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New York Magazine

Trump without a nose, looking for all the world like a vintage Señor Wences character, is the brainchild of multimedia artist Jeremiah Warren. His inspiration apparently came from the “no nose” meme, which peaked in 2013 and inspired a Reddit community with 17,000 subscribers.

Some of the older submissions were funny, but Warren’s Trump GIF is easily the no-nose genre’s most significant achievement: It’s turned a divisive billionaire credited with reenergizing white supremacists into a harmless hand puppet and made an old meme great again.

The Washington Post

Here’s an idea for the most terrible April Fool’s joke you could possibly play on your co-workers this year: Tell them you all won the Mega Million jackpot in your office pool.

No, seriously, do not do that.

Think of something a little less soul-crushing for a prank — maybe making a friend’s desktop icons disappear? — as you watch Jeremiah Warren’s video about the history of April Fool’s Day.

The Atlantic

Jeremiah Warren's quirky animation style makes for an entertaining three-minute whirlwind tour of Nikola Tesla's career, full of fun facts and more than a little disdain for Thomas Edison. Don't miss The History of Thomas Edison, a similar treatment of the rival inventor's life.

The Wall Street Journal

Jeremiah Warren, a 19-year-old filmmaking student in Dallas, said he plans to upgrade his iPhone as soon as the new one becomes available.

"Apple has caught me with the 'magic' of the phone, not the technical specs," he said.

The Daily Mail

Jeremiah, 19, from Texas, used a 2.6 inch, $120 camcorder that was able to capture the rocket's flight in high definition. The result is a stomach-churning bird's eye view of the projectile as it accelerates skyward, explodes, and then tumbles back down to Earth.

TechCrunch

“We originally wanted to make every transition completely seamless and hidden, but locations and logistics meant that we had to make most of our transitions stylized. We worked closely with Alpha Studios to plot out where one shot would end and where the preceding shot would begin,” producer Jeremiah Warren says. “Kaitlyn Yang, from Alpha Studios, was the on-set VFX supervisor and was key in helping us figure out these transition points that her team blended with VFX in post-production.”

Input

Here are a commercial filmmaker's seven essentials.

Cultr

Having released their infectious summer love-hit ‘OMG’ a few months back, Gryffin & Carly Rae Jepsen have now delivered a visual masterpiece to help us re-imagine the song.

The visually stunning and equally mind-bending clip was directed by Ani Acopian and produced by Jeremiah Warren. The clip is set against white walls, blue skies and across a layer of water. It starts sees a musician playing with a controller setup that is also linked to the movements of a variety of dancers busting out interesting and complex moves, chopped and reversed together.

Mashable

You might think emoticons a relatively new "Internet" phenomenon, but evidence suggests they could date back to the 19th century — perhaps even earlier.

The video above — by Jeremiah Warren and Greyson MacAlpine — rolls back the printed history of text turned into tiny, sarcastic faces.

WIRED

Sure, you love to watch a crash-bang firework show while you sip a cold beer on July 4th, but did you ever think about how the poor firework feels? Well did you, you callous spectator, you?

No, you didn't, which means that Jeremiah Warren is a much better man than you. Not only did he ask himself about the firework's welfare, he tried to see things from its point-of-view. Literally. Warren, a videographer, mounted tiny video cameras onto the rockets and fired them up into the sky.

Complex

While we spend tomorrow getting wasted in honor of our country's Independence Day, we'll also attempt to light off a couple of fireworks with the hopes that we won't lose any fingers. Texas photographer Jeremiah Warren opted for a safer alternative. Well, sort of. Jeremiah created a video that captures fireworks exploding from a bird's eye view.

CBS News

Tomorrow is the 4th of July, and with the national holiday tends to come a bit of grilling and a whole lot of fireworks. So let's get an early start to the latter tradition with a truly fascinating slow-motion, bird's-eye-view of some fireworks exploding in the air. Check it out.

The amazing perspective was provided by YouTube user jeremiahjw

Gawker

Created by Jeremiah Warren, this short video tells the story behind the man, Saint Patrick, who's real name it turns out, was name was Maewyn Succat!

Business Insider

Those persistent alien beings from Space Invaders have finally abandoned the confines of their video game quarters, setting their crab-like eyes on the destruction of Earth. And it’s up to one man to save the fate of human kind as we know it—Jeremiah Warren. Equipped with his trusty Atari CX-40 joystick, the lonesome saviour [sic] battles the descending alien invaders, destroying them one by one with his laser cannon, right from his own bedroom window. See the battle below.

Gizmodo

Using a tried and true GoPro-ceiling-fan bullet time rig, photographer Jeremiah Warren put together a jaw-dropping amateur pyro-effects reel that's as impressive as it is festive. With the instructions on Jeremiah's blog, you can build your own slow-mo rig for about $100. Or you could just buy a bunch more fireworks instead. Follow your heart.

The Huffington Post

Now dog lovers are getting another chance to look at life from a canine perspective — this time from a puppy’s point of view. Texas-based photographer and videographer Jeremiah Warren decided to try a similar film experiment by attaching a GoPro camera to puppies.

Fstoppers

This rig isn't capable of fully "freezing time" like a proper array would, but the effect works well anyway as you can see in the final video above. Jeremiah Warren, the creative that put this all together also documented the process in the second video and in greater depth on his blog which you can view here. On his site he has the full description of how he made the parts and a video on the process as well. I highly recommend that you go check it out.

My Modern Met

I took the names of the victims of 9/11 and created typographic images from 9/11 photographs, and then animated it,” said this video’s creator, Jeremiah Warren. “All the images were non-editorial, other than the Raising the Flag image and two from the Public Domain. The Flickr community was very kind in allowing me to use these images since it was a non-commercial project.”

Small Hands, Nasty Women, and Bad Hombres: Hegemonic Masculinity and Humor in the 2016 Presidential Election

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