• The short film
The Return of Osiris by the Palestinian visual artist Essa Grayeb weaves numerous stylistically divergent excerpts extracted from Egyptian movies and television series produced between 1976 and 2016; The found footage excerpts were edited to reconstruct the late Egyptian President
Gamal Abdel Nasser's resignation speech in 1967 according to the original text. • "In 2006, an audience that eventually grew to more than six million watched
CSI: Miamis
David Caruso don a pair of sunglasses after making a glib remark about a victim. He kept doing it for seven minutes, in basically a
möbius strip of shades and awful one-liners." • Rich Juzwiak, a culture writer for
VH1, uploaded a supercut video of the number of times that contestants in
reality television shows spoke lines equivalent to "I'm not here to make friends" in mid-2008, which helped to popularize the format after Baio's post. • "With the Internet and more specifically
YouTube, local news is no longer restricted just to the municipalities that it serves. It is easier than ever for someone to capture a funny clip from television and upload it online. If you're bored on the Internet searching for these clips – rest easy. A YouTube user did the heavy lifting for you, compiling 2013's best local news
bloopers into one 15-minute super cut. The video begins with Kerryn Johnston, an anchor for a local TV news service in Australia. Johnston, reading off the teleprompter in Ron Burgundy-esque fashion, says, 'Good evening. Tonight, I'm going to sound like drunk.'" (Johnson says she made this joke because she thought she was only rehearsing and didn't realize she was live.) • Video magazine
Screen Junkies has produced multiple supercuts, such as all words that started with the letter "f" in
The Wolf of Wall Street, drunk characters, explosions,
Johnny Depp's weird faces, and last words. • YouTube channel What's the Mashup? contains supercuts based on many films, most notably one of 100 dance sequences from different films set to
Mark Ronson and
Bruno Mars' "
Uptown Funk." • A supercut of every
COVID-19 ad featured in 2020 are exactly alike as reported on an article of
The New York Times. • "thecussingchannel", a defunct YouTube channel launched by
CinemaSins' Jeremy Scott, containing supercuts of films such as the number of profanities used in
Pulp Fiction and the number of spells for all eight
Harry Potter films. == References ==