Shared posts

28 Apr 16:38

Infomercial Actors Pretending To Be Terrible At Routine Tasks

by Zeon Santos

(Video Link)

Why can't those unbelievably bad actors in infomercials ever seem to perform even the most mundane tasks without the help of some fancy newfangled product?

Is it because working as a product shill has made them lose their minds, or is there some other sinister force at work in their lives?

The easiest explanation- they’re actors paid to follow a script to the letter, and if that means pretending you don’t know how to properly swab your ears, or brush your hair, without causing yourself excruciating pain then so be it.

These wack wacky actors are the reason we watch infomercials, and now you can enjoy them all in this Hilarious Infomercial Struggles Compilation video , which was put together by Distractify.

-Via 22 Words

25 Apr 15:23

What If Forrest Gump Was Directed By Wes Anderson?

by Zeon Santos

(Video Link)

Forrest Gump is one of those polarizing films that some people love and others find extremely cheesy. Wes Anderson films are similarly polarizing, with anti-Andersonites always picking fights with the pro-Wes set.

Louis Paquet is the filmmaker who brought the two together, not sure what his stance is on either one though, you'll have to check with him to see where he stands on this important issue.

So what would the opening credits of Forrest Gump have looked like if it was directed by Wes Anderson? Let’s just say there are a bunch of beautiful static shots of stuff from the movie, accompanied by a lively soundtrack created by DEVO alum Mark Mothersbaugh. Splendid!

-Via 22 Words

25 Apr 00:55

Why I’m not gloating about Canada’s middle class

by Trish Hennessy

This week Canada’s nascent national debate about the problem of income inequality as it relates to the anxious middle class descended into ridiculous levels of un-Canadian gloating.

On Tuesday, Canadians awoke to news that the hypothetical middle-income Canadian outperformed its American counterpart in terms of after-tax income in 2010 (median, per capita, after-tax PPP-adjusted, inflation-adjusted income).

Right-wing politicians and pundits were quick to crow that their ideology was working and that Canada’s middle class is not, in fact, struggling.

Andrew Coyne claimed the idea of Canada’s “struggling middle class” is so two decades ago that it’s time to “retire” that talking point.

Business professor Ian Lee started a live debate with me on Power and Politics by gloating that there is no problem with Canada’s middle class and that organizations like mine that carefully document income inequality were wrong all along.

The finding that Canada did well in 2010, amid a global economic recession that rocked entire nations, isn’t that surprising. America’s middle class has been pummeled by a global economic recession their financial elite created.

It did not help that America’s middle class was over-leveraged with household debt and had no Canadian-style social safety net upon which to fall. The result was devastating for middle class America and that, to me, is nothing to gloat about.

In Canada, thanks to our strong bank regulations (which existed before the current federal government) and thanks to the fact that it took us longer to adopt $0 down, 40-year mortgages, we were relatively sheltered from the worst of the economic meltdown. Though Canadians did lose jobs in the recession and long-term unemployment remains a problem. Let’s not forget about them.

International comparisons and rankings are interesting, but they have their drawbacks. Often, they collapse so much data to be able to make the comparison that it scrubs out the details, like regional disparities in Canada.

For instance, if you’re earning a middle income in oil-blessed Alberta during this current boom, enjoy it. These are the salad days. And we all know that what goes boom eventually goes bust.

If you’re living in Canada’s manufacturing heartland – among the thousands who have lost good-paying jobs in Windsor and London, Ontario, for instance, your family is looking at food banks in a whole new light.

If you’re among Canada’s youth or immigrant population, facing stubbornly high levels of unemployment post-recession, the struggle is real.

Dismissing the angst of Canada’s middle and working class while we watch America struggle strikes me as a perfect way to avoid having an important conversation in this country about very real pressure on the majority of Canadians.

Today, the ticket into Canada’s middle class means it takes two or more workers in a household to stay afloat, partly because male median income has fallen over a 35-year period. Many piece together their standard of living by working part-time, contract jobs without benefits, sick pay or pensions.

We live in an era where, even when all workers help grow Canada’s economy, the majority is getting a smaller share of the income gains than when the gap between the rich and the rest of us was narrowing.

In this Hill Times story, CCPA Senior Economist Armine Yalnizyan pointed to the key drivers behind income inequality in Canada today: the richest 1% has doubled its share of income over the past generation while de-industrialization in Canada and the U.S. is fueling “continued outsourcing of manufacturing jobs, the erosion of unions’ bargaining power” and constant pressure on the middle “to give something up”.

When the CCPA released a report in 2012 by Dalhousie University Economist Lars Osberg, he noted in his examination of income inequality in North America that Mexico is the only part of the continent where the middle class has been gaining from growth.

“Although similar trends in Canada and the U.S. maintained growth in middle class incomes until the 1970s,” Osberg says, “they have since run out of steam. Globalization, technological advances, a drop in unionized work, and a deregulated labour market have contributed to stagnant real incomes for most in Canada and the U.S. since the 1980s.”

For young Canadians, the future can feel daunting: the B.A. is the new Grade 12 – and young Canadians are taking on student debt the size of a mortgage downpayment before they even land their first big job.

Meanwhile, household debt is so troubling we’ve had both Canada’s former federal finance minister and former Bank of Canada governor raise it as a major problem.

So, it’s a story of worry and instability for many Canadians.

We are becoming a more unequal society and the consequence of that trend is palpable. If Canadians don’t start talking about solutions, now when we’re well-positioned as a country to ensure a stable middle class and address persistent poverty, we may find ourselves looking back at this moment and realizing we missed a crucial opportunity to get real in uncertain times.

That’s a conversation well worth keeping front and centre in Canada today and for years to come. Denial is not an option.

Trish Hennessy is director of the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives’ Ontario office. Follower her on Twitter: @trishhennessy. Follow the CCPA-Ontario on Twitter: @CCPA_Ont

24 Apr 17:58

Forrest Gump directed by Wes Anderson

by David Pescovitz

Here are the opening credits to Forrest Gump, directed by Wes Anderson. (video by Louis Paquet)






24 Apr 17:49

The Fifth Element - 8-Bit Cinema Edition

by Zeon Santos

(Video Link)

Cult classic sci-fi flick The Fifth Element is beloved by fans for its original sense of humor, vibrant characters, and truly unique twist on the sci-fi genre, but when TFE gets an 8-bit makeover the whole thing becomes even more far out!

Cinefix's conversion of The Fifth Element into a pixel-tastic, video game inspired animated short may not replace the original movie in the hearts of fans, but once again they have done a great job of making me long for an old school style video game that will never come out. *sigh*

-Via GeekTyrant

24 Apr 17:35

Star Wars - Bad Foley Edition

by Zeon Santos

(Video Link)

Star Wars is one of the most beloved sci-fi franchises of all time, and both the special effects and the movie soundtracks still hold up decades later.

A big part of the original trilogy’s charm is the fun foley sound effects created specifically for the films- they're so iconic you can tell a lightsaber from a blaster rifle from a TIE fighter just by hearing the sound, but what would Star Wars be without those iconic foley sound effects?

YouTube user Hudson Hongo brings us Star Wars: Bad Foley Edition in an effort to prove just how important sound effects are to those wars in the stars.

-Via Gamma Squad

24 Apr 17:25

NZ Greens unveil Internet Rights and Freedoms bill

by Cory Doctorow

Andrew writes, "The Green Party of Aotearoa New Zealand has launched their Internet Rights and Freedoms Bill. The Bill was launched on a crowdsourced platform where members of the public are given the opportunity to shape these emerging rights and freedoms. This is the first time a Bill has been crowdsourced by a political party in New Zealand. The Internet Rights and Freedoms Bill proposes:"

1. Ten Internet Rights and Freedoms including the right to access and net neutrality; the right to encryption technology; and the right to privacy including the right to be forgotten online

2. Establishment of an Internet Rights Commissioner, as part of the Human Rights Commission, to allow New Zealanders to seek effective remedies for human rights violations online

3. A Chief Technology Officer for New Zealand similar in scope to the role of Chief Science Advisor to champion the Internet economy

4. A call for New Zealand to support a global Internet Rights Treaty

To view or participate in the Bill's drafting, go to http://www.internetrightsbill.org.nz/

NZ Greens Internet Rights and Freedoms Bill | Gareth Hughes MP (Thanks, Andrew!)






23 Apr 19:39

Harry Potter Reimagined As A 1980s Cyberpunk Anime

by Zeon Santos

(Video Link)

Kids who grew up in the 80s didn’t have Harry Potter in their lives, but frankly they didn’t need the shrimpy spell flinger hanging around when they had Transformers, Dungeons & Dragons and He-Man to keep their imaginations occupied.

However, now that the lil scarhead has made such a big splash in the world of geekdom he’s being integrated into all kinds of silly projects, like this animated short which reimagines Harry Potter as a 1980s Anime series.

Created by Nacho Punch, Harry Potter Cyber Punk Adventure: The 1980's Anime is heavy on the Akira influence and light on the teen angst, and would have looked right at home with the Saturday Morning cartoons lineup.

-Via Laughing Squid

23 Apr 14:57

Cinderella’s Pizza Dress is a Fairy Tale Come True

by John Farrier

With the help of her Fairy Godchef, Cinderella’s dress turns into a marvel of cheese and pepperoni. The result is much tastier than the fabric original. Just make sure that it’s delivered before midnight or the next dress is free.


(Video Link)

This .gif was made by Animation Domination High-Def, the animation team responsible for Axe Cop.

-via That’s Nerdalicious!

23 Apr 14:54

Grand Theft Frozen

by John Farrier

In this mod of Grand Theft Auto 4, you play Princess Anna from Frozen. She sings a foul-mouthed version of her sister’s song “Let It Go” while going on a murderous rampage around Liberty City. Anna may not have Elsa’s powers or responsibilities, but she’s definitely ready to:

It’s time to see what I can do
To test the limits and break through
No right, no wrong, no rules for me
I’m free

Of course, you don’t have to slaughter random people in boblester122’s mod. It’s not mandatory. But that’s what people do in GTA, right?


(Video Link)

I found this video at Kotaku, where you can also find a video of a spree-killing Elsa.

Content warning on the video: foul language.

22 Apr 16:04

Reddit's /r/technology demoted over scandal of secret censorship that blocked Internet freedom stories

by Cory Doctorow


Alan sez, "According to various media reports (e.g. BBC) the technology subreddit has scrubbed its moderator team after users discovered that the sub was holding a secret censorship list of banned words that included 'National Security Agency', 'GCHQ', 'Anonymous', 'anti-piracy', 'Bitcoin', 'Snowden', 'net neutrality', 'EU Court', 'startup' and 'Assange'.

On its face, this looks like a list of politicized terms, and blocking them looks like a highly political and partisan act -- for example, by blocking "net neutrality," then stories that are critical of network discrimination would be blocked, while straight news stories that overwhelmingly quoted corporate spokespeople using uncritical terms would make the front door.

More charitably, it may have been the act of overworked (and ultimately irresponsible) moderators to simply ban hot-button topics altogether.

Here's the Reddit post that outed /r/technology's moderators.

Once the news got publicized, the moderator team did a 'U turn' and removed the auto-deletion software, as well as booting the mods responsible for it in the first place.

Still, as the BBC story notes, the technology sub is no longer "featured", meaning it doesn't appear in the subreddits that are promoted to new users and appear on the front page.

Reddit downgrades technology community after censorship [BBC]

(Thanks, Alan!)






22 Apr 15:11

Appeals court orders Obama administration to disclose the legal theory for assassination of Americans

by Cory Doctorow

The Obama administration has lost a high-stakes lawsuit brought against it by the New York Times and the ACLU over its refusal to divulge the legal basis for its extrajudicial assassination program against US citizens. The Obama administration declared that it had the right to assassinate Americans overseas, far from the field of battle, on the basis of a secret legal theory. When it refused to divulge that theory in response to Freedom of Information Act requests, the Times and the ACLU sued. The Second Circuit Court of Appeals has found in the Times's and ACLU's favor.

The Obama administration had insisted that the legal memo in question was protected as a national security secret. However, the court found that because the administration had made statements about the memo, assuring the public that the assassinations were legal, it had waived its right to keep the memo a secret. There's no work on whether the administration will appeal to the Supreme Court.

"After senior Government officials have assured the public that targeted killings are 'lawful' and that OLC advice 'establishes the legal boundaries within which we can operate,'" the appeals court said, "waiver of secrecy and privilege as to the legal analysis in the Memorandum has occurred" (PDF).

The Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC), which in a friend-of-the court brief urged the three-judge appeals court to rule as it did, said the decision was a boon for citizen FOIA requests.

"It's very helpful. We have a number of cases, including one of our oldest FOIA cases, that involves the warrantless wiretapping memos. The basic premise is when OLC writes a legal memo and when that becomes the known basis for a program, that's the law of the executive branch and cannot be withheld," Alan Butler, EPIC's appellate counsel, said in a telephone interview.

Obama ordered to divulge legal basis for killing Americans with drones [David Kravets/Ars Technica]






22 Apr 15:06

Convicted Terrorist Sentenced to Read Malcolm Gladwell Book

by John Farrier


(Photo: Pop!Tech)

Malcolm Gladwell is a public intellectual famous for his broad-scope psychological and sociological books, such as The Tipping Point, Outliers, and Blink. His most recent book is entitled David and Goliath: Underdogs, Misfits, and the Art of Battling Giants. It's a study of how disadvantages can make people stronger. A US federal court recently sentenced Rebecca Rubin, a convicted terrorist, to read it as part of her punishment.

Between 1997 and 2001, she committed several acts of arson on behalf of environmental causes. US District Judge Ann Aiken sentenced Rubin to 5 years in prison, so she'll have plenty of time to get through the book.  Judge Aiken hopes that by reading the Gladwell book, "Rubin could learn non-violent means to protesting systems she perceives as unjust."

What books do you think would serve as effective criminal punishments?

-via Jessica Reed

21 Apr 23:21

Can you figure out what's wrong with this picture of a half-naked 16 year-old girl with breast implants the size of her head?

by Rob Beschizza

Jannelle Asselin could, but when she wrote an article about the Teen Titans cover—in terms so measured and respectful that one is struck by her restraint--she was of course inundated nonetheless with relentless boyrage and misogyny from comic book guys; professionals included.

The Daily Beast's Tauriq Moosa summarizes the imbroglio.

After criticizing the new ‘Teen Titans’ cover, Janelle Asselin was name-called and threatened with rape. The worst part? No one is surprised. You’ve seen this scenario before, and you’ll see it again (until more of us do something). Woman writes about something traditionally regarded as a male-orientated industry or area of interest; if she’s conveying love, she’s doing it “for attention” (so what?) or “fake” (whatever that means); if she criticizes, she’s insulting, whining, moaning, on her period; if she says anything at all, her argument or point is made invisible because her damn biology is getting in the way.

There's something peculiar about this cover that really gets to the heart of it all. The discrepancy between what it thinks it is (a strong character for young girls to aspire to) and what it really is (objectified skin for old men to wank to) is just so obvious that it simply couldn't exist without the whole business's lifetime subscription to denial.






21 Apr 20:15

Open source seeds

by Maggie Koerth-Baker
Last week, the Open Source Seed Initiative released 29 new varieties of 14 different food crops. The new seeds cannot legally be brought under any kind of IP protection, nor can any future varieties bred or otherwise created from them.






20 Apr 17:58

The Cats of YouTube

by Miss Cellania

(YouTube link)

Artist and filmmaker Richard Swarbrick drew illustrations of the most popular cat videos of the past few years and animated them to make this video. You will recognize them all, because we posted the originals here as they were produced, and because he captured the essence of the originals so well. In other words, this is good. -via Uproxx

20 Apr 17:53

Spooky music made by abusing turntables and cutting up and reforming vinyl records

by Cory Doctorow

Knitmeapony sez, "This is the raddest, most atmospheric thing ever. All kinds of delightful, spooky distortions, creepy static, half-heard voices and mashed-up music, created by physically altering vinyl records and record players and manipulating them as they go. A serious delight."






20 Apr 17:52

Pharrell Williams's "Happy" Created with 6-Second Vine Videos

by John Farrier


(Video Link)

Last month, we saw a clever trombone player use sampling and looping playback to perform Pharrell Williams's hit song "Happy" by himself. Rob Scallon used Vine to create something similar. He noticed that one measure of "Happy" was precisely 6 seconds long--which is the length of a Vine video. By looping and staggering out pieces of the song, he was able to recreate it.

-via 22 Words

18 Apr 14:41

Free Speech

spriteleigh

Always mouseover with XKCD

I can't remember where I heard this, but someone once said that defending a position by citing free speech is sort of the ultimate concession; you're saying that the most compelling thing you can say for your position is that it's not literally illegal to express.
18 Apr 05:42

If Hayao Miyazaki Films Were Like Other Anime

by John Farrier

Hayao Miyazaki is the master filmmaker responsible for anime classics such as My Neighbor Totoro and Princess Mononoke. He has a fairly consistent style of storytelling and animation. If you watch a fair amount of anime, you'll easily notice the differences.

This College Humor video imagines Miyazaki's films as though he wasn't original and imitated other shows, including Naruto*, Voltron, Sailor Moon, and Pokémon.

*Or maybe Dragon Ball Z. I haven't seen either show, so I'm just guessing.

POLL: What is your favorite Miyazaki movie?

  • Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind
  • Princess Mononoke
  • Howl's Moving Castle
  • Ponyo
  • Kiki's Delivery Service
  • Porco Rosso
  • Spirited Away
  • My Neighbor Totoro
  • The Castle of Cagliostro
  • Castle in the Sky
  • The Wind Rises
  • I don't know! Can I see the answers?
17 Apr 20:18

20 Things You Might Not Know About Kill Bill: Vol. 1 & 2

by Miss Cellania

It was ten years ago this week that Kill Bill Vol. 2 was released, completing Quentin Tarantino’s tale about a vengeful woman. The first movie came out in 2003, and was originally intended to be all in one part, but at four hours in length, the decision was made to split it in two. Any Quentin Tarantino movie has a lot of weird things going on both onscreen and offscreen, so at least some of these bits of trivia will be new to you. For instance:

3. Talk about doing Kill Bill started during Pulp Fiction. Quentin Tarantino came up with the idea of doing Kill Bill while talking with Uma Thurman on the set of Pulp Fiction. The two were discussing the types of movies they liked and he expressed his interest in ’70s kung fu movies. They then started hashing out what would become the opening scene of the beaten Bride in her wedding gown.

14. 450 gallons of blood were spilled. According to makeup effects artist Christopher Allen Nelson, over 450 gallons of fake blood were used over the course of filming both movies.

17. Many Bills were considered before going with David Carradine. Kevin Costner was considered for the part, but was busy with Open Range. Jack Nicholson, Kurt Russell, Mickey Rourke, and Burt Reynolds were also on the table as well. Tarantino was ready to sign Warren Beatty, but had second thoughts about the actor when, according to Michael Madsen, Beatty expressed that he “didn’t get what the story was about” to Tarantino.

I read all twenty bits of trivia on the list at FilmDrunk, but I am just as confused about the story as I ever was. Maybe someday I’ll actually watch the Kill Bill movies.

16 Apr 23:37

Web developers: EFF needs your help with important pro-democracy tool!

by Cory Doctorow

Rainey from the Electronic Frontier Foundation sez, "The Electronic Frontier Foundation, the Sunlight Foundation, and Taskforce.is have teamed up to build a public domain tool that makes it easier for everyday people to contact Congress. EFF wants to use it so that Internet users can effectively stop Congress from enacting laws that don't make sense for technology and advocate for laws that protect our rights. But once it's done, it will be free software that anybody will be able to use it and improve.

"There's already a functional prototype, but it's not quite finished: we need web developers to donate time to help us finish off creating individual files for each member of Congress. Please pitch in for a few hours if you can, and help us make the voices of Internet users heard in the halls (or at least the inboxes) of Congress."

Dear Web Developers: EFF Needs Your Help

(Thanks, Rainey!)






16 Apr 17:54

ZenPen is a Dead Simple, Distraction Free Writing Zone on the Web

by Eric Ravenscraft

ZenPen is a Dead Simple, Distraction Free Writing Zone on the Web

There are a lot of great distraction-free writing tools out there. If you'd rather not download an app, though, ZenPen is a wonderful web-based alternative with a simple design and minimal clutter.

Read more...

16 Apr 12:57

Crowdfunding £12,000 to fight mandatory UK Internet filters

by Cory Doctorow

Jim Killock from the UK Open Rights Group sez, "Recently the British Government, with the help of conservative religious lobby groups, has persuaded ISPs to introduce an internet filter across the UK. Open Rights Group needs your help to challenge this. We want to make people aware that filters don't work, are dangerous for internet freedom and could give parents a false sense of security when it comes to their children's use of the internet.

"To get this message across we want to produce a high-quality, funny film that will re-start the debate about why filters are a bad idea. It will cost us £12,000 to get this campaign off the ground. We need to show people that filters censor the internet. Most of all, we need to tell politicians like Claire Perry that they have to stop blaming the internet for society's problems.

"Filters don't work. Help us to fight them."

Internet filters are a weak spot in the UK government's expanding censorship programme, and ripe for disruption through pointed satire. I contributed.

Stop UK Internet Censorship

(Disclosure: I co-founded the Open Rights Group and volunteer on its advisory board)






16 Apr 00:52

TL;DR Wikipedia

by Miss Cellania

If you think the articles in Wikipedia are too long to read, there’s a new Tumblr ready to enlighten you on all manner of subjects. TL;DR Wikipedia bills itself as “Wikipedia condensed for your pleasure.” It’s a hoot! Some of the entries are even funnier than these; I picked out a few that lacked objectionable language to show here. Otherwise the air conditioner entry would be at the top. My accountant would disagree about the last one, though, at least in my case. -via Metafilter

15 Apr 20:29

The most mindblowing photograph to emerge from the Nevada BLM/white militia standoff

by Xeni Jardin


Reuters

Reuters photog Jim Urquhart captured this surreal photograph of Eric Parker, who lives in central Idaho, aiming his gun from a bridge as pro-states' rights protesters assemble at the Bureau of Land Management base camp in Bunkerville, Nevada. The Atlantic has a good explainer on the case, which involves rancher Cliven Bundy not paying grazing fees to the BLM, and now essentially squatting his "ancestral land" with support from a lot of very angry white people with guns. This is militia culture in the United States.






14 Apr 22:41

A Vindication for the Public: Guardian and Washington Post Win Pulitzer Prize (A statement from Edward Snowden)

by Edward Snowden

I am grateful to the committee for their recognition of the efforts of those involved in the last year's reporting, and join others around the world in congratulating Glenn Greenwald, Laura Poitras, Barton Gellman, Ewen MacAskill, and all of the others at the Guardian and Washington Post on winning the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service.

Today's decision is a vindication for everyone who believes that the public has a role in government. We owe it to the efforts of the brave reporters and their colleagues who kept working in the face of extraordinary intimidation, including the forced destruction of journalistic materials, the inappropriate use of terrorism laws, and so many other means of pressure to get them to stop what the world now recognizes was work of vital public importance.

This decision reminds us that what no individual conscience can change, a free press can. My efforts would have been meaningless without the dedication, passion, and skill of these newspapers, and they have my gratitude and respect for their extraordinary service to our society. Their work has given us a better future and a more accountable democracy.

--Edward Snowden, April 14, 2014

This statement originally appeared on the Freedom of the Press Foundation website. Greenwald, Poitras, and Boing Boing editor Xeni are also board members of FotPF. Thanks, Trevor Timm.






14 Apr 21:18

Punishments for scientists who don't make research open access

by Maggie Koerth-Baker
The National Institutes of Health requires research it funds to be put into the public access PubMed Central database within a year of publication. Now, it's witholding grant money from scientists who fail to comply with that rule. Ditto the Wellcome Trust in the UK.






14 Apr 17:07

Don Draper and Jackie Brown at LAX

by Rob Beschizza

Illo: Matt Haughey

Two scenes shot on LAX's mosaic-backed moving walkway, years apart: Pam Grier in the intro credits of Jackie Brown, and Jon Hamm as Don Draper in last night's season opener of Mad Men. Compare The Graduate.

Matt Haughey carefully spliced stills from the two scenes together to create this exquisite composite. It's unsettling, yet intriguing, to see the two stars with their impassive public don't-bother-me faces appearing to stand before one another. The walkway hidden from view, it could be anywhere in abstract LAXspace.

But I prefer an alternate explanation, where the context of the automatic walkway is assumed: Don has turned around in order to travel backwards while chatting up Jackie, but Jackie is having none of his bullshit.

(For context, here's video of the mosaic and walkway.)






13 Apr 17:23

Kickstarting Storium: turn writing into a multiplayer game

by Cory Doctorow

Mur Lafferty sez, "This week, Storium launched its Kickstarter and reached funding ($25000) in the first day. Storium is a web-based online game that you play with friends. It works by turning writing into a multiplayer game."

With just your computer, tablet, or smartphone, you can choose from a library of imaginary worlds to play in, or build your own. You create your story's characters and decide what happens to them. You can tell any kind of story with Storium. The only limit is your imagination.

Storium uses familiar game concepts inspired by card games, role-playing games, video games, and more. In each Storium game, one player is the narrator, and everyone else takes on the role of a character in the story. The narrator creates dramatic challenges for the other players to overcome. In doing so, they move the story forward in a new direction. Everyone gets their turn at telling the story."

Storium offers worlds to play in created by authors, transmedia writers, and game designers, and one of the perks of supporting the Kickstarter campaign is instant access to the already-running beta.

Storium — The Online Storytelling Game (Thanks, Mur!)