Coffee 54 wrote:
Harsh, I think I'd rather have the silence. One, or very few people clapping just draws attention to the fact that no one else is.
Enjoy the silence.
dokool wrote:Otakon 2003. Hearing 6,000 people
groaning when the title card for
my video came up. Keeping in mind that this was the first video of mine that I was really proud of, and somehow it was good enough to get me to the Otakon finals on my first try.
The video starts, dead silence. No boos, but silence.
The video continues. Dead silence.
Haruka goes airborne. This is with 30 seconds
remaining in the video. For some reason, this is enough for everyone to start laughing.
'The End' title card comes up, applause.
I think I had several heart attacks over the course of those 3 and a half minutes...
Heh. I guess my Otakon 2003 experience was kind of the opposite.
I didn't get to see my video played on Friday night, since it was near the end (being a comedy), and it was getting past midnight, and my dad (not knowing my video was in the contest) wanted to take the younger kids back to the truck stop, so the rest of us had to go too.
I did get to see my video played on Saturday afternoon... but it was in Video Room 1 instead of the main events room, and the audio balance was not good at all.
That's probably why my video got more laughs at its title card and intro than during the rest of it... because <i>no one could hear the lyrics</i>, and the video was entirely lyric-synched.
From the sound of the polite applause when the final title card came up, it sounded to me like people were more confused than anything.
And of <i>course</i>, the category was won by a video with no lyrics.

I learned my lesson... and applied it for Otakon 2004.
