Time Magazine Hails Pixar’s Up

May 8, 2009

It started with a cartoon drawing: a cluster of gaily colored party balloons held by a cranky old man, his eyes asquint, as if daring any kid to take one. Pete Docter’s sketch, made back in ’04, suggested another droll innovation at Pixar, a studio proud of taking risks in a traditional genre; mean and old are words rarely attached to the main character in an animated feature. But Docter, 40, who’d done the 2001 Monsters, Inc., and his co-director and co-writer Bob Peterson didn’t want just to have fun with the elderly gent. They would send him and the audience on a journey in two new directions: penetratingly inward and exaltedly up.

Those, you might say, were the compass points of last summer’s Pixar wonder WALL-E, of which Docter was the original director (before handing the project to Andrew Stanton). There are other similarities between that futurist galactic epic and Up, which will open the Cannes Film Festival on May 13 and come to North American theaters on May 29. Both movies are about lonely creatures – a droid left on Earth, a man whose cherished wife has died – taking a perilous trip. Both protagonists are stout and box-shaped and don’t talk much. Both films, under the thrill-ride wrapping, are unabashed love stories. And though it’s not yet summer, we can declare that Up, like WALL-E, will prove to be one of the most satisfying movie experiences of its year. (Read more HERE)

aup_0518


Twilight Success Inspires New Material, More Books

May 7, 2009

Twilight was released on DVD in March and the next cinematic installment of Stephenie Meyer’s vampire series, New Moon, doesn’t hit theaters until November. What are devoted Edward and Bella fans to do in the meantime? Little, Brown and Company, the publisher behind the books – which have sold 53 million copies worldwide – is filling the void with a range of new material.

A special hardcover edition of Breaking Dawn, the final book in the “Twilight” franchise, arrives in August. It will include an exclusive DVD with footage from last summer’s four-city “Breaking Dawn” concert series, featuring a conversation between Meyer and Justin Furstenfeld of Blue October, as well as a concert performance by the group. The edition will also come with a reproduction of Furstenfeld’s handwritten lyrics for his song “My Never,” plus a full-color poster of Bella and Edward.

In October, Little, Brown and Company will release “The Twilight Journals,” a series of books inspired by the “Twilight” franchise. Each journal features the iconic “Twilight” artwork, and the entire collection comes packaged in a collectible tin.

Also in October, “New Moon: The Complete Illustrated Movie Companion” will hit bookshelves. Like the #1 New York Times best-selling “Twilight” version, the “New Moon” companion will be an illustrated paperback with a behind-the-scenes guide to the making of the film and color photos of the cast, locations, and sets.

Additionally, the publisher is set to publish a number of other hardcover and paperback versions of “New Moon,” including a cloth-covered edition – “Twilight” devotees will have much to sink their teeth into before “New Moon” arrives in the fall. (Thanks for the tip Don Thompson!)

 twilightbooks


Who Got Voted Off American Idol On 5-6-09

May 6, 2009

And then there were three. Allison Iraheta was sent home tonight.  The remaining top three American Idol contestants are Kris Allen, Adam Lambert, and Danny Gokey.

3321181955_e19382e888


Sneak Your Toys Into Work

May 6, 2009

I want a briefcase-contained model train set not because I’m into trains, but because I would like to to open it at a business meeting and see people’s reactions. I would even put on my conductor’s hat and make choo choo sounds. Unfortunately, it’s $1,500.

r8sr-gama-88100-1-detailc-25746

r8sr-gama-88100-1-25748


LOST Follow The Leader Sneak Peeks

May 6, 2009

Enter to Win Terminator: Salvation VIP Screening Passes

May 6, 2009

Screening VIP passes mean no waiting in line & two specially reserved seats for you and your guest. Advance screenings will take place the week of May 18 – click here  for a list of cities.

To enter to win, you must fill in the forms below or text SALVATION and your zip code to 43549 (example text: SALVATION 91505). You will receive a text message with a link that is unique to your entry. You can forward the text containing the link to your friends, family or whoever you think will help you win. The more times people click on that link, the more entries into the contest you will get.

The contest will end on Wednesday 5/13 @ 11:59pm PDT. Exclusive VIP winners will be randomly chosen out of all eligible entries within a 30 mile radius of each theater and notified via text on Thursday 5/14 or Friday 5/15 with further instructions. The prize for the winner will consist of two (2) VIP seats held until thirty (30) minutes before the start of the screening.

Always spam free. 43KIX does not charge for text messages, but standard rates may apply, consult your wireless plan.

Enter HERE.

movie_terminatorsalvation_001


Between Two Ferns With Zach Galifianakis And Natalie Portman

May 6, 2009

Uncrate Answers

May 6, 2009

Looking for the best HDTV under a grand? Or maybe a killer razor to keep your facial in check? Or need to know the general consensus on denim shirts? Look no further. In partnership with Gillette, we’re pleased to announce Uncrate Answers, a new feature that lets you crowdsource for gear, tips, and other man-specific advice, using the best source of information possible: your fellow Uncrate readers. Questions aren’t limited to “stuff” either — whether you need help diagnosing a strange noise coming from your hard drive, finding the proper balance of class and casualness when dressing for your next corporate event, or simply need a recipe to impress a date, ask away. Of course, our editors will also be around to help answer your questions and offer advice. So sign up (or sign in using your Uncrate Stuff username), head on over, and ask your most pressing question or start sharing your knowledge with the rest of us.

answers-article


Expect Wolverine 2 And A Deadpool Spinoff

May 6, 2009

X-Men Origins: Wolverine has 2 “secret” endings that foreshadow what will come next. In one scene, Wolverine is drinking shots at a bar in Japan, claiming that he’s “drinking to remember” so expect a Japanese Samurai storyline.  

Fox has also begun development on a Wolverine spinoff featuring Deadpool, the wise-cracking mercenary played in the film by Ryan Reynolds.

Reynolds is attached to reprise the character for what for now is simply being called “Deadpool.” Lauren Shuler Donner and Marvel Studios would act as producers.

wdp


Amazon Kindle DX

May 6, 2009

Amazon is going the bigger is better route with the Kindle DX ($489). With a 9.7-inch paper-like e-ink screen (2.5x bigger than the standard Kindle), and measuring just over 1/3 of an inch thin (like a magazine), the new DX is definitely tall and slim. The new Kindle DX also gets auto-rotation (read in portrait or landscape mode), better image and photo display, native PDF support, 4GB of storage (good for up to 3,500 books), wireless 3G access, and a handy text-to-speech feature.

kindle


Oprah Winfrey Show Kentucky Grilled Chicken Two-Piece Meal Coupon

May 5, 2009

Oprah wants to buy the entire country dinner. Get two pieces of KFC grilled chicken, two individual sides and a biscuit for free! The coupon download will be available from 9 a.m. CDT on May 5, 2009, to 9:59 p.m. CDT on May 6, 2009. The coupon is redeemable at participating KFC locations in the United States from May 5, 2009 to May 19, 2009—excluding Mother’s Day, May 10, 2009.

Print your coupon HERE.

coupon


Time Magazine Interviews Comedian Louis C.K.

May 5, 2009

Rumor Watch: Apple To Buy Twitter

May 5, 2009

TechCrunch’s Michael Arrington is reporting that rumors beginning to float around the blogosphere are stating that Apple is interested in purchasing Twitter for US$700 million in cash. Twitter is the magical “social networking” tool that has you answer the question “What am I doing right now?” in 140 characters or less.

Twitter currently has more than 25 million users, and it is rumored that growth has been exploding since Oprah blessed the service with her presence in mid-April. However, despite the size and growth potential of Twitter, there’s simply no compelling reason for Apple to spend part of its huge cash reserves to purchase the company.

Google recently tried to purchase Twitter, but was turned down by Twitter’s CEO Evan Williams. Today’s rumor comes from a “normally reliable source” who told Arrington that “Apple is in late-stage negotiations to buy Twitter and is hoping to announce it at WWDC in June.”

twitterbird_601a5bbc


Pixar’s Up – Exclusive Clip

May 5, 2009

Happy Cinco de Mayo

May 5, 2009

Cinco de Mayo is a date of great importance for the Mexican and Chicano communities. It marks the victory of the Mexican Army over the French at the Battle of Puebla. Althought the Mexican army was eventually defeated, the “Batalla de Puebla” came to represent a symbol of Mexican unity and patriotism. With this victory, Mexico demonstrated to the world that Mexico and all of Latin America were willing to defend themselves of any foreign intervention. Especially those from imperialist states bent on world conquest.

Cinco de Mayo’s history has its roots in the French Occupation of Mexico. The French occupation took shape in the aftermath of the Mexican-American War of 1846-48. With this war, Mexico entered a period of national crisis during the 1850′s. Years of not only fighting the Americans but also a Civil War, had left Mexico devastated and bankrupt. On July 17, 1861, President Benito Juarez issued a moratorium in which all foreign debt payments would be suspended for a brief period of two years, with the promise that after this period, payments would resume.

The English, Spanish and French refused to allow president Juarez to do this, and instead decide d to invade Mexico and get payments by whatever means necessary. The Spanish and English eventually withdrew, but the French refused to leave. Their intention was to create an Empire in Mexico under Napoleon III. Some have argued that the true French occupation was a response to growing American power and to the Monroe Doctrine (America for the Americans). Napoleon III believed that if the United States was allowed to prosper indescriminantly, it would eventually become a power in and of itself.

In 1862, the French army began its advance. Under General Ignacio Zaragoza, 5,000 ill-equipped Mestizo and Zapotec Indians defeated the French army in what came to be known as the “Batalla de Puebla” on the fifth of May.

In the United States, the “Batalla de Puebla” came to be known as simply “5 de Mayo” and unfortunately, many people wrongly equate it with Mexican Independence which was on September 16, 1810, nearly a fifty year difference. Over, the years Cinco de Mayo has become very commercialized and many people see this holiday as a time for fun and dance. Oddly enough, Cinco de Mayo has become more of Chicano holiday than Mexican one. Cinco de Mayo is celebrated on a much larger scale here in the United States than it is in Mexico. People of Mexican descent in the United States celebrate this significant day by having parades, mariachi music, folklorico dancing and other types of festive activities.

 


Jamie Pugh On Britain’s Got Talent

May 4, 2009

Urine For A Treat

May 4, 2009

Click HERE to take a peek at some of the strangest and most unique urinals in the world. 

cool_toilet_8


Maybe You Shouldn’t Buy That

May 4, 2009

Maybe You Shouldn’t Buy That is a website that posts some of the most expensive and most worthless items in the world.

untitled1


The Zappos Mission

May 4, 2009

Zappos.com CEO Tony Hsieh’s mission is to spread happiness to his customers and employees — and quite possibly change the tone of business as we know it. 


The Code the CIA Can’t Crack

May 4, 2009

In 1988, artist James Sanborn was commissioned to create an outdoor sculpture to adorn the CIA’s facility in Langley, Virginia. So he created Kryptos, a 10-foot high scroll of copper filled with letters. Its 865 characters contain, the artist asserts, a coded message. But even the best CIA cryptologists have been unable to crack all of it. One of the four sections remains a complete mystery. You can read about Sanborn’s extensive study of cryptology HERE.

kryptos


Where Are You In The Movie?

May 4, 2009

If they started a movie on the day you were born, and stretched it over your lifespan, this is where you’d be in that movie. So if you’re a teenager, you might see Luke arguing with Uncle Owen, or Cameron making a phony phone call to Ed Rooney. If you’re a retiree, you might see the Marshmallow Man, or Toto pulling away the curtain. And if you’re in your mid-thirties, you might be relieved to know that Ferris is still eating lunch, and the Millenium Falcon hasn’t left Tatooine. Click HERE to try it.

ferris


Happy Star Wars Day!

May 4, 2009

May the 4th be with you.  HERE are some ways to celebrate.

ln0001-star-wars


Family Guy Spoofs Stephen King

May 4, 2009

On the Family Guy Season Finale entitled “Three Kings” scheduled to air on Sunday May 10th, Peter discovers the writing of Stephen King and imagines his family and friends in three of King’s most famous works. First, Peter, Quagmire, Cleveland and Joe – as 12-year-olds – travel along a railroad track on a journey of self-discovery narrated by Richard Dreyfuss (guest-voicing as himself). Second, Brian is injured in a bad car crash only to be “rescued” by his “number one fan,” Stewie. Finally, Cleveland and Peter become fast friends in prison.”

3kingspromo


The 100 Million Views Club: The Most Watched Viral Videos of All-Time

May 3, 2009

Since Susan Boyle’s recent viral video triumph, VisibleMeasures.com has been inundated with requests for a listing of the most watched viral videos of all time. The questions come in part because people are eager to understand Susan’s position in the pantheon of viral video history, but also because the numbers involved have exceeded many people’s expectations regarding the potential cultural impact of online video. 

Over the past few days, they have busily been compiling and categorizing the data relating to the Web’s largest video campaigns. Click HERE for the result: the 100 Million Views Club is a first-of-its-kind listing.

dda5_1


Can A Larger Kindle Save The Newspaper Industry?

May 3, 2009

The iPod stemmed losses in the music industry. The Kindle gave beleaguered book publishers a reason for optimism.

Now the recession-ravaged newspaper and magazine industries are hoping for their own knight in shining digital armor, in the form of portable reading devices with big screens.

Unlike tiny mobile phones and devices like the Kindle that are made to display text from books, these new gadgets, with screens roughly the size of a standard sheet of paper, could present much of the editorial and advertising content of traditional periodicals in generally the same format as they appear in print. And they might be a way to get readers to pay for those periodicals — something they have been reluctant to do on the Web.

Such e-reading devices are due in the next year from a range of companies, including the News Corporation, the magazine publisher Hearst and Plastic Logic, a well-financed start-up company that expects to start making digital newspaper readers by the end of the year at a plant in Dresden, Germany.

But it is Amazon, maker of the Kindle, that appears to be first in line to try throwing an electronic life preserver to old-media companies. As early as this week, according to people briefed on the online retailer’s plans, Amazon will introduce a larger version of its Kindle wireless device tailored for displaying newspapers, magazines and perhaps textbooks.

An Amazon spokesman would not comment, but some news organizations, including The New York Times, are expected to be involved in the introduction of the device, according to people briefed on the plans. A spokeswoman for The Times, Catherine J. Mathis, said she could not comment on the company’s relationship with Amazon.

These devices from Amazon and other manufacturers offer an almost irresistible proposition to newspaper and magazine industries. They would allow publishers to save millions on the cost of printing and distributing their publications, at precisely a time when their businesses are under historic levels of pressure.

“We are looking at this with a great deal of interest,” said John Ridding, the chief executive of the 121-year-old, salmon-colored British newspaper The Financial Times. “The severe double whammy of the recession and the structural shift to the Internet has created an urgency that has rightly focused attention on these devices.”

Perhaps most appealing about this new class of reading gadgets is the opportunity they offer publishers to rethink their strategy in a rapidly evolving digital world. The move by newspapers and magazines to make their material freely available on the Web is now viewed by many as a critical blunder that encouraged readers to stop paying for the print versions. And publishers have found that they were not prepared to deal with the recent rapid decline of print advertising revenue.

Publishers could possibly use these new mobile reading devices to hit the reset button and return in some form to their original business model: selling subscriptions, and supporting their articles with ads.

The current version of the Kindle has proved in a limited way that this is possible. Even though its six-inch black-and-white screen is made for reading books, Amazon offers Kindle owners subscriptions to more than 58 newspapers and magazines, including The Times, Newsweek and The Wall Street Journal. (The Journal subscription costs $9.99 a month, The Times is $13.99 a month and The New Yorker is $2.99 a month.)

Subscribers get updates once a day over a cellular network. Amazon and other participating publishers say they are satisfied with the results, although they have not released data on the number of subscriptions that have been sold.

For the all the hope publishers are placing in dedicated electronic reading devices, they will be encumbered at the start with some serious shortcomings. Most use display technology from E Ink, a company in Cambridge, Mass., that was founded in 1997 based on research started at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology M.I.T. Media Lab to develop thin electronic displays capable of mimicking the readability of regular paper, while using a minimum amount of battery power.

The screens, which are currently in the Kindle and Sony Reader, display no color or video and update images at a slower rate than traditional computer screens. That has some people in the magazine industry; in particular, keeping their hopes in check until E Ink evolves.

“I don’t think we would be anywhere near as excited about anything in black and white as we would about high-definition color,” said Tom Wallace, the editorial director of Condé Nast, publisher of glossy magazines like Vogue and Wired. “But technology changes at a pretty high clip these days, and if we are now in the Farmer Gray days, it will be only a very short while until we are in the video game era.”

Another hitch is that some makers of reading devices, like Amazon, want to set their own subscription prices for publications and control the relationship with the subscriber — something media companies like Condé Nast object to. Plastic Logic and Hearst have said publicly that they will take a more open approach and let media companies deal directly with readers and set their own prices.

Then there is the looming presence of Apple, which seems likely to introduce a multipurpose tablet computer later this year, according to rumor and speculation by Apple observers. Such a device, with a screen that is said to be about three or four times as large as the iPhone’s, would have an LCD screen capable of showing rich color and video, and people could use it to browse the Web.

Even if such a device has limited battery life and strains readers’ eyes, for many buyers it could be a more appealing alternative to devices dedicated to reading books, newspapers and magazines.

Such a Web-connected tablet would also pose a problem for any print publications that hope to try charging for content that is tailored for mobile devices, since users could just visit their free sites on the Internet. One way to counter this might be to borrow from the cellphone model and offer specialized reading devices free or at a discount to people who commit to, say, a one-year subscription.

Then there is the possibility that all these devices from Amazon, Apple and the rest have simply not appeared in time to save many players in the troubled realm of print media.

“If these devices had been ready for the general consumer market five years ago, we probably could have taken advantage of them quickly,” said Roger Fidler, the program director for digital publishing at the University of Missouri, Columbia. “Now the earliest we might see large-scale consumer adoption is next year, and unlike the iPod it’s going to be a slower process migrating people from print to the device.”

“And all of us are very worried about how newspapers are going to survive in the next few years if we don’t see any turnaround in the economy,” Mr. Fidler said.

Whether or not the situation is hopeless, newspapers and magazines now find themselves weighing offers of aid from outsiders. When asked at the debut of the Kindle 2 in February whether the Kindle could help the print media, Jeffrey P. Bezos, Amazon’s founder and chief executive, said he thought there were “genuine opportunities” to save journalism.

“And we’re excited about helping with that,” he added. (Reprinted from the New York Times)

 04read_xlarge1


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 214 other followers