Yes, I fought for the criminal, but they had to see that not everyone is evil. To present a diagnosis and pray they understood and accepted the terms and conditions for an antidote. It was routine and it was my job to change their minds.
VINE VIDEO WITH WORK FROM HOME SONG FULL
I was back in the large dusty room where my mind decided to finally break.Ī court room full of a jury with the same condition: glued eyes and closed ears set on what they were told, not on what was true. And although I could feel my wife’s hand grip my own, and her words trying to beckon me back to our bedroom, I couldn’t return. Do you see how frustrating that is? I tried… but I… failed… how could I fail?” I noticed my heart rate pick up and beat violently, I saw the memories of a year ago begin to play out vividly in front of me, as though I stood there again, front row to my mistakes.
This Vine from VH1 shows off a scene from Lollapalooza in Chicago.“Yes,” I sighed, hating that my night terrors were doing this to her. Even when fans are aware of the stops, seeing the footage on camera adds a little incentive to get out and buy a ticket when they find out what they're missing. Showing concert footage is a great way to promote a tour with more cities left on the trip. Anything from touring footage to chilling out at home can make for an interesting Vine when done right.
And the more fun they're having off stage, the more drawn in those fans get. Fans go nuts at the chance to see behind of scenes footage of their favorite bands.
Harry Styles is goofing off on the tour bus and catching six seconds of it on camera. This is another example of a big name doing very little for an effective promotion, but imagine all the money saved on a television commercial by going Vine's route. Sir Paul McCartney, perhaps the most dapper of the Beatles, is teasing his new video with a short clip of him getting dressed and warming the pipes for a concert. An artist as successful as Celine really just has to say her name and album title for it to go platinum, but lesser-known musicians can doll up the video any way they wish for more attention. Here's Celine Dion at the Today Show announcing her new album to the camera. Vine is a quick way to announce television appearances too. Pinnacle College for music production and similar programs reach out to perspective students the same way MTV reaches out to viewers. Music production schools also do a lot of media work to promote themselves with Vine. You'll notice that humor is a pretty consistent theme with these videos. Music networks like MTV and VH1 (even though they never really play music anymore) have a huge presence on Vine and love to promote anything from events like the Video Music Awards to celebrity gossip like a new hairstyle on Beyonce. Musicians use Vine to promote not only their music, but their projects, charities and media appearance in all sorts of fun and creative ways. For the most part, Vine videos are six seconds of cats and teenagers goofing off with their iPhones, but businesses and other professionals are finding new ways to promote their brand using the popular mobile app. That's what bands and musical artists are doing with Vine, the micro-video app from Twitter that lets users record six seconds of video and publish it to a social stream.