| View previous topic :: View next topic | 
	
	
		| Author | Message | 
	
		| dave Casual Observer
 
 
 Joined: 12 Sep 2006
 Posts: 33
 
 
 | 
			
				|  Posted: Thu Sep 14, 2006 9:38 pm    Post subject: |   |  
				| 
 |  
				|  	  | Just1Juliet wrote: |  	  | some of these things come up in other videos though. such as the walrus's. "cool walrus effect" and the turtle, "but what was the turtle standing on?"  and bug... "skeetering"? (thats grasping right there) and peanuts... what about the neanderthal episode? she crushed nuts. | 
 
 The irrelevant "peanuts" tag was taken from #17 Me, Religion, and Daniel.
 
 Turtle does not appear in my list of irrelevant tags.  Although perhaps it should.  As I noted in He Said / She Said: "'turtle' may be a reference to Owen."  Curriguy noted it as irrelevant in that episode.
 
 Bug comes from #16 What Did Daniel and Dad Talk About, not Swimming.
 
 Skeeter, or variations thereof, is mentioned numerous times in Swimming, and not listed as a tag.  I'd say that this is not "grasping".
 
 
  	  | curriguy wrote: |  	  | the only issue I'd have is in Vlog 4, The DanielBeast
 
 the word "safari" isn't irrelevant.
 she's wearing a safari hat
 
 | 
 
 Good catch, curriguy.  I will correct this now.
 |  | 
	
		| Back to top |  | 
	
		|  | 
	
		| dinomyte Casual Observer
 
  
 Joined: 14 Sep 2006
 Posts: 56
 
 
 | 
			
				|  Posted: Thu Sep 14, 2006 9:39 pm    Post subject: |   |  
				| 
 |  
				|  	  | sorrow wrote: |  	  | WHOA! 
 I had never even seen these two videos!
 
 The first is really obviously a reference to the cult classic Donnie Darko.....
 
 that's big.. you can't go into donnie darko without meaning something deeper...
 
 
 did people already know about this and i just totally missed the memo????
 | 
 
 Here are the links
 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=51h0dDsxxMc
 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pTNkIjbdPVY
 |  | 
	
		| Back to top |  | 
	
		|  | 
	
		| Just1Juliet Casual Observer
 
 
 Joined: 14 Sep 2006
 Posts: 105
 
 
 | 
			
				|  Posted: Thu Sep 14, 2006 9:43 pm    Post subject: |   |  
				| 
 |  
				|  	  | dave wrote: |  	  |  	  | Just1Juliet wrote: |  	  | some of these things come up in other videos though. such as the walrus's. "cool walrus effect" and the turtle, "but what was the turtle standing on?"  and bug... "skeetering"? (thats grasping right there) and peanuts... what about the neanderthal episode? she crushed nuts. | 
 
 The irrelevant "peanuts" tag was taken from #17 Me, Religion, and Daniel.
 
 Turtle does not appear in my list of irrelevant tags.  Although perhaps it should.  As I noted in He Said / She Said: "'turtle' may be a reference to Owen."  Curriguy noted it as irrelevant in that episode.
 
 Bug comes from #16 What Did Daniel and Dad Talk About, not Swimming.
 
 Skeeter, or variations thereof, is mentioned numerous times in Swimming, and not listed as a tag.  I'd say that this is not "grasping".
 
 
  	  | curriguy wrote: |  	  | the only issue I'd have is in Vlog 4, The DanielBeast
 
 the word "safari" isn't irrelevant.
 she's wearing a safari hat
 
 | 
 
 Good catch, curriguy.  I will correct this now.
 | 
 
 
 I think you misunderstood what i was implying. I was not saying that any of you were grasping, i was saying *I* was grasping. I was just showing that its kind of odd to mention walrus and tag walrus. How often does a walrus come up in a conversation? they may not have been in the same tag/video relationship, but the fact that it was brought up again. The coincidences.
 |  | 
	
		| Back to top |  | 
	
		|  | 
	
		| Lv1222 Suspiciously Absent
 
 
 Joined: 13 Sep 2006
 Posts: 20
 Location: Miami
 
 | 
			
				|  Posted: Thu Sep 14, 2006 10:32 pm    Post subject: shamanism? |   |  
				| 
 |  
				| okay...so ive been looking some stuff up. What about Shamanism? Thelema is Pagan and Pagans generally use shamanism. Here is a site that i looked up the animals at: http://www.geocities.com/RainForest/4076/indexlist.html 
 On a lot of the tags i got things that make sense...but i need help stitching it all together and finding out more.
 
 hamster = gentleness, love, responsibility. I think this one could be used to describe the "orginal" bree that we were introduced to. We kinda see this in the "normal" videos.
 Puppy appears in the first Proving Science Wrong. According to the site "dog" means understanding the quality of doubt and faith" i think this may have something to do with it.
 Squirell apears in the hiking video. To me, this is the video that first seemed wierd. It was like a different view. "Squirell" often means, change of direction, warning.
 Platypus apears in the PSW spoof. "Platypus" means "remain as you are"
 Ocelot appears in "Bree - Cookie monster"...in that one we first see an actual connection to something "101206". "Ocelot": connection w/ physical and spiritual world....connection to the unseen.
 
 
 problem here is that i based it on one site. On other sites, and in other forms of religion meanings could be similar but more meaningful or worded different. So...help? anyone agree with me or am i crazy?
 |  | 
	
		| Back to top |  | 
	
		|  | 
	
		| zeutheir Suspiciously Absent
 
 
 Joined: 10 Sep 2006
 Posts: 20
 
 
 | 
			
				|  Posted: Fri Sep 15, 2006 1:02 am    Post subject: |   |  
				| 
 |  
				| Thelema isn't Pagan per se. They're Pagan in the Christian sense (they're non-Christian) but not in the Pagan sense. Pagans are nature worshippers by definition, and Thelemites are esoteric. _________________
 One day, people will look back and say that Jess Rose gave birth to the 21st century. - Will Harris
 |  | 
	
		| Back to top |  | 
	
		|  | 
	
		| love_leslie Casual Observer
 
 
 Joined: 15 Sep 2006
 Posts: 58
 
 
 | 
			
				|  Posted: Sat Sep 16, 2006 7:26 am    Post subject: |   |  
				| 
 |  
				| has anyone thought to follow the tags and see what other videos come up on youtube? maybe someone else made a video with the irrelevant tags, and there is a connection there.....?
 
 just a thought.
 |  | 
	
		| Back to top |  | 
	
		|  | 
	
		| Luv2Skydive The Order of Denderah
 
  
 Joined: 11 Sep 2006
 Posts: 2766
 Location: Dropzone
 
 | 
			
				|  Posted: Sat Sep 16, 2006 1:00 pm    Post subject: Another angle.... |   |  
				| 
 |  
				| Phylum also means "a large group of languages that are historically related". 
 Kant and the Platypus: Essays on Language and Cognition
 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
 The book develops some aspects of Eco's A Theory of Semiotics which came out in 1976.
 
 Using the example of the arrival of the first platypus in Europe, Eco looks at the problem faced by scientists in their attempts to classify the creature for eighty years, and at the contractual nature of the negotiations that produce shared meaning.
 _________________
 LG15 needs more COWBELL!
 http://www.youtube.com/luv2skydive
 |  | 
	
		| Back to top |  | 
	
		|  | 
	
		| aleksmakk Casual Observer
 
 
 Joined: 16 Sep 2006
 Posts: 30
 
 
 | 
			
				|  Posted: Sat Sep 16, 2006 3:59 pm    Post subject: |   |  
				| 
 |  
				| This may be really reaching, but maybe we could use the first or last letters in the superfluous tags to make a message of some kind. Those videos lacking extra tags would be spaces? I have not had much luck in doing this so far, but it was just a thought. |  | 
	
		| Back to top |  | 
	
		|  | 
	
		| curriguy Enthusiastic Fan
 
  
 Joined: 14 Sep 2006
 Posts: 397
 
 
 | 
			
				|  Posted: Sat Sep 16, 2006 4:41 pm    Post subject: |   |  
				| 
 |  
				|  	  | aleksmakk wrote: |  	  | This may be really reaching, but maybe we could use the first or last letters in the superfluous tags to make a message of some kind. Those videos lacking extra tags would be spaces? I have not had much luck in doing this so far, but it was just a thought. | 
 
 that is exactly why I first compiled the list, but it didn't pan out.
 it may be coded?  but I had no luck with that either.
 |  | 
	
		| Back to top |  | 
	
		|  | 
	
		| aleksmakk Casual Observer
 
 
 Joined: 16 Sep 2006
 Posts: 30
 
 
 | 
			
				|  Posted: Sat Sep 16, 2006 5:16 pm    Post subject: |   |  
				| 
 |  
				| Yeah the clues are probably more symbolic. I thought of the code too, but I have probably just been watching too much Kyle XY. 
 The main reason I thought of a code/word clue was because the tags don't seem to be pointing in any kind of common direction.
 |  | 
	
		| Back to top |  | 
	
		|  | 
	
		| shiloh Casual Observer
 
  
 Joined: 14 Sep 2006
 Posts: 110
 Location: Washington
 
 | 
			
				|  Posted: Sat Sep 16, 2006 8:36 pm    Post subject: |   |  
				| 
 |  
				| Ancient Malagasy legend said that the Aye-aye was a symbol of death. 
 The Aye-aye is often viewed as a harbinger of evil and killed on sight. Others believe that should one point its long middle finger at you, you were condemned to death. Some say the appearance of an Aye-aye in a village predicts the death of a villager, and the only way to prevent this is to kill the Aye-aye. The Saklava people go so far as to claim Aye-ayes sneak into houses through the thatched roofs and murder the sleeping occupants by using their middle finger to puncture the victim's aorta.
 |  | 
	
		| Back to top |  | 
	
		|  | 
	
		| IkeRUnner89 Suspiciously Absent
 
 
 Joined: 17 Sep 2006
 Posts: 1
 
 
 | 
			
				|  Posted: Sun Sep 17, 2006 7:54 pm    Post subject: |   |  
				| 
 |  
				|  	  | sorrow wrote: |  	  | considering we are dealing with scientific minds here: 
 (i'm specifically drawn to this by the mention of Phylum in the langosta tag)
 
 Hamster:
 Kingdom: 	Animalia
 Phylum: 	Chordata
 Class: 	Mammalia
 Order: 	Rodentia
 Suborder: 	Myomorpha
 Superfamily: Muroidea
 Family: 	Cricetidae
 Subfamily: Cricetinae
 Fischer de Waldheim, 1817
 
 Walrus:
 Kingdom: 	Animalia
 Phylum: 	Chordata
 Class: 	Mammalia
 Order: 	Carnivora
 Family: 	Odobenidae
 Allen, 1880
 Genus: 	Odobenus
 Brisson, 1762
 Species: 	O. rosmarus
 
 Pirana:
 Kingdom: 	Animalia
 Phylum: 	Chordata
 Class: 	Actinopterygii
 Order: 	Characiformes
 Family: 	Characidae
 Subfamily: Serrasalminae
 
 Puppy:
 Domain: 	Eukaryota
 Kingdom: 	Animalia
 Phylum: 	Chordata
 Subphylum: Vertebrata
 Class: 	Mammalia
 Order: 	Carnivora
 Family: 	Canidae
 Genus: 	Canis
 Species: 	C. lupus
 Subspecies: C. l. familiaris
 
 Squirrel:
 Kingdom: 	Animalia
 Phylum: 	Chordata
 Class: 	Mammalia
 Order: 	Rodentia
 Family: 	Sciuridae
 
 Platypus:
 Kingdom: 	Animalia
 Phylum: 	Chordata
 Class: 	Mammalia
 Order: 	Monotremata
 Family: 	Ornithorhynchidae
 Genus: 	Ornithorhynchus
 Blumenbach, 1800
 Species: 	O. anatinus
 
 Pelican:
 Kingdom: 	Animalia
 Phylum: 	Chordata
 Class: 	Aves
 Order: 	Pelecaniformes
 Family: 	Pelecanidae
 Rafinesque, 1815
 Genus: 	Pelecanus
 Linnaeus, 1758
 
 Aphid:
 Kingdom: 	Animalia
 Phylum: 	Arthropoda
 Class: 	Insecta
 Order: 	Hemiptera
 Suborder: 	Homoptera
 Superfamily: Aphidoidea
 
 Langosta (which means lobster...):
 Kingdom: 	Animalia
 Phylum: 	Arthropoda
 Subphylum: 	Crustacea
 Class: 	Malacostraca
 Order: 	Decapoda
 Suborder: 	Pleocyemata
 Infraorder: 	Astacidea
 Family: 	Nephropidae
 Dana, 1852
 
 Ocelot:
 Kingdom: 	Animalia
 Phylum: 	Chordata
 Class: 	Mammalia
 Order: 	Carnivora
 Family: 	Felidae
 Genus: 	Leopardus
 Species: 	L. pardalis
 (Linnaeus, 1758)
 
 Lepton:
 Not an animal, but first described in 1948....
 
 Cephalopod:
 Kingdom: 	Animalia
 Phylum: 	Mollusca
 Class: 	Cephalopoda
 Cuvier, 1797
 
 Sable:
 Kingdom: 	Animalia
 Phylum: 	Chordata
 Class: 	Mammalia
 Order: 	Carnivora
 Family: 	Mustelidae
 Genus: 	Martes
 Species: 	M. zibellina
 Linnaeus, 1758
 
 Campylobacter:
 Kingdom: 	Bacteria
 Phylum: 	Proteobacteria
 Class: 	Epsilon Proteobacteria
 Order: 	Campylobacterales
 Family: 	Campylobacteraceae
 Genus: 	Campylobacter
 Sebald and Véron 1963
 
 Aye-Aye:
 Kingdom: 	Animalia
 Phylum: 	Chordata
 Class: 	Mammalia
 Order: 	Primates
 Suborder: 	Strepsirrhini
 Infraorder: 	Chiromyiformes
 Anthony and Coupin, 1931
 Family: 	Daubentoniidae
 Gray, 1863
 Genus: 	Daubentonia
 É. Geoffroy, 1795
 Species: 	D. madagascariensis
 (Gmelin, 1788)
 
 
 
 There are four Phyla mentioned here:  Chordata, Anthropoda, Mollusca, Proteobacteria
 
 Also, Lobster (as other seafood) typically do have some concentration of Mecury (about .1-.3 ppm depending on the species).  it's on the low end compared to other sea life... hrm.. stumped.
 
 Eh? anything? anybody?
 | 
 
 
 Uh..C...A...M....P......camp......religious camp?
 
 Ceramony...something..?
 
 I dunno..
 
 Just came into my head...
 |  | 
	
		| Back to top |  | 
	
		|  | 
	
		| Woo Lonely Fan
 
  
 Joined: 14 Sep 2006
 Posts: 223
 Location: Nottingham, UK
 
 | 
			
				|  Posted: Mon Sep 18, 2006 11:41 am    Post subject: |   |  
				| 
 |  
				| Latest video (my first kiss) has the tag of 
 "Scimitar"
 
 Which is
 
 " scimitar is a sword with a curved blade of a design finding its origins in western Asia (Middle East).
 
 The name can be used to refer to almost any Arabian sword with a curved blade. The word "scimitar" is most likely a derivative from the Persian shamshir."
 |  | 
	
		| Back to top |  | 
	
		|  | 
	
		| PushedButton Devoted Fan
 
  
 Joined: 15 Sep 2006
 Posts: 513
 Location: En-ger-land, Guvna.
 
 | 
			
				|  Posted: Mon Sep 18, 2006 12:35 pm    Post subject: |   |  
				| 
 |  
				| scimitar; a curved oriental saber; the edge is on the convex side of the blade Posible a ref. to H.P. Lovecraft's
 
 The Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath
 
 Which features a charater that carries a scimitar and is called Carter
 |  | 
	
		| Back to top |  | 
	
		|  | 
	
		| gogo Devoted Fan
 
  
 Joined: 18 Sep 2006
 Posts: 675
 Location: New England
 
 | 
			
				|  Posted: Mon Sep 18, 2006 3:30 pm    Post subject: |   |  
				| 
 |  
				| Scimatar is an interesting tag, indeed. 
 From: http://www.reference.com/browse/wiki/Scimitar
 
 
 
  	  | Quote: |  	  | In fiction, warriors of Middle Eastern or Asian cultures often use scimitars, for example the character Yellow Robe in ''Journey to the West¡" Scimitars are also commonly used when the inclusion of a fairly exotic weapon is desired by authors of fantasy fiction and role-playing games. | 
 
 
 Furthermore in searching the title of "Journey to the West" on
 http://www.reference.com/browse/wiki/Journey_to_the_West:
 
 
 
  	  | Quote: |  	  | Journey to the West¡ is one of the Four Classical Novels of Chinese literature. Originally published anonymously in the 1590s during the Ming Dynasty, and even though no direct evidence of its authorship survives, it is traditionally ascribed to the scholar...The work is also known as Monkey from the title of a popular, abridged translation by Arthur Waley¡Part of the novel's enduring popularity comes from the fact that it works on multiple levels: it is a first-rate adventure story, a dispenser of spiritual insight, and an extended allegory in which the group of pilgrims journeying toward India stands for the individual journeying toward enlightenment. It also has much comedy, poetry and word play. | 
 
 Hmmm.  Bree's journey to enlightenment?  Monkey? Hmmm.
 |  | 
	
		| Back to top |  | 
	
		|  | 
	
		|  |