Thank you for watching. We was very surprised. But thanks to that, I contacted my old friends for the first time in a while. Now we are 28 years old Japanese. But we PROMISEd "Let's geddan again." I want to upload the video someday. Corona is still hard, but I'm looking forward to this PROMISE, I live every day. By the way, I'm a video editor, not this two dancer XD
I feel extreme nostalgia, cringe (from thinking about my former self) and sadness through this video... absolute masterpiece... shoulda made these kinds of memories while i still had the time
@Rip bozo depending on what you decide to study it could either be really fun, or excruciatingly painful... but the people are generally more mature, so friendships there will hold for longer
@Rip bozo As a college student, I can say it's not as scary as k12 makes it out to be lol there's always a lot of work to be done but some of my favorite memories so far have been of goofing around at stores with my friends and them "kidnapping" me to go to sleepovers, as well as getting random fast food with my sister after our class let out at 9:00 pm. There's plenty of time to dick about in college, and I hope you get to experience it. I don't why im writing still i need to go to bed lmao
@@mr.discopotato5945I'm not Russian nor do I have anything to do with Russia, but I get the same odd melancholy feeling when I see old, funny internet videos that came out of Russia. To see everyone young and happy, as I was, in that time captured on video, then snapping back to reality when the video ends, realizing that those people in my generation that were on the internet with me may not even be here anymore because of this evil war. Nothing is the same.
I hope and pray every day these two are living their best lives after blessing us with this masterpiece. I could never thank them enough for the memories!
@@gon9684 Probably last year of school, judging from the empty classroom it could be that time of the year when you're technically a graduate but the graduation ceremony hasn't been held yet. Which would explain the level of boredom required to make this sort of video, also most 12th graders just don't go to school at this time so no worries of embarrassing yourself. But judging from the time on the clock, it could also just be after classes, it's just a speculation...
@@ohwell2088 I mean as long as datahoarders and the Internet Archive and other long-term archival projects exist, it basically is (though that's a big condition)
@@LittleWhole You already said it yourself, long-term projects they are, backed up and safely stored around the world. So I don't think it's such a big condition. I am thankful they exist tho
@@shirou5915 Oh they did. But still, the fact that the clock jumps so much means that for each shot there was probably at least five minutes of setup, possibly more.
Fun fact: This meme originates from a bug in the videogame Goldeneye 007 where character models would spin around like crazy. The song lyrics, which translates to "Shaking, spinning, tilting, sad feelings", was used as a reference to this bug. (edit) Here's the video of the bug: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-nq3Cty-LpD4.html
I don't know if it's a high effort video per se, I mean they just took pictures at the perfect time, either that or they recorded everything and screenshotted the ☆amazing photos☆ at the desired times making it much easier in the process, compiling all of the pictures they took, making it into an wonderful piece of history i mean for the times im sure it was impressive to see this kind of quality, but quickly you can realize just how easy it is to do the same thing im sure within about 5 minutes you can produce something very similar if not better nowadays
they didn't mean taking new shots every frame, they mean that these people spent like an hour of constant jumping trying to strike poses and get clean shots for this video