{"entry":[{"id":"27203024","hash":"04290584b93a620ec0bbf38ae2dcbc70","requestHash":"musicvideocritic","profileUrl":"http:\/\/gravatar.com\/musicvideocritic","preferredUsername":"musicvideocritic","thumbnailUrl":"http:\/\/1.gravatar.com\/avatar\/04290584b93a620ec0bbf38ae2dcbc70","photos":[{"value":"http:\/\/1.gravatar.com\/avatar\/04290584b93a620ec0bbf38ae2dcbc70","type":"thumbnail"}],"name":{"givenName":"A.J.","formatted":"A.J. "},"displayName":"musicvideocritic","aboutMe":"Music videos have always captivated me. I remember when I first watched Fiona Apple's \"Criminal\" video back in 1997. I was completely oblivious to complexity within the images expressed in that seedy frat house and the bathtub filled to the brim with floating apples and filthy thoughts. At the time I thought: Why is this girl so damn skinny? And why is she hiding in a closet? I was nine (I was allowed to watch one music television channel-VH1) but I still remember to this day how that one music video got me thinking.\r\n\r\n Long story short--music videos have a fantastic way of leaving an impression on viewers in an extremely short amount of time. I want to break down what's out there today, what the next generation is being exposed to--the good, the bad, the what-just-happened-on-the- television-screen?? \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n","urls":[]}]}