Lost Media

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For the discussion of lost media, and the searches for them.

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Not to be confused with the 2014 OpenBlox (legacy version) repo that has been found

Clues:

The outdated repo: https://sourceforge.net/projects/openblox/

The comment that stated where the repo is hosted ~3 years ago at the time of posting: https://farside.link/redlib/r/opensourcegames/comments/sujs4u/comment/hyjfgtg (Linked git site shut down at the time of this post)

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Alot of Riley Reid’s Youtube videos
have been removed from her public channel..

@RileyReidx3

If I remember correctly, in her channel, she had many videos, today I discovered, only three are available.. The last time I visited, was probably over around two years ago.. I am also confused as to why I am the only one who discovered this on the internet, as she was fairly popular.. Is there any other available source to reach her old videos? Any feedback reply will be appreciated …

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From r/lostmedia : https://www.reddit.com/r/lostmedia/comments/18a4nqm/found_the_filthy_frank_kenya_song_has_been_found/

I couldn’t believe my eyes when I learned this. For a decade, no one knew the name of a song used in the singer and former YouTuber Joji’s (then Filthy Frank) video “How to Pick Up Women in 30 Different Cultures”. At 0:38 in Frank’s video, a 4 second long clip of a song plays. Since the video was uploaded in 2013, people have been searching for the name of it until no avail. Since 2019 or so, this song has been a holy grail of Lostwave songs, and has remained one of the most popular mystery songs since then. It was so obscure that even Joji himself has acknowledged the mystery after fans asked him for info about the song, stating, “Don’t know the song name, stop asking [me for it]!”

This mystery eluded people for years until just yesterday, when a user found it on YouTube. Here is nbduckman’s video detailing the search.

You can also listen to “Katonda Alinawe” in full on YouTube here.

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From r/lostmedia : https://www.reddit.com/r/lostmedia/comments/184moqr/unidentified_media_toiwinkuru_twin_kill_%E3%82%AC%E3%82%AA%E3%82%AC%E3%82%AA%E3%83%94%E3%83%A7%E3%83%8E%E3%82%A4%E3%82%BA/?ref=share&ref_source=link

I came across this Youtube video about 3 years ago: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I2EL-6oU0Wg

It contains two segments: The first segment is harsh noise, which to my surface level research, cannot be found anywhere online. The only instance I have been able to find online (via searching the title of the song, the artist name, as well as scouring various reddit threads) has been in the video linked. The second segment being a completely different song, which has been found: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KMD2sbbGcAM

Some info that may be helpful:

The supposed artist of the song, Toiwinkuru, translates phonetically in Japanese to Twinkle, the artist of the second segment of the song.

The song name, ガオガオピョノイズ, translates in English to "Gao Gao with Noise", leading me to believe that the uploader may have spliced the two segments together himself, and may also have possibly created the noise segment himself.

I messaged the uploader of the video on his twitter account 2 years ago, but to this day they have not seen the messages.

The cover is from the Belarusian punk rock band Ksilema's self titled album "Ksilema", and from what I can tell has no correlation to either segments of the song.

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Title screen.

Ōkōchi Gengorō Ikka (大河内源五郎一家, lit. "Ōkōchi Gengorō Family" or "Gengoichi Shimoda") is an unreleased Nintendo 64 simulation game. During the N64 era, there was no information about this game being featured in magazines or other media, but it became generally known on April 12, 2007, when Game Tanteidan, a used retro game store in Nihonbashi, Osaka, introduced a prototype ROM of the game on its blog.

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In the summer of 1999, Mexia Supermarket, a Fort Worth, Texas grocery store, was shut down after its owners declared bankruptcy. Three months following its abandonment, city officials would discover that everything was left inside to decay, creating an extremely biohazardous environment. It is known that a walkthrough, the clean-up process, and other news story footage was captured of the incident.

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Akihabara@Deep is a Japanese novel by Ira Ishida that was originally published in 2004. Telling the story about a group of otaku social outcasts aiming to solve problems in their local hangout, the novel inspired a manga series, a Japanese television drama, and a live-action film.

At the 2006 Tokyo Anime Fair, Nickelodeon and Polygon Pictures announced their intent to develop the novel into a CG-animated series. Akihabara@Deep ultimately went unfinished. It's not known how far into production the series went into before cancellation.

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From r/lostmedia : https://www.reddit.com/r/lostmedia/comments/182ndxp/found_major_news_about_shrek_lost_animation/

IN MAJOR DEVELOPMENT, an animator involved in the creation of the Shrek test animation has generously released the entire test to the public. The newly accessible version spans a duration of 38 seconds, albeit with audio quality on the lower side. An intriguing revelation accompanies this release, as listeners can now discern that Tom Kenny, widely known for voicing characters like SpongeBob, is not the voice behind the mugger in this particular versionof the short.

This disclosure adds extra layer of interest for Shrek enthusiasts and animation aficionados alike. The significance of this test animation in the development of the beloved Shrek franchise amplifies its value. What was once a behind-the-scenes glimpse for industry insiders has now become a treasure trove for fans seeking to explore the early stages of Shrek's creation. The availability of this version in full HD enhances the viewing experience, providing a clearer window into the animation process that eventually gave rise to one of best characters

Original animator (Barry e jackson) https://youtu.be/w5qvMdoxGnc?si=un-IB1EBAVOE9ULv

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From r/lostmedia : https://old.reddit.com/r/lostmedia/comments/182elo4/archival_a_week_ago_a_former_rockstar_games/

Obee Vermeij is a developer who worked on Rockstar Games from 1995 until 2009, like a week ago, he created a blog named https://insiderockstarnorth.blogspot.com/, which detailed a lot of very interesting information about the development of the original GTA trilogy, GTA 4, their cancelled Cold War spy-action game Agent, and even stuff like a never-before-publicly-revealed Zombie Survival game set in Scotland that was being developed around the same time as Vice City (2002), and many more.

Like, how can I describe it? this blog is every GTA fan dream, it even revealed 20-year-old unexplained mysteries in the GTA trilogy, like explaining the easter egg of why the moon in the original GTA games enlarges when you shoot it with a sniper rifle.

Very awesome stuff for GTA and video game fans in general!, a ton of GTA-centric YouTube channels have made videos about this blog in various languages, but unfortunately, since this topic is related to a multi-billion dollar media empire like Rockstar Games, the company that constantly shuts down fan mods, Obee's last post was about how he received an e-mail from Rockstar North telling him to stop, and so it did, the blogspot was deleted.

However.... The blog and apparently all of its contents were archived on the Wayback Machine, but again, since this is Rockstar Games that we are talking about, I recommend everyone in the Lost Media and GTA/Rockstar Games community to archive all of its content on the WayBack Machine in case Rockstar goes against the Wayback Machine too!

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from r/lostmedia : https://www.reddit.com/r/lostmedia/comments/180pugm/fully_lost_obscure_japanese_mobile_game_made_by_a/

im confident everyone here has at least heard of the mobile game series Battle Cats. if you are unfamiliar with battle cats, its a strategy game where you deploy cats out to fight other animals. but im here to discuss not battle cats but rather another game made by the same company, PONOS corporation. back when i played battle cats a lot, i decided to download all the other games made by ponos to see if they were also any good. two of the ones i downloaded were sister games called "Onibi". one was called Onibi-Chan Futari. you control two fire orbs with your thumbs and have to dodge water droplets while also collecting fire. its a fun little game to kill time with, and ive had a lot of enjoyment with it. the other game, Onibi-Chan Hitori was a different story. thought im not positive how it played, from the few screenshots of it i have it seemed to be the same as the other game but with one orb instead of two. upon opening the app, the game would lock on a black screen for a while. after 30ish seconds, the app would simply close. i tried for months to get this game to work, but it never did. i eventually uninstalled it. since then, both apps were deleted off the app store (at least in my region, the usa). ive tried using download links off the web to play it but it always crashes or just never loads at all. for anyone wondering, i still have the sister app downloaded and it works just fine despite having been taken off the appstore. if anyone happens to have any further info about this seemingly lost game id be happy to hear it

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by HelloHotel to c/lostmedia
 
 

I notice a few oddities in EKT that bug me. I just partially transcribed a cleaned, voice only version of EKT into a very rough IPA timestamped transcript.

IPA like lyrics (text in brackets were not transcribed and are easily legible)

your canin on (invisable consinant, m?) ~~sh en~~ shape s in the (held "a") y

cʌt up [" in a world of lies"]

ever one ["knows that you got"] (taunting tone)

a te re ah ["motives"]

["tell me the"] tuu th

(vocoding effect subtly increased) e ver ver show

Interpretation of the above

~~your counting ~~on~~ all machine(s)/shape(s) in the sky

caught up in a world of lies

ever(y) one knows that you got

alterior motives

(tell me the truith) ever ver show

lyrics oddities.

  • for some reason she says "ever one" instead of "everyone".
  • the last line is not "ever(y) one shows", she is saying "ever" followed by "ver" followed by "show".
  • "truth" is pronounced like "tooth".
  • the vocoding effect increses slightly at the end of the clip, it is also perfectly cut. my theory is that is indicates a transition or ending.
  • comparing the two times "ever" is said
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This post is based on this redit thread : https://www.reddit.com/r/lostmedia/comments/10hll81/partially_lost_the_melancholy_of_haruhi_suzumiya/

This entry is about the original 2004 manga adapted from the light novels by Makoto Mizuno, not the well know 2005 version by another author. Despite what sources may say, the manga has ever truely been fully found.

While the chapter 1-5 and is well known and available, but the existance of Chapters 6-8 are very under reported on. With even the fandom wiki only having minimal information about chapters 1-5 that were released in a tankoban, with many sources not even acknowledging their existence. The truth is there were 8 chapters released in Shonen Ace magazine with the 8th Chapter in the December issue being the last before this manga was cancelled.

So the way it goes is that the entire cancelled series (Chapters 1-8) appeared in the monthly magazine Shonen Ace throughout the year 2004, and Chapters 1-5 were released in Vol 1.

Progress so far:

Chapter 1-5 is available and chapter 7 has been found by a redditor leaving chapter 6 and 8 still lost.

Chapter 1-5: Found (Available in volume 1)

Chapter 6: Lost (Only in October 2004 Shonen Ace)

Chapter 7: Found (Only in Nov 2004 Shonen Ace)

Chapter 8: Lost (Only in December 2004 Shonen Ace)

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I remember it was made around early 2010s and was exclusive to the CBBC website.

It was a parody of Mama Do The Hump by Rizzle Kicks.

Only want to find it just so my brain doesn't keep telling me it's fake memory when I did indeed remember hearing it a few times. Nostalgia is a bitch I guess..

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Matt Groening and David X. Cohen’s animated sci fi comedy Futurama is set to return for another revival on Hulu next month after the show’s last revival on Comedy Central ended in 2013, and as a fan of the show I thought it would be a fitting time to discuss a lost media mystery that Futurama fans have been wondering about since the start of the show’s original run on FOX.

Phil Hartman, who was famous for voicing Troy McClure and Lionel Hutz on The Simpsons from season two to season ten and for his work on shows such as Saturday Night Live and NewsRadio, was the original pick to voice the character Zapp Brannigan in Futurama. Sadly, Hartman was killed by his wife in a murder-suicide soon after Futurama began production, and the role of Zapp ultimately went to Billy West instead. West voices Zapp for the entirety of the series and will voice him again in the upcoming revival, but for years fans of the show have been trying to figure out if any audio recordings exist of Hartman’s audition for the role of Zapp or if he recorded any dialogue for the first few episodes that Zapp appears in that later went unused after his death. Even though Futurama first began production twenty-five years ago and much is now known about the production process, we still don’t have a definitive “yes or no” answer on whether or not Hartman ever recorded any lines for Zapp before his death. By a definitive “yes or no” answer, I mean that nobody directly involved with the show has ever come out and straight up said “yes, Hartman recorded lines for Zapp” or “no, Hartman did not record lines for Zapp”.

From what I’ve been able to find online, I believe that Hartman most likely never recorded any dialogue for any of the finished episodes, but his audition could have possibly been recorded and may possibly exist somewhere. Below, I have put together a production timeline for the first season of Futurama and have included excerpts from commentary and interviews in which Matt Groening, David X. Cohen, and Billy West discuss the production process, Hartman’s audition, and how West took over the role of Zapp after Hartman’s death.

The Production Timeline

If Hartman had recorded any dialogue for Zapp for episodes that made it to air, he would have only been able to record dialogue for a max of just three episodes of the series, the three episodes that Zapp appears in and speaks in during season one (which first aired from March 28th, 1999 to November 14th, 1999). The season one episodes were aired in the order that they were produced, with Zapp debuting in the episode “Love’s Labours Lost in Space” (the fourth episode of the series to be produced and aired, first airing on April 13th, 1999). Zapp appears again in “A Flight to Remember” (the tenth episode produced and aired, first airing on September 26th, 1999), and “When Aliens Attack” (the twelfth episode produced and aired, first airing on November 7th, 1999). All other speaking appearances of Zapp in the series are in season two or later, which all began production well after Hartman’s death. Because of how long it takes to make an episode from start to finish and because the episodes were aired in production order, if Hartman did record any episode dialogue I think that it would have only been for “Love’s Labours Lost in Space”, as that is the earliest one in production that Zapp appears in.

According to Groening and Cohen, it takes a long time to produce a single episode of Futurama. In a March 1999 interview with Denver Rocky Mountain News, Groening says that it takes six months to make an episode from start to finish. In an April 1999 online chat for TV Guide Groening says that in order to finish a season on time multiple episodes are being worked upon at the same time. In a 2001 Sci Fi Weekly interview Cohen says that it takes eight to nine months to make an episode and clarifies the timeline further by saying that it usually takes roughly two months for the writers to go from an initial idea for an episode script to the final script, the voice actors do not record their lines until the script is completely done, and once the voice acting is finished the recordings are sent off to the animation studio so the animation can begin. Before Hartman would have been able to record dialogue for any episodes featuring Zapp, the scripts for these episodes would need to have been finalized first. Cohen saying that it usually takes two months to go from the idea for the script to the final script doesn’t necessarily mean that it always takes two months, it’s possible that the scripts for some episodes are finished sooner and some are finished later, but even if the writers had been working on multiple scripts at once and had finished a script for “Love’s Labours Lost in Space” relatively quickly there would only be a very small window of time in which Hartman could have recorded anything before his death.

According to an October 1999 article covering Futurama in The Face magazine, Groening and Cohen first pitched the show to FOX sometime in April 1998, although a specific date in April is not given. The pitch was successful, and the FOX executives ordered the show right then and there. Because of how long it takes to produce the episodes, in order for the first season to be ready to air by March 28th, 1999 I would assume that production began sometime in April 1998, soon after the pitch to FOX. If we decide to be as generous as we can be with the timeline and assume that the pitch was delivered at the very beginning of April 1998, the writers were most likely beginning to work on scripts in early April and the scripts would most likely not have been finalized and given to the voice actors until near the end of May 1998 at the earliest and sometime in June 1998 at the latest.

Comments by Those Involved in the Making of Futurama

In the DVD commentary for “Love’s Labours Lost in Space”, Groening and Cohen talk about Hartman’s audition for the role of Zapp and talk about West taking over the role after Hartman’s death. This is what Groening and Cohen say regarding Hartman:

GROENING: The part of Zapp Brannigan was originally meant for Phil Hartman and, uh, we knew how great he was and we said "you don't have to come in and audition", but he said no he wanted to, and he came in and of course he nailed the part, and he was ready to go and then, you know, was killed just a couple of weeks later. And it was, you know, incredibly sad to see this guy who, when he came in, was so full of life, so much fun. And I don't think I've ever seen an actor enjoy himself as much as Phil Hartman did, not only his own work, but obviously the people who he was playing with.

COHEN: And I said, in regarding Billy West who ended up doing the part, he came into audition also and he does it the way he did when he came in to audition, he never was doing an impression of Phil Hartman. We let him do his take on it, once Phil wasn't available obviously...

Groening confirms that Hartman auditioned for the part and confirms that Hartman’s murder occurred a couple of weeks after his audition, so that would mean that the audition likely occurred sometime in early May 1998, as Hartman was killed on May 28th, 1998. If the script for “Love’s Labours Lost in Space” was finished between Hartman’s audition and May 28th then there’s a very small window of time in which he could have theoretically recorded lines for the episode, but it really depends on whether or not the script was finished yet, and I think that it’s extremely unlikely that it was completed and ready to be given to the voice actors that early on in production. I mentioned earlier that we don't have a definitive "yes or no" answer on whether or not recordings of Hartman voicing Zapp exist, but Groening saying that Hartman was “ready to go” implies that he never recorded anything for the episodes.

Hartman’s page on the Infosphere (the Futurama Wiki) even claims that no dialogue for Zapp had been recorded by him yet at the time of his death, which would seem to solve the mystery, but the page does not provide a citation to back up that claim. Hartman’s Infosphere page links both to the “Love’s Labours Lost in Space” DVD commentary and to an interview with Billy West done by Joel Keller for TV Squad in 2006. The link on the Infosphere page was broken and wouldn’t take me to the interview, but I was able to track it down via the references in Billy West’s Wikipedia page, and this is what West has to say about production and taking over the role:

KELLER: Did they have the script for the first episode ready before you went in for the audition?

WEST: They had pieces of dialogue. And once I got into it and got that part of the show, I began to see what he (Fry) was all about. And I loved the writing; the writing had more layers than an onion.

According to West, while no full scripts were finished at the time the voice actors began auditioning, it does seem like there were bits and pieces of dialogue for at least the first episode of the series that were possibly used later in the episode. Depending on when the script for “Love’s Labours Lost in Space” was started, it's possible that there could have been pieces of dialogue available for that episode as well. West further discusses the process of recording voices for the show with Keller and explains that the voice actors would do a table read first and then record the finalized script:

KELLER: I've always been under the impression that it was more story-oriented, like the early seasons of The Simpsons.

WEST: Yeah, Futurama, they crafted stories very well. And we had to read them on Tuesdays, you know, read the run through with all the actors doing the parts and then they'd record it. And then the writers would bring it back to the office and listen to it and see what played and what didn't and what could be even better, and they do it up until record time, you know, they'll be changing something.

KELLER: So the whole cast got together and did table reads?

WEST: Oh yeah. Well, they treated it like a sitcom because it was in prime time.

KELLER: Would you record together?

WEST: Yeah, a lot of times we would. You know, like, sometimes the whole cast would be there. I like that better than doing all my stuff by myself and then leaving.

Finally, West discusses how Hartman was supposed to voice Zapp originally and how he ended up taking over the role:

KELLER: Did Zapp Brannigan change much? Because I saw the first episode he was in and it sounded pretty much like how he sounded later.

WEST: Did he change? Um, I don't know, I try to keep it pretty consistent. Phil Hartman was supposed to do that character, and I was imitating Phil Hartman. I knew Phil Hartman; when I came to work with him on some commercials and stuff out here in Hollywood, we both had this real fascination and love for these big, old-time dumb announcers. You know, the guys who have their balls in a wheelbarrow and think that every word is so precious that it's hard to give birth to it, like everything comes out in four syllables instead of one. Guys who think far and away that of everything else in this universe, he loves his voice. So that's what was going on with him. He's modeled after a couple of big dumb announcers I knew. Fry was named after Phil. Philip Fry.

I also found a 2005 interview that West did with IGN in which he discusses the audition and production process for Futurama and discusses how the voice actors for Zapp, Fry, and Leela changed between the auditions and the release of the show.

IGN FILMFORCE: When you read for those characters, which ones did you automatically feel didn't click?

WEST: I read for Fry originally, but I didn't get it. My friend Charlie Schlatter got it – and also, my friend from MadTV, Nicole Sullivan, was Leela. It was just this weird turn of events where they weren't going to use them, and they got Katey (Sagal) to do Leela. I read for Bender, Farnsworth – I didn't read for Zapp Brannigan early on…

IGN FILMFORCE: Because that role was still going to be Phil Hartman at that point, right?

WEST: I think so. I'm trying to think of the order of things. We started recording the show and then we took a break, and then they asked me to come in and use my voice, pretty much, and read for Fry. I did it, and they said, "Well, that's what we wanna do."

West saying that Hartman “was supposed to do that character” implies that he never got around to recording dialogue for Zapp, similarly to Groening saying that Hartman was “ready to go”. I would say that based off of what is known about production and what Groening, Cohen, and West have said, it would be theoretically plausible for the script for “Love’s Labours Lost in Space” to have been finished before Hartman’s death, but even if it was finished it’s unlikely that Hartman recorded anything for this episode or for the other two episodes that Zapp appears in during season one.

Possible Audition Tape?

While it’s unlikely that Hartman recorded any dialogue for any of the finished episodes, because Hartman is confirmed to have done an audition I believe that, if the audition was recorded, it’s possible that this recording may still exist somewhere, and it may have used pieces of dialogue that potentially remained in the final scripts for the episodes featuring Zapp. However, if a recording of Hartman’s audition does exist, I would expect it to have surfaced by now. Because of Groening saying in the DVD commentary that the role was always intended for Hartman and the audition only occurred because Hartman himself wanted to come in and do it, it’s also possible that no one bothered to record it since it had already been determined that the role was going to go to him.

Even if Hartman’s audition wasn’t recorded, it’d be nice to get some kind of confirmation that a recording of the audition does or does not exist rather than just the implication that no recordings of Hartman voicing Zapp exist. It would also be interesting to see if Charlie Schlatter’s audition for Fry and Nicole Sullivan’s audition for Leela have recordings too, just so the fans could get a small glimpse of what Futurama could have sounded like if circumstances had been different.

References

April 1999 Online Chat With Matt Groening: https://web.archive.org/web/20000929144303/http://frcr.com/library/april6_matt_g_chat.html

March 1999 Denver Rocky Mountain News Article: https://web.archive.org/web/20000824051917/http://www.frcr.com/library/denver1.html

Billy West’s 2005 Interview With IGN: https://web.archive.org/web/20120517013905/http://uk.tv.ign.com/articles/652/652770p1.html

Billy West’s 2006 Interview With Joel Keller: https://archive.ph/20120918095324/http://www.aoltv.com/2006/06/15/Billy-west-the-tv-squad-interview/

December 2001 Sci Fi Weekly Article: https://web.archive.org/web/20080610080245/http://www.scifi.com/sfw/interviews/sfw7897.html

Infosphere Page for Phil Hartman: https://theinfosphere.org/Phil_Hartman

Infosphere Page for Season One of Futurama: https://theinfosphere.org/Season_1

“Love’s Labours Lost in Space” Commentary Transcript: https://theinfosphere.org/Transcript:Commentary:Love%27s_Labours_Lost_in_Space

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In 1995, the ABC sitcom Full House was cancelled, with the network citing increased production costs and the contracts of several main actors expiring as the reasons for cancellation. However, despite cancellation, there were ongoing negotiations to keep the show going on the new network The WB, though these plans never panned out, and Season 8 was the final season of the show.

However, there were allegedly several scenes for a planned Season 9 filmed during Season 8's production that were to be shown to WB executives as a test to see if they would want to pick up the show. But, several main cast members (Stamos, Cameron) wanted to move on and would either be merely recurring/guest characters or not appear at all, and The WB was only willing to hire one Olsen Twin to portray Michelle, so the plans fell through. The cancellation was pretty abrupt, as the "finale" (Michelle Rides Again) was not actually written to be one, so they had to add a few new scenes to give it some sense of finality, and some of the younger actors allegedly didn't even know the show was done until the final taping (which was NOT the final episode, but another episode in Season 8).

There were allegedly some set photos in an entertainment magazine of Season 9 in 1995, but beyond that, evidence of any footage seems to be lost. It very well may never have existed, but I've seen enough Reddit posts and YouTube videos talking about it to think that there might legitimately be something out there.

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From an interview in 2017:

Björk has opened up about a lost collaboration with the Wu-Tang Clan. In a new interview with FACT Magazine, she discussed wanting to have RZA contribute beats to her 1997 album Homogenic. After that didn’t pan out, Björk flew to New York to meet the group. “We wrote a couple of songs together,” she said. “Sometimes when you do things and you don’t plan them it’s magic. And I really think what we made was magic. But I think because it wasn’t part of the whole Homogenic thing and it wasn’t part of what Wu-Tang were doing at the time, it was better as an idea, if that makes any sense?”
Björk added that she later connected with the group at an event at Tower Records. “I was signing books for an hour, and they sent some of their team, standing there with me,” she explained. “That was one of my all-time favourite moments: I had been on my own, so when they turned up I felt very protected. It was magic.” She continued, “In my eyes, they’re punk. We are definitely [similar]—we do things in, like, a ritual way.” Read the full interview here.

https://pitchfork.com/news/bjork-talks-lost-wu-tang-collaboration-what-we-made-was-magic/

Has anyone heard of this / found anything? Not sure if related, but found this RZA remix of Bachelorette (from Homogenic), as a bonus track. Maybe it's related? :

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fGUtexd_Ppk

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[Mostly Lost] The Weekly Radio Address of President George W. Bush (parody from The Onion)

The Weekly Radio Address of President George W. Bush - parody

I downloaded these every week from The Onion long ago. They've been unavailable online for many years; even the Internet Archive was missing a lot of them. Which is a pity, because they're incredibly funny. Recently I assembled them into a single collection, filling in some of the gaps with supplements from the IA, and posted the whole collection. There are 40 files. As far as I know, this is the most complete archive available anywhere.

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From Wikipedia:

"A CBS camera caught a disgusted Gumbel blurting out, "What a fucking idiot," just after he had finished a hostile interview with Robert Knight of the Family Research Council (FRC). The incident occurred at about 7:15 a.m. ET on Thursday, June 29, 2000, following Knight's appearance to defend the Boy Scout policy of excluding gays from being leaders. The Media Research Center reported that he uttered those words; Gumbel openly admitted to saying so when guest-hosting a June 2007 episode of Live with Regis and Kelly."

The Media Research Center's page on the incident, which includes a now-unplayable RealPlayer media file of Gumbel's alleged use of the word "fuck," is below:

http://archive2.mrc.org/biasalerts/cyberalert-06302000-fing-idiot#1

Unfortunately, all I could find was this screenshot from the 2000 broadcast from the aforementioned page:

http://cdn.mrc.org/archive/stillshots/2000/gumbelslip.jpg

However, I do remember downloading it and being able to view it years ago. I downloaded the clip again recently, but am unable to get it to play on several media players I have tried. I've searched for it on all the usual video-sharing websites, but have come up completely empty of finding anything.

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Pizza-biyori (ピザびより) was the short-lived Japanese mobile-only website and Gijinka character series by Pizza Hut.

Pizza-biyori featured the Gijinka characters of Pizza Hut's pizzas of the time, and the website contained various content featuring the characters, mainly Yonkoma webcomics.

There were six characters in Pizza-biyori:

  • Mayo-Q-tan (based on Mayo-Q)
  • Mushroom-tan (based on Bacon Mushroom)
  • Kani-Ebi-tan (based on Kani-Ebi (crab and shrimp))
  • Bulgogi-tan (based on Bulgogi)
  • Seafood-tan (based on Seafood)
  • Deluxe-tan (based on Deluxe)

The site ran from July to September 2007 and was inaccessible from a PC. The Wayback Machine hasn't archived everything, and only a little information can be found in a Wikipedia article and a Nico Nico Pedia article.

24
 
 

In the mid-to-late 2010s, a YouTube channel named Daniel Walterbury posted comedic bait-and-switch logo parodies claiming to be "high quality logo captures" in the same manner as SiIvaGunner, a comedic music collective known for "high quality rips" of video game music. After making several non-parody videos consisting of various TVCs and fictional television IDs (mostly FOX) around 2020, Daniel removed all of his videos from his channel. According to TheMossbergMan's comment on my "Where are they now?" post on Reddit, Daniel is currently contributing rips for SiIvaGunner. Currently there are only a few videos to be found, most of which are the parodies of the PBS and Viacom logos. Almost all of his Viacom parodies have been re-uploaded to the Internet Archive.

25
 
 

So a few channels that spring to mind were UltraJman and Mas n Vic, there's also Tatsudoshi but most people know that one.

The former did a few lets plays like IWBTG, Cave Story, Metroid Fusion, and I recall Mega Man 7 being one as well, but those have been gone for many years and aside from a cut down upload of IWBTG they haven't been found anywhere.

The other was a channel called Mas n Vic, which featured a guy from TheZeldaDungeon https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCtldOMW0pKAgMkdq8Z6I2KA

doing small reviews of games like Cybernoid and Wii Sports, that channels been dead and wiped for the better part of a decade. Here's an archive.org link https://web.archive.org/web/20080705173220/http://www.youtube.com/user/MASnVIC

If anyone knows of these lemme know, or even better if one had links archived but I sincerely doubt these'll turn up, especially that second one.

EDIT: User ClementJ642 also has a few videos that are totally gone, like vlogs, wrestling videos, and a few others, I got a couple backed up to Archive.org and a few people sent some stuff, but plenty is still lost.

There's also the user HarvesterofEyes,who originally covered an assortment of strategy RPGs, so Fire Emblem, Shining Force, Tactics Ogre, even some obscure ones like on the Game Gear. He eventually ended up wiping both his channel and his website SRPGAcademy, and aside from a scant upload of four videos, there's basically no traces left. channel was here

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