The resources for fans of social networks, for podcast producers and even for content creators in other media are more and more numerous. Even more so since AI has become popular and allows you to create images or texts at will or make Eminem sing with David Guetta. It can’t always be distinguished from human-produced content, though. But for real resources there are few options. And one of them is PlayPhrase, a web page that allows you to search for any phrase and see it in a movie.
This website is a collaborative project in which users upload movie content from around the world and subtitle the phrases so they can be used. In principle it is free and serves to obtain phrases or dialogues either from the website itself or from its pages on social networks, including YouTube. Yes indeed, It doesn’t work for songs, only movies and books.
Although most of the content is in English, there are phrases in Spanish (increasingly) that can be used. The web is basically free, at least for the first five searches. Then a username and password are required. But one way around this hurdle is to search from a hidden page and thus extend the set limit.
Although PlayPhrase is the best known, there are other options also available, such as Bard-Video or Morbotron. It is also possible to search in Melobytes, although here the mechanism is different: instead of looking for a specific phrase, enter the name of an actor or actress and the phrases that person has said appear.
Finally, an interesting option is Clash. If Shazam allows us to identify a song we’re listening to, Clash transcribes the lyrics of the song we’re listening to or singing directly to text. Then we can pass this to one of the aforementioned applications and make someone famous or famous sing that tune.
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