Tag Archives: virtual

Virtual Newsstand: Movieline.com, June 2011

Every month at Movieline, we collect the best interviews, smartest features, and most compelling reviews we’ve produced, and curate them in one easy-to-use table of contents called the Virtual Newsstand, which pays tribute to our print magazine history. Here’s the Virtual Newsstand for June 2011.

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Virtual Newsstand: Movieline.com, June 2011

Virtual Newsstand: Movieline.com, March 2011

Every month at Movieline, we collect the best interviews, smartest features, and most compelling reviews we’ve produced, and curate them in one easy-to-use table of contents called the Virtual Newsstand, which pays tribute to our print magazine history. Here’s the Virtual Newsstand for March 2011.

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Virtual Newsstand: Movieline.com, March 2011

Taylor Lautner, Justin Timberlake Vie For ‘Best Line’ MTV Movie Award Nods

‘Eclipse,’ ‘Social Network’ stars and more may snag nominations in the new category as voting begins today. By Eric Ditzian Taylor Lautner in “Eclipse” Photo: Summit New MTV Movie Award categories come and go. Best Kiss has been around since the beginning (“My Girl” co-star Anna Chlumsky and Macaulay Culkin were the inaugural winners in 1992), while Sexiest Performance and Best Virtual Performance lasted just a year (congrats, Jessica Alba and Gollum!). For the 2011 show, one new category joins the field: Best Line From a Movie . Folks like Justin Timberlake (“Social Network”), Taylor Lautner (“Eclipse”) and Leonardo DiCaprio (“Inception”) will compete to make the final list of nominees. We should add, however, that we’ve seen something like this before. For two years at the turn of the millennium, we presented a category called Best Line. Robert De Niro won that first year for asking Ben Stiller in “Meet the Parents,” “Are you a pothead, Focker?” The next year, “Legally Blonde” star Reese Witherspoon triumphed for delivering this line to Selma Blair: “Oh, I like your outfit too, except when I dress up as a frigid bitch, I try not to look so constipated.” While comedic movie lines won twice in the past, there’s no telling what’s going to happen this year. Potential nominees are both young (“Grown Ups” star Alexys Nycole Sanchez: “I want to get chocolate wasted!”) and, well, not as young (“Tron: Legacy” star Jeff Bridges: “You’re really ruining my Zen thing”). There are laugh lines (“With no power, comes no responsibility,” Aaron Johnson said in “Kick Ass”) and deadly serious ones (“If you guys were the inventors of Facebook, you’d have invented Facebook,” Jesse Eisenberg declared in “The Social Network”). A few quotes are a little too dirty to print in full (“It’s in the shape of a giant co–,” cracks Chlo

Are You Looking Forward to a Bunch of Homophobic Super Bowl Commercials?

I hate this. I hate the Super Bowl. Hate it. Worst of all, I hate the cavalcade of expensive, often-offensive commercials that come with the Super Bowl. Extended families and fraternities and crochet klatches gather for the big event, and what do they see? Unabashedly gay-unfriendly commercials like the following Doritos ads , which are being considered for air. Look, straight people doing suggestively gay things — but for your amusement! Comedy! I hate this.

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Are You Looking Forward to a Bunch of Homophobic Super Bowl Commercials?

Now Even the Pope is On the Social Network Bandwagon

Might The Social Network be God’s choice to win Best Picture? “Entering cyberspace,” Pope Benedict said today in an address essentially giving his blessing to social networking, “can be a sign of an authentic search for personal encounters with others, provided that attention is paid to avoiding dangers such as enclosing oneself in a sort of parallel existence, or excessive exposure to the virtual world. In the search for sharing, for ‘friends,’ there is the challenge to be authentic and faithful, and not give in to the illusion of constructing an artificial public profile for oneself.” Huh. I always took him for more of a Black Swan guy. [ Reuters ]

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Now Even the Pope is On the Social Network Bandwagon

Megyn Kelly in GQ: Foxy News Anchor!

Everyday on Fox News, Megyn Kelly reports from her America Live desk. Now, GQ has decided: she’s hot! The blonde “reporter” is featured in the magazine’s latest issue, showing just how fair her skin is and and just how balanced her… nevermind. Among the topics Kelly tackles in the interview is the old rumor that she carried on an affair with fellow anchor Brit Hume. Megyn says of this story: “I think Brit knew how preposterous it was to anyone with two nickels in between their ears. The first thing he said at his retirement dinner was “I haven’t been this honored since that rumor about me having an affair with Megyn Kelly went around.” Clearly, this is a woman unafraid to embrace her sex appeal. But is that the proper attitude for the lead daytime anchor on the country’s most watched news network? You tell us: Megyn Kelly in GQ is…

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Megyn Kelly in GQ: Foxy News Anchor!

Dancing With the Stars: Who Will Win?

Does Jennifer Grey deserve it because of the physical ailments she’s overcome and the high scores she’s consistently produced, week in and week out? Does unheralded, charismatic Kyle Massey get the nod thanks to the rare blend of technical merit and fun he and Lacey Schwimmer bring to the table? Does Bristol Palin deserve it because … well, presumably people have some reason for stuffing the virtual ballot box for Sarah’s daughter each Monday. Who should win Dancing With the Stars this evening? The real (and possibly rigged, depending on who you believe) votes are cast, but THG’s poll is open! Weigh in and watch the results along with us later …

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Dancing With the Stars: Who Will Win?

Bozell Column: Medal of Dishonor

In today’s world, video war games are all the rage. The military knows that video games make young men more interested in military service, and can even make them better soldiers. As is so often the case, some of the producers of these games have taken the simulation too far. For the latest version of its wildly popular shooter game “Medal of Honor,” Electronic Arts chose to set the game in post-9/11 Afghanistan. But now it also allows players to fight as the Taliban and kill American troops. This was too much for the military. Army, Air Force, and Navy bases have announced they will refuse to sell the game out of respect to our troops who have been killed by the Taliban. “You know how many of my friends have been killed by the Taliban?” Staff Sgt. William Schober, a fan of the earlier “Medal” games, asked the New York Times. “One of my friends was sniped in the head by them. That’s something you want to have fun with?” It’s another American popular-culture embarrassment. In the international community, defense ministers in countries that have lost troops to the Taliban have also experienced outrage. Britain’s Liam Fox said he was “disgusted and angry” and “would urge retailers to show their support for our armed forces and ban this tasteless product.” Canada’s Peter MacKay added  “I find it wrong to have anyone, children in particular, playing the role of the Taliban.” The lifelike simulations of combat are manufactured out of a close working relationship between game producers and the military. EA made “Medal of Honor” with the consent and assistance of the Army, which gave them access to a replica of an Iraqi village used for training at Fort Irwin in California. But an Army spokesman insisted the Army wasn’t aware that users would have the capability of fighting against U.S. troops and underlined the review process would be more thorough in the future. But why continue a partnership when you’ve been conned? An EA spokesman stressed that the game was intended to celebrate American soldiers. But with the popularity of online multi-player showdowns (where one guy in Virginia can play against another guy in Idaho), game makers have increasingly offered users the options of embracing the role of bad guy. EA’s last version of the game, set in World War II, allowed players to fight against the Allied forces. As tasteless as that is, it’s history. Right now, American boys are dying every day. They deserve this nation’s highest respect, not this final insult. The amorality of these professional war-gamers can be astonishing. Last year, hundreds of parents protested Activision’s game “Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2” for a scene in which players could take part in a terrorist group’s machine-gun massacre of civilians at a Russian airport. The player acts as a special-ops agent infiltrating the terrorist cell that can either choose to join in the civilian-shooting to remain “credible,” or refrain from the bloodbath. EA’s Frank Gibeau complained to the media that video games are unfairly singled out: “At EA we passionately believe games are an art form, and I don’t know why films and books set in Afghanistan don’t get flak, yet [games] do. Whether it’s ‘Red Badge Of Courage’ or ‘The Hurt Locker,’ the media of its time can be a platform for the people who wish to tell their stories.” Here we go again, the scoundrel’s final defense: It’s “art.” Video games are amazing technological products, but they are not “stories” like a book or a movie. Parents don’t worry about their kids reading Taliban books. I don’t know of any movies where the Taliban are the heroes. It’s only video games where children enter an imaginary (but most realistic and therefore, dangerous) world in which they are the main characters. In a video game, every player is the author and the movie director. The game maker only sets the parameters, and lets the player finish the story. In this case, EA has created a plot in which children can be absorbed for hours in the virtual reality of killing American solders, the best and most honorable product our nation has to offer. The idea that game makers just can’t comprehend why this would be singled out for condemnation is ludicrous. They know exactly what they’re doing as the thirty pieces of silver jingle in their pockets.

There’s A Lot Less Coal Out There Than We Think – But That’s Not Civilization’s End

photo: Jennifer Woodard Maderazo via flickr TreeHugger has covered the uncomfortable and largely under-publicized topic of peak coal on a number of occasions, but David Roberts over at Grist just brought it up again–and it’s a topic certainly worth revisiting as the future implications are great. I’ll take the question out of R… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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There’s A Lot Less Coal Out There Than We Think – But That’s Not Civilization’s End

Can Your iPhone Save a Rainforest? Nurturing Virtual Trees to Save Real Ones

Image credit: SyncStudios I’ve never been much of a gamer, but I did always enjoy the constructive challenges posed by games like SimCity and its later spin offs. That’s why I kind of liked the idea of a Facebook game that lets you nurture virtual chickens, and rescue real ones too . It seems a UK company has been having similar ideas—developing an iPhone app that allows you to plant a virtual tree and help it grow, meanwhile securing real tree in the Peruvian rainforest. So c… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Can Your iPhone Save a Rainforest? Nurturing Virtual Trees to Save Real Ones