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Blair Witch Syndrome 

Human nausea induced by video recording technique in which a single or multiple hand-held cameras are used (NOT in 'steady-shot' mode) to create "realistic" feel. "The Blair Witch Project" is the best/original (most nauseas) example since the camera is being run around most of the movie. The popularity of "24" pretty much solidified the technique as legitimate and I've been getting sick ever since. I can only watch blockbusters now because EVERY non-blockbuster is too blair witch for me.
I can only watch blockbusters now because EVERY non-blockbuster gives me Blair Witch Syndrome.

blairesmeilo 

blairesmeilo is the best fanpage ever!!
someone- why do u love blairesmeilo so much?
me- because she’s amazing!!
blairesmeilo by blairesmeilo March 17, 2022

Tony Blair George Bush Syndrome 

Meaning that were affected mentally by the George Bush and Tony Blair regime. Many Arabs start to feel paranoia and is a mental issue. This even affects people that were caught up like journalists and even the average citizen learning what is unfolding through the news channel.
The Tony Blair George Bush Syndrome affects a lot of people around the world. It causes nausea, heart-throbbing and even seizures. My Arab friend almost ran a mile when he heard it mentioned by White folks on the street of New York

st. blaise 

A national holiday, celebrating the joys of the greener things in life, on February 3rd. This is the day when the 4th Century Saint Blaise was martyred with iron combs.
In areas of the English countryside it was the custom to light bonfires on St. Blaise's feast day, February 3 - evidently inspired by the sound of the word blaze.
st. blaise by a 2 tha k February 4, 2007

Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2 

In my honest opinion, arguably the most underrated film of all time. It is a sequel to The Blair Witch Project, and is set in live action as opposed to the handycam filming of the first.

Directed by Joe Berlinger, the film is metaphorically about the craze and phenomenon of the Blair Witch Project a year or less after it is released. Five obsessed fans go on a tour in the Maryland town the film is set in, led by a man (Jeff Donovan) who is recovering from a stay at a psychiatric ward. After a long night of partying, the group find their campsite demolished and make base at the tour guide's massive house/factory, in an effort to use their film and piece together what happened that night. Before their final revelation, the psychological paranoia and "group hysteria" begins to set in, along with something else.

Also, the film is intellectual and speaks on many different levels. The way the tour guide says to a tourist, "Video never lies, but film does" sets the goal for the film, and explores the dangers of blurring the line between fiction and reality (as many did with the Blair Witch Project), and the film makes you question what's really happening, what's real and what's not. On top of that, the question is invited if the Blair Witch is actually messing with the protagonists's minds, or if it's simply group hysteria. In the end, the events of the film which are videotaped by the tour guide reveal to be slightly different from what the stars think they saw...or perhaps the events happened, but the tapes have been altered by the Blair Witch. On another deep level, the film's stars, the five fans of the Blair Witch phenomenon seem to represent different types of fanbases, for example a Wicca girl trying to set the record straight for what the Blair Witch hysteria really means, a Goth girl doing it mainly out of it being a fad, a tourist couple just interested in the subject without much inner knowledge of it, and mainly the tour guide, representing the ones trying to make a buck off a fad, further distorting our lines between fiction and reality, which is what the film is mainly about.
I think "Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2" is (at least one of) the most undderated film of all time.