This Is Why Hipster Bands Shouldn't Be Allowed To Use YouTube

6 years ago
25

The video you have the chance to see here is on one in the popular comedy series on Cracked.com. If you never heard of it before, or better put, if you have been living under a rock for the past ten years, Cracked.com is a humor website with over 300 million monthly page views. The website was founded in 2005, by Jack O’Brien and is currently owned by E. W. Scripps. It is descended from Cracked magazine, which dates back to 1958.

“Does Not Compute” is what you get when you take Cracked TV, slap a new coat of graphics on it, download a screen-widening patch and boost humor output 16.4%. Same S.W.A.I.M., same internet madness, brand new jokes.

In this episode of “Does Not Compute”, the host Michael Swaim explicates graphically why hipster bands should not be allowed to use YouTube anymore. What's not to like?

It has become an obvious truth that YouTube has lowered the barrier of entry to everyone with a video camera. Unfortunately, video cameras are not on the list of “things that are too popular to own” that every hipster carries around with them. What are the points you need to observe to make the crucial distinction between a homeless person and a hipster; what is the appropriate method of linguistic analysis of words hipsters enjoy coining and how to use them, if ever; is this really music we are fed to in this modern day and age, and much much more in this video. Watch!

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