I make a point to tweet out really funny comments I get on YouTube videos. I have the most ridiculous ones.

Instead of watching cartoons when I was little, I had Russian ballet videos from, like, the 1950s and 1940s.

Music videos are really expensive, and if I mess it up, it's like, 'Oh, there goes 15,000 dollars,' you know?

I was into skateboarding, so through skating I kind of got into hip hop by discovering it through skate videos.

Have I ever had dance lessons? I'm mobile, but not nearly as much as our promotional videos lead people to believe.

I just liked making funny videos, content that people would enjoy. The likes and retweets - that was, like, a plus.

I watched a lot of Alessandro Nesta videos, as he had similar characteristics, studied carefully and applied myself.

When I first started, I wasn't trying to go viral. I just liked making funny videos, content that people would enjoy.

I enjoy doing these silly little videos, and a lot of stuff online is stuff I actually created for my live comedy shows.

In selfie pictures, there is no human touch; it's all about the pose. But selfie videos have sound, actions, and emotions.

When I pull up to music videos, I'm like, 'I've been doing 11-hour days since I was eight-years-old, so I'm not tripping.'

I'm a very sensitive person by nature. Things move me very easily, like music or videos on Facebook, and I feel for people.

Of course I like to watch myself bat. After every innings, match, series, I do watch my own videos whenever I get the time.

What joy and adventure the youngsters of today are missing as they sit indoors mucking about with computer games and videos!

I vividly remember my mom would put on this VHS of Michael Jackson's greatest hits music videos. I'd watch that all the time.

I was on Tumblr when I was 12 or 13. I was on YouTube, too. I had a channel and made music videos. It had 50,000 subscribers.

We're all trapped in the digital world. It's filled with cat videos, and you have to dodge comments about how much you stink.

We actually make all of our own music videos. Often we come up with the visual concepts at the same time as writing the music.

I have a P.O. Box that I get about 50 letters a day that my mom picks up, and a lot of weird gifts I like to show on my videos.

I'm now a brand. Like, KSI is a brand. It's crazy that it all came from me sitting in my bedroom just making a few FIFA videos.

Gaming content is exactly what YouTube wants (the videos are long, the audiences are engaged, and thus people stay on the site).

The downside of videos is that it will put my vision in front of other people, so they might not get the chance to create their own.

When we were first approached with the idea to do videos, we said why not. We used the things that we do in our lives in the videos.

My videos went viral in Pakistan and Bangladesh, but, funnily enough, not in India. India took a lot of time to warm up to my videos!

My record company had to beg me to stop filmin' music videos in the projects. No matter what the song was about, I had 'em out there.

I like to have fun with my videos and performances, that's the most fun part when it comes to the music. I get to show off my character.

I hated my early videos. I really did. I hated 'The Rhythm.' Hated it. It's not my vibe to have lot of white people jumping on trampolines.

People love me when I do selfie videos, so I know they like me in music videos as well. Otherwise, I would have just been a playback singer.

I come from music videos and commercials, where style is a big part of the whole world. I've always tried to add that to whatever I'm doing.

Before I started my modeling career at 20, I used to replay fashion show videos on-line and study how famous models walk and pose on runways.

I be turnt when I'm making music videos, and then I'll just do a different dance in each one that I haven't done before, just because I'm lit.

Nobody is really going to bring my vision to life like the way that I am. Before I was doing my own music videos, it was not really my vision.

I'd do entire music videos in my bedroom, where I used to stand in front of my television memorizing the moves to Michael Jackson's 'Beat It.'

MTV essentially killed 'American Bandstand' and 'Solid Gold,' because music videos are an easier way for pop artists to gain television exposure.

People say they like my fashion-haul videos because it's like you've been shopping with your friends, and you look back over what you have bought.

I graduated from UC San Diego, wanted to work in film to get my hands-on real experience, did music videos, TV, feature films, all kinds of stuff.

I try to find happiness in almost anything... watching videos about new exercises, like ones you can do on a flight when you clench your buttocks.

I went on YouTube and saw videos of Angelina Jolie on some talk show showing people switchblade tricks, and I was like, 'That's what I want to do.'

There are some really genuinely talented people that make fan videos. They cut them really well, like, I'm amazed at the quality these editors have.

I've seen that so many people have made and uploaded videos with my song, 'Bubble Pop.' I was inspired because many of them were even better than me.

Some people draw a line between music videos and short films, looking down on music videos as a format, but there's so much potential in music videos.

I'm a writer first and a singer second. And then I started editing my own videos when I was 17, so it's a process I've been doing since I was younger.

It feels like Gangstarr is the purest group in hip-hop. They was shooting videos on the beach in the winter when the water was ice. Razor-blade music.

I've always written the storyboards for the music videos, and it's been hard working with directors trying to get them to understand what I'm thinking.

I'm known as a person who, like, steps out of the comfort zone. Who kind of breaks the rules and crosses the line in the sense of making YouTube videos.

What is portrayed on stage and in my music videos is different from my everyday lifestyle. But I want to people to see me as CL on stage and in my music.

My lifetime role model and hero is Freddie Mercury of Queen. His songwriting skills, I cannot even approach, but his showmanship, I learned it from videos.

I didn't have any role models of artists that were in the same playing field as me - making expensive videos, travelling, marketing and promoting an album.

Music videos are an especially fun thing to watch - I bet from the outside, too - because you learn so much, just like in our music... It's really fun work.

I didn't understand how difficult it would be to transition in the public eye and look back at pre-transition videos - it's sort of humiliating and painful.

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