
"I Thought It Would Never End": 23 People Who Lost A Year Of Their Lives After Watching A Very, Very, Very Long Movie Where The Director Forgot How To Edit
1. "I remember having the DVD copy of Pearl Harbor that came in two discs, and when the first disc ended, I thought, 'That's a strange way to end a movie,' and then I got the 'insert disc two' message, and I was like 'What the fuck?'"
3. " Gangs of New York on cable TV, so with the commercial breaks, it was five goddamn hours long."
View this video on YouTube
5. "Sorry, Nolan, I like your stuff... but Oppenheimer... I don't really dislike the movie, but damn, it was drawn out too long."
View this video on YouTube
6. " Meg 2: The Trench. I was sure I was at the end of the third act, but somehow, there was another movie left."
7. " Australia (2008). They spend two hours riding horses across the outback, then they get to town, and it turns into an hour-long combat movie. Don't watch it."
View this video on YouTube
10. "The remake of King Kong. I swear, they spent an hour just talking on that damn boat."
View this video on YouTube
14. "My boys wanted to go see Dune: Part Two with me, and my daughter, who was considerably younger, wanted to go as well. About halfway through the flick, she had been in a quasi-fetal position in her chair for most of the movie. She looked up at me and said, 'It feels like we've been here for a DAY already.'"
View this video on YouTube
15. " The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King has like seven final scenes."
View this video on YouTube
16. " The Wolf of Wall Street. Hit a point where I was sure it was wrapping up, glanced at my phone, and went, 'You've got to be kidding me.' Still loved every minute though, even if my drink was empty and my legs were cramping."
View this video on YouTube
18. " Gone With the Wind. My college girlfriend made me watch it with her. I had no idea that you had to wait flipping hours for the famous 'Frankly, Scarlet' line."
View this video on YouTube
19. "I fell asleep twice trying to watch Zack Snyder's Justice League at about the two-hour mark, where Wonder Woman meets Cyborg in the street. The movie hasn't really even begun at this point, and there are two more hours to go."
View this video on YouTube
20. " Les Misérables. I saw the movie in theaters with my friend, who absolutely loves the play. I thought the movie was coming to an end and thought, 'Oh, thank God.' My friend sighed emotionally and said, 'Ah, the intermission!' I nearly cried."
View this video on YouTube
21. " The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes. Man, that last half felt almost like a different movie."
View this video on YouTube
23. " Tenet. I couldn't understand anything anyone was saying, and the plot itself was too convoluted. There were some good parts, but it should have been way shorter."
View this video on YouTube
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Hypebeast
an hour ago
- Hypebeast
'Skibidi' and 'Delulu' Are Officially in the Cambridge Dictionary
Summary TheCambridge Dictionaryhas officially added the slang terms 'skibidi' and 'delulu' to its online edition, reflecting the growing influence of internet culture on the English language. 'Skibidi,' a playful, gibberish word popularized by the viral YouTube seriesSkibidi Toilet, is defined as having multiple meanings – from 'cool' to 'bad' – or sometimes no meaning at all, used simply as a joke. Colin McIntosh, Lexical Programme Manager at Cambridge Dictionary, noted that such additions capture the evolving ways people communicate online and offline. Meanwhile, 'Delulu,' a shortened form of 'delusional,' is defined as believing things that are not real or true, often by choice. The term, widely used on platforms like TikTok and X (formerly Twitter), has been embraced in humorous and self-aware words are among more than 6,000 new entries added this year, alongside other social media–driven slang and culturally relevant terms such as 'tradwife,' 'red flag,' 'mouse jiggler' and 'work wife' to name a few.


Digital Trends
4 hours ago
- Digital Trends
YouTube apparently wants the Oscars – 5 reasons why it might be a great idea
YouTube is interested in hosting the Oscars, according to a Bloomberg report on Sunday, citing several people familiar with the matter. It would mean wrestling the rights from Walt Disney's ABC, which has long hosted the annual awards show and whose contract runs until 2028. Recommended Videos ABC already shows the Oscars on YouTube, but by owning the rights itself, YouTube would have primary control of the broadcast, giving it greater influence over how the event is presented on its platform. Like streaming rivals Netflix and Amazon, Google-owned YouTube is ramping up its coverage of live events in a bid to boost audience numbers. Bloomberg said that if YouTube managed to nab the rights to the Academy Awards, it would be 'a huge statement from YouTube and a shock to the industry.' Here are five reasons why it may actually be a good idea … and a couple why it might not. 1. Massive reach: YouTube is the world's most-visited video platform, with around 2.7 billion monthly active users. Giving the broadcast rights to YouTube could give a real boost to the Oscars ceremony, which has struggled to maintain relevance and grow audience numbers in recent years. 2. A younger, more diverse audience: YouTube is popular with younger viewers who are turning away from regular TV in increasing numbers. Having YouTube take control of the Oscars broadcast would likely bring in more of these younger viewers, as well as broaden the ceremony's multicultural audience, generating a wave of renewed interest in the annual entertainment event. 3. A more interactive viewing experience: The show could become a whole lot more engaging via things like live chat, polls, games like forecasting, and live behind-the-scenes material that viewers could effortlessly dip in and out of. 4. Influencer involvement: It could make the Oscars more fun with greater interaction with YouTube celebrities and influencers, bridging Hollywood and digital culture in ways that could make the ceremony feel fresh again. 5. Convenient on-demand viewing: YouTube can make it easy for viewers to enjoy the highlights, movie clips, or the entire ceremony on demand after the event is over, which would align nicely with changing viewing habits. Possible downsides: 1. Loss of its traditional TV broadcast audience: If YouTube wins the rights to show the event on its streaming platform, there's a risk that it could result in some people tuning out instead of tuning in, especially older folks who enjoy the Oscars but may be slow to hop aboard online streaming services like YouTube. 2. Possible technical issues: Streaming platforms are more prone to technical issues than traditional broadcasting operations. Netflix, for example, experienced a major livestreaming failure during the Mike Tyson vs. Jake Paul boxing match in November last year. More than 60 million people tuned in, but many of them were met with poor image quality and buffering. YouTube would have to be sure that it can handle the potentially massive demand.


Forbes
6 hours ago
- Forbes
Taylor Swift On New Heights Podcast: A Marketing Masterclass For The Ages
Taylor Swift was never sporty. At least, that what she said herself. Yet this week, she dominated one of the most male-coded corners of sports culture. On her record-breaking debut appearance on New Heights, the football podcast hosted by her boyfriend, Travis Kelce, and his brother Jason, the global pop phenomenon openly admitted that until recently she didn't know the rules when it came to football. Making an appearance on a podcast by bros, for bros, Swift announced the release of her twelfth studio album, titled The Life of a Showgirl, drawing an audience of 1.3 million live viewers on YouTube, nearly double the audience that tuned in live to Donald Trump's much-hyped appearance on The Joe Rogan Experience during his 2024 election run. Taylor Swift Sets the Price It's hard not to see these numbers as a sweet win for Swift, especially in light of Donald Trump's September 2024 comments on Fox & Friends, where he dismissed her as someone who 'seems to always endorse a Democrat' warning she would 'probably pay a price for it…in the marketplace.' If this week proved anything, it's that when it comes to the cultural zeitgeist that is Swift, far from paying a price, Swift is a woman who sets the price, and the market has shown us time again, it's more than willing to pay. Taylor Swift Proves Women Can Expand Culture Of course, the NFL already knows what Swift means for its bottom line. Stadium shots of her in a red lip did more for ticket sales and broadcast ratings than most quarterbacks could dream of. And yet, much has been made and mocked of her relationship with Kelce and the NFL. She's been booed in stadiums, joked at by mainstream media, and roasted online to the extent that both the NFL and high-profile players have publicly defended her right to attend. Perhaps that's why the impact of this podcast appearance is even more significant. It offered proof that women don't just consume culture, they expand it. This was a two hour podcast episode that shattered decades of siloed marketing assumptions, proving audiences are far more fluid than the old playbook allows. It signaled that women's fandom is not niche. It moves markets, breaks records, and has the power to reshape industries. Whether it's ticket sales, album streams, or podcast viewership, the Swift phenomenon is measurable, massive, and undeniable. The Taylor Swift Effect: Viewership Earthquake The numbers speak for themselves. Swift's appearance didn't just break records, it reshaped the audience. Within 24 hours of the episode's release, female viewership on Spotify increased by over 600%, marking the largest single-day demographic shift in New Heights' history, with Spotify reporting, the episode had become one of this past year's highest-performing podcasts within just one day of its release Taylor Swift Shows Curiosity Is Currency It further demonstrated that curiosity has huge commercial leverage. Swift did not posture as an authority on the NFL, instead admitting she didn't know what a tight end was when her and Kelce first connected, and is now as she describes 'obsessed' with the sport. That admission is more than charming self-deprecation- it's a direct challenge to decades of sports culture that has often patronized or dismissed women's interest whose engagement was rarely seen as influential. Swift's approach flipped that script entirely. By showing that enthusiasm, curiosity, and authenticity can resonate with millions of viewers, she sent a message that influence isn't just about technical mastery and enthusiasm can be as influential in growing viewership as expertise. The opportunity lies in connecting audiences, breaking assumptions, and reshaping who gets to matter in sports culture. Taylor Swift's Masterclass in Modern Influence In an era where media, sports, and politics compete for attention, Taylor Swift has shown us just how cultural influence is evolving. For two hours, Swifties and sports fans shared a moment that made her more than a performer: she became a connector, wielding a form of soft power rarely seen so visibly from women. This wasn't just a record-breaking media moment- it was a masterclass in marketing in the digital age, where shaping culture, connecting communities, and turning curiosity into commerce defines success.