vidder
English
Etymology
vid (“video”) + -er
Noun
vidder (plural vidders)
- A person who creates fanvids.
- 2006, Rochelle Mazar, “Slash Fiction/Fanfiction”, in Joel Weiss; Jason Nolan; Jeremy Hunsinger; Peter Pericles Trifonas, editor, The International Handbook of Virtual Learning Environments, Springer, →ISBN, page 1148:
- Old school vidders created these forms of post-modern art using a VCR; today more and more vids are being created using video software such as Adobe premiere and imovie.
- 2010, Kim Middleton, “Alternate Universes on Video: Fanvid and the Future of Narrative”, in Heather Urbanski, editor, Writing and the Digital Generation: Essays on New Media Rhetoric, McFarland & Company, →ISBN, page 121:
- In his desire to differentiate vidders' multi-layered work from MTV's commercial, iconographic aesthetic, Jenkins asserts: “fan video is first and foremost a narrative art” (233).
- 2011, Eve Ng, “Reading the Romance of Fan Cultural Production: Music Videos of a Television Lesbian Couple”, in Gail Dines; Jean M. Humez, editor, Gender, Race, and Class in Media: A Critical Reader, SAGE Publications, published 2008, →ISBN, page 560:
- In a similar vein, another vidder, who made several Lianca videos, wrote that “I would just hear a song and start seeing clips. I would be driving down the road and it would just hit.”
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:vidder.
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Synonyms
- fanvidder
Anagrams
- drived
Norwegian Bokmål
Noun
vidder m or f
- indefinite plural of vidde
Norwegian Nynorsk
Noun
vidder f
- indefinite plural of vidd
- indefinite plural of vidde
Swedish
Noun
vidder
- indefinite plural of vidd.
Anagrams
- dervid