No idea if someone already said this in the comments but making things super small to make it seem invisible or gone is a trick used in game dev. It makes it easier then actually making it deleted or invisible.
200 reasons why you should live 1. your family 2. your friends 3. the feeling you get when you’ve finished something 4. the feeling you get when you get a compliment 5. the feeling you get when you buy new clothes 6. the feeling you get when you try on new clothes 7. the feeling you get when youre room is tidy 8. the feeling you get when youre laughing hesterically. 9. the feeling you get when you make a new friend 10. the feeling you get when you make someone smile 11. you’d have to watch your family and friends grieve. 12. you’ve never been to that place you always wanted to visit. 13. you’ve never been to disney world. 14. you’ve never been skinny dipping. 15. you’ve never swam in a lake. 16. you’ve never met your idol. 17. you haven’t gotten married. 18. you’ve never decorated your own house. 19. you’ve never saved someone’s life. 20. you haven’t learnt to drive. 21. there is music you haven’t listen too. 22. you have so many more people to meet. 23. everyone who thought you’d do well in life, would have been wrong. 24. the people who said you’d end up no where, would have been right. 25. all the fake people would pretend to like u and post u on their stories. 26. you would have been the best mom or dad. 27. you haven’t lived the ‘my funeral will be packed’ type of life. 28. your friends would suffer. 29. your mum would never be able to walk into your room. 30. you haven’t apologised to people you have hurt. 31. someone loves you. 32. you are not alone. 33. i’m here for you. 34. the clothes you’re buried in might be gross. 35. you haven’t truly loved yourself yet. 36. suicide is a permanent solution to temporary problems. 37. you haven’t watched your kids open their christmas presents. 38. you haven’t watched your kids grow older. 39. the pain you feel right now, isn’t forever. 40. there are so many foods you haven’t tried. 41. you’ll never get the feeling of walking into a warm building on a cold day. 42. finding your person. 43. really soft pillows. 44. eating pizza with your kids and partner. 45. you’ve never danced in the rain. 46. you’ve never kissed someone in the rain. 47. there are so many hobbies you haven’t tried. 48. you’ll never have a sleepover with your best friend again. 49. your friends would blame themselves. 50. your mom's smile. 51. your best friend's laugh. 52. your sister would lose her best friend. 53. your cousins that look up to you. 54. hot chocolate on cold days. 55. ice water on hot days. 56. getting a tan. 57. hearing ‘i love you’. 58. not being able to sleep the night before and exciting day. 59. your birthday. 60. you’ve never been to a nightclub. 61. long hot showers. 62. long steamy baths. 63. freshly shaved legs. 64. perfectly smooth hair. 65. watching people trip over small objects. 66. you could have a huge impact on someone’s life. 67. you would regret dying. 68. you can’t change your mind once you're gone. 69. you wake up everyday for a reason. 70. stars. 71. you will always be enough. 72. movies that make you feel warm when they’re over. 73. reading powerful quotes. 74. genuine smiles. 75. the crunch of autumn leaves. 76. christmas. 77. christmas eve. 78. decorating the tree. 79. long meaningful hugs. 80. sunsets. 81. ice cream. 82. you never got that puppy. 83. you are so brave, it would be a waste to let the fire go. 84. rainbows. 85. travelling to new places. 86. funny stories. 87. funny jokes. 88. inside jokes. 89. coffee. 90. your talents would go to waste. 91. the feeling you get when you’re truly happy. 92. all nighters with friends. 93. cuddling. 94. reconnecting with old friends and family. 95. smiling. 96. capturing perfect moments on camera. 97. swimming on a hot day. 98. feeling cozy in blankets. 99. helping other people with the same thing you got help with. 100! becoming successful. 101. cute babies. 102. cute old people. 103. love stories that make you jealous. 104. telling crazy stories. 105. watching lightning. 106. watching rain. 107. star gazing. 108. recovery. 109. melted chocolate. 110. freshly baked cookies. 111. late night adventures. 112. overcoming fears. 113. sunday mornings. 114. friday mornings. 115. you’ll be dead, forever. 116. you will make a difference to people. 117. picnics with friends. 118. waking up late. 119. waking up late and ending up being on time. 120. to prove them wrong. 121. to prove them you can. 122. to prove you're strong. 123. to love and be loved. 124. the ocean. 125. pets. 126. very loud music. 127. days out. 128. finishing a book. 129. conversations that just flow. 130. learning new things. 131. you are important. 132. you are wanted. 133. mistakes. 134. snow. 135. sun. 136. flowers. 137. flowers that look gorgeous but smell gross. 138. new bed sheets. 139. new home decor. 140. roller coasters. 141. theme parks. 142. smiling at strangers. 143. random acts of kindness. 144. the sound of water. 145. visiting a place from your childhood. 146. to look back on all the things you got yourself through on your own. 147. to feel proud. 148. reassurance. 149. cute nicknames. 150. long stares that make you feel loved. 151. meaningful gifts. 152. blowing out candles. 153. meeting online friends in real life. 154. success. 155. to work the job you always wanted. 156. the live the life you dreamt of. 157. babies smiling. 158. sleep. 159. tea. 160. breaking rules. 161. dreams. 162. the last day of school/work. 163. taking pictures. 164. brownies. 165. bubbles. 166. water slides. 167. holidays. 168. to fall asleep on someone. 169. to feel protected. 170. to grow taller. 171. to grow stronger. 172. to grow old. 173. to make memories you’ll cherish. 174. to laugh at old pictures. 175. to be loved by a pet. 176. the first signs of summer. 177. the first signs of autumn. 178. the first signs of winter. 179. the first signs of spring. 180. to binge watch a series. 181. to live independently. 182. to get somewhere in life all by yourself. 183. to not have broken any promises. 184. to fulfill your promises. 185. to breathe. 186. so you can tell your children stories of when you was there age. 187. so say you’re alive. 188. to know you’re stronger than you think. 189. falling in love. 190. you’ve never snuck out. 191. you’ve never not smashed your phone. 192. you’ve never stayed out all night. 193. you are a kind soul. 194. you have a warm heart. 195. you care for others. 196. the smell of pancakes. 197. when you walk over frosty grass. 198. you haven't truly apologized to all the people you've hurt 199. i love you. 200! to say you made it.
watching this makes me realize even more how much u and other youtubers & influencers go through and don’t let their fans know for them not to worry. ur the most genuine person Albert . i wish u and ur family the best always!! loved this video hands down one of my favs! thanks for being so vulnerable with us.
Hey Albert, Ive got and admin idea for you, trap an online couple in a room where they cannot get out, and they have to decide which one gets tortured and which one survives, the person getting tortured is getting their limbs ripped off one by one, the person who survives has to watch their online boy/girl friend get tortured.
Video Idea: Make a game kind of like portal or tunneler. Get a bunch of admin commands to use then advertise the game. Go wild with the commands in the players.
IDEA: Get admin in a popular game and annoying everyone then make a fake apology, and later keep annoying them until they quit :) I’m your fan from 2-3 years ago and I mostly like ur admin vids❤️❤️
POV: you said you were a fan for 2-3 years but u joined 10 months ago also for the 🤓s that say you dont need a account to watch vids if you were a fan wouldnt you be subbed
@Uploads Hay Fever was a comical play with a strong message. The actors throughout this play steadily used others to gain their own attention. The message this play left behind after many laughs was do not use others, plain and simple. The space was a well-constructed thrust stage however, the stage was not raised off the ground and the seats appeared to be mobile which lead to the belief that this is an Environmental Theater. As for the layout of the stage, there was a couch and a table in center stage for the first two acts, a door to the unseen outside front of the house upstage right, there were two large double doors upstage center leading to the backyard garden, and a raised floor upstage left containing a piano, a bookcase and a door leading to the home library. Stage left there was a half spiral staircase that lead up to the second floor which had a painting and lights that extended across to stage right. The second floor also contained the bedrooms for the house but the doors were not in sight. The detail was greater than expected: the hardwood floor throughout the first floor seemed to be genuine, the actual bookcase filled with real books not stage books, and the extremely large double doors with translucent glass and floral designs lead to the Garden, which featured an array of plants behind the doors. The entire space was well lit for the duration of the play; the stage took place inside the Bliss’ home so the bright lighting added a confortable feel to the inside of the house. The theatre was nearly sold out; it was hard to spot an empty seat, including the balcony and lower level seating. The crowd contained nearly an even amount of student audience members and senior citizens; there was few in the audience that appeared middle aged. rowd was laughing through the entire scene. It appeared that Wrentmore instructed the actors, to keep their pauses longer than natural to heighten the awkward tension in the scene, which made it brilliant. The blocking throughout the play worked with the floor plan very well. All of the blocking worked seamlessly; the actors were never out of sight or in awkward positioning (ex. turned around, talking to someone behind them while face forward, etc.) even during the second act in the first scene while all eight actors were on set. One part of the set that stood out was the staircase, it is obviously very large, but the way Owen Virgin followed Megan Davis up the stairs was seamless. They both walked up the stairs with footsteps I unison, and Owen Virgin was so focused on every detail of Davis, it almost screamed out how much he was infatuated with her. The artistic intent of this production was to entertain, and it fulfilled that intent completely. The entire audience was laughing during most of the production, I was even laughing out loud, which doesn’t happen very often. Every interaction between the characters was comical at one point during the production. An example of this playing out would be in the second act when Rascher busts through the door and proclaims his engagement. The only purpose of this is to entertain and entertain it did. The actors seemed natural moving along with their blocking and engaging with each other on stage. There was no point at which it was confusing why someone moved here or there, every movement made sense. emoller’s character, Jackie Coryton. Rascher made his voice more shrill and audible to appear to be more dramatic and create more attention for himself. In the same way, Rascher used grander gestures with his arms (flailing, waving, etc.) to cause a more dramatic effect. The play was well interpreted by all whom were involved. Steven Wrentmore, the Director, kept the 1920’s feel by dressing in all 1920’s costumes and everyone spoke as if they were living at the time. Michelle Bisbee, the scene designer, made the inside of the home appear 1920’s because everything was grand. The Bliss’ home was grand with the spiral staircase, the very large backdoors, and the eloquent piano. The actors’ mannerisms seemed like they were portraying a silent film. In older movies, actors seemed very dramatic and had flamboyant actions to prove so; the actors in Hay Fever shared the same feel for the dramatics. As far as Stephen Wrentmore’s directing goes, he did an excellent job. The scene when Chris Karl (Richard) and Caitlin Stegemoller (Jackie) enter and are left alone to make small talk with each other is the best pertaining to directing. The two actors used the entire stage in this scene and were very awkward with one another. This was Wrentmore’s doing because you could tell he had a vision for this scene in particular because it seemed very crisp and well rehearsed. The actors played it perfect with the excessively long pauses in their awkward small talk that the crowd was laughing through the entire scene. It appeared that Wrentmore instructed the actors, to keep their pauses longer than natural to heighten the awkward tension in the scene, which made it brilliant. emoller’s character, Jackie Coryton. Rascher made his voice more shrill and audible to appear to be more dramatic and create more attention for himself. In the same way, Rascher used grander gestures with his arms (flailing, waving, etc.) to cause a more dramatic effect. The play was well interpreted by all whom were involved. Steven Wrentmore, the Director, kept the 1920’s feel by dressing in all 1920’s costumes and everyone spoke as if they were living at the time. Michelle Bisbee, the scene designer, made the inside of the home appear 1920’s because everything was grand. The Bliss’ home was grand with the spiral staircase, the very large backdoors, and the eloquent piano. The aery large backdoors, and the eloquent piano. The actors’ mannerisms seemed like they were portraying a silent film. In older movies, actors seemed very dramatic and had flamboyant actions to prove so; the actors in Hay Fever shared the same feel for the dramatics. As far as Stephen Wrentmore’s directing goes, he did an excellent job. The scene when Chris Karl (Richard) and Caitlin Stegemoller (Jackie) enter and are left alone to make small talk with each other is the best pertaining to directing. The two actors used the entire stage in this scene and were very awkward with one another. This was Wrentmore’s doing because you could tell he had a vision for this scene in particular because it seemed very crisp and well rehearsed. The actors played it perfect with the excessively long pauses in their awkward small talk that the crowd was laughing through the entire scene. It appeared that Wrentmore instructed the actors, to keep their pauses longer than natural to heighten the awkward tension in the scene, which made it brilliant. emoller’s character, Jackie Coryton. Rascher made his voice more shrill and audible to appear to be more dramatic and create more attention for himself. In the same way, Rascher used grander gestures with his arms (flailing, waving, etc.) to cause a more dramatic effect. The play was well interpreted by all whom were involved. Steven Wrentmore, the Director, kept the 1920’s feel by dressing in all 1920’s costumes and everyone spoke as if they were living at the time. Michelle Bisbee, the scene designer, made the inside of the home appear 1920’s because everything was grand. The Bliss’ home was grand with the spiral staircase, the very large backdoors, and the eloquent piano. The actors’ mannerisms seemed like they were portraying a silent film. In older movies, actors seemed very dramatic and had flamboyant actions to prove so; the actors in Hay Fever shared the same feel for the dramatics. As far as Stephen Wrentmore’s directing goes, he did an excellent job. The scene when Chris Karl (Richard) and Caitlin Stegemoller (Jackie) enter and are left alone to make small talk with each other is the best pertaining to directing. The two actors used the entire stage in this scene and were very awkward with one another. This was Wrentmore’s doing because you could tell he had a vision for this scene in particular because it seemed very crisp and well rehearsed. The actors played it perfect with the excessively long pauses in their awkward small talk that the crowd was laughing through the entire scene. It appeared that Wrentmore instructed the actors, to keep their pauses longer than natural to heighten the awkward tension in the scene, which made it brilliant. emoller’s character, Jackie Coryton. Rascher made his voice more shrill and audible to appear to be more dramatic and create more attention for himself. In the same way, Rascher used grander gestures with his arms (flailing, waving, etc.) to cause a more dramatic effect. The play was well interpreted by all whom were involved. Steven Wrentmore, the Director, kept the 1920’s feel by dressing in all 1920’s costumes and everyone spoke as if they were living at the time. Michelle Bisbee, the scene designer, made the inside of the home appear 1920’s because everything was grand. The Bliss’ home was grand with the spiral staircase, the very large backdoors, and the eloquent piano. The actors’ mannerisms seemed like they were portraying a silent film. In older movies, actors seemed very dramatic and had flamboyant actions to prove so; the acto
@@testtestrestrest I have a rtx geoforce graphics card with an oculus and gaming headphones a mic and my vr is linked to my account I’m much cooler than you little boy I have a steam deck Nintendo switch iPhone 13 pro max 4k tv this just proves how cooler I am then you
ISHOWHEADLESS, this stream changed my life. My entire view of everything that exists in this world, in fact, even in the entire universe. I can never look at anything I know the same way again. This stream represents emotions that most humans could never understand. But I can. Thanks to this stream was awakened to many things previously considered unimaginable. Thank you for this exquisite stream, I will never forget this experience
my friend and her brother spend like 300 dollars a month on roblox. she has korblox, and was about to buy headless horseman right before it went away. she also has i think premium and im so jealous of her-
The avatar Albert has created was quite expensive and exquisite! The tongue really did really say “kawaii cute tongue” would definitely buy this product with the long lushes eyelash or per say “period uh period ah” eyelashes. The silk pink fabric was a great fit on the body figure with “slayed queen”! Don’t even get me started on the hair! Loved how it covered the brainless and headless and the bangs was chefs kids! Jeff the killer face was MWAH 💋! I bought this product worth buying 10/10! Whoever says the outfit is disgusting was raised wrong and you need to have you're “freedom of speech taken away”! Overall loved the video and creativeness and the money spent in this video! 200000000000000000/10!!!! 💗
Bruh faked the reason he commented on the wrong video is because it's a bot that copies popular comments from the other video and posts it another video for likes.
Early :) I love your videos, flamingo! You have helped me throughout my years where I have felt miserable and depressed. I deeply appreciate you taking time out of your day to post these amazing videos. ILY, and stay safe
OH MY GODDDDDD I CAN'T BELEIVE YOU GOT THE ' NEW ' HEADLESSS!!!!!!!!!! OHHH MYYY GODDD IM CLENCHING MY TOES RIGHT NOW IM CRYING YOU GOT HEADLESSSSSSSSSSS!@!!~!!~!@~!@111`2`12`12`!!!111!!!!
Hay Fever was a comical play with a strong message. The actors throughout this play steadily used others to gain their own attention. The message this play left behind after many laughs was do not use others, plain and simple. The space was a well-constructed thrust stage however, the stage was not raised off the ground and the seats appeared to be mobile which lead to the belief that this is an Environmental Theater. As for the layout of the stage, there was a couch and a table in center stage for the first two acts, a door to the unseen outside front of the house upstage right, there were two large double doors upstage center leading to the backyard garden, and a raised floor upstage left containing a piano, a bookcase and a door leading to the home library. Stage left there was a half spiral staircase that lead up to the second floor which had a painting and lights that extended across to stage right. The second floor also contained the bedrooms for the house but the doors were not in sight. The detail was greater than expected: the hardwood floor throughout the first floor seemed to be genuine, the actual bookcase filled with real books not stage books, and the extremely large double doors with translucent glass and floral designs lead to the Garden, which featured an array of plants behind the doors. The entire space was well lit for the duration of the play; the stage took place inside the Bliss’ home so the bright lighting added a confortable feel to the inside of the house. The theatre was nearly sold out; it was hard to spot an empty seat, including the balcony and lower level seating. The crowd contained nearly an even amount of student audience members and senior citizens; there was few in the audience that appeared middle aged. rowd was laughing through the entire scene. It appeared that Wrentmore instructed the actors, to keep their pauses longer than natural to heighten the awkward tension in the scene, which made it brilliant. The blocking throughout the play worked with the floor plan very well. All of the blocking worked seamlessly; the actors were never out of sight or in awkward positioning (ex. turned around, talking to someone behind them while face forward, etc.) even during the second act in the first scene while all eight actors were on set. One part of the set that stood out was the staircase, it is obviously very large, but the way Owen Virgin followed Megan Davis up the stairs was seamless. They both walked up the stairs with footsteps I unison, and Owen Virgin was so focused on every detail of Davis, it almost screamed out how much he was infatuated with her. The artistic intent of this production was to entertain, and it fulfilled that intent completely. The entire audience was laughing during most of the production, I was even laughing out loud, which doesn’t happen very often. Every interaction between the characters was comical at one point during the production. An example of this playing out would be in the second act when Rascher busts through the door and proclaims his engagement. The only purpose of this is to entertain and entertain it did. The actors seemed natural moving along with their blocking and engaging with each other on stage. There was no point at which it was confusing why someone moved here or there, every movement made sense. emoller’s character, Jackie Coryton. Rascher made his voice more shrill and audible to appear to be more dramatic and create more attention for himself. In the same way, Rascher used grander gestures with his arms (flailing, waving, etc.) to cause a more dramatic effect. The play was well interpreted by all whom were involved. Steven Wrentmore, the Director, kept the 1920’s feel by dressing in all 1920’s costumes and everyone spoke as if they were living at the time. Michelle Bisbee, the scene designer, made the inside of the home appear 1920’s because everything was grand. The Bliss’ home was grand with the spiral staircase, the very large backdoors, and the eloquent piano. The actors’ mannerisms seemed like they were portraying a silent film. In older movies, actors seemed very dramatic and had flamboyant actions to prove so; the actors in Hay Fever shared the same feel for the dramatics. As far as Stephen Wrentmore’s directing goes, he did an excellent job. The scene when Chris Karl (Richard) and Caitlin Stegemoller (Jackie) enter and are left alone to make small talk with each other is the best pertaining to directing. The two actors used the entire stage in this scene and were very awkward with one another. This was Wrentmore’s doing because you could tell he had a vision for this scene in particular because it seemed very crisp and well rehearsed. The actors played it perfect with the excessively long pauses in their awkward small talk that the crowd was laughing through the entire scene. It appeared that Wrentmore instructed the actors, to keep their pauses longer than natural to heighten the awkward tension in the scene, which made it brilliant. emoller’s character, Jackie Coryton. Rascher made his voice more shrill and audible to appear to be more dramatic and create more attention for himself. In the same way, Rascher used grander gestures with his arms (flailing, waving, etc.) to cause a more dramatic effect. The play was well interpreted by all whom were involved. Steven Wrentmore, the Director, kept the 1920’s feel by dressing in all 1920’s costumes and everyone spoke as if they were living at the time. Michelle Bisbee, the scene designer, made the inside of the home appear 1920’s because everything was grand. The Bliss’ home was grand with the spiral staircase, the very large backdoors, and the eloquent piano. The aery large backdoors, and the eloquent piano. The actors’ mannerisms seemed like they were portraying a silent film. In older movies, actors seemed very dramatic and had flamboyant actions to prove so; the actors in Hay Fever shared the same feel for the dramatics. As far as Stephen Wrentmore’s directing goes, he did an excellent job. The scene when Chris Karl (Richard) and Caitlin Stegemoller (Jackie) enter and are left alone to make small talk with each other is the best pertaining to directing. The two actors used the entire stage in this scene and were very awkward with one another. This was Wrentmore’s doing because you could tell he had a vision for this scene in particular because it seemed very crisp and well rehearsed. The actors played it perfect with the excessively long pauses in their awkward small talk that the crowd was laughing through the entire scene. It appeared that Wrentmore instructed the actors, to keep their pauses longer than natural to heighten the awkward tension in the scene, which made it brilliant. emoller’s character, Jackie Coryton. Rascher made his voice more shrill and audible to appear to be more dramatic and create more attention for himself. In the same way, Rascher used grander gestures with his arms (flailing, waving, etc.) to cause a more dramatic effect. The play was well interpreted by all whom were involved. Steven Wrentmore, the Director, kept the 1920’s feel by dressing in all 1920’s costumes and everyone spoke as if they were living at the time. Michelle Bisbee, the scene designer, made the inside of the home appear 1920’s because everything was grand. The Bliss’ home was grand with the spiral staircase, the very large backdoors, and the eloquent piano. The actors’ mannerisms seemed like they were portraying a silent film. In older movies, actors seemed very dramatic and had flamboyant actions to prove so; the actors in Hay Fever shared the same feel for the dramatics. As far as Stephen Wrentmore’s directing goes, he did an excellent job. The scene when Chris Karl (Richard) and Caitlin Stegemoller (Jackie) enter and are left alone to make small talk with each other is the best pertaining to directing. The two actors used the entire stage in this scene and were very awkward with one another. This was Wrentmore’s doing because you could tell he had a vision for this scene in particular because it seemed very crisp and well rehearsed. The actors played it perfect with the excessively long pauses in their awkward small talk that the crowd was laughing through the entire scene. It appeared that Wrentmore instructed the actors, to keep their pauses longer than natural to heighten the awkward tension in the scene, which made it brilliant. emoller’s character, Jackie Coryton. Rascher made his voice more shrill and audible to appear to be more dramatic and create more attention for himself. In the same way, Rascher used grander gestures with his arms (flailing, waving, etc.) to cause a more dramatic effect. The play was well interpreted by all whom were involved. Steven Wrentmore, the Director, kept the 1920’s feel by dressing in all 1920’s costumes and everyone spoke as if they were living at the time. Michelle Bisbee, the scene designer, made the inside of the home appear 1920’s because everything was grand. The Bliss’ home was grand with the spiral staircase, the very large backdoors, and the eloquent piano. The actors’ mannerisms seemed like they were portraying a silent film. In older movies, actors seemed very dramatic and had flamboyant actions to prove so; the acto
he’s pretty upfront about doing this for money, although he loves his fans too im sure that understandably he wouldn’t be posting if he wasn’t getting paid 💀
Idea: Make a therapy store and ask people what their fears are and make them become real (Original from @I like turtles, just spreading the word bc I like the idea
2:30 btw the owner of the game has a tiktok account and a youtube accound and she just made a video saying you are jealous of her but your fanbase is bigger than her brain and got hated on.
Albert is literally the definition of a Florida man.
lol
Stop insulting him
i mean. he is a man who lives in florida
@Christofer Pezet 💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀 💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀
@Î Âm ÇhŕìśBB ×63 slay
No idea if someone already said this in the comments but making things super small to make it seem invisible or gone is a trick used in game dev. It makes it easier then actually making it deleted or invisible.
how though
@@RealDreadmania idk maybe the fact that if you dont have a head on roblox you die, but i could be wrong
true but you can also set it to transparancy 1 when you finish tween
Yup, 1st one to comment stuff like that
Yeah, with the tiny heads too
the actual best headless outfit i've ever seen
Ooga booga
I've seen one where they made their "head" more disturbing and a bit Gory it was rlly cool
bro go away, who even makes rblx edits anymore-
@@ItsStarberryy Get off her dick wdf
@@ItsStarberryy a lot of people,
200 reasons why you should live
1. your family
2. your friends
3. the feeling you get when you’ve finished something
4. the feeling you get when you get a compliment
5. the feeling you get when you buy new clothes
6. the feeling you get when you try on new clothes
7. the feeling you get when youre room is tidy
8. the feeling you get when youre laughing hesterically.
9. the feeling you get when you make a new friend
10. the feeling you get when you make someone smile
11. you’d have to watch your family and friends grieve.
12. you’ve never been to that place you always wanted to visit.
13. you’ve never been to disney world.
14. you’ve never been skinny dipping.
15. you’ve never swam in a lake.
16. you’ve never met your idol.
17. you haven’t gotten married.
18. you’ve never decorated your own house.
19. you’ve never saved someone’s life.
20. you haven’t learnt to drive.
21. there is music you haven’t listen too.
22. you have so many more people to meet.
23. everyone who thought you’d do well in life, would have been wrong.
24. the people who said you’d end up no where, would have been right.
25. all the fake people would pretend to like u and post u on their stories.
26. you would have been the best mom or dad.
27. you haven’t lived the ‘my funeral will be packed’ type of life.
28. your friends would suffer.
29. your mum would never be able to walk into your room.
30. you haven’t apologised to people you have hurt.
31. someone loves you.
32. you are not alone.
33. i’m here for you.
34. the clothes you’re buried in might be gross.
35. you haven’t truly loved yourself yet.
36. suicide is a permanent solution to temporary problems.
37. you haven’t watched your kids open their christmas presents.
38. you haven’t watched your kids grow older.
39. the pain you feel right now, isn’t forever.
40. there are so many foods you haven’t tried.
41. you’ll never get the feeling of walking into a warm building on a cold day.
42. finding your person.
43. really soft pillows.
44. eating pizza with your kids and partner.
45. you’ve never danced in the rain.
46. you’ve never kissed someone in the rain.
47. there are so many hobbies you haven’t tried.
48. you’ll never have a sleepover with your best friend again.
49. your friends would blame themselves.
50. your mom's smile.
51. your best friend's laugh.
52. your sister would lose her best friend.
53. your cousins that look up to you.
54. hot chocolate on cold days.
55. ice water on hot days.
56. getting a tan.
57. hearing ‘i love you’.
58. not being able to sleep the night before and exciting day.
59. your birthday.
60. you’ve never been to a nightclub.
61. long hot showers.
62. long steamy baths.
63. freshly shaved legs.
64. perfectly smooth hair.
65. watching people trip over small objects.
66. you could have a huge impact on someone’s life.
67. you would regret dying.
68. you can’t change your mind once you're gone.
69. you wake up everyday for a reason.
70. stars.
71. you will always be enough.
72. movies that make you feel warm when they’re over.
73. reading powerful quotes.
74. genuine smiles.
75. the crunch of autumn leaves.
76. christmas.
77. christmas eve.
78. decorating the tree.
79. long meaningful hugs.
80. sunsets.
81. ice cream.
82. you never got that puppy.
83. you are so brave, it would be a waste to let the fire go.
84. rainbows.
85. travelling to new places.
86. funny stories.
87. funny jokes.
88. inside jokes.
89. coffee.
90. your talents would go to waste.
91. the feeling you get when you’re truly happy.
92. all nighters with friends.
93. cuddling.
94. reconnecting with old friends and family.
95. smiling.
96. capturing perfect moments on camera.
97. swimming on a hot day.
98. feeling cozy in blankets.
99. helping other people with the same thing you got help with.
100! becoming successful.
101. cute babies.
102. cute old people.
103. love stories that make you jealous.
104. telling crazy stories.
105. watching lightning.
106. watching rain.
107. star gazing.
108. recovery.
109. melted chocolate.
110. freshly baked cookies.
111. late night adventures.
112. overcoming fears.
113. sunday mornings.
114. friday mornings.
115. you’ll be dead, forever.
116. you will make a difference to people.
117. picnics with friends.
118. waking up late.
119. waking up late and ending up being on time.
120. to prove them wrong.
121. to prove them you can.
122. to prove you're strong.
123. to love and be loved.
124. the ocean.
125. pets.
126. very loud music.
127. days out.
128. finishing a book.
129. conversations that just flow.
130. learning new things.
131. you are important.
132. you are wanted.
133. mistakes.
134. snow.
135. sun.
136. flowers.
137. flowers that look gorgeous but smell gross.
138. new bed sheets.
139. new home decor.
140. roller coasters.
141. theme parks.
142. smiling at strangers.
143. random acts of kindness.
144. the sound of water.
145. visiting a place from your childhood.
146. to look back on all the things you got yourself through on your own.
147. to feel proud.
148. reassurance.
149. cute nicknames.
150. long stares that make you feel loved.
151. meaningful gifts.
152. blowing out candles.
153. meeting online friends in real life.
154. success.
155. to work the job you always wanted.
156. the live the life you dreamt of.
157. babies smiling.
158. sleep.
159. tea.
160. breaking rules.
161. dreams.
162. the last day of school/work.
163. taking pictures.
164. brownies.
165. bubbles.
166. water slides.
167. holidays.
168. to fall asleep on someone.
169. to feel protected.
170. to grow taller.
171. to grow stronger.
172. to grow old.
173. to make memories you’ll cherish.
174. to laugh at old pictures.
175. to be loved by a pet.
176. the first signs of summer.
177. the first signs of autumn.
178. the first signs of winter.
179. the first signs of spring.
180. to binge watch a series.
181. to live independently.
182. to get somewhere in life all by yourself.
183. to not have broken any promises.
184. to fulfill your promises.
185. to breathe.
186. so you can tell your children stories of when you was there age.
187. so say you’re alive.
188. to know you’re stronger than you think.
189. falling in love.
190. you’ve never snuck out.
191. you’ve never not smashed your phone.
192. you’ve never stayed out all night.
193. you are a kind soul.
194. you have a warm heart.
195. you care for others.
196. the smell of pancakes.
197. when you walk over frosty grass.
198. you haven't truly apologized to all the people you've hurt
199. i love you.
200! to say you made it.
Whole ESSAY
Wow! Your teacher must be proud
201. Your an amazing person
202. Free headless
I skipped all of this to see how many they were
watching this makes me realize even more how much u and other youtubers & influencers go through and don’t let their fans know for them not to worry. ur the most genuine person Albert . i wish u and ur family the best always!! loved this video hands down one of my favs! thanks for being so vulnerable with us.
what is this even about
@@scaramouchesbf it's a bot obviously
Maybe not all of his family
@@scaramouchesbf the kidnap thing lol, the whole comment is a joke obv
Hey Albert, Ive got and admin idea for you, trap an online couple in a room where they cannot get out, and they have to decide which one gets tortured and which one survives, the person getting tortured is getting their limbs ripped off one by one, the person who survives has to watch their online boy/girl friend get tortured.
This is a super good idea
these comments without context>>
he doesn't really do admin videos anymore
@Jack Wrath ...
You're late😶👍
Remember kids, just because you don't like how someone looks, doesn't mean you need to chase them with a gun. That's the lesson for today.
but my plans :(
no. you should chase them with 2 guns instead.
That was a little to late since Albert killed many with a gun
Thank you, Teacher ! 😍
@william K🇬🇧 NO-
(6:11)
The fact that he blurred it is just amazing-
when I clicked I got an ad and it's all your fault
Congrats on 11 mil. Albert. You do deserve it!
ure kinda latw lmfao
Bro you are very late
Let’s see how many subscribers I can gain from this comment
@@amberalwood2076 u should go to jail
@@amberalwood2076 go cry to your mom 🤡🤡
Imagine not wanting to spend 300 dollars on a virtual character
Ikr
actually CRAZY PEOPLE cant relate
Underrated comment
But fr like loser 😒😒😒
*LMAO XD🤣🤣🤣🤣😂😂😂*
imagine not wanting to spend over 300 dollars on losing and item and your brain
Cheers to the police officer who’s first reaction to seeing Albert is to pull out his firearm. That’s golden
The perfect word to describe the average Roblox user. "Headless".
5:02 Albert: goes to some kid with the most terrifying paralysis demon you'll ever see
The kid instantly: Nah man i gotta put you down
Albert is slowing going insane.. we are all loving it.
Yo thanks for the likes. Lol I fr just copy and pasted this comment but changed a few words.
No the comments are
Both are
Yes😞
Brother?
khanborgini
3:50 the little noise the creature makes LOL
HuMmM?🤨
mmm?
hMm?
Video Idea: Make a game kind of like portal or tunneler. Get a bunch of admin commands to use then advertise the game. Go wild with the commands in the players.
3:33 “see thats not right”
*literally one second later*
*buys*
2:01 Albert use the same picture as my science today what the chance lol
IDEA: Get admin in a popular game and annoying everyone then make a fake apology, and later keep annoying them until they quit :) I’m your fan from 2-3 years ago and I mostly like ur admin vids❤️❤️
POV: you said you were a fan for 2-3 years but u joined 10 months ago
also for the 🤓s that say you dont need a account to watch vids if you were a fan wouldnt you be subbed
@@kaifyuu alt accounts:
@@kaifyuu I forgot my other accs pass but yeah I have been a fan for a long time
*Bot are jealous because flamingo content is better👌😂*
1:15 This is the funniest thing I've ever seen
We will always love him even if he calls us losers ☺️
No they not
No
He is a loser himself
Grandparents
@Christofer Pezet your vids are bwad
I appreciate his content because he advertises small games that do not have many players and it really helps those people out
Now I'm tempted to see what masterpieces one can make with their avatar.
You're a weird influence Flamingo, but that's what I like about ya.
Kangaroo
@@AnbuRushin
*_Sub 2 Technoblade_*
@@teentraveler1790 im not subscribing to a pig
5:03 can we all just say how HE MAKES MY DYING ON THE FLOOR LAUGHING 24/7 LIKE I LOVE HIS VIDSS XD
1:51 *wheeezee* THE HEAD 🤣😂😂😂😂
14 MINS AGO, ALBERT YOU ARE MY FAVORITE UA-camR EVER. YOU ARE ONE OF THE FUNNIEST PEOPLE I HAVE EVER SEEN
@Uploads ok but who the fuck asked
@Uploads Hay Fever was a comical play with a strong message. The actors throughout this play steadily used others to gain their own attention. The message this play left behind after many laughs was do not use others, plain and simple.
The space was a well-constructed thrust stage however, the stage was not raised off the ground and the seats appeared to be mobile which lead to the belief that this is an Environmental Theater. As for the layout of the stage, there was a couch and a table in center stage for the first two acts, a door to the unseen outside front of the house upstage right, there were two large double doors upstage center leading to the backyard garden, and a raised floor upstage left containing a piano, a bookcase and a door leading to the home library. Stage left there was a half spiral staircase that lead up to the second floor which had a painting and lights that extended across to stage right. The second floor also contained the bedrooms for the house but the doors were not in sight. The detail was greater than expected: the hardwood floor throughout the first floor seemed to be genuine, the actual bookcase filled with real books not stage books, and the extremely large double doors with translucent glass and floral designs lead to the Garden, which featured an array of plants behind the doors. The entire space was well lit for the duration of the play; the stage took place inside the Bliss’ home so the bright lighting added a confortable feel to the inside of the house. The theatre was nearly sold out; it was hard to spot an empty seat, including the balcony and lower level seating. The crowd contained nearly an even amount of student audience members and senior citizens; there was few in the audience that appeared middle aged.
rowd was laughing through the entire scene. It appeared that Wrentmore instructed the actors, to keep their pauses longer than natural to heighten the awkward tension in the scene, which made it brilliant.
The blocking throughout the play worked with the floor plan very well. All of the blocking worked seamlessly; the actors were never out of sight or in awkward positioning (ex. turned around, talking to someone behind them while face forward, etc.) even during the second act in the first scene while all eight actors were on set. One part of the set that stood out was the staircase, it is obviously very large, but the way Owen Virgin followed Megan Davis up the stairs was seamless. They both walked up the stairs with footsteps I unison, and Owen Virgin was so focused on every detail of Davis, it almost screamed out how much he was infatuated with her.
The artistic intent of this production was to entertain, and it fulfilled that intent completely. The entire audience was laughing during most of the production, I was even laughing out loud, which doesn’t happen very often. Every interaction between the characters was comical at one point during the production. An example of this playing out would be in the second act when Rascher busts through the door and proclaims his engagement. The only purpose of this is to entertain and entertain it did. The actors seemed natural moving along with their blocking and engaging with each other on stage. There was no point at which it was confusing why someone moved here or there, every movement made sense.
emoller’s character, Jackie Coryton. Rascher made his voice more shrill and audible to appear to be more dramatic and create more attention for himself. In the same way, Rascher used grander gestures with his arms (flailing, waving, etc.) to cause a more dramatic effect.
The play was well interpreted by all whom were involved. Steven Wrentmore, the Director, kept the 1920’s feel by dressing in all 1920’s costumes and everyone spoke as if they were living at the time. Michelle Bisbee, the scene designer, made the inside of the home appear 1920’s because everything was grand. The Bliss’ home was grand with the spiral staircase, the very large backdoors, and the eloquent piano. The actors’ mannerisms seemed like they were portraying a silent film. In older movies, actors seemed very dramatic and had flamboyant actions to prove so; the actors in Hay Fever shared the same feel for the dramatics. As far as Stephen Wrentmore’s directing goes, he did an excellent job. The scene when Chris Karl (Richard) and Caitlin Stegemoller (Jackie) enter and are left alone to make small talk with each other is the best pertaining to directing. The two actors used the entire stage in this scene and were very awkward with one another. This was Wrentmore’s doing because you could tell he had a vision for this scene in particular because it seemed very crisp and well rehearsed. The actors played it perfect with the excessively long pauses in their awkward small talk that the crowd was laughing through the entire scene. It appeared that Wrentmore instructed the actors, to keep their pauses longer than natural to heighten the awkward tension in the scene, which made it brilliant.
emoller’s character, Jackie Coryton. Rascher made his voice more shrill and audible to appear to be more dramatic and create more attention for himself. In the same way, Rascher used grander gestures with his arms (flailing, waving, etc.) to cause a more dramatic effect.
The play was well interpreted by all whom were involved. Steven Wrentmore, the Director, kept the 1920’s feel by dressing in all 1920’s costumes and everyone spoke as if they were living at the time. Michelle Bisbee, the scene designer, made the inside of the home appear 1920’s because everything was grand. The Bliss’ home was grand with the spiral staircase, the very large backdoors, and the eloquent piano. The aery large backdoors, and the eloquent piano. The actors’ mannerisms seemed like they were portraying a silent film. In older movies, actors seemed very dramatic and had flamboyant actions to prove so; the actors in Hay Fever shared the same feel for the dramatics. As far as Stephen Wrentmore’s directing goes, he did an excellent job. The scene when Chris Karl (Richard) and Caitlin Stegemoller (Jackie) enter and are left alone to make small talk with each other is the best pertaining to directing. The two actors used the entire stage in this scene and were very awkward with one another. This was Wrentmore’s doing because you could tell he had a vision for this scene in particular because it seemed very crisp and well rehearsed. The actors played it perfect with the excessively long pauses in their awkward small talk that the crowd was laughing through the entire scene. It appeared that Wrentmore instructed the actors, to keep their pauses longer than natural to heighten the awkward tension in the scene, which made it brilliant.
emoller’s character, Jackie Coryton. Rascher made his voice more shrill and audible to appear to be more dramatic and create more attention for himself. In the same way, Rascher used grander gestures with his arms (flailing, waving, etc.) to cause a more dramatic effect.
The play was well interpreted by all whom were involved. Steven Wrentmore, the Director, kept the 1920’s feel by dressing in all 1920’s costumes and everyone spoke as if they were living at the time. Michelle Bisbee, the scene designer, made the inside of the home appear 1920’s because everything was grand. The Bliss’ home was grand with the spiral staircase, the very large backdoors, and the eloquent piano. The actors’ mannerisms seemed like they were portraying a silent film. In older movies, actors seemed very dramatic and had flamboyant actions to prove so; the actors in Hay Fever shared the same feel for the dramatics. As far as Stephen Wrentmore’s directing goes, he did an excellent job. The scene when Chris Karl (Richard) and Caitlin Stegemoller (Jackie) enter and are left alone to make small talk with each other is the best pertaining to directing. The two actors used the entire stage in this scene and were very awkward with one another. This was Wrentmore’s doing because you could tell he had a vision for this scene in particular because it seemed very crisp and well rehearsed. The actors played it perfect with the excessively long pauses in their awkward small talk that the crowd was laughing through the entire scene. It appeared that Wrentmore instructed the actors, to keep their pauses longer than natural to heighten the awkward tension in the scene, which made it brilliant.
emoller’s character, Jackie Coryton. Rascher made his voice more shrill and audible to appear to be more dramatic and create more attention for himself. In the same way, Rascher used grander gestures with his arms (flailing, waving, etc.) to cause a more dramatic effect.
The play was well interpreted by all whom were involved. Steven Wrentmore, the Director, kept the 1920’s feel by dressing in all 1920’s costumes and everyone spoke as if they were living at the time. Michelle Bisbee, the scene designer, made the inside of the home appear 1920’s because everything was grand. The Bliss’ home was grand with the spiral staircase, the very large backdoors, and the eloquent piano. The actors’ mannerisms seemed like they were portraying a silent film. In older movies, actors seemed very dramatic and had flamboyant actions to prove so; the acto
@@jihuaa wtf
@Uploads i checked ur n word pass, but it expired 3 years ago. Sorry bud…
How did i know?
im in your walls 😳🖐💀💀💀
@@ivonetjokro81sorry for them being so tight
3:10 didnt expect to see loginhdi in a flamingo video
Game suggestion:don’t run over people challenge
Btw flamingo I love ur vids:D
Man this comment section is just sad i wish you all the best albert!
your comment section is sad
how
Kangaroo
@DodgeThis! Average roblox player
@DodgeThis! Average Adopt me player
Having a vr headset is more of a flex then buying a over 300 dollars item on a game so that means I’m cooler then headless
Having a gamer pc linked with a steam vr headset, I’m cooler than you
@@testtestrestrest I have a rtx geoforce graphics card with an oculus and gaming headphones a mic and my vr is linked to my account I’m much cooler than you little boy I have a steam deck Nintendo switch iPhone 13 pro max 4k tv this just proves how cooler I am then you
I love how he is starting to lean more towards his adult audience
Kids audience*
@@thebestnoobyt1270 I get you, but I hope the kids don’t read the comment section- Look above you 😭
*Bot are jealous because flamingo content is better😂👌*
@Uploads what the fuck 😂👌
@Christofer Pezet naw
“✨eXtrAoRDinArY! yOUr cOmMmmEnT hAs bEEn sEnT✨”
Why does this sound like a line straight out of Harry Potter-
3:00 I laughed a lot lol
Flamingo can we get headless?
No we got headless at home
*headless at home **1:42*
NAHHHH
ISHOWHEADLESS, this stream changed my life. My entire view of everything that exists in this world, in fact, even in the entire universe. I can never look at anything I know the same way again. This stream represents emotions that most humans could never understand. But I can. Thanks to this stream was awakened to many things previously considered unimaginable. Thank you for this exquisite stream, I will never forget this experience
...
wrong channel LOL
average speed fan:
i think bro was talking about kreek
@@龍が如く parody of a comment I think
my friend and her brother spend like 300 dollars a month on roblox. she has korblox, and was about to buy headless horseman right before it went away. she also has i think premium and im so jealous of her-
5:02 THAT COP IS A CHAD HE DONT STAND FOR NO "shy" GIRLS
5:26 no sense of humor
fax bro
So real
Mad respect to flamingo for sticking through all the hard times he had so we could see what the top of the tower was.
Your a video late my guy
Fake.
Whoooooaaaaa this is amazing ❤😂
Every single video he loses more of his sanity, and we’re all here for it
The avatar Albert has created was quite expensive and exquisite! The tongue really did really say “kawaii cute tongue” would definitely buy this product with the long lushes eyelash or per say “period uh period ah” eyelashes. The silk pink fabric was a great fit on the body figure with “slayed queen”! Don’t even get me started on the hair! Loved how it covered the brainless and headless and the bangs was chefs kids! Jeff the killer face was MWAH 💋! I bought this product worth buying 10/10! Whoever says the outfit is disgusting was raised wrong and you need to have you're “freedom of speech taken away”! Overall loved the video and creativeness and the money spent in this video! 200000000000000000/10!!!! 💗
The fact that my guy came all the way up for a screenshot and Albert just didn't leave the game. Mad respect
bot
copied comment + stupid username
wrong vid my guy 💀
@@tuesdayiscool *it's a bot*
this confused the fuck out of me i thought i had short term memory loss and clicked another video
Bruh faked the reason he commented on the wrong video is because it's a bot that copies popular comments from the other video and posts it another video for likes.
Albert: hey boys…… *shy*
Boy: *points out gun*
Albert: AHHHHHHHHH
💀💀
Albert is the type of person to actually take someone's head off and say "HAHA"
*Bot are jealous because flamingo content is better😂👌*
@Christofer Pezet WTF DUDE
@@The_Buzz_Force he copied that
@@teamfortressgaming3742 oh ok
@Christofer Pezet Hey dude! Stop commenting offensive stuff on every single comment and get a life you low life, mediocre, hypocrite.
Early :) I love your videos, flamingo! You have helped me throughout my years where I have felt miserable and depressed. I deeply appreciate you taking time out of your day to post these amazing videos. ILY, and stay safe
@Christofer Pezet we don’t care
@@GlarePhysics its a bot
*Bot are jealous because flamingo content is better😂👌*
@Christofer Pezet I'd love to see someones reaction...
@Christofer Pezet hope they don't stop
Thank you for being such a good content creator. This video was rly funny could you make more like them in the future? Thank you
wdym? make more videos? all his videos are really funny.
When I was young, I used to watch those animations gosh I regret that
3:58 looks kinda like the couple from Beetlejuice
@@Cristiano_km shut up
at exactly 6:31 you can see a txt stan. MOA FOR EVER.
MOAAA
albert could bully us in every video and we would still love it
I am happy to see flamingo uploading pretty much daily, man, the days
Props to flamingo for letting the 9 year olds vs UA-cam bots war go on without intervention from him
Congrats on 11M!!
OH MY GODDDDDD I CAN'T BELEIVE YOU GOT THE ' NEW ' HEADLESSS!!!!!!!!!! OHHH MYYY GODDD IM CLENCHING MY TOES RIGHT NOW IM CRYING YOU GOT HEADLESSSSSSSSSSS!@!!~!!~!@~!@111`2`12`12`!!!111!!!!
Albert ayy ayy there’s kids here
also Albert: ugly just ugly 6:30
Can we take a minute appreciate the braincells Albert loses everyday to post for us
@Uploads funny.. but dark
*Bot are jealous because flamingo content is better😂👌*
@@sinarchbishopofgaming6319 how is that even funny in the first place?
@Uploads hope they don't STOP
@Uploads THATS MY BOY!!!
These intros are getting better and better
Hi! I’m very excited because I was in the same Roblox cart game as you today. PS were you recording? From Finbar, age 11
I think after watching Albert for only like two days you are officially 20% more enlightened on how Roblox affects someone's mental state
Kangaroo
NO IT DOESNT
I will find out where you love
1:00 lol pls stop pls you just made me sad :{
Ha ha
Then click off the video how easy is that
No me baby timmy
If baby timmy quits he will be super Joe mama man with doodoo
cnp queen said that flamingo is jealous because shes so rich
the part where the policeman pulled out the gun out of nowhere was actually unexpected
0:35 WOW TWEETS ARE INSANE 🌕🖤 👀
3:40 PERIOD AH PERIOD UH
Pls don’t or suffer the consequences
That girl faked a disability
What
Fucking cringe
2:09 theres something in ur hair
its the headless head
@@zesu09 YES
hi
I’m gonna cry myself to sleep bc flamingo said IMimmimmmm aaAaaLLLOoooossssEEERRRR WAAAAAA
Bro he's on a grind of posting holy shit
2:54 Leatherface Reference?
Yo is there gonna be new merch?
Flamingo is such a good youtuber, that when he dies, he will still be posting the best videos in heaven.
egg
No
He is not
Jesus Christ what did he do 💀
@Î Âm ÇhŕìśBB ×63 E
1:38 all the 10 year old that spent all there parents money on headless
NOOOOOOOOOOOOO
your the person to make someones day
3:46 The stare i show when I have an intense fear of looking at stuff I haven’t learned and being called randomly at school
*Meg in a nutshell: **4:36*
Here's a trophy to those who are early and found this comment"🏆"
Hi
amogus
Hay Fever was a comical play with a strong message. The actors throughout this play steadily used others to gain their own attention. The message this play left behind after many laughs was do not use others, plain and simple.
The space was a well-constructed thrust stage however, the stage was not raised off the ground and the seats appeared to be mobile which lead to the belief that this is an Environmental Theater. As for the layout of the stage, there was a couch and a table in center stage for the first two acts, a door to the unseen outside front of the house upstage right, there were two large double doors upstage center leading to the backyard garden, and a raised floor upstage left containing a piano, a bookcase and a door leading to the home library. Stage left there was a half spiral staircase that lead up to the second floor which had a painting and lights that extended across to stage right. The second floor also contained the bedrooms for the house but the doors were not in sight. The detail was greater than expected: the hardwood floor throughout the first floor seemed to be genuine, the actual bookcase filled with real books not stage books, and the extremely large double doors with translucent glass and floral designs lead to the Garden, which featured an array of plants behind the doors. The entire space was well lit for the duration of the play; the stage took place inside the Bliss’ home so the bright lighting added a confortable feel to the inside of the house. The theatre was nearly sold out; it was hard to spot an empty seat, including the balcony and lower level seating. The crowd contained nearly an even amount of student audience members and senior citizens; there was few in the audience that appeared middle aged.
rowd was laughing through the entire scene. It appeared that Wrentmore instructed the actors, to keep their pauses longer than natural to heighten the awkward tension in the scene, which made it brilliant.
The blocking throughout the play worked with the floor plan very well. All of the blocking worked seamlessly; the actors were never out of sight or in awkward positioning (ex. turned around, talking to someone behind them while face forward, etc.) even during the second act in the first scene while all eight actors were on set. One part of the set that stood out was the staircase, it is obviously very large, but the way Owen Virgin followed Megan Davis up the stairs was seamless. They both walked up the stairs with footsteps I unison, and Owen Virgin was so focused on every detail of Davis, it almost screamed out how much he was infatuated with her.
The artistic intent of this production was to entertain, and it fulfilled that intent completely. The entire audience was laughing during most of the production, I was even laughing out loud, which doesn’t happen very often. Every interaction between the characters was comical at one point during the production. An example of this playing out would be in the second act when Rascher busts through the door and proclaims his engagement. The only purpose of this is to entertain and entertain it did. The actors seemed natural moving along with their blocking and engaging with each other on stage. There was no point at which it was confusing why someone moved here or there, every movement made sense.
emoller’s character, Jackie Coryton. Rascher made his voice more shrill and audible to appear to be more dramatic and create more attention for himself. In the same way, Rascher used grander gestures with his arms (flailing, waving, etc.) to cause a more dramatic effect.
The play was well interpreted by all whom were involved. Steven Wrentmore, the Director, kept the 1920’s feel by dressing in all 1920’s costumes and everyone spoke as if they were living at the time. Michelle Bisbee, the scene designer, made the inside of the home appear 1920’s because everything was grand. The Bliss’ home was grand with the spiral staircase, the very large backdoors, and the eloquent piano. The actors’ mannerisms seemed like they were portraying a silent film. In older movies, actors seemed very dramatic and had flamboyant actions to prove so; the actors in Hay Fever shared the same feel for the dramatics. As far as Stephen Wrentmore’s directing goes, he did an excellent job. The scene when Chris Karl (Richard) and Caitlin Stegemoller (Jackie) enter and are left alone to make small talk with each other is the best pertaining to directing. The two actors used the entire stage in this scene and were very awkward with one another. This was Wrentmore’s doing because you could tell he had a vision for this scene in particular because it seemed very crisp and well rehearsed. The actors played it perfect with the excessively long pauses in their awkward small talk that the crowd was laughing through the entire scene. It appeared that Wrentmore instructed the actors, to keep their pauses longer than natural to heighten the awkward tension in the scene, which made it brilliant.
emoller’s character, Jackie Coryton. Rascher made his voice more shrill and audible to appear to be more dramatic and create more attention for himself. In the same way, Rascher used grander gestures with his arms (flailing, waving, etc.) to cause a more dramatic effect.
The play was well interpreted by all whom were involved. Steven Wrentmore, the Director, kept the 1920’s feel by dressing in all 1920’s costumes and everyone spoke as if they were living at the time. Michelle Bisbee, the scene designer, made the inside of the home appear 1920’s because everything was grand. The Bliss’ home was grand with the spiral staircase, the very large backdoors, and the eloquent piano. The aery large backdoors, and the eloquent piano. The actors’ mannerisms seemed like they were portraying a silent film. In older movies, actors seemed very dramatic and had flamboyant actions to prove so; the actors in Hay Fever shared the same feel for the dramatics. As far as Stephen Wrentmore’s directing goes, he did an excellent job. The scene when Chris Karl (Richard) and Caitlin Stegemoller (Jackie) enter and are left alone to make small talk with each other is the best pertaining to directing. The two actors used the entire stage in this scene and were very awkward with one another. This was Wrentmore’s doing because you could tell he had a vision for this scene in particular because it seemed very crisp and well rehearsed. The actors played it perfect with the excessively long pauses in their awkward small talk that the crowd was laughing through the entire scene. It appeared that Wrentmore instructed the actors, to keep their pauses longer than natural to heighten the awkward tension in the scene, which made it brilliant.
emoller’s character, Jackie Coryton. Rascher made his voice more shrill and audible to appear to be more dramatic and create more attention for himself. In the same way, Rascher used grander gestures with his arms (flailing, waving, etc.) to cause a more dramatic effect.
The play was well interpreted by all whom were involved. Steven Wrentmore, the Director, kept the 1920’s feel by dressing in all 1920’s costumes and everyone spoke as if they were living at the time. Michelle Bisbee, the scene designer, made the inside of the home appear 1920’s because everything was grand. The Bliss’ home was grand with the spiral staircase, the very large backdoors, and the eloquent piano. The actors’ mannerisms seemed like they were portraying a silent film. In older movies, actors seemed very dramatic and had flamboyant actions to prove so; the actors in Hay Fever shared the same feel for the dramatics. As far as Stephen Wrentmore’s directing goes, he did an excellent job. The scene when Chris Karl (Richard) and Caitlin Stegemoller (Jackie) enter and are left alone to make small talk with each other is the best pertaining to directing. The two actors used the entire stage in this scene and were very awkward with one another. This was Wrentmore’s doing because you could tell he had a vision for this scene in particular because it seemed very crisp and well rehearsed. The actors played it perfect with the excessively long pauses in their awkward small talk that the crowd was laughing through the entire scene. It appeared that Wrentmore instructed the actors, to keep their pauses longer than natural to heighten the awkward tension in the scene, which made it brilliant.
emoller’s character, Jackie Coryton. Rascher made his voice more shrill and audible to appear to be more dramatic and create more attention for himself. In the same way, Rascher used grander gestures with his arms (flailing, waving, etc.) to cause a more dramatic effect.
The play was well interpreted by all whom were involved. Steven Wrentmore, the Director, kept the 1920’s feel by dressing in all 1920’s costumes and everyone spoke as if they were living at the time. Michelle Bisbee, the scene designer, made the inside of the home appear 1920’s because everything was grand. The Bliss’ home was grand with the spiral staircase, the very large backdoors, and the eloquent piano. The actors’ mannerisms seemed like they were portraying a silent film. In older movies, actors seemed very dramatic and had flamboyant actions to prove so; the acto
Beautiful
i agree
Nice job advertising bs
Owen Virgin lol
😕 I ain't reading allat
Curious if you could play JUDY? it used to be one of my favourite horror games. I feel like you would enjoy it? idk. Anyways no pressure!!!
0:22 understandment of the year
All the comments : "Can we just appreciate how much work he puts in his video" 💀
this is so true also they are all bots
Someone actually said she instead of he
@Christofer Pezet are you British?
@Christofer Pezet jit trippin💀💀💀
@@LSmapping423 give me tea🙂
He got 24k in 4 hours what a king
Albert:if u dont have headless u are a loser
Me:…………Yes im a loser?
4:15 looking a bit too much like smartschoolboy9
😂 Flamingo always makes the best bangers! 🎉
Bot
@@chrisayres169 lol yea, just trying to bait them haters😜
Lol
@@ThySANSisNow If you took time searching around. you wouldve figured out that I wasn't botting.
@@imjustconf_used oh my bad its just that everytime a bot comments like this.
This man has saved me bro💀
you spent over 300 dollars to get your head invisible, but your dad went entirely invisible for free
I WAS DYING FROM LAUGHTER THE WHOLE VIDEO😂
4:23 creation of wednesday addams
let’s just say he always post for us.
what
he’s pretty upfront about doing this for money, although he loves his fans too im sure that understandably he wouldn’t be posting if he wasn’t getting paid 💀
@@koilings1856 thats what kind of separates him from other youtubers, he’s more open about youtube being his only source of income.
@@koilings1856 thats mostly all youtubers, you never notice they are all worried about demonetization?
@Jimmy Jim wdym atleast he never gave up on us. ._.
Idea: Make a therapy store and ask people what their fears are and make them become real
(Original from @I like turtles, just spreading the word bc I like the idea
Whenever I see Albert's comment section, I question where is humanity leading to
The wolf guy in 5:46 I see him In every server
me too i saw him today
I saw him 3 weeks ago
@@wave2gigi I literally saw him about a week ago in road trip to Nowhere or infinite road trip I think ya when I saw him he remembered me
@@yourlocalfurrybraixen55 oh nice
2:30 btw the owner of the game has a tiktok account and a youtube accound and she just made a video saying you are jealous of her but your fanbase is bigger than her brain and got hated on.
i saw that vid
her rage bait is crazy 💀
Do
@@GoodJimothyDo
Yup she's hating on a random person
I got banned for a day by saying “I found Schrott” and by saying “Jay more like gay”
I feel like Albert is slowly losing his sanity and we are all encouraging him 🤣
2:50 texas chainsaw massacre but in roblox
3:17 slaying in roblox yw
"Hello, am shy"
**Proceeds to pull out gun**
" let's appreciate how much work and effort he puts in his videos for us🤓"
@Uploads awesome
@Uploads oh.
@Uploads 💀💀💀💀
*Bot are jealous because flamingo content is better😂👌*
@Uploads 💀💀💀bro what
0:50 Albert soyjanck Albert soyjanck