lego pet shop youtube

lego pet shop youtube

lego pet shop street

Lego Pet Shop Youtube

CLICK HERE TO CONTINUE




Dora'S LovelyLovely LikesLps DiysDiy LpsShops DiyPet ShopsLps CraftsShop CraftsKalee'S LpsForwardHow to make skirts for LPS. okay this video is super annoying but very informative so....Ideas Pikachu SPikachu S PokemonPokemon LegosPokemon FanPokemon StuffPokemon ShopWatch PokemonPokemon CardsLego PokémonForwardLast Updated 7 months ago. Click "Updates" above to see the latest.NewsAmazing footage of parrot singing 'Everything is Awesome' from hollywood blockbuster The Lego Movie goes viralThe bird belts out the tune to members of staff and stunned customers at the pet shopThis amazing video shows the moment a parrot appears to burst into song in the middle of a pet shop. Princess Yellow Feather has become something of a celebrity after footage of her singing the hit song from the Hollywood blockbuster The Lego Movie was posted online. It has already been watched more than 38,000 times on YouTube and countless more on Facebook. In the video, the green parrot is seen walking on a parrot stand in the middle of the Birds on Safari pet shop in Florida.




As the camera rolls, the animal then belts out "Everything is Awesome" - which was the song to last year's hit movie. Posting the video to Facebook, the shop said: " Princess Yellow Feather declares that "Everything is Awesome". "We hope that you all have an awesome weekend and look forward to seeing you soon!" Although some viewers have claimed the footage is false, it is not the first time the bird has been captured singing. Earlier this year, footage emerged showing the Parrot singing Celine Dion's "All By Myself". Have a look and let us know if you think the singing is real. Is the parrot really singing? Like us on FacebookFollow us on TwitterDaily NewsletterFollow @DailyMirrorSubscribe to our Daily newsletterEnter emailPets doing silly things and even Taylor Swift's latest video may generate millions of views, but it's a video that shows a woman removing toys out of packaged that is the internet's top earner.  According to a video analytics platform called OpenSlate, the highest YouTube earner of 2014 made nearly $5 million just by opening Disney toy packages.




The DC Toys Collector YouTube channel features a woman removing the toys and then putting them together. Like christmas every day: Mysterious toy-unboxer DC Toys Collector was the most popular YouTube channel in October with 400m views a month Another gift: The channel features a young woman in intricately painted nails removing the toys from their packaging and then assembling themThe channel features over 1,600 videos and gets 380 million views a month.Its most-played video is Play-Doh Sparkle Disney Princesses. The video has been viewed more than 172 million times since it was posted in July. Unboxing is a relatively new genre of YouTube videos, and DC Toys Collector struck while the iron was hot. Unboxing videos show off the features of a product, most often a piece of technology.Essentially the videos are a virtual tour of a product in which you're interested.Here, the user unboxes everything from Disney princesses, to tubs of Play-Doh, to Lego sets.  Toy unboxing usually shows the narrator assembling a toy for the viewer.




Playtime: The channel has about one new video a day. DC Collector is part of a new, highly lucrative genre of online videos called 'unboxing' Unreal: The one-woman toy-reviewing YouTuber called DC Toys Collector is making more money than most CEOsOnly the narrator's hands and the product being unboxed are usually seen.Despite the channel's massive, sweeping, and somewhat perplexing popularity, no one — neither the toddlers who watch it along with their parents, nor executives at YouTube seem to know who is behind it.Children love the videos. One uploaded to DC Toys Collector's channel on Friday called Teletubbies Stacking Cups Surprise Eggs Play-Doh already has 200,000 views.All her videos start the same way with the toy being introduced. The woman then goes on to open and 'play' with the children's toy pointing out various 'adorable' features.Dane Golden, who works in the YouTube channel ecosystem as the VP of marketing at Octoly has followed Disney Collector for some time.'What I believe to be true is that kids are loving this because the woman never shows her face,' Golden said to BuzzFeed. 




'You never see anything but her well-manicured hands. She has a very comforting voice. It's just like playing with other kids playing toys. I think she disappears in the mind of the children.' So simple: The user unboxes everything from Disney princesses, to tubs of Play-Doh, to Lego sets Colorful character: Unboxing YouTubers don't typically have sponsorship connections to the brands of products they're unwrapping Princess Yellow Feather doesn’t have a record deal, she’s a yellow-naped Amazon parrot. But she does have an incredible ability to mimic human song. Like in the video above, where she sings “Everything is Awesome” from The LEGO Movie, ensuring that at least the next 14 seconds of your day will be awesome as well. At the pet store Birds on Safari in Stuart, Florida where she lives, PYF also moves customers with Celine Dion’s “All By Myself”. She’s got great vocal range, and maybe a future slot at the Luxor. Yellow-naped Amazon parrots are popular in the pet trade, which likely has something to do with their impressive ability to mimic human speech and song.




Like their incredibly intelligent and equally vocal relatives the African grey parrots (seen here singing SpongeBob because why not), the Amazon parrots are deft social learners, able to mimic human speech simply by listening to their environment like they would from other birds. There are limitations to bird “speech,” of course, as birds lack both vocal cords and lips, but some avian dinosaurs like the common parakeet have been known to amass massive vocabularies nonetheless. A blue parakeet named Puck was heard chirping 1,728 different words and phrases, for example—which the 1995 Guinness Book Of World Records duly noted. Mimicking human speech is probably the feat that gets the most attention, but the undisputed master of sound mimicry in birds may in fact be the lyre bird. Learning from its encounters with photographers and loggers, below you can hear it sounding like everything from a camera shutter to a chainsaw: Everything really is awesome. IMAGE: “Amazona auropalliata -captivity-8” by whiskymac – flickr.

Report Page