We Are Your Friends

01:26:00

I remember my high school years divided between not particularly conscientious engagement into school work and a thorough exploration of YouTube which has been taking its first steps with no idea of how big it was going to be. The internet has changed everything. We conduct business online, we write blogs, we upload videos, making the world a smaller place, with every corner of earth available to the masses. With good, it also brought a lot of evil. Is there still a place for something genuine in the era of Facebook friends who like your profile picture but don't say "hello" when they pass you on the street? In times of great success stories is there a spot for failure and morals? Where is the line between right and wrong and what should we value? Friends? Love? Money? Fame? And once you stay genuine to oneself, can you have it all? 


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On the nature of pictures

*Every Google image belongs to someone and this someone should be noted. However, if pictures are scenes from the film they most probably belong to owners of the film/producers. I use saved screens of the Google compilation of pictures, thus the pictures of pictures, which I take, cut and edit myself (as a derivative use). They are used for reviewing purposes (fair use), not for diminishing the films' profits by stealing what rightly belongs to them. Copyright is tricky, let's get used to it.