video remixing projects as an engaging way to teach critical media literacy to youth. Back in December I taught one of these workshops with the Reel Grrls – a Seattle based non-profit that aims to empower girls to critique media images and to create their own films. As both a fun introduction to the remixing process and also as a form of creative media literacy I gave participants the assignment of switching the video and audio from Saturday morning cartoon toy commercials aimed specifically at boys with those aimed at girls. The resulting juxtapositions provided hilarious and insightful commentary on the way the advertising industry manipulates gender roles and helps develop gendered socialization in children.
http://www.vimeo.com/8268124Embedded above are remixed ads by Reel Grrls Sahar & Diana – also make sure to check out Julia & Caitlin’s remix ads, Gwyn & Emma’s remix and Mari’s remix. I had a lot of fun teaching this workshop and was definitely inspired by the Reel Grrls media making talent, skill and creative energy.
Remixing Pop Culture Event in LA at CSUN
I will be presenting the Political Remix Video portion of the Remixing Pop Culture event on Thursday March 25, 12:30pm at California State University, Northridge in LA. Together with vidders Julie Levin Russo and Alexis Lothian, we will be screening some of the most intriguing remix videos & fan vids that subvert traditional gender and sexuality norms. The program will be followed by a Q&A with all the curators. The event is hosted by Anita Sarkeesian of FeministFrequency.com (Special thanks to Laura Shapiro for consulting). Check out the facebook event page for all the details!
NPR Piece on Fair Use and Buffy vs Edward
Last month while speaking at the World’s Fair Use Day in Washington DC I was interviewed for this NPR radio piece about fair-use and remix. They get bonus points in my book for mentioning that Buffy vs Edward is a pro-feminist critique of the Twilight franchise – Plus NPR reporter Joel Rose takes advantage of fair-use himself and uses my remixed audio clip of Buffy dusting Edward for the end of his segment.
Here is a direct link to the NPR radio story with transcript:
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=123684026
Remix Goes Mainstream Panel at SxSW 2010
This March I will be speaking on a panel at SxSW entitled Remix Goes Mainstream: Making Mashups Pay. The South by Southwest media festival happens every year in Austin Texas and I’m excited to be a part of it this time around. The Making Mashups Pay panel is scheduled for Sunday, March 14 at 3:30pm – it should prove to be an interesting and lively conversation moderated by Patricia Aufderheide from the Center for Social Media. I will be focusing my comments on some of the more indirect benefits I get from my video remixing projects as opposed to any direct monetary gain like ad revenue which I do not get from of my work.
Below is the official SxSW panel description:
Filed under: News | Comment (0)Remix, mashup, compilation, clip job, footage art: it’s what doc filmmakers and online video artists do from 102 Minutes that Changed America to Moral Kombat to Los Angeles Plays Itself to Buffy v. Edward. But how do they make money, get distribution and stay legal?
Speaking at the 1st World’s Fair Use Day
I have been invited to speak on a panel about my remix video work at the first annual World’s Fair Use Day (WFUD) in Washington DC on January 12, 2010. It’s an event put together by the public interest group Public Knowledge which works to defend all of our rights in the emerging digital culture. The WFUD is a free, all-day celebration of fair use: the legal right that allows innovators and creators to make particular uses of copyrighted materials. It will be focused on highlighting new and innovative uses of existing content; provide the perspectives of artists, policymakers, academics and business innovators; and teach you how fair use can enrich your creative work. The event is free and open to the public so check out the WFUD site for RSVP info.