人類の皆様こにゃにゃちわ!ROBOT55(ロボット・ゴー・ゴー)です!
昨日(4月4日金曜日)下北沢MosaicでSu凸ki D凹koi(すっとこどっこい)のワンマン・ライブに便乗させて頂き、PV撮影を行いました!
曲は数ある名曲の中より敢えて『ブス』! Continue Reading…
人類の皆様こにゃにゃちわ!ROBOT55(ロボット・ゴー・ゴー)です!
昨日(4月4日金曜日)下北沢MosaicでSu凸ki D凹koi(すっとこどっこい)のワンマン・ライブに便乗させて頂き、PV撮影を行いました!
曲は数ある名曲の中より敢えて『ブス』! Continue Reading…
Ricky Martin (about 10-years-old), in blue shirt at front. Mike Rogers, left, white shirt.
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“Upside inside out,
She’s livin’ la vida loca,
She’ll push and pull you down,
Livin’ la vida loca”
– Ricky Martin (Lyrics from ‘Livin’ Da Vida Loca.’
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The other day, I posted that article about Jack White of the White Stripes. It got a fantastic reaction! Thanks so much. If you want to read that story (when you read it, you’ll also see that it is, indeed, a true story) then click here: The White Stripes Jack White and Me (A True Story) – (robot55.jp/blog/jack-white-and-me-a-true-story/)There’s also photo of me with Jack and Meg White of the White Stripes and that was well before they ever became famous.
Actually, folks, may I brag? I have tons of photos like that with me and the rich and famous. I went looking through a bunch of them and saw a few names that I’d like to drop: Yoko Ono, Paul Weller, Arnold Schwarneggar, former US President George Bush… But which story would impress you, dear reader the most today?
Well, the hint came from an alert reader and friend Jimbo who wrote: “Wow, Placebo, Linkin Park, and Elvis Costello are all very impressive, but I doubt many people can claim to have a photo with Menudo. That is a gem. :)”
So, today I am going to show you proof of me with Menudo and Ricky Martin when he was a 10-year-old boy.
No kidding.
First off, “Who is Menudo?” You ask? Here’s what Wikipedia says: “Menudo was a Puerto Rican boy band that was was one of the biggest Latin boy bands in history. The band achieved much success, especially during the 1980s, becoming the most popular Latin American teen musical group of the era. The band was a starting point for superstars like Ricky Martin and Draco Rosa, who were members around the mid 1980s during their youth.”
Actually, they were so popular they toured Japan in 1985. I was there.
Here’s the official release story for the mass media after I left Menudo:
Mike Rogers, was the sixth, most handsome and eldest member of Menudo. He wrote all the hit songs and played all the instruments. He also was director of choreography for all the stage shows. During Menudo’s Japan tour, things came to a head when the other five members complained that Mike was getting all the action with the hot and sexy Japanese babes (who were just dying to meet him) while the other Menudo members couldn’t run around with girls because they still hadn’t reached puberty and all had to be in bed by 8:00 pm.
During their Japan tour, Mike was having so much fun with sex-starved Japanese girls that he said “Goodbye” to Menudo and quit the group.
It was a mistake that Mike Rogers would always regret. If Mike had stayed, it would have been him, and not Ricky Martin would would be living in massive homes in the Caribbean, yachting on his yacht and flying around the world in his own private jet.
But he left, and the rest is, as they say history….
Mike would be quoted as saying later: “Sure, I regret it. But I just couldn’t live with myself having all that money and all those women trying to get into my pants all the time!… So I decided to take a $7.42 an hour job teaching English to Japanese businessmen.”
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Well, OK…. the above is a bit of a stretch… That’s not exactly how it happened. What really happened was I was a regular on a kid’s show named “Ohayo Studio” on TV Tokyo in the mid eighties and Menudo came on my show. After the show ended, I asked if I could take my photo with them so I could claim, years later, that I was the eldest member of the group…
See? I have always been a guy who planned ahead! (But the fake story is much more fun, isn’t it?)
Chuckle!
Have a great weekend!
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At Robot55 we make video productions for businesses and services and products, but we also pride ourselves on making videos for art and music. Our starting price is ¥70,000 and we are sure we can work out something that fits your budget. Oh, and we love making band videos too!
Contact us! contact@robot55.jp
(Ninja Slayer News at bottom!)
Out of the mouths of babes (oft times come gems) – Ancient proverb
When working on any project, be it a company, community or school project, nothing motivates people more than getting them involved and letting them know that their opinion is important and respected.
A good manager will listen to all ideas and opinions, attempt to get a consensus or at least understanding from the members, then make a decision.
There are four things I always like to keep in mind whenever I am doing any project. These are things that I find I must force myself to do as they are not easy to achieve. Those things are:
1) Deciding that, if you are going to do it, you are going to do it world class.
2) Understanding that to do world class you need to plan and make the effort. Old Japanese saying: 80% of success is in planning.
3) Listen to everyone’s ideas and get them involved.
4) Nothing motivates people more than knowing they are respected and nothing gets them to do a better job than letting them feel “ownership” in a project. And that’s the key to getting great work out of mediocre workers.
I think these four points are critical for success in any project, whether it is a video project or planning and designing just about anything!
Heck, even planning a good event like a birthday party or wedding has the same rules.
Nothing makes up for lack of money more than a bunch of great ideas and the best way to get great ideas is to listen to everyone. Two heads are better than one… I reckon it stands to reason that three heads are better than two. You’ll get those great ideas through great communication and brainstorming with your team.
Like it says in the Rocky Horror Picture Show, “Don’t dream it. Be it.” We are reaching for the stars.
For your company projects, are you discussing and planning enough with your staff before you jump into the project or are you shooting from the hip? Remember, 80% of success is in the planning.
Teamwork requires team effort and team opinion….
Don’t do like Dilbert’s boss says, “Teamwork is a lot of people doing what I say.”
Teamwork is getting everyone involved, listening to them all, making them feel respected and giving them “ownership” of the project.
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NINJA SLAYER! Right now, the team at Robot 55 is working on the information program for the animation entitled Ninja Slayer that starts April 16, 2015 at 11 pm on Niconico. (http://otakumode.com/sp/ninjaslayer/). I am confident that our program with Ninja Slayer will be a success as we strive for world class quality – in spite of a shoestring budget.
Before even starting and accepting the job, we discussed for several hours different ideas and ways to approach the program. Then we came up with what we thought was a good starting point.
We’re glad we did.
The discussion and planning are a crucial part of the success of this video project… It is necessary for the success of any project.
Niconico is announcing our show to the world on April 11, 2015. The show begins April 16. We’ll be having a cool video preview for you right here on this Robot55 blog on April 11.
Stay tuned!
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At Robot55 we make video productions for businesses and services and products, but we also pride ourselves on making videos for art and music. Our starting price is ¥80,000 and we are sure we can work out something that fits your budget. Oh, and we love making band videos too!
Contact us! contact@robot55.jp
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動画, ロボット・ゴー・ゴー, 格安ビデオ制作、ROBOT55, 紹介動画, 動画制作, ビジネスビデオ制作, 東京, 撮影, 格安, ロボット・ゴー・ゴー, ビデオ, 格安, ビデオ制作, ビデオ編集,
英語分からな?問題ない!ビデオをクリック!
Thanks to everyone for the kind messages about yesterday’s post about hiring the handicapped to become a part of our team. (If link doesn’t work, copy and paste this into your browser: http://robot55.jp/blog/looking-to-hire-the-handicapped-for-video-editing-at-home/). We will keep on trying and keep on going forward. With your support, I know we can do this.
Thanks so much.
In the spirit of opening our hearts and trying to make this a better place to live, as well as a “thank you!” present for all our well-wishers, today I’d like to show you three very touching videos from Thailand. Is this an attempt at pulling at dear reader’s soft heart strings? Why, yes it is. It is also because I am a big softy and these things make me cry too. (Heck, I cried in the Disney cartoon Dumbo!) Today’s short videos are very well done and make my water works flow also! I think you’ll like them a lot! I do.
Why does Thailand have so many heart ripping videos today? Maybe it’s because Thailand was such a desperately poor country (still is in many ways) for so many centuries. Things have gotten better, but westerners cannot imagine the poverty in nations like Thailand (or India) that still exist today… Maybe these heart-wrenching videos come about due to Thailand’s Buddhist history. I am not sure.
The first video is about a blind boy who saves a baby bird. This movie speaks for itself. Watch this and see if this doesn’t jerk your heartsrings….
I love how they got a real actor with a sight disorder to play the part. Genius. Well done!
The next video is a video that is perfect for Japan and addresses the social problem of bullying. This one, too, needs little explanation…. The note the little boy receives at the start of the video says, “Loser!”
The note the little boy receives at the end of the video says, “Teach me!” Watch it!
Brilliant!
Finally, this is the best of the bunch. Actually, I find this video production to be quite excellent and I am happy to see how this was adapted… No! Is this an ancient story? Or is this a modern story? I am leaning to believing that this is an ancient Buddhist story.
Here is an English adaptation that I found:
“One day, a poor boy who was selling goods from door to door to pay his way through school, found he had only one thin dime left, and he was hungry. He decided he would ask for a meal at the next house. However, he lost his nerve when a lovely young woman opened the door.
Instead of a meal he asked for a drink of water. She thought he looked hungry so brought him a large glass of milk. He drank it slowly, and then asked, “How much do I owe you?”
“You don’t owe me anything,” she replied. “Mother has taught us never to accept pay for a kindness.”
He said, “Then I thank you from my heart.”
As Howard Kelly left that house, he not only felt stronger physically, but his faith in God and man was strong also. He had been ready to give up and quit.
Year’s later that young woman became critically ill. The local doctors were baffled. They finally sent her to the big city, where they called in specialists to study her rare disease. Dr. Howard Kelly was called in for the consultation.
When he heard the name of the town she came from, a strange light filled his eyes. Immediately he rose and went down the hall of the hospital to her room. Dressed in his doctor’s gown he went in to see her. He recognized her at once.
He went back to the consultation room determined to do his best to save her life. From that day he gave special attention to the case. After a long struggle, the battle was won.
Dr. Kelly requested the business office to pass the final bill to him for approval. He looked at it, then wrote something on the edge and the bill was sent to her room. She feared to open it, for she was sure it would take the rest of her life to pay for it all. Finally she looked, and something caught her attention on the side of the bill. She began to read the following words: “Paid in full with one glass of milk. Signed, Dr. Howard Kelly.”
So I am sure, now, this is an ancient story. Now that you know the story, you don’t need to know the language. The video adaptation is superb:
It’s a wonderful day. Thank you for sharing your time with us today.
Please give your loved ones a hug. Cherish all that you have. Kindness to others will be repaid to you in good karma…
As the final video says, “Giving is the best communication.”
We are Robot55.
Our Mission Statement is:
“We make wonderful videos productions; for a profit if we can, at a loss if we must. But no matter what, we make wonderful video productions.”
Our Motto is:
“Let’s have fun!”
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At Robot55 we make video productions for businesses and services and products, but we also pride ourselves on making videos for art and music. Our starting price is ¥70,000 and we are sure we can work out something that fits your budget. Oh, and we love making band videos too!
Contact us! contact@robot55.jp
人類の皆様、ご機嫌麗しゅう!ROBOT55(ロボット・ゴー・ゴー)です!
インターネットと小型ノート・パソコンの飛躍的進化のお陰で通勤とかしなくても在宅 勤務、或いはノマドスタイルで仕事が何の問題もなく出来る時代が到来しましたね。
それは体の不自由な方々に社会進出の門戸をより広く開けてくれたとも言えます。 Continue Reading…
人類の皆様ご機嫌麗しゅう!
Greetings, my humanoid friends!
高円寺にあるオシャレでカッコいいバー、ALBA 圓(えん)のお店紹介ビデオを制作しました!
We just made a video for a very cool bar in a very cool neighbourhood, Koenji, called ALBA EN! Continue Reading…
皆様ご機嫌麗しゅう!ROBOT55(ロボット・ゴー・ゴー)です!
来たる4月3日金曜日「オブラートのないチャット・モンチー(by 綾小路翔)」SU凸KO D凹KOI(すっとこどっこい)のライブでPVの撮影も行います!
PVに出演をしたい方、或いは単純に彼女たちの素晴らしいライブを
因みにPVの曲は知る人ぞ知る大傑作「ブス」。
その赤裸々で痛ましいまでのリアリティ溢れる歌詞に聴く者は涙を禁じ得ません!
名曲「ブス」収録!SU凸KO D凹KOIのEP『一寸先は闇』
そんな訳でロックが好きな人、いや音楽が好きな人は皆んな下北沢MOSAICに集合!
以下チケット購入等のインフォメーションです:
2015.4.3(FRI)下北沢MOSAICにてSU凸KO D凹KOIワンマンライブ決定!!!この日にのpvも撮影します!全員集合!
2015年4月3日金曜日
開場 18:30 / 開演 19:00
前売 ¥2,000 + ¥500 Drink / 当日 ¥2,500 + ¥500 Drink
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◎お取り置き予約はホームページの一番下からお問い合わせいただけます。
※e+でのチケット販売が1/13から開始されます。こちらにはチケット事前購入特典(4/3のライブ会場受付にて受け取れます)がございますので是非こちらからのご購入、もしくはライブハウスの店頭販売、Su凸ko D凹koiライブ物販にてのチケット購入でも特典がつくのでおすすめしています。
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◎ホームページの仕様が変更されたため、御手数ですがお問い合わせメールの際、返信をご希望とされる方は本文中に返信用のアドレスを入力していただけると幸いです。
Hey welcome back for some more great animations.I hope you folks enjoy this series of animations. As for me, I find that watching these things inspires me and gives me ideas for when I make my own video productions for Robot55. It is amazing that, in many cases, so many wonderful videos remain of productions that were made on shoe string budgets.
I love that sort of thinking. It is the ultimate in creativity. I hope that some of these videos give you ideas for your creative productions whether those are video productions, art, writing a book, or even making a cake! Whatever we do, let’s have fun!
The first animation up today is one of the earliest animators. His name is Willis O’Brien. Most of you might recognize his work as he was the guy who made the giant gorilla in the classic 1933 film, “King Kong.” I remember watching that film in cinema class at university and just being simply amazed that they could have this animation so many years ago…. (I was studying animation too at the time!)
Willis Harold O’Brien was born in Oakland, California in 1886. He is a pioneer in motion picture special effects and stop-motion animations. He is well known and his reputation was (and still is) that he, “was responsible for some of the best-known images in cinema history.” O’Brien is best remembered for his work on The Lost World (1925), King Kong (1933) and Mighty Joe Young (1949). He won the 1950 Academy Award for Best Visual Effects. He wrote the story for King Kong vs. Frankenstein which was changed and was developed into Ishirō Honda’s King Kong vs. Godzilla (1962).
Here is Willis H. O’Brien from 1915 – “The dinosaur and the missing link”
(If link about doesn’t play, copy and past this link into your browser: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RClif87GM1A)
Next up is some stop animation work that, when I was a kid, I didn’t like at all. For some reason, these images disturb me. I can’t put my finger on it… But I guess they made me fear that my toys were alive while I was sleeping. You might recognize some of these images and this style too. This is work by George Pal.
George Pal was born in 1908 in Hungary and moved to the USA in 1940. He was an animator and film producer, mostly doing science fiction (maybe that’s where the scary part came in for me as a kid). He was nominated for Academy Awards in the category Best Short Cartoons for seven years in a row between 1942 – 1948! Wow! Pal is the the second most nominated Hungarian exile after Miklós Rózsa.
George Pal has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1722 Vine St.
Rocky Horror Picture Show fans will be interested in the trivia that, in the opening theme to that show, of both the stage musical, “Science Fiction/Double Feature,” George Pal is among the many references to classic science fiction and horror films in the opening theme.
Here’s George Pal with “Philips Broadcast” from 1938:
(If link about doesn’t play, copy and past this link into your browser: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jQmiqymo7Og).
OK. I said the last animation scared me as a kid. Next up is a very bizarre and twisted animation that is sure to cause the kids have nightmares. I cannot find any information about this Japanese animator nor this animation. But I think it speaks for itself.
Hitoshi Suenaga Distrust of Romantica:
(If link about doesn’t play, copy and past this link into your browser: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q2mJIpvgUC0)
Well that’s it for this week. Hope you enjoyed this short trip into the past and the minds of some very “out of the box” creators. See you next week, same place and same time!
Psst! Want to see more?
Need a Break? Watch These Three Fantastic Short Animations! (robot55.jp/blog/need-a-break-watch-these-three-fantastic-short-animations/)
More Exciting (and Bizarre) Animations! robot55.jp/blog/more-exciting-and-bizarre-animations/
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At Robot55 we make video productions for businesses and services and products, but we also pride ourselves on making videos for art and music. Our starting price is ¥70,000 and we are sure we can work out something that fits your budget. Contact us! contact@robot55.jp
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ロボット・ゴー・ゴー, ROBOT55, 格安ビデオ制作、commercial video, english language video, english video production, video production tokyo, サブカル, ビデオ, ビデオ編集, プロモーションビデオ, 制作, 動画, 動画制作, 動画制作 東京, ビデオ制作、
人類の皆様コニャニャチわ!ROBOT55(ロボット・ゴー・ゴー)です。よ!
人間だれでも仕事ばかりしていてはダメですよね。大いに働き、大いに遊んだ方がいい仕事も出来るというもの!
そんな「明日への活力」はロボットにも必要!いい動画を制作する為には一流の作品を見て、一流の遊び方をしなくてはいけません。
そんな僕、ROBOT55は何を隠そう大の芸者遊び好き! Continue Reading…
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At Robot55 we make video productions for businesses and services and products, but we also pride ourselves on making videos for art and music. Our starting price is ¥80,000 and we are sure we can work out something that fits your budget. Oh, and we love making band videos too!
Contact us! contact@robot55.jp
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ロボット・ゴー・ゴー, 格安ビデオ制作、ROBOT55, 格安, ビデオ制作, ビデオ編集, レストラン, 動画, ビジネスビデオ制作, ビデオ, 紹介動画, 動画制作, 東京, 撮影, 格安, ロボット・ゴー・ゴー,