!!TOP!! Download Funny Videos Short

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Cuasimodo Onaba

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Jan 25, 2024, 8:29:55 AM1/25/24
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A few weeks ago, I saw a funny short video in which an Asian girl probably in her 20s is sitting on a living room floor with an empty wine glass on a coffee table in front of her. Presumably, someone else who is off-screen starts pouring white wine into her glass. She keeps waving her hand and saying, "No, no, no, it's okay, no that's too much!" as the wine is getting poured for her. As the wine bottle is emptied and the wine glass is full, you can see that it was her own hand pouring the wine the whole time. Then she stops refusing it and takes a sip. There was a caption that said something like, "me after a long week of parenting" or something like that.

TikTok is one platform where users generally expect more informal tones from all accounts, professional or not. Many videos skew toward being funny and entertaining, hence the prevalence of short and witty captions seen in the list above.

download funny videos short


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In fact, funny cat videos in particular are scientifically proven to do amazing things for your stress levels and health. A recent study conducted by Jessica Gall Myrick, PhD, a social scientist and professor at Penn State University, found that watching cat videos was shown to reduce tiredness by up to 40 percent and increase energy by 16 percent. Plus, 82 percent of subjects reported immediately feeling happier and less stressed after watching just a quick little cat video. (Click through to learn more about how watching cat videos is good for your health).

In a recent small study conducted at Loma Linda University in Southern California, 20 normal, healthy, older adults watched a funny video distraction-free for 20 minutes, while a control group sat calmly with no video. Afterwards, they performed memory tests and had saliva samples analyzed for stress hormones.

You guessed it; those who got to laugh the 20 minutes away with the funny video scored better on short-term memory tests, researchers said. And salivary levels of the stress hormone cortisol -- a memory enemy of sorts -- were significantly decreased in the humor group.

Marketers, entrepreneurs, and entertainers alike produce short-form videos to capture the attention of their audiences. Ten- or 15-second videos on Instagram or TikTok that deliver quick life tips or funny music video clips can be used to entertain and promote your business. Longer IGTV or YouTube videos can be used for things like in-depth tutorials or workouts.

It costs a lot of dough for a production company to make even a very short video for you. For a fraction of the cost, Biteable gives you access to everything you need to create short videos all the time. (Every day if you want.)

Want to promote your business? Maybe you need to create buzz about a service, event, or training course. Looking to make an explainer video? We have professionally designed short video templates for each of these purposes. Now you can spend less time brainstorming and more time creating.

The best short video makers give you access to lots of visuals like high-quality stock clips and animations created in-house. As you choose a video maker for your short, also look for pre-made scenes and the ability to automatically add those scenes to your video. Premium features like in-app voice-over capabilities and in-app recording are also a big plus.

After watching (literally) hundreds of funny cat videos growing up, we still cannot help but make ourselves look and feel like fools whilst giggling stupidly and uncontrollably at a our computer screens. Whether it's a cat failing a short jump or pushing expensive things off a shelf, for some reason it's almost impossible for us not to find the silly acts shown in these funny cat videos anything short of hilarious.

Generally speaking you can get more laughs out of these cat compilations as there is more than just one clip. There are always going to be a few duds though, which is why we have painstakingly poured through hundreds of funny cat video compilations to bring you this definitive list.

So without any further ado, containing videos both old and new of cats doing senseless and ludicrous things, here is our purr-fect list of the top 5 funny cat videos that will leave you rolling around on the floor in stitches.

When it comes to classic funny cat videos, this one is the equivalent of Gone With The Wind. With over 5.5 million views it has been in many vintage compilations and chances are you're all familiar with this poor cat's harrowing experience upon entering the bath. You can't help but feel a little bit of compassion for the cat as it is dragged hilariously into the bath by the baby and escapes a bit soggy and quite annoyed.

This video is a classic when it comes to funny cat videos on the internet. It features a large headed cat watching an television program when suddenly the owner calls the Cat or the Cat hears something and turns its head slowly. It shows its face with a pair of huge - almost cartoon-like - eyes adding to the pointlessness of the clip. Sometimes this video is dubbed with "Dramatic Music", which only brings the hilarity up to a whole other level!

This cute duo lands itself at number 3, and although at first glance you may not think it belongs on a list of funny cat videos, there is definitely a chuckle or two to be had - not to mention a large 'Awwww' Factor. This adorable video shows two cats lying next to each other, and they seem to be having a pretty in-depth conversation with one another by purring and meowing.

Presentation of humor simultaneously with a stressful event has been shown to dampen the psychological and physiological responses of stress. However, whether a relatively short humorous intervention can be utilized to prevent the subsequent stress processing is still underinvestigated. Furthermore, it is unknown, whether such a humor intervention changes stress processing at a cost of cognitive functioning. According to the broaden-and-build theory inducing positive emotions may subsequently impact cognitive performance. Here, we investigated whether humor protects against subsequent stressors by attenuating both, psychological and physiological stress levels and whether this affects cognitive performance. Participants watched either a humorous or a neutral movie, underwent stress induction and performed in a visual search task. Compared to the control group, psychological stress levels and salivary cortisol levels were lower in the humor group, yet no differences were found in response times and accuracy rates for the visual search task. Our results demonstrate that a short humorous intervention shields against subsequent psychological stress leaving cognitive performance intact, thus making it highly applicable to improve mental and physical health in everyday life situations.

Picture yourself on the train on the way to an important job interview or presentation. You know you will be faced with a stressful situation, in which you have to perform to the best of your abilities. To distract yourself from the upcoming event and possibly to kill some time on the commute, you might grab your phone and start watching funny movie clips. Yet, the consequences of this seemingly banal action could be more far-reaching than expected. Is it possible, that this short humorous intervention is not only entertaining but possibly protects against the subsequent stressful situation? And will it have an effect on your cognitive performance by affecting your attention?

Stress has been identified to be one of the largest risk factors for public health. It can affect individuals psychologically as well as impact the nervous, the endocrine and the immune system1. A number of observational as well as laboratory studies have focused on the relationship of humor and stress and whether humor can offset the adverse effects of stress. In these studies, humor has often been operationalized in terms of trait humor (sense of humor) or in terms of an instantaneous humorous intervention. Stress, on the other hand, has been either assessed by subjective reports (psychological stress) or by biomarkers, such as heart rate or skin conductance rate (physiological stress). For instance, Abel2 found individuals with higher self-reported sense of humor to experience less stress and state anxiety than those with lower scores. Similarly, Martin & Dobbins3 observed sense of humor to moderate the adverse effects of daily stressors on secretory immunoglobulin, an index of immune functioning. In contrast, when stress is experimentally induced, sense of humor does not seem to affect the psychological and biological stress response, yet a humor intervention does4,5. Subjects score lower in state anxiety after watching a funny film compared to an informative one6 and this seems to be more effective when the humorous clip precedes the unpleasant stimulus4. In the absence of stress induction, state anxiety decreases after viewing a funny film compared to a hopeful or sad one7. Similarly, humor generation (i.e., producing a humorous narrative to a stressful film) has been found to moderate the effects of, both psychological and physiological stress more reliably than generating an informative narrative5. However, Rizzolo and colleagues8 observed merely a reduction in the physiological markers of stress (i.e., heart rate and blood pressure) after a 30-min humorous intervention but report no effects on daily stressors scores, i.e., on psychological markers. Taken together, the evidence seems to point towards a beneficial effect of humor on stress, either directly or as a moderator. However, in most studies the humorous intervention occurs simultaneously to stress-inducing measures5 or in succession6 but 4, is rather time-consuming8 and stress is primarily assessed on the psychological level3,4 but 5. Therefore, it still remains an open question, whether a short humorous intervention suffices to counteract the adverse effects of both psychological and physiological stress even before the stressful event occurs. In other words, will a humorous intervention (compared to a neutral one) preceding an experimentally induced stressor lower psychological and physiological stress levels?

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