John Farrier's Blog Posts
Buzzfeed has a great roundup of geeky My Little Ponies, from Spider-Man to Samwise Gamgee to Han Solo in carbonite. Pictured above is My Little Rorschach by deviantART user Spippo.
Link via Wonderland
(YouTube Link)
The comedy team Smosh consists of Anthony Padilla and Ian Hecox. In this video, they explain why it would be bad for cartoons to be realistic using scenes from alternative versions of Pokémon, Dragon Ball Z, The Simpsons, He-Man, and others.
(Despite the censor bar that appears in the screenshot, it's completely SFW.)
via Nerd Bastards | Official Website
(YouTube Link)
1971 saw the birth of The Oregon Trail -- one of the earliest educational computer games. It was originally text-dependent until later versions included reasonably impressive graphics. The above video is a trailer for a non-existent movie that stays faithful to the game, courtesy of the comedy sketch group Half Day Today.
via CrunchGear
Residents of Derby, UK, named a new street in honor of Lara Croft, a native of their town. It's called "Lara Croft Way."
Article Link and Photo Gallery via Blame It on the Voices | Photo by Flickr user Arturo J. Paniagua used under Creative Commons license
The name was chosen from a shortlist by public vote, with 89% of those polled opting for the character devised by Derby-based game studio Core Design.
Article Link and Photo Gallery via Blame It on the Voices | Photo by Flickr user Arturo J. Paniagua used under Creative Commons license
(YouTube Link)
I had no idea that Batman did this kind of work. Apparently, he has a YouTube channel filled with short educational videos about all manner of common activities, such as reading, converting a .doc file to a .pdf, crocheting, and how to get out of the "friend zone" of a relationship. In the above video, the Dark Knight explains how a drive-thru window functions.
YouTube Channel via Great White Snark
Masked robbers entered an Internet gaming cafe in Hawaii. They took money from the customers. Then they made a big mistake. They tried to take a Nintendo console away from a customer:
Customers hand over whatever change they have while a suspect punches video monitors at the counter but the cameras are still rolling. That's when the suspect in black approaches Dylan Hays.
"They tried to take his DS, his Nintendo DS and he wasn't having that -- so he came back swinging," said Wolery.
"Then he hit me and I kind of just got angry and I bull-rushed him out there door," said Hays.
"I pulled him down the ground over here, the table got moved and I had him down on the ground he was still hitting me," said Wolery. "Dylan pulls off the guys mask -- he runs out the door -- his friends are outside waiting. Let's get out of here, let's get out of here and we were holding one guy in and still fighting him and the other guys come into the store --pull him out and take off."
Police arrived on the scene about minutes later and arrested the thieves. So why did Hays fight back? Here's the most interesting part of the news story:
"I mean we're gamers, we've been immersed in that culture where like we all want to Superman, you know we're missing something partial in our brain that says yeah this might be dangerous," said Hays.
Link via Kotaku | Screenshot: Kotaku
Pixelation user junkboy has, over the years, presented screenshots of modern video games in classic 8-bit pixelation. He's assembled many of them in a huge post, such as the above image from Red Dead Redemption. At the link, you can click on an image to see a larger view.
Link via Geekosystem
(YouTube Link)
A mysterious and brutal killer known as the Red Hood is taking over Gotham City's criminal gangs. Whose face lies beneath the mask? And how did he get there? Those are the central questions in the new DC/Warner Bros. animated movie entitled Batman: Under the Red Hood.
By the standards of Warner Brothers' direct-to-video films (of which I am a fan), this is an excellent movie. The animation, pacing, storytelling, and screenwriting are optimal. A surprising but completely reasonable plot forms.
Spoilers below the jump....
Sadly, this is still just a concept -- not an actual, existing couch. But industrial designer Igor Chak, besides having a cool name, has a great idea. Let's hope that some furniture maker picks up on it. More pictures at the link.
http://www.igorchak.com/industrial/ via Kotaku
Either the government of the State of Maryland recognizes the awesomeness of Civilization, or it's sucking up to a game developers' conference. At any rate, Governor O'Malley declared:
"Sid Meier is known throughout Maryland and the world as a pioneer of electronic gaming, having co-founded his first studio in Baltimore County, Maryland in 1982, and today continuing a tradition of developing the talent and creativity of future generations," Governor Martin O'Malley said in a statement.
"Now, therefore, I, Martin O'Malley, Governor of the State of Maryland, do hereby pay tribute to the outstanding achievements of Sid Meier on this day, July 28, 2010, and hereby recognize September 21, 2010, as Sid Meier's Civilization V Day, and call upon the people of our State to join in celebrating this salute."
Which video game do you think is the most deserving of an official holiday, and when should it take place?
http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/102480-Maryland-Declares-Official-Civilization-V-Day via Geekosystem | Photo: Game Developers' Conference
TV show host Jimmy Fallon decided to cover the history of video games by playing 10 different video game consoles in 60 seconds. Skip about three minutes into the video. Fallon tried to play The Legend of Zelda on the NES, Sonic the Hedgehog on Sega Genesis, Donkey Kong Country on Super NES, Crazy Taxi on Sega Dreamcast, Star Fox on Nintendo 64, Tomb Raider on PlayStation, Katamari on PS2, Halo on Xbox, Street Fighter IV on PS3, Tiger Woods on Wii, and Madden on Xbox 360.
via DVICE
(YouTube Link)
Toby Turner sang a literal, shot-by-shot, description of a Harry Potter trailer. You can read the lyrics at the video link. At the end, he asks viewers what movie he should tackle next: Narnia, The Expendables, or Little Fockers.
via Geekstir
Um, okay.
Filmmaker Kevin Smith was invited by DC to write Batman. This was the result. Chris Sims offers a lengthy take-down of why this was a very bad idea. Money quote:
Unfortunately, a creator -- any creator, in any creative field -- has to recognize his or her limits, and if he can't, that's what an editor's for. And you eventually come to a point where either the editor has to look at something and decide that it's an unpublishable mess or the creator has to take a step back and ask himself if he really wants his contribution to a 70-year legacy be a story where Batman gets high and pisses himself.
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