El musical colaborativo de TikTok basado en Ratatouille que puede revolucionar los Emmy Ratatouille: The TikTok Musical aspira a convertirse en la primera creación de esta red social en conseguir una nominación en los premios más importantes de la televisión estadounidense Se trata de una obra colaborativa cuyas canciones, coreografías o escenografía han sido creadas por distintos tiktokers y que ha llegado a tener un estreno virtual con fines benéficos por todo lo alto El periodista y responsable de redes sociales Eneko Ruiz Jiménez cree que las fronteras de lo televisivo se han ido desdibujando: “Al final lo que hace Netflix es lo que antiguamente llamábamos webseries”
Ratatouille: The Musical is a unique social media experience that brought together a number of creative individuals, including Daniel Mertzlufft & Kate Leonard, who were kind enough to speak to ComingSoon.net about their experience adapting the popular Pixar animated film.
TikTok Star Behind Foul-Mouthed Mickey Mouse Scared After Cryptic DM From Disney On 5/7/21 at 10:21 AM EDT A TikTok star known for his profanity-laced and belligerent impersonations of Mickey Mouse said a cryptic message, allegedly from the Walt Disney Company, left him scared, but he showed no intention of shelving his personal twist on the beloved cartoon character. Comedy TikToker Hassan Khadair, who boasts 1.8 million followers on the platform, regularly posts videos voicing a Mickey Mouse puppet with a spot-on impersonation. Khadair s content typically involves the puppet reacting to other videos on the platform in an aggressive manner, often uttering expletives and unexpectedly transitioning into a sinister, low-pitched voice. The videos tend to attract hundreds of thousands to millions of views.
To revist this article, visit My Profile, then View saved stories. Last September, Daniel Mertzlufft was holed up in his Manhattan apartment avoiding Covid-19 when he decided to rework someone else’s song. Specifically, Louisa Melcher’s “New York Summer,” a plaintive but funny pop ballad. TikTok users had already turned the bridge ( We’re fighting in the grocery store / and I love you, but I don’t know if I like you anymore) into a meme, but to Mertzlufft’s ear, it needed more drama. The 27-year-old composer and arranger wrote some new lyrics and added some strings and guitar. He recorded himself singing the new arrangement with full theater kid gusto, using TikTok’s greenscreen tool to set the scene in a generic supermarket aisle. The entire process took about an hour. When Mertzlufft posted the video to TikTok, he included a caption as he hits the last note: “This is 100% the end of Act 1.”
TikTok cooks up something special with the 'ratatousical' brandeishoot.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from brandeishoot.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
January 27th 2021 17:05 Our social media roundup is back so you can keep up to date with the biggest and best stories and brand campaigns every month. For a deeper dive into social media platform innovation, head over to The Social Quarterly Report. For the first month of 2021, we’ve got campaigns from not one but two UK charities and creative work from the likes of Ikea, as well as some striking statistics on TikTok usage in 2020. Let’s get started… TikTok beats Facebook on average time spent in 2020 The average amount of time spent on the TikTok app among its UK users, per month, has nearly doubled between 2019 and 2020, according to analysis from App Annie. On Android devices alone, monthly average hours increased from 11 to 19.9, vastly outpacing Facebook’s 16.6 hours across 2020 and cementing its place as one of the most rapidly growing apps for engagement.
The most incredible part of “Ratatouille: The TikTok Musical” is how fortuitously the show and its ragtag origins embody the morals of “Ratatouille’s” underdog story.
I KNEW I Smelled a Rat!: A Review of Ratatouille: The TikTok Musical Cast members of Ratatouille: The TikTok Musical belt out the rousing finale. Courtesy of Ratatouille: TheTikTok Musical/TodayTix By As all good things do, it probably started as a meme. On August 10, 2020, TikTok user Emily Jacobsen (@e jaccs) posted a short musical snippet titled “Ode to Remy” on the social media platform, featuring her pitch-altered voice and a slideshow of Pixar’s Ratatouille’s star rat Remy. From there, other TikTok accounts expanded on her viral clip, creating theatrical personas for Remy’s brother Emile; no-nonsense chef Colette; and the bumbling son of Chef Gusteau, Linguini. Some fans added dance numbers, showed off their individual renditions of rat costumes, or even composed an orchestration of Jacobsen’s ode, in the case of Daniel Mertzlufft (@danieljmertzlufft). The rest is history: with Disney’s blessing (the musical was permitted to air online for 72 hours), director Lucy Moss (Broadway’s
The Road To But how did we get here? In August 2020, TikTok user Emily Jacobsen (@e jaccs) posted a short song, “Ode to Remy” a quick soundbite of her musical praise for Ratatouille’s rodent hero . Then, Daniel J. Mertzlufft (@danieljmertzlufft) posted an ensemble version of the song, envisioned as an end-of-Act-II showstopper à la the finale of The Hunchback of Notre Dame. Over the next few months, heaps of videos buoyed the Ratatouille: The Musical meme. Additional songs came from TikTok users like RJ Christian (@rjthecomposer) as well as theater performers, such as Dear Evan Hansen’s The Prom star