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Sanders Sides: Catching the reference - Extended 2023 version

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The Sanders Sides series is almost 7 years old now. Like any other work of fiction, it's filled with countless references to different pop culture elements. Many of these references are easily recognizable by almost anyone. Others may have been missed by some, maybe because we don't know the original, maybe because we just didn't get the reference.

In this video, I try to do what the title says and catch all the references the series has made. I'm showing small portions from the series, followed by small portions of the works they're reference, so that we all know where the reference comes from.

Most certainly, I haven't caught all of the existing references. Some of them are not included simply because I couldn't find the footage, others, simply because I didn't know about them. And there may be some where the connection was coincidental and not intended by the authors as a reference, I included these just because it was fun to see that relation, even if hypothetically unintentional. If you know of any reference not included in the video, feel free to add it in the comments. If there are enough, perhaps, there could be a part 2, who knows. I hope anyway, you fin the video informative, or at least enjoyable.

This is an extended version of a video originally released in 2020, featuring new episodes released after the original version, which is released to celebrate the 10th anniversary of Thomas Sanders' debut on Vine in April 2013.

The Sanders Sides series belongs to Thomas Sanders and the Foster Dawg Team. Here are their links:

YouTube:    / @thomassanders  

The Frankenstein audiobook section was originally published on YouTube with a Creative Commons Licence of the CCBY type. Here's their data and link to the original:

   • Frankenstein – Chapter 20  

Frankenstein; Or, The Modern Prometheus by Mary Shelley. Chapter 20.
Read by Tomás Costal on the 200th anniversary of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein.



Frankenstein ebook via Project Gutenberg https://goo.gl/yLmvj4

Picture credits: Theodore Von Holst (18101844) (Tate Britain. Private collection, Bath.) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons https://goo.gl/6w2DXZ

The rest of the footage belongs to their respective owners and is included under a claim of fair use in very small portions, inside of a transformative, educational, nonprofit work.

posted by Hughesf9