VideoVat clips for physic (22 entries)
This Stop Motion Animation takes you into another world. In this world no physical laws count. The only laws that count are the laws of the Animator.
I animated myself through my house and the city of Breda, the Netherlands. It took me 6 months to complete. That is mainly because of the weather. It wasn't always suitable to shoot my scenes.
The song I used is called Chinois by DJ Aphrodite and can be found on the record Aftershock.
Enjoy! I would like to know what you think about it.
Channel: Misc
Watched 5094 times.
Tags: Animation | Stop | Motion | Stopmotion | Jelle | van | Dun | Breda | Animatie | Pixelation | tetris | pong | retro | games
1,500 plus CPDRC inmates of the Cebu Provincial Detention and Rehabilitation Center, Cebu, Philippines, whose approach to rehabilitation is discipline and physical fitness.
Channel: People
Watched 6590 times.
Tags: cpdrc | thriller | inmates | michael | jackson | prisoners | dancing
StarCraft II is a sequel to the real-time strategy game StarCraft, announced on May 19, 2007, at the Blizzard Worldwide Invitational in Seoul, South Korea. StarCraft II is being developed for concurrent release on Windows XP, Windows Vista and Mac OS X. Though currently no release date has been given, it has been stated that development on the game began shortly after Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne back in 2003 and that the game development is "very far along and already playable in multiplayer with all three races". The game will feature the Havok physics engine, allowing "debris [to] roll down a ramp", as well as improved 3D graphics. Its lead designer is Dustin Browder.
Channel: Science and Technology
Watched 5206 times.
Tags: Blizzard | starcraft | 2 | south | korea | announcement | 2007 | May
http://www.yugloo.com/
Oscar De La Hoya was six years old when he first began to box. "My brother, Joel Jr., put a pair on me and the other pair on one of my cousins," Oscar recalled. " Then he yelled 'Time!' immediately, I covered my cheeks with the gloves." "The next thing I knew — wham — the first punch is a left jab that goes between my gloves and lands smack on my nose!" Oscar De La Hoya ran home, crying every step of the way.
De La Hoya never pictured himself becoming a fighter. He was always found in the park playing baseball with the other kids. It was actually his older brother Joel Jr. who many believed had the potential to become a great fighter.
Joel Jr. never pictured his younger brother as a fighter. "Oscar hated physical confrontations, he never had a street fight. He preferred to play with skateboards near the house and baseball in the park. Nothing violent." But boxing is in the De La Hoya tradition and blood. It goes back several generations when his grandfather, Vicente, a 126-pound amateur in the 1940s, and his father Joel, Sr., who fought as a lightweight in the professional ranks in the mid-1960s.
Oscar was being pushed to go to the gym and learn to defend himself. He started going to the Eastside Boxing Gym in East L.A and began training and remembers that "every time I won a fight, my cousins, aunts and uncles would give me money. A dollar here, a quarter there, half a buck."
It was there that this future world champion began his road to stardom.
He quickly discovered the ingredient that would make him a devastating fighter, his powerful left hand. He began to train religiously.
Oscar's first true test was at the 1992 Olympics. He waited anxiously and prepared his entire life for that moment. He promised his ailing mother, Cecilia, that he would bring back home the gold medal. There was no question in his mind that he would win it. He was going to win it for his mother!
The road to the gold medal bout was not an easy one. As the Olympic tournament began he disposed of his first three opponents - knocking out the first. Then in his first medal round match, what should have been an easy victory became a close controversial decision. De La Hoya struggled against his opponent's awkward bull-rushing style, but Oscar would not be denied as he emerged with a tight one-point victory.
De La Hoya was now in the gold medal bout. The very gold medal he promised his beloved mother and was eager to win since all the other U.S. boxers failed to bring home the gold.
His final hurdle would come against Marco Rudolph, the fighter who had defeated Oscar one year earlier at the World Championships in Australia. It was De La Hoya's first loss as an amateur in four years. For Oscar, it would make the victory that much sweeter.
De La Hoya, fighting at 132 pounds, dominated the fight from beginning to end. He controlled Rudolph for the entire three rounds. In the third round, he used his powerful left hand to knock down Rudolph. It was no contest and the referee stopped the fight. De La Hoya celebrated by dancing around the ring with a U.S. flag in one hand and a Mexican flag in the other.
Oscar had accomplished his ultimate goal, he fulfilled his special promise to his mother -- one of the most emotional moments of the Olympic Games.
During his amateur boxing career, De La Hoya's record was an outstanding 223-5 with 163 knockouts.
After the Olympics, Oscar bought a big house in a nice neighborhood a few miles from East L.A. He wanted to share the success of winning the gold medal and the house with his mother, but she was already gone. His mother, Cecilia died of breast cancer.
Oscar wanted to quit boxing because the pain of losing his mother was unbearable, but he realized that she wanted him to be a great fighter. So he continued and became a five-time world champion with explosive power and great boxing skills in the ring.
Oscar has won world crowns at 130, 135, 140, 147 and 154 pounds beating some impressive boxers along the way. He stopped Wilfredo Rivera in eight rounds on the "Title Wave" championship card in Atlantic City, NJ and defeated a tough Hector Camacho in 1996 by unanimous decision. "He's a true champion," said Camacho. "He's the best I've ever fought and I've been in there with the best."
De La Hoya's also fought against the legendary Julio Cesar Chavez in Chavez's 100th professional fight. Oscar defeated him soundly and cut Chavez's eye and broke his nose, but felt honored to be in the ring with such a true warrior and boxing legend.
De La Hoya captured the welterweight title in his victory over six-time world champion Pernell Whitaker on April 12, 1997, in Las Vegas. It was a huge challenge for the Golden Boy who went up seven pounds (from 140 to 147) and took on a seasoned tricky southpaw who at times fought in a low crouch and fired from different angles.
Channel: Funny
Watched 5306 times.
Tags: boxing | fight | Oscar | De | La | Hoya | DeLaHoya | Floyd | Mayweather | knockout | KO | Cinco | de | May | The | World | Awaits | crazy | funny | HBO | PPV
ZERO-G(TM) and its sponsors, Space Florida and The Sharper Image, flew world-renowned physicist and cosmologist Professor Stephen Hawking into weightlessness today, performing eight parabolas, out of the Shuttle Landing Facility at the Kennedy Space Center in Central Florida. It was the first time Professor Hawking, the world's leading expert on gravity, had a zero-gravity experience.
Channel: Misc
Watched 679 times.
Tags: Stephen | Hawking | Zero | Gravity | Kennedy | Space | Center
Physically challenged scuba diver guided by Bali International Diving Professionals. BIDP provides diving courses and trips for the Handicapped and Disabled scuba divers and is a member of the IAHD.
Channel: Sport
Watched 1649 times.
Tags: handicap | handicapped | challenged | disabled | disability | scuba | diving | bali | indonesia | iahd | courses | trips
a Ukrainian swimming coach filmed having a physical altercation with his daughter before her World Championships swimming heat. He is now going to face court at Melbourne Magistrates Court.
Channel: Sport
Watched 9779 times.
Tags: swimming | swimmer | FINA | World | Championship | melbourne | Kateryna | Mikhail | Zubkova | Ukrain | Ukrainian | coach | altercation
Police officer who used "brute force" when he struck a young black woman "as hard as I was physically able" while arresting her has been removed from frontline duties. PC Anthony Mulhall, of South Yorkshire Police, said he hit Toni Comer, who was 19 at the time, to subdue her so she could be handcuffed during the incident outside the Niche nightclub in Sheffield last July. The incident was captured on CCTV.
Channel: Violence
Watched 2677 times.
Tags: police | britain | arrest
A simple argument about the state of our public school system in America pours into the street and gets somewhat physical. It also doesn't help that both girls were all riled up from not making the cut on flavor of love.
Channel: Violence
Watched 61655 times.
Tags: girl fights
In a failed attempt to defy physics this guy thinks if he runs fast enough the ice wont have a chance to break. He ends up falling into the center of the pond causing multiple cuts and scratches.
Channel: Stunts
Watched 9691 times.
Tags: snow and ice