Animem-se........
Christmas Lights Gone Wild
"Wow, this thing has really gone crazy with the viewers. Let me first start by saying that this is not my house. Regardless of what any of the comments read, this house really does exist, I have seen it with my own eyes and nothing you see in the video is trickery, it's all real.
This display was the work of Carson Williams, a Mason, Ohio, electrical engineer who spent about three hours sequencing the 88 Light-O-Rama channels that controlled the 16,000 Christmas lights in his annual holiday lighting spectacular (from Christmas 2004). His 2005 display includes over 25,000 lights that he spent nearly two months and $10,000 to hook up. So that the Williams' neighbors aren't disturbed by constant noise, viewers driving by the house are informed by signs to tune in to a signal broadcast over a low-power FM radio station to hear the musical accompaniment.
The rough quality of the video has led some viewers to believe it was put together in stop-action form from still photographs, but that is an artifact of the high compression used in the clip circulated via e-mail. Mr. Williams has posted instructions for recreating his "Wizard in Winter" sequencing, and another of his choreographed Christmas light music shows can be viewed here.
Carson's Christmas display proved so popular that it was featured in a Miller Lite beer commercial in December 2005." - From: houseofboyd
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Frisco Christmas Lights - Wizards in Winter
"www.friscochristmas.com - my home Christmas light display in Frisco, TX (This is my 2005 video - more videos from '06 and '07 to be posted soon). I am not the guy in Ohio (I did not copy his display - we both just happened to use the same song in '05 - I no longer use this song). I have been building large scale light displays since 2001. Update 12/17/07: December 2007 electric bill amount - $140. Comparision: February 2007 bill (with no lights) - $105." - From: trykoski