The first part of the video has been over done but not with this
commercial, the second part is funny, believe dat'
Give it a chance and just watch it.
I did not know what to call this video.
It's just another spoof from the new Manny Pacquiao commercial.
I did however add some extra new footage of something a little
different. I am sure you will enjoy the second half of this video.
If you laughed, GREEN K me biatches!.
End of and ENJOY!
The first part of the video has been over done but not with this
commercial, the second part is funny, believe dat'
Give it a chance and just watch it.
I did not know what to call this video.
It's just another spoof from the new Manny Pacquiao commercial.
I did however add some extra new footage of something a little
different. I am sure you will enjoy the second half of this video.
If you laughed, GREEN K me biatches!.
End of and ENJOY!
funny shit i was laughin my ass all the time :lol1:
Yeah it threw me back for sure. I think the fame is getting to him. To talk so badly about his past opponents is awful. Hopefully he was just playing up for the camera though. I don't think he is truly like that.
I am sure he was just doing this for the camera and just his friends, he normally does not talk shiet but in these videos he is going off. Did you see how angry mommy Pacquiao was? I think Manny had just one too many of those little wine thingy's he was drinking. Too much celebrating IMO.
:lol1:
He didn't talk sh*t at all the translation is false. Don't catch feelings it's a parody. The vid is not funny at all to me.
That is good to hear. What did he really say in the video?
Yeah it threw me back for sure. I think the fame is getting to him. To talk so badly about his past opponents is awful. Hopefully he was just playing up for the camera though. I don't think he is truly like that.
He didn't talk sh*t at all the translation is false. Don't catch feelings it's a parody. The vid is not funny at all to me.
I really am turned off by Manny talking like that, I never knew this side of him.
Yeah it threw me back for sure. I think the fame is getting to him. To talk so badly about his past opponents is awful. Hopefully he was just playing up for the camera though. I don't think he is truly like that.
Maybe because I can understand the language, and the subs dont match thats why its not funny for me.
Oh, damn, what was I thinking? Hahahahah! I am glad I do not understand the language or else it would not have been funny to me either. Oh, well. Those of us who don't speak the language will get a nice kick out of it.
bwhahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaahahahahahahahahahahahahaaahahahhaa
I'd green you too but you have to give it back to me
You're probably the 2nd most hated man in BS
after me :fingersx:
Haha, I did laugh at the guitar stuff. Funny thing is that the guitar he was using had the Union Jack on it while.
Apparently I gave you green K some time ago so I gotta spread it around before I can hit you again.
Pacquiao actually doesn`t speak like that - the subtitles are entirely false. And others might take this seriously.
It's says its a parody spoof, what part of parody don't you understand?
A parody (pronounced /ˈpærədiː/; also called send-up or spoof), in contemporary usage, is a work created to mock, comment on, or poke fun at an original work, its subject, or author, or some other target, by means of humorous, satiric or ironic imitation. As the literary theorist Linda Hutcheon (2000: 7) puts it, "parody … is imitation with a critical difference, not always at the expense of the parodied text." Another critic, Simon Dentith (2000: 9), defines parody as "any cultural practice which provides a relatively polemical allusive imitation of another cultural production or practice." Often, the most satisfying element of a good parody is seeing others mistake it for the genuine article.
Parody may be found in art or culture, including literature, music (although "parody" in music has a rather wider meaning than for other art forms), and cinema. Parodies are sometimes colloquially referred to as spoofs or lampoons.
Origins
According to Aristotle (Poetics, ii. 5), Hegemon of Thasos was the inventor of a kind of parody; by slightly altering the wording in well-known poems he transformed the sublime into the ridiculous. In ancient Greek literature, a parodia was a narrative poem imitating the style and prosody of epics "but treating light, satirical or mock-heroic subjects" (Denith, 10). Indeed, the apparent Greek roots of the word are par- (which can mean beside, counter, or against) and -ody (song, as in an ode). Thus, the original Greek word parodia has sometimes been taken to mean counter-song, an imitation that is set against the original. The Oxford English Dictionary, for example, defines parody as imitation "turned as to produce a ridiculous effect" (quoted in Hutcheon, 32). Because par- also has the non-antagonistic meaning of beside, "there is nothing in parodia to necessitate the inclusion of a concept of ridicule" (Hutcheon, 32).
Roman writers explained parody as an imitation of one poet by another for humorous effect. In French Neoclassical literature, parody was also a type of poem where one work imitates the style of another for humorous effect.
edit] Music
Main article: Parody music
In classical music, parody means a reworking of one kind of composition into another (e.g., a motet into a keyboard work as Girolamo Cavazzoni, Antonio de Cabezón, and Alonso Mudarra all did to Josquin des Prez motets.) More commonly, a parody mass (missa parodia) or an oratorio used extensive quotation from other vocal works such as motets or cantatas; Victoria, Palestrina, Lassus, and other notable composers of the 16th century used this technique; Bach also used existing cantatas for his Christmas Oratorio. In fact, the musical use of the word parody is wider than its general use - and while much musical parody does have humorous, even satirical intent, some simply recycles musical ideas.
edit] English term
The first usage of the word parody in English cited in the Oxford English Dictionary is in Ben Jonson, in Every Man in His Humour in 1598: "A Parodie, a parodie! to make it absurder than it was." The next notable citation comes from John Dryden in 1693, who also appended an explanation, suggesting that the word was in common use, it means to make fun of or re-create what you doing.
edit] Modernist and post-modernist parody
In the broader sense of Greek parodia, parody can occur when whole elements of one work are lifted out of their context and reused, not necessarily to be ridiculed. Hutcheon argues that this sense of parody has again become prevalent in the twentieth century, as artists have sought to connect with the past while registering differences brought by modernity. Major modernist examples of this recontextualizing parody include James Joyce's Ulysses, which incorporates elements of Homer's Odyssey in a twentieth-century Irish context, and T. S. Eliot's The Waste Land, which incorporates and recontextualizes elements of a vast range of prior texts, including Dante's The Inferno.
Blank parody, in which an artist takes the skeletal form of an art work and places it in a new context without ridiculing it, is common. Pastiche is a closely related genre, and parody can also occur when characters or settings belonging to one work are used in a humorous or ironic way in another, such as the transformation of minor characters Rosencrantz and Guildenstern from Shakespeare's drama Hamlet into the principal characters in a comedic perspective on the same events in the play (and film) Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead. In Flann O'Brien's novel At Swim-Two-Birds, for example, mad King Sweeney, Finn MacCool, a pookah, and an assortment of cowboys all assemble in an inn in Dublin: the mixture of mythic characters, characters from genre fiction, and a quotidian setting combine for a humor that is not directed at any of the characters or their authors. This combination of established and identifiable characters in a new setting is not the same as the post-modernist habit of using historical characters in fiction out of context to provide a metaphoric element.
The first part of the video has been over done but not with this
commercial, the second part is funny, believe dat'
Give it a chance and just watch it.
I did not know what to call this video.
It's just another spoof from the new Manny Pacquiao commercial.
I did however add some extra new footage of something a little
different. I am sure you will enjoy the second half of this video.
If you laughed, GREEN K me biatches!.
End of and ENJOY!
HAHA id green you but I already have !