I Want Conan O’Brien To Blow Up My Car!
Monday, August 24th, 2009
This video is my 90-second entry into The Tonight Show With Conan O’Brien’s “Conan, Please Blow Up My Car” contest.
Wherein, essentially - you submit a video or essay of why you have the worst car in America, and if a panel of judges select you the winner - you receive a brand new 2010 Lexus HS250h car, and have your old one exploded on national television.
This is my entry into that contest, I hope you enjoy!
For more info on the contest (which is now closed), and to view other people’s entries, please visit:
http://www.tonightshowwithconanobrien.com/lexus/
Created by: Jonathan Paula & Jory Caron
An ideo Production - © 2009.
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Update #6 for the movie “The Last Airbender”
Prom Night In Mississippi premieres Monday July 20 9PM/8C only on HBO. For more information, go to hbo.com/docs
Directed by Paul Saltzman, PROM NIGHT IN MISSISSIPPI is an eye-opening reminder that racism is alive and well in America, 54 years after the U.S. Supreme Court ordered an end to segregated public schools. Resistance to integrating the prom comes primarily from parents, while the students, for the most part, sound a hopeful note, articulating their own feelings in the face of the prejudices of their parents and grandparents. Prom Night In Mississippi premieres Monday July 20 9PM/8C only on HBO. For more information, go to hbo.com/docs
1970 Goodyear Tire Commercial shown during the first ever Monday Night Football Game. Imagine this being shown today.
(Highlights only) This documentary paints a compelling portrait of Taurean Charles, a high school football player for Miami’s Northwestern Bulls. Located in Miami’s impoverished Liberty neighborhood, Northwestern high has a history as a breeding ground for college football and NFL players. Led to believe that football is his only ticket out, Charles focuses all his efforts on earning a place on a Division I collegiate team, letting his grades suffer in the process. But if Charles can’t raise his SAT score to meet the NCAA’s standards, he might never escape his inner city life. As Charles struggles to meet demands from his coaches, family, and society, he wonders who he can actually trust. YEAR OF THE BULL reveals the immense pressures facing poor black youth, and exposes the violent and cruel methods used by coaches to push young athletes.