Vine has grown in popularity so much that Dunkin Donuts was the first to use a Vine video for a commercial. The art world has even seen the creative use of Vines when the first Vine video was sold at #SVAES (The Shortest Video Art Ever Sold) in NYC offering Vine videos to purchase for $200 vua thumb drive. Tits On Tits On Ikea was the first to be sold.
The creativity of Vines is amazing of what people can do within six seconds. Editing videos is timely, but Vine makes it fun and innovative while adding your own spin to how you view the world. Vine is a product of our remix culture by remixing videos with music that is totally opposite of the image clip to make a point or to be funny.
These Vines are very creative and amazing. How'd you do It?
Also Vines have the ability to change the way we see the world within a short time. Journalism has utilized Vine's short video capture when a bomb exploded in Turkey and the reporter recorded the most important facts of the incident. My favorite use of a Vine for Social Justice is when a young African-American teenager is constantly followed around a store by racist store clerks. This speaks to many young black males and others as well as a reminder that racism in America still exist on all levels.
#ShethinkImstealing -great hashtag.
So are vines the video version of twitter? And since everyone can tweet will everyone Vine regardless of technical skills. Twitter does not focus on grammar usage, but content. Vine seems to still have an impact regardless of shaky cameras and poor audio. Have we dumbed down our production for quality now that everyone can produce? I hope not...
And my all time favorite Vine accompanied by music from Atlanta Hip-Hop group Migos that was not playing when the video was recorded. Hash tagged as "when the school shooting goes as planned"