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Funny Videos | koon | All Categories Search Result for : koon
this guy wanted to box..so here ya go..
me(koon): 5'10" 165
no shoes: 6'0" 200 KOON & NO SHOE DUDE - round 1 |
me boxin this guy..after i boxed the big guy..
me(koon): 5'10" 165
green dude: 6' 180 KOON & GREEN DUDE - round 1 |
this guy wanted to box..so here ya go..
me(koon): 5'10" 165
no shoes: 6'0" 200 KOON & NO SHOE DUDE - round 2 |
me boxin this guy..after i boxed the big guy..
me(koon): 5'10" 165
green dude: 6' 180 KOON & GREEN DUDE - round 2 |
this dude wanted to box..so here ya go..
me(koon): 5'10" 165
no shoes: 6'0" 200 KOON & NO SHOE DUDE - round 3 |
me boxin this big guy..i didnt have any shorts and we were on concrete and gravel..
me(koon): 5'10" 165
big dude: 6'2" 250 KOON & BIG DUDE - round 1 |
me boxin this guy..after boxin the big guy..
me(koon): 5'10" 165
green dude: 6' 180 KOON & GREEN DUDE - round 3 |
me boxin this big guy..i didnt have any shorts and we were on concrete and gravel..
me(koon): 5'10" 165
big dude: 6'2" 250 KOON & BIG DUDE - round 2 |
Watch Part two by clickin on my user Andy Koons Stand Up (1) |
Andy at the Canteeen part two Andy Koons Stand Up (2) |
Very funny persian version of troy Persian Troy Funny !! :D |
Ah, the wit and wisdom of the legendary Tom Lehrer. Sung by Jon Koons, an ardent admirer and keeper of the flame. Check out JestMaster.com for more about Jon and contact info! Tom Lehrer's I Hold Your Hand |
This is one of my favorite tricks, and a lot of fun.
Check out JestMaster.com for more about Jon and contact info. Sword Thru Neck - Magic by Jon |
A rockin' song that hits close to your heart. And a bit lower. An ode to a miracle drug sung by Jon Koons at Broadway Comedy Club. Viagra Man |
After three or four days of Christmas celebration, Germans start going stir crazy and decide to go to their nearest museum. I can understand this. But my nearest one was some Jeff Koons show and I refused to pay. I think kitsch should be free. Free Kitsch |
Director:Marc Klasfeld Writer:Marc Klasfeld (writer) Release Date:18 November 2006 (Japan) more Genre:Comedy Plot:"The L.A. Riot Spectacular", an equal opportunity offender, is a surreal, funny, and provocative view of the participants and psychology that fueled the epochal 1992 events Snoop Dogg ... The Narrator T.K. Carter ... Rodney Charles S. Dutton ... The Mayor (as Charles Dutton) Emilio Estevez ... Officer Powell George Hamilton ... The King of Beverly Hills Charles Durning ... The Lawyer Christopher McDonald ... Officer Koon Jonathan Lipnicki ... Tom Saltine Jr. Ted Levine ... Tom Saltine William Forsythe ... George Holliday Ronny Cox ... The Chief Jude Ciccolella ... The Assistant Chief Ron Jeremy . Arrestee Attention celluloid connoisseurs, here's a movie that has that rare blend of outrageous comedy, biting satire, art with substance and spot-on social criticism. This film will have you chuckling and howling, thenthinkinga tad disturbed, but will inevitably leave you with more insight behind what fuels urban decadence. Spoofing the beating of Rodney King by the LAPD, this wickedly witty work exposes many of the root causes and perpetuation of these unfortunate, yet all-too-common incidents in society. Treating people like impersonal objects, distrust, misunderstanding, turf protection and crass commercialism all contribute to the frayed edges, short fuses and lethal disrespect of social intolerance. This movie doesn't just poke fun at racism, the media, political correctness and stereotyping, it throws stiff jabs and roundhouse kicks at the whole shithouseand damn, it's funny! It also has the courage to face head on, deep human issues with a twinkle in the eye and tongue-in-cheekeverybody's guilty, yet everybody's cool. It's a short film, less than an hour-and-a-half, but generates more substance per minute than bloated mainstream blockbusters. It warrants repeated viewing. The production values are not lacking despite a modest film budget and the dialogue is rich in subtlety, revealing the writer's depth of understanding of what makes society tick and what makes society sick. I found this refreshing while viewing it and even more so afterwards. Most films that deal with race related issues tend to be unconvincing due to shallowness in either the writing, directing or acting, or all the above. Though I've enjoyed the serious intent of films like "Dangerous Minds," "Boyz In the Hood," and "Blackboard Jungle," they never quite convinced me that they had a finger on the pulse of what goes down in the 'hood.' "The L.A. Riot Spectacular," from its comedic perspective, hits much closer to home. It's a hip flick that switches gears seamlessly between highbrow and homeboy in the proper vernacular and with real authority. The actors do a fine job bringing their obnoxious, yet endearing characters to life. As the story progresses, they undergo transformations and one can't help but laugh at and empathize with their follies. I particularly enjoyed Charles Dutton, as Mayor Bradley and it was fun seeing Ronnie Cox as Police Chief Gates. But I found the whole cast amusing with memorable performances by: TK Carter, who plays victim-turned-opportunist, Rodney King; Snoop Dogg lends a likable narration and entertainment presence; Emilio Estevez, still has the best snicker in Hollywood as Officer Powell along with Christopher McDonald as Officer Kuhn. George Hamilton achieves comedic transcendence when he morphs from flaky underdog to ominous overcat. Other notable caricatures were achieved by the actors who portrayed; the lucky slime who filmed the infamous beating on video, the dejected-but-lovable Mexican, the hard-luck-but-good-attitude Korean couple, the impossibly narrow Aryan father and son, the naive-but-mindlessly-dangerous gangstas, the sensational TV news couple with their shameless gall and of course, a blood-sucking lawyer. Good art asks questions but some art reveals answers and tells you where your feet are. So to writer/director Marc Klasfeld, thanks for the hard work and awesome job! Keep jabbing away. This film will find its audience and make people guffaw for years to come and maybe someday we will, "all get along." The L.A. Riot Spectacular Movi |
Director:Marc Klasfeld
Writer:Marc Klasfeld (writer)
Release Date:18 November 2006 (Japan) more
Genre:Comedy
Plot:"The L.A. Riot Spectacular", an equal opportunity offender, is a surreal, funny, and provocative view of the participants and psychology that fueled the epochal 1992 events
Snoop Dogg ... The Narrator
T.K. Carter ... Rodney
Charles S. Dutton ... The Mayor (as Charles Dutton)
Emilio Estevez ... Officer Powell
George Hamilton ... The King of Beverly Hills
Charles Durning ... The Lawyer
Christopher McDonald ... Officer Koon
Jonathan Lipnicki ... Tom Saltine Jr.
Ted Levine ... Tom Saltine
William Forsythe ... George Holliday
Ronny Cox ... The Chief
Jude Ciccolella ... The Assistant Chief
Ron Jeremy . Arrestee
Attention celluloid connoisseurs, here's a movie that has that rare blend of outrageous comedy, biting satire, art with substance and spot-on social criticism. This film will have you chuckling and howling, thenthinkinga tad disturbed, but will inevitably leave you with more insight behind what fuels urban decadence. Spoofing the beating of Rodney King by the LAPD, this wickedly witty work exposes many of the root causes and perpetuation of these unfortunate, yet all-too-common incidents in society. Treating people like impersonal objects, distrust, misunderstanding, turf protection and crass commercialism all contribute to the frayed edges, short fuses and lethal disrespect of social intolerance. This movie doesn't just poke fun at racism, the media, political correctness and stereotyping, it throws stiff jabs and roundhouse kicks at the whole shithouseand damn, it's funny! It also has the courage to face head on, deep human issues with a twinkle in the eye and tongue-in-cheekeverybody's guilty, yet everybody's cool.
It's a short film, less than an hour-and-a-half, but generates more substance per minute than bloated mainstream blockbusters. It warrants repeated viewing. The production values are not lacking despite a modest film budget and the dialogue is rich in subtlety, revealing the writer's depth of understanding of what makes society tick and what makes society sick. I found this refreshing while viewing it and even more so afterwards. Most films that deal with race related issues tend to be unconvincing due to shallowness in either the writing, directing or acting, or all the above.
Though I've enjoyed the serious intent of films like "Dangerous Minds," "Boyz In the Hood," and "Blackboard Jungle," they never quite convinced me that they had a finger on the pulse of what goes down in the 'hood.' "The L.A. Riot Spectacular," from its comedic perspective, hits much closer to home. It's a hip flick that switches gears seamlessly between highbrow and homeboy in the proper vernacular and with real authority.
The actors do a fine job bringing their obnoxious, yet endearing characters to life. As the story progresses, they undergo transformations and one can't help but laugh at and empathize with their follies. I particularly enjoyed Charles Dutton, as Mayor Bradley and it was fun seeing Ronnie Cox as Police Chief Gates. But I found the whole cast amusing with memorable performances by: TK Carter, who plays victim-turned-opportunist, Rodney King; Snoop Dogg lends a likable narration and entertainment presence; Emilio Estevez, still has the best snicker in Hollywood as Officer Powell along with Christopher McDonald as Officer Kuhn. George Hamilton achieves comedic transcendence when he morphs from flaky underdog to ominous overcat. Other notable caricatures were achieved by the actors who portrayed; the lucky slime who filmed the infamous beating on video, the dejected-but-lovable Mexican, the hard-luck-but-good-attitude Korean couple, the impossibly narrow Aryan father and son, the naive-but-mindlessly-dangerous gangstas, the sensational TV news couple with their shameless gall and of course, a blood-sucking lawyer.
Good art asks questions but some art reveals answers and tells you where your feet are. So to writer/director Marc Klasfeld, thanks for the hard work and awesome job! Keep jabbing away. This film will find its audience and make people guffaw for years to come and maybe someday we will, "all get along." The L.A. Riot Spectacular Movi |
This is my first non blog video wich was meant 2 b a comedy. My little bro gets hungry. ENJOY!!! The story of a cheese |
The L.A. Riot Spectacular PART-1 Director:Marc Klasfeld
Writer:Marc Klasfeld (writer)
Release Date:18 November 2006 (Japan) more
Genre:Comedy
Plot:"The L.A. Riot Spectacular", an equal opportunity offender, is a surreal, funny, and provocative view of the participants and psychology that fueled the epochal 1992 events
Snoop Dogg ... The Narrator
T.K. Carter ... Rodney
Charles S. Dutton ... The Mayor (as Charles Dutton)
Emilio Estevez ... Officer Powell
George Hamilton ... The King of Beverly Hills
Charles Durning ... The Lawyer
Christopher McDonald ... Officer Koon
Jonathan Lipnicki ... Tom Saltine Jr.
Ted Levine ... Tom Saltine
William Forsythe ... George Holliday
Ronny Cox ... The Chief
Jude Ciccolella ... The Assistant Chief
Ron Jeremy . Arrestee
Attention celluloid connoisseurs, here's a movie that has that rare blend of outrageous comedy, biting satire, art with substance and spot-on social criticism. This film will have you chuckling and howling, thenthinkinga tad disturbed, but will inevitably leave you with more insight behind what fuels urban decadence. Spoofing the beating of Rodney King by the LAPD, this wickedly witty work exposes many of the root causes and perpetuation of these unfortunate, yet all-too-common incidents in society. Treating people like impersonal objects, distrust, misunderstanding, turf protection and crass commercialism all contribute to the frayed edges, short fuses and lethal disrespect of social intolerance. This movie doesn't just poke fun at racism, the media, political correctness and stereotyping, it throws stiff jabs and roundhouse kicks at the whole shithouseand damn, it's funny! It also has the courage to face head on, deep human issues with a twinkle in the eye and tongue-in-cheekeverybody's guilty, yet everybody's cool.
It's a short film, less than an hour-and-a-half, but generates more substance per minute than bloated mainstream blockbusters. It warrants repeated viewing. The production values are not lacking despite a modest film budget and the dialogue is rich in subtlety, revealing the writer's depth of understanding of what makes society tick and what makes society sick. I found this refreshing while viewing it and even more so afterwards. Most films that deal with race related issues tend to be unconvincing due to shallowness in either the writing, directing or acting, or all the above.
Though I've enjoyed the serious intent of films like "Dangerous Minds," "Boyz In the Hood," and "Blackboard Jungle," they never quite convinced me that they had a finger on the pulse of what goes down in the 'hood.' "The L.A. Riot Spectacular," from its comedic perspective, hits much closer to home. It's a hip flick that switches gears seamlessly between highbrow and homeboy in the proper vernacular and with real authority.
The actors do a fine job bringing their obnoxious, yet endearing characters to life. As the story progresses, they undergo transformations and one can't help but laugh at and empathize with their follies. I particularly enjoyed Charles Dutton, as Mayor Bradley and it was fun seeing Ronnie Cox as Police Chief Gates. But I found the whole cast amusing with memorable performances by: TK Carter, who plays victim-turned-opportunist, Rodney King; Snoop Dogg lends a likable narration and entertainment presence; Emilio Estevez, still has the best snicker in Hollywood as Officer Powell along with Christopher McDonald as Officer Kuhn. George Hamilton achieves comedic transcendence when he morphs from flaky underdog to ominous overcat. Other notable caricatures were achieved by the actors who portrayed; the lucky slime who filmed the infamous beating on video, the dejected-but-lovable Mexican, the hard-luck-but-good-attitude Korean couple, the impossibly narrow Aryan father and son, the naive-but-mindlessly-dangerous gangstas, the sensational TV news couple with their shameless gall and of course, a blood-sucking lawyer.
Good art asks questions but some art reveals answers and tells you where your feet are. So to writer/director Marc Klasfeld, thanks for the hard work and awesome job! Keep jabbing away. This film will find its audience and make people guffaw for years to come and maybe someday we will, "all get along." The L.A. Riot Spectacular Movi |
Director:Marc Klasfeld Writer:Marc Klasfeld (writer) Release Date:18 November 2006 (Japan) more Genre:Comedy Plot:"The L.A. Riot Spectacular", an equal opportunity offender, is a surreal, funny, and provocative view of the participants and psychology that fueled the epochal 1992 events Snoop Dogg ... The Narrator T.K. Carter ... Rodney Charles S. Dutton ... The Mayor (as Charles Dutton) Emilio Estevez ... Officer Powell George Hamilton ... The King of Beverly Hills Charles Durning ... The Lawyer Christopher McDonald ... Officer Koon Jonathan Lipnicki ... Tom Saltine Jr. Ted Levine ... Tom Saltine William Forsythe ... George Holliday Ronny Cox ... The Chief Jude Ciccolella ... The Assistant Chief Ron Jeremy . Arrestee Attention celluloid connoisseurs, here's a movie that has that rare blend of outrageous comedy, biting satire, art with substance and spot-on social criticism. This film will have you chuckling and howling, thenthinkinga tad disturbed, but will inevitably leave you with more insight behind what fuels urban decadence. Spoofing the beating of Rodney King by the LAPD, this wickedly witty work exposes many of the root causes and perpetuation of these unfortunate, yet all-too-common incidents in society. Treating people like impersonal objects, distrust, misunderstanding, turf protection and crass commercialism all contribute to the frayed edges, short fuses and lethal disrespect of social intolerance. This movie doesn't just poke fun at racism, the media, political correctness and stereotyping, it throws stiff jabs and roundhouse kicks at the whole shithouseand damn, it's funny! It also has the courage to face head on, deep human issues with a twinkle in the eye and tongue-in-cheekeverybody's guilty, yet everybody's cool. It's a short film, less than an hour-and-a-half, but generates more substance per minute than bloated mainstream blockbusters. It warrants repeated viewing. The production values are not lacking despite a modest film budget and the dialogue is rich in subtlety, revealing the writer's depth of understanding of what makes society tick and what makes society sick. I found this refreshing while viewing it and even more so afterwards. Most films that deal with race related issues tend to be unconvincing due to shallowness in either the writing, directing or acting, or all the above. Though I've enjoyed the serious intent of films like "Dangerous Minds," "Boyz In the Hood," and "Blackboard Jungle," they never quite convinced me that they had a finger on the pulse of what goes down in the 'hood.' "The L.A. Riot Spectacular," from its comedic perspective, hits much closer to home. It's a hip flick that switches gears seamlessly between highbrow and homeboy in the proper vernacular and with real authority. The actors do a fine job bringing their obnoxious, yet endearing characters to life. As the story progresses, they undergo transformations and one can't help but laugh at and empathize with their follies. I particularly enjoyed Charles Dutton, as Mayor Bradley and it was fun seeing Ronnie Cox as Police Chief Gates. But I found the whole cast amusing with memorable performances by: TK Carter, who plays victim-turned-opportunist, Rodney King; Snoop Dogg lends a likable narration and entertainment presence; Emilio Estevez, still has the best snicker in Hollywood as Officer Powell along with Christopher McDonald as Officer Kuhn. George Hamilton achieves comedic transcendence when he morphs from flaky underdog to ominous overcat. Other notable caricatures were achieved by the actors who portrayed; the lucky slime who filmed the infamous beating on video, the dejected-but-lovable Mexican, the hard-luck-but-good-attitude Korean couple, the impossibly narrow Aryan father and son, the naive-but-mindlessly-dangerous gangstas, the sensational TV news couple with their shameless gall and of course, a blood-sucking lawyer. Good art asks questions but some art reveals answers and tells you where your feet are. So to writer/director Marc Klasfeld, thanks for the hard work and awesome job! Keep jabbing away. This film will find its audience and make people guffaw for years to come and maybe someday we will, "all get along." The L.A. Riot Spectacular Movi |
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