Unofficial music video for the song "One pasko at a Time" from the album of the same name sa pamamagitan ng Jonathan Coulton and John Roderick, using footage from The bituin Wars Holiday Special (1978).
This is the full-length konsiyerto from the DVD that came with the original release of "Best. Concert. Ever." It was filmed in February 2008 in front of a sold out crowd at the Great American Music Hall in San Francisco.
A kinetic typography music video for Jonathan Coulton's tindahan Vac. This was created using Adobe Illustrator, Photoshop, After Effects, Premiere and Toon Boom Animate.
Music video for "The Stache" sa pamamagitan ng Jonathan Coulton (from his 2011 album, "Artificial Heart") about a man and his moustache. The main footage used is from the 1966 cult film "Manos: The Hands of Fate."
Music video for the song "Now I Am An Arsonist" sa pamamagitan ng Jonathan Coulton (from his 2011 album, "Artificial Heart") featuring Suzanne Vega on lead vocals.
This is "Good Morning Tucson," Jonathan Coulton's song about a hapless TV morning ipakita host who has a nervous breakdown, using footage from Archive.org and TV news bloopers found on YouTube.
This is a fanvid for "Want You Gone," sa pamamagitan ng Jonathan Coulton, originally written for Portal 2. It was edited using footage from "Kin-dza-dza!", a 1986 Soviet sci-fi film directed sa pamamagitan ng Georgi Daneliya.
Music video for "Artificial Heart" sa pamamagitan ng Jonathan Coulton from his 2011 album, "Artificial Heart." It was edited using footage found exclusively on Archive.org in the Prelinger Archives section.
This is a music video for Jonathan Coulton's song "Nemeses" (with lead vocals from John Roderick of "The Long Winters") from Coulton's 2011 album "Artificial Heart." The album was produced sa pamamagitan ng John Flansburgh of "They Might Be Giants."
This is a music video for the song "Today With Your Wife" sa pamamagitan ng Jonathan Coulton (from his 2011 album, "Artificial Heart," produced sa pamamagitan ng John Flansburgh of They Might Be Giants) using footage from old 8mm films found on Archive.org.