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28 Feb 20:04

Fixed, An App Designed to Help Challenge Parking Tickets

by Rollin Bishop

Fixed App Ticket Photo

Fixed is an app from co-founders David Hegarty, David Sanghera, and DJ Burdick that aims to help users contest parking tickets. Users take a photo of their ticket, provide whatever grounds they wish to contest it on, and the app provides an analysis of how likely the ticket is to be dismissed as well as personal advocate to help users through the process. If the ticket is dismissed, Fixed charges 25% of whatever the fine would have been, and there is no fee assessed if the ticket is not.

Fixed is currently only available in San Francisco, with signups being taken on their website, but the company plans to expand to other cities soon.

Fixed App Advocate

Fixed App Contest Grounds

via Boing Boing

28 Feb 20:03

'Real life' Noah's Ark successfully funded after Bill Nye creationism debate - Death and Taxes


Newsweek

'Real life' Noah's Ark successfully funded after Bill Nye creationism debate
Death and Taxes
While many in the mainstream hated the idea of Bill Nye showing up to debate Ken Ham at the Creation Museum in Kentucky on the grounds that it unduly validated Ham's theories, more seemed to rejoice in Nye's performance–satisfied that he'd done the ...
Christian group behind controversial Creationist Museum to build 800-acre ...The Independent
Noah's Ark Project in Ky. to Move ForwardABC News
Australian creationist's 'Ark' plan resurfaces in KentuckyThe Australian
Salon -The Detroit News
all 255 news articles »
28 Feb 19:51

UK agency violated privacy of webcams, explored Kinect surveillance

by Earnest Cavalli
Classified documents published by The Guardian reveal that British surveillance agency GCHQ surreptitiously gathered webcam images from more than a million Yahoo user accounts, while also evaluating the surveillance potential of the Xbox 360's Kinect...
28 Feb 19:32

jeremyspurlock: All done. Blue Squadron reporting in. A-Wings...

firehose

A-Wings best wings



jeremyspurlock:

All done. Blue Squadron reporting in.

A-Wings are best.

28 Feb 19:31

inaneenglish: How do I sign up for Kelly Sue to nag me? I need that in my life. I need to make...

inaneenglish:

How do I sign up for Kelly Sue to nag me? I need that in my life.

I need to make this an FAQ. 

You want me to nag you randomly?  You’re now taking a class called “Bitches Get Shit Done.”  

To sign up, text @bitchesg to (971) 244-8342. 

28 Feb 19:30

The New Faces of Beauty

by Ari
Charlotte Rampling by Peppe Tortora courtesy of Grey Magazine
Marc Jacobs Beauty Campaign by David Sims


Break out the Bolly sweeties!  There is indeed something to celebrate in these waning days of winter. NARS and Marc Jacobs have made a quantum leap into the future of beauty in their decision to hire two women who have been worshipped since they were young.

Charlotte Rampling, 68,will be the face of NARS. Jessica Lange, 64, will be the face of Marc Jacobs.

For seasoned women, women who threw caution to the winds in the 60’s and 70’s and lived a life where they took chances, and as they were doing that, remembered to put on some lippy, seeing the divine Miss Lange and the supreme Miss Rampling in every magazine from New York to Timbuktu will be a triumph of age over youth.

Seniors they are not.  And while we’re at it let’s banish that hateful word to describe women over fifty.  Ramplng and Lange are goddesses as are we.
- Alice Carey, author of I'll Know It When I See It
28 Feb 19:29

Ask Chris #185: Superheroes Of The Squared Circle

by Chris Sims
firehose

Adam Warrock beat; getting beaten up by Gambit beat

Ask Chris art by Erica Henderson

Q: Who is the best wrestler in Marvel or DC?@Mike_Zeidler

A: I’ll be honest with you, folks: Over the past week, I have pretty much done nothing but watch the new WWE Network for five straight days, so it was a foregone conclusion that this week’s column was going to be about pro wrestling. It was either this, or a lengthy examination of what the tag team tournament from Starrcade ’89: Future Shock had in common with Secret Wars II, and I don’t think any of us want to sit through that.

Now, I’ve written about comics that were about pro wrestling in the past, but if we’re talking about which mainstream superheroes would fare best inside the squared circle, well, there’s certainly an obvious answer.

Deadpool Team-Up #888, Marvel Comics

Canonically speaking, the superhero who’s had the most actual success in wrestling is none other than Benjamin J. Grimm, the Fantastic Four’s ever-lovin’ blue-eyed Thing, who joined up with the Unlimited Class Wrestling Federation back in 1985. Unsurprisingly, I genuinely love the idea behind this, which is that there were so many mutants and mad scientists running around giving people superpowers that there were enough of them who decided not to commit crimes or fight for justice, and instead joined up with a wrestling promotion for people who could lift a minimum of ten tons, and this was somehow not the most popular form of entertainment on Earth.

It’s such a weird little quirk of the Marvel Unvierse, but in its own way, it makes perfect sense. If you find yourself on the receiving end of a little genetic tinkering from the Power Broker, are you going to want to be like the Constrictor, a dude who routinely gets his teeth knocked out by the Hulk and once got beaten up by Gambit, or are you going to want long limousines, jet airplaines, and the ten pounds of gold? I think that choice is pretty clear.

As for how the Thing got involved in the King of Sports, well, it was the ’80s, and this is quite possibly the 1980sest story of all time. That whole series is a bizarre little time capsule, but there was a point where Bashful Benjamin was just wandering around from one pop-culture fad to another. In the issues right before he joins up with the UCWF, he’s hanging out with the Thunderriders, a team of dirtbike stuntmen, and leaves them just in time to sign up with UCWF and introduce the world to the superheroic “enhancement talent” that is D-Man. If he’d only teamed up with U.S. 1 to haul an 18-wheeler full of cosmic cubes across the country, it would’ve been the best comic of all time.

Quick aside: Can we talk about the Thunderriders for a second? Because they are amazing. Originally known as Team America, they were another of those obscure early ’80s toy licenses that Marvel picked up and built an entire story around. In this case, the story that a creative team including Jim Shooter, Denny O’Neil, Bill Mantlo, Ed Hannigan and Steven Grant came up with involved a former CIA agent leading a group of five dirtbike stuntmen who performed across the country while secretly fighting crime. Every time they’d get into a tight spot, they’d be rescued by The Maurader, a masked, black-clad biker who turned out to be the psychic manifestation of their x-treme dirtbike skills that would possess a team member’s wife. Their arch-nemesis was a HYDRA’s middle manager, who only joined because HYDRA offers health benefits. Seriously. It is amazing.

Anyway, after spending some time with them, the Thing, who was part of a superhero team that literally saved the world from being eaten by a giant purple man from space on more than one occasion, had a brief stint as their World Champion, and I have to imagine that was the extension of what happened a few years earlier in Tom DeFalco and Ron Wilson’s Marvel Two-In-One Annual #7:

Marvel Two-In-One Annual #7

For my money, this is one of the all-time greatest Marvel Comic stories, perfectly hitting that balance of simple and completely ridiculous. A cosmic being called The Champion of the Universe shows up and threatens to destroy the world unless Earth’s superheroes go one-on-one in the ring with him in Madison Square Garden, and after everyone else is disqualified, it’s up to the Thing to do the job. The Champion wins, but Ben Grimm refuses to stay down and keeps getting up to keep fighting. It’s kind of the perfect representation of his never-say-die attitude, with the added bonus of getting to see Wonder Man beaten to a bloody pulp and get DQed for running away.

Admittedly, that story was about boxing, but by 1985, when Hulkamania had given wrestling one of its biggest boom periods in pop culture, it was only natural for comics to add in a little more sports entertainment. Thus, Unlimited Class Wrestling and the Thing’s all-too-short run with the title.

One more thing to note about the UCWF: I’m actually a fan of Ben Grimm as a pro wrestler in the comics, because my love of pro wrestling is powerful enough to cross into Marvel Comics continuity. When Cullen Bunn and Tom Fowler brought it back in Deadpool Team-Up #888 a couple years ago, Fowler drew me into the crowd as a spectator during the Thing and Deadpool’s tag team match. I’m the one holding the soda, next to Adam Warrock:

Deadpool Team-Up #888, Marvel Comics

Aside from the Thing, there’s one other major Marvel character with close ties to the world of professioal wrestling, and that, of course, is Spider-Man, whose very first act upon realizing that he has super-powers is to hop into the ring against Crusher Hogan:

Amazing Fantasy #15, Marvel Comics

Again, I love this — not just because it’s a rare appearance of pro wrestling in comics, but because it’s one of the few Marvel origins that actually makes more sense now than when it was originally published. I mean, look at Peter Parker. He’s this nerdy kid who’s suddenly super strong and super agile, and so he decides to put on a straight up luchador mask to go fight crime. Of course that guy’s into pro wrestling. He even cuts promos on his opponents while he’s fighting them.

Amazing Spider-Man #69, Marvel Comics

That’s a straight up flying headscissor takedown, y’all, and nothing you can say will convince me otherwise.

The thing is, all the crazy smack-talking and acrobatic luchador moves aren’t what you’d get from a kid who really liked pro wrestling in 1963, it’s what you’d get from a kid who grew up with pro wrestling today. It’s one of the reasons that it made perfect sense to keep that part of the origin virtually the same for the first Sam Raimi movie, just updating things from the giant grappler in trunks to the Macho Man Randy Savage. Seriously, there is no way in hell that Spider-Man has not annoyed at least Slyde or the Kangaroo into submission by continually asking them if they smell what he’s cookin’. And really, how prophetic a name was “Crusher Hogan?’

Speaking of ol’ Crusher, he’s reappeared a few times in comics over the years, too. The most notable is probably the aptly titled “Whatever Happened to Crusher Hogan?” from Amazing Spider-Man #271:

Amazing Spider-Man #271, Marvel Comics

It’s a good story — I first read it in the Very Best of Spider-Man paperback that I had as a kid — but I call shenanigans on it based purely on Tom DeFalco and Ron Frenz retconning Hogan as a washed-up palooka at a boxing gym rather than tying it into wrestling. Then again, the bad guy in that issue was someone looking to fix the fights, so I suppose pro wrestling might’ve made that a little redundant.

The other major Crusher Hogan appearance comes from a story in Spider-Man: Tangled Web #14, drawn by Guiseppe Camuncoli and co-written by Brian Azzarello and Scott Levy, a professional wrestler that you might know as Raven. It’s a really good comic and adds a very interesting, noirish, crime-story take to the setup of Crusher Hogan and his challenge to take on all comers, but it’s also ultimately really depressing, and casts Spider-Man as the direct cause of a whole lot of suffering. It is, however, that prototype Spider-Man in the webbed mask and the sweatshirt who let his uncle die, not the super-hero who learned his lesson, so it’s actually pretty easy to justify it, but man, it gets dark at the end.

There are a few other superheroes who have tried their hand at the noble art of grappling — Superman got into the ring a few times in the Silver Age, which is every bit as weird as it sounds — but there’s one last one that bears mentioning, if only how bad it was, and that’s the time Batman was a pro wrestler. Not the regular version, you understand, but the alternate version created for Stan Lee and Joe Kubert’s Just Imagine Stan Lee’s Batman.

Just Imagine Stan Lee's Batman, DC Comics

If you’ve never read Just Imagine…, don’t. Despite the presence of a lot of talented artists and the ultimate stunt of having Stan Lee recreate the major figures of the Distinguished Competition’s roster, the whole thing was pretty abysmal, as evidenced by the fact that it gave us pro wrestling Batman and still wasn’t any good.

The short version is that ex-con Wayne Williams (get it? Because Stan Lee characters have alliterative names?) was trying to find the man who killed his father, “Handz,” so he decided to secretly investigate the crime by becoming a famous pro wrestler named Batman. He literally sews himself a bat costume, walks into a gym, and then is a millionaire three weeks later. I mean, sure, that’s probably about as plausible as a magic ring from space that lets you make giant glowing green chainsaws, but still, you have to draw the line somewhere.

Then again, the regular DC Universe Batman does wear a bright yellow belt that people are always trying to take away from him, and spent a lot of time in the ’90s fighting a dude on steroids who wore a lucha mask and did an actual pro wrestling backbreaker as his signature move. Maybe he’s been a pro wrestler all along?

Ask Chris art by Erica Henderson. If you’ve got a question you’d like to see Chris tackle in a future column, just send it to @theisb on Twitter with the hashtag #AskChris.

Read More 'Ask Chris'

28 Feb 19:27

Super Secret Crisis War: Cartoon Network Stars Assemble In IDW's Cutest Crossover Yet

by Matt D. Wilson
firehose

the only comics crossover that should ever happen
stop all future crossovers, they're pointless

IDW Cartoon Network Super Secret Crisis WarIDW/Cartoon Network

When the evil Aku, Vilgax, Mandark and Mojo Jojo join forces in an axis of awfulness, their respective nemeses are going to have to team up to stop them, right?

That’s the idea behind IDW’s new series Super Secret Crisis War, which brings together Dexter from Dexter’s Laboratory; Samurai Jack; The Powerpuff Girls; Ben 10, and Ed, Edd and Eddy to form a super-team of characters with different skills, backgrounds and art styles. The six-issue event, written by Louise Simonson and with art by Derek Charm, starts in June.

“I love writing group books! So obviously, Super Secret Crisis War! is my dream job!” Simonson said in an IDW press release. “Even researching the series is fun — who doesn’t love watching cartoons!? Especially excellent, award-winning cartoon series like Samurai Jack, Ben 10, Powerpuff Girls, Dexter’s Laboratory, and Ed, Edd & Eddy. But the very best part is seeing the art and design so beautifully realized by the wonderful Derek Charm.”

In July, the event will expand to include characters from Foster’s Home for Imaginary Friends, Grim Adventures of Billy and MandyJohnny BravoCodename: Kids Next Door, and Cow and Chicken, who will appear in tie-in one-shots. They’ll be written by Ivan Cohen, Kate Leth, Erik Burnham, Scott Peterson and Jim Zubkavich.

Charm got his feet wet with CN crossover art with a variant cover of Dexter’s Laboratory #1 featuring the Powerpuff Girls, which he’s been writing and illustrating at IDW as well. We thought that’d be as close as we got to a crossover tale, but it turns out far greater plans were already in motion.

IDW Cartoon Network Super Secret Crisis War 1

IDW Cartoon Network Super Secret Crisis War 2

Dexter Meets The Powerpuff Girls Via Variant Cover

28 Feb 19:25

Steam Family Sharing now available to all Steam users

by Samit Sarkar

Steam Family Sharing, the service that allows for sharing of a Steam library between multiple individuals and computers, is now available to all Steam users, Valve announced today.

The service can be enabled for up to five Steam accounts to share a single collection of games across as many as 10 different computers. During the beta that Valve had been running until now, the limit had been 10 users. Under the Family Sharing program, Steam maintains game saves in the Steam Cloud and tracks achievements for each account.

Valve announced Steam Family Sharing and launched a limited beta last September, and last month, the company increased security by adding two-factor authentication. According to Valve's Family Sharing FAQ, individuals must be online in order to play games in libraries that are shared with them. And whether there are one or 10 Steam users authorized to share a library, multiple people can't be playing at the same time — only the account holder, the person whose library is being shared, maintains unlimited access to their games at all times.

28 Feb 19:24

pick up - Tsuppari Oozumou Risshin Shussehen (Tecmo - Super...



pick up -

Tsuppari Oozumou Risshin Shussehen (Tecmo - Super Famicom - 1993)

28 Feb 19:23

A Worthless Clock Featuring the Armless Black Knight From ‘Monty Python and the Holy Grail’ Not Showing The Time

by Justin Page

The Most Worthless Clock by Phil Jones

Look, you stupid bastard, you’ve got no arms left!” – King Arthur

Minneapolis artist Phil Jones has created “The Most Worthless Clock,” a clever illustration featuring the Black Knight from Monty Python and the Holy Grail standing in the middle of the clock with his arms chopped off and laying at his feet, rather than pointing to the current time. Prints of Phil’s illustration are available to purchase online at Society6.

Here is the original scene from Monty Python and the Holy Grail for reference:

The Most Worthless Clock by Phil Jones

images via Phil Jones, video via ObscureQuotes

via reddit, Neatorama

28 Feb 19:20

Newswire: Prince announces takeover of Arsenio Hall Show in appropriately Prince-ian manner

by David Anthony

Earlier this week it was announced that, despite its troubles, CBS was renewing The Arsenio Hall Show for another season. This vote of confidence from the network alone wouldn’t be enough to rectify the show’s flaws–most notably its struggle to land guests on par with its late-night competition. Yet, much like Hall was delivered the news of his renewal from postman Jay Leno, he was once again the recipient of some show-shaking snail-mail last night. 

The always-theatrical Prince sent a “letter-bearing clone”—likely one of many he keeps around for events such as these—to offer his services to Hall for an evening. According to that letter, on Wednesday, March 5 the eccentric star will be Arsenio’s lone guest, though that didn’t stop Prince from claiming he’d also  be bringing “all of America” along with him. Though a Prince boost will likely help, it ...

28 Feb 19:05

doublehamburgerjack: thefingerfuckingfemalefury: bethanythemart...

firehose

via GN
the implication that Hulk is straining to carry all the pies













doublehamburgerjack:

thefingerfuckingfemalefury:

bethanythemartian:

ohmygil:

scratch-the-maven:

"We have…mead pie. Beer pie. And for the truly daring…Fimbulvinter pie."

Avengers #24.NOW

I think we’re burying the lead. Thor made veggie burgers and that is hilarious

BRING FORTH THE PIES

THEY HAVE MADE READY SUCH PASTRIES :D

SUCH PASTRIES

WITH VIGOR

28 Feb 19:03

Photo

firehose

fuck the police



28 Feb 18:59

Ex-NFL safety Sharper surrenders in Los Angeles - Washington Post

firehose

'Sharper, 38, who has pleaded not guilty to the other charges, was ordered to surrender his passport, stay in Los Angeles and avoid all women. He is free on $1 million bail.'

aaaaaaaaaaaaaAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA


Washington Post

Ex-NFL safety Sharper surrenders in Los Angeles
Washington Post
LOS ANGELES — Former NFL All-Pro safety Darren Sharper surrendered to Los Angeles police after being named in a warrant involving a rape case in New Orleans. Sharper, 38, also is under investigation in sexual assault cases in Florida, Nevada and ...
Darren Sharper surrenders to Los Angeles policeUSA TODAY
Former NFL safety and alleged serial rapist Darren Sharper turns himself inSalon
Man implicated in Sharper assault case surrendersBaraboo News Republic

all 420 news articles »
28 Feb 18:58

Twitter / nickpampenella: So I snapped a photo of my ...

firehose shared this story .

So I snapped a photo of my favorite science guy w/ my favorite jigga man & then the Internet exploded @TheScienceGuy pic.twitter.com/XTnVVTVcdR

28 Feb 18:52

Best Sequential Art Ever (This Week): Yasmin Liang, Roc Upchurch and Sara Pichelli

by Janelle Asselin
firehose

'we get to see female Spock do exactly what male Spock does, showing that being a leader and person of action are not traits reserved for one gender. It's great, quiet storytelling that happens and is over in a flash but is nonetheless appreciated.'

also I should be reading Rat Queens

The comic book, animation, illustration, pinup, mashup, fan art and design communities are generating amazing artwork of myriad styles and tastes, all of which ends up on the Internet and filtered into ComicsAlliance’s Best Art Ever (This Week). These images convey senses of mood and character — not to mention artistic skill — but comic books are specifically a medium of sequential narratives, and great sequential art has to be both beautiful (totally subjective!) and clear in its storytelling (not so subjective!). The words and the pictures need to work together to tell the story and create whatever tone, emotion and indeed world the story requires. The contributions of every person on a creative team, from the writer to the artist(s) to the letterers, are necessary to achieving a great page of sequential storytelling.

It is the special nature of comic books that we’re celebrating in this recurring feature: Best Sequential Art Ever (This Week).


Star Trek 30 Yasmin Liang IDW

Story: Mike Johnson
Art:  Yasmin Liang
Colors: Zac Atkinson
Lettering: Gilberto Lazcano
Editing: Sarah Gaydos
Publisher: IDW
Available: Comics shops (print) / ComiXology (Apple + Android + Web)

Gender-swapped Star Trek! What a glorious thing. Yasmin Liang's art is very strong on this issue, which must have been extremely challenging. The balance between making sure the regular versions of the characters look like the actors in the newer movies and making their gender-swapped versions look similar must have been very hard to hit just right, but Liang does it with very few missteps as can be seen here. Like other artists of a similar style, Liang's art occasionally feels like it lacks motion, but this page is a great example of her putting characters into motion well. The panel sizes and shapes are interesting and different without being distracting. The lettering is on target and the figures help to guide the eye. Probably the best part of this page, though, is the subtle cues in the first panel. Female Spock tries to protect Uhura in the same way male Spock does, thus implying that in the gender-swap world, Spock and Uhura's roles are not reversed in a way they might be in a more sexist comic. Instead, we get to see female Spock do exactly what male Spock does, showing that being a leader and person of action are not traits reserved for one gender. It's great, quiet storytelling that happens and is over in a flash but is nonetheless appreciated.

Rat-Queens-pgs-6-7(click to enlarge)

Story: Kurtis J. Wiebe
Art: Roc Upchurch
Lettering: Ed Brisson
Editing: Laura Tavishati
Publisher: Image Comics
Available: Comics shops (print) / ComiXology (Apple + Android + Web) / Image ( DRM-free download)

If people have told you that Rat Queens is one of the most fun, accessible, and entertaining comics on the stands, well, those people were not wrong. As can be seen on this spread, it is chock full of violence and tough ladies, but it also has a lot of heart and colorful swearing! This page is just a beautiful example of action in a comic. It feels fast paced and brutal in all the best ways. There's not a lot of lettering but all the sound effects look great, are colored well enough to pop but not distract, and everything is placed well. The featured character is facing forward in all but one of the shots, as it is she and not her foes that really matter in this battle. The lightning effects are well done and really help push that last blow over the top. Certain hits and other actions help guide the eye, too, as in panel two and the lightning at the bottom of panel six, which make you want to see what happens to cause that lightning. Artist Roc Upchurch has done some truly outstanding work here.

'Guardians of the Galaxy' #12

Guardians of the Galaxy #12 Sara Pichelli

Story: Brian Michael Bendis
Art: Sara Pichelli
Colors: Justin Ponsor
Lettering: VC's Cory Petit
Editing: Ellie Pyle and Stephen Wacker
Publisher: Marvel Comics
Available: Comics shops (print) / Marvel (Apple + Android + Web)

Sara Pichelli's art is gorgeous. Clearly. This page is a perfect example of how even a quiet moment can be given depth thanks to her artwork.  Cyclops walking away upset in the third panel is beautifully done, and the serious looks on everyone's faces are both appropriate and unique -- which is important since, you know, people don't always look serious in the same way.

Honestly, though, the real star of this page as far as storytelling is the lettering. The first two panels are a master class in how to lay out balloons to get a lot of copy out of the way without clogging the art. Certainly Pichelli gets credit for leaving that space -- artists who understand they need to leave room for lettering and leave it in the right spots are way too few and far between in American comics. But letterer Cory Petit really did a great job with the space. The rest of the lettering is just as well-placed, but it's the start of the page that really pops.

More Best Sequential Art Ever

28 Feb 18:50

Service dog may lose eye after alleged beating by a Washington County animal control officer

firehose

'He says, earlier this week, the wind blew open his gate. Someone called Washington County Animal Control to report the dog, Dojie, barking in the street.

Witnesses tell him she looked scared when officers got there and barked and ran to Starr's backyard.

Starr says Officer Hoyt Stepp followed. No one saw what came next, but Starr has his suspicions.

"They beat my dog and drove away leaving an injured animal to fend for itself, not knowing when the owner would return," he said.

The only indication of what happened was a notice on his door that warned "Your dog may have been injured." Below it, the officer had written his name: Hoyt Stepp

It's the same name that made headlines in Skagway, AK, 10 years ago.

Those headlines in the Skagway News read: "Death of dog concerns some citizens," and "Dog shooting continues to divide community."'

28 Feb 18:46

Twin Peaks

28 Feb 18:45

A Japanese Pillow Specifically Designed for Pillow Fighting

by Rollin Bishop
firehose

it's important to have standards

Japanese Pillow Fighting Pillow

The rather wordy “Pillow Officially Recognized by the All Japan Pillow Fighting Association” is a pillow specifically designed by Makura Kabushikigaisha (“Pillow Corporation) for pillow fighting. It also happens to be recognized by the All Japan Pillow Fighting Association, thus the name. The 35cm by 50cm pillows weigh around 800 grams and are filled with a latex material that’s been weighted to provide a good wallop while also being elastic enough to not cause any lasting damage.

According to RocketNews24, the second annual All Japan Pillow Fighting Tournament — hosted by the All Japan Pillow Fighting Association which recognizes these pillows — was held last weekend in Ito, Shizuoka Prefecture in Japan. There are a number of images available on the Ito Tourism Association Blog from the event, as well as a video of one of the games.

The “Pillow Officially Recognized by the All Japan Pillow Fighting Association” is currently available on Rakuten for 3,150 yen, which equates to around $32.

Japanese Pillow Tournament

Japanese Pillow Tournament

Japanese Pillow Tourament

images via Rakuten, Ito Tourism Association Blog

via Netorabo, Rakuten, Ito Tourism Association Blog, RocketNews24

28 Feb 18:43

Photo



28 Feb 18:43

Photo



28 Feb 18:43

Photo

firehose

the major hates being left out of McNulty's Shadowrun campaigns



28 Feb 18:41

one of the reasons i liked macho man as a kid was because of all the tassels in his attire

one of the reasons i liked macho man as a kid was because of all the tassels in his attire

28 Feb 18:37

Big Issues: Adventures Of Superman makes a case for continuity-free superhero comics

by Oliver Sava

Each week, Big Issues focuses on newly released comic-book issues of significance. This week, they are Adventures Of Superman #10 (print) and #44 (digital). Written by Derek Fridolfs, Josh Elder, and Ron Marz, with art by Sean “Cheeks” Galloway, Victor Ibáñez, and Evan “Doc” Shaner, these Superman stories show the benefits of abandoning continuity and embracing classic interpretations of superheroes.

Continuity is the great double-edged sword of superhero comic books, beneficial in that it creates a sense of history and growth for characters, but detrimental because it can make stories inaccessible for the new readers that the industry needs. Much to the chagrin of longtime fans, DC Comics eliminated most of its established continuity with the New 52 line-wide reboot in September of 2011, making its heroes younger, hipper, and, in theory, less complicated than what they were before. In practice, things got rather confusing, because while characters like Superman ...

28 Feb 18:33

This is the insane way Terry Gilliam's Watchmen movie would have ended

by Rob Bricken
firehose

'the existence of Doctor Manhattan had changed the whole balance of the world economy, the world political structure. He felt that THAT character really altered the way reality had been. He had the Ozymandias character convince, essentially, the Doctor Manhattan character to go back and stop himself from being created, so there never would be a Doctor Manhattan character. He was the only character with real supernatural powers, he went back and prevented himself from being turned into Doctor Manhattan, and in the vortex that was created after that occurred these characters from "Watchmen" only became characters in a comic book.

CS: That's fascinating. Very META.

Silver: Oh yeah. So the three characters, I think it was Rorschach and Nite Owl and Silk Spectre, they're all of the sudden in Times Square and there's a kid reading a comic book. They become like the people in Times Square dressing up like characters as opposed to really BEING those characters. There's a kid reading the comic book and he's like, "Hey, you're just like in my comic book." It was very smart, it was very articulate, and it really gave a very satisfying resolution to the story, but it just didn't happen. Lost to time.'

This is the insane way Terry Gilliam's Watchmen movie would have ended

There was a while where it seemed like Brazil director Terry Gilliam would be the one to bring Alan Moore's seminal graphic novel Watchmen to the big screen. It obviously didn't work out, but producer Joel Silver has revealed how Gillaim's adaptation would have ended, and it's bonkers.

Read more...


    






28 Feb 18:32

LeBron James wore a mask and was awesome

by Jason Patt
firehose

"I think he played like Batman out there," center Chris Bosh said. "I think it really helped him out. He played great."

"How you know what Batman plays like?" Beasley shouted toward Bosh. "How does he play?"

oblig. http://assets.sbnation.com/assets/1101026/bosh_avengers.gif

James tore up the Knicks while wearing a black mask that made him look a bit like the Caped Crusader.

If Dwight Howard is Superman, then LeBron James is Batman.

At least that's what Miami Heat teammate Chris Bosh said after James dominated the New York Knicks to the tune of 31 points on Thursday night while donning a menacing black mask to protect his broken nose, according to ESPN's Mike Wallace:

"I think he played like Batman out there," center Chris Bosh said. "I think it really helped him out. He played great."

Of course, Michael Beasley was there to ask the tough questions:

"How you know what Batman plays like?" Beasley shouted toward Bosh. "How does he play?"

If Batman did play basketball, one has to imagine it would be a lot like James, with plenty of aggression and power. James certainly looked the part with his black, carbon-fiber mask, which he said was a last-second choice:

"It went with the uniform," James said of his reason for going with the dark design to match the classic black uniforms the Heat wore for Thursday's game. "I knew we were wearing throwback uniforms. I was able to get a carbon fiber one, which is actually lighter than the one I had been wearing in practice. It came through at the last minute, so I went with it."

James expects to wear the mask for several weeks as his nose heals up after getting broken by Serge Ibaka last week on a drive to the basket. James had expressed a few concerns about adjusting to playing with the mask, but afterward, he said there wasn't much of a problem:

"A couple of times it was (a problem)," James said. "A couple of times, I kept seeing inside the mask sometimes before I could see a player. But for the most part, I was able to get into a good comfort zone and make some plays. And I just kind of tried to forget about it, besides maybe when it got hot a few times. I was happy with a couple of the timeouts when they came, and I was able to take it off."

Judging by his performance, there certainly didn't appear to be any issues. James made seven of his first nine shots and finished 13-of-19 from the field to go along with four rebounds and four assists in the 108-82 shellacking of the dreadful Knicks.

James has stepped up his game of late, re-inserting himself into the MVP conversation as Kevin Durant and the Oklahoma City Thunder have slipped a bit. Over his last five games, James is averaging 35.8 points, 8.4 rebounds and 5.0 assists while shooting 62.5 percent overall and 42.9 percent from three. The two-time reigning MVP clearly doesn't want to give up his throne without a fight.

James may also have to fight for his new look, as Bosh had some fun with it after the game:

Terrifying.

28 Feb 18:26

The Violent, Geeky World Of Hardcore Medieval Combat

Middle Ages war reenactment is taking a turn for the violent as a new breed of weekend warriors — don’t call them LARPers — grapple with dangerous weaponry, entrenched nationalism, and a bit of institutional corruption and chaos.
28 Feb 18:25

Microsoft experimenting with free version of Windows 8.1

by Tom Warren
firehose

'the experiment is part of a number of initiatives designed to push and monetize Microsoft’s cloud services and apps. Microsoft is increasingly betting on Bing as a platform it can monetize in future'

Microsoft is currently experimenting with a free version of Windows 8.1 that could boost the number of people using the operating system. Sources familiar with Microsoft’s plans have revealed to The Verge that the company is building "Windows 8.1 with Bing," a version that will bundle key Microsoft apps and services. While early versions of the software have leaked online, we understand that Windows 8.1 with Bing is an experimental project that aims to bring a low-cost version of Windows to consumers. ZDNet first reported some Windows 8.1 with Bing details earlier this week.

Designed as a free or low-cost upgrade for Windows 7 users

We’re told that Microsoft is aiming to position Windows 8.1 with Bing as a free or low-cost upgrade for Windows 7 users. Any upgrade offers will be focused on boosting the number of people using Windows 8.1. This Bing-powered version of Windows 8.1 may also be offered to PC makers as part of recent license cuts for devices under $250. It’s not clear how committed Microsoft is to these plans, but the experiment is part of a number of initiatives designed to push and monetize Microsoft’s cloud services and apps. Microsoft is increasingly betting on Bing as a platform it can monetize in future. Microsoft is also considering low-cost or free versions of Windows Phone, and the company is working towards merging its Windows RT and Windows Phone software into a single version designed for ARM-based chipsets.

Bing-powered apps are currently bundled into Windows 8.1, and a leaked version of "Windows 8.1 with Bing" does not appear to reveal any significant changes yet. Microsoft recently unveiled its Windows 8.1 spring update, and the company is expected to further detail the update at its Build developer conference in April. Additional details around the merging of Windows RT and Windows Phone are also expected to be shared at the Build conference.

28 Feb 18:24

Watch out, creative class: Robots are coming after your jobs, too

by Rachel Feltman
firehose

great

Delicious.

The best way to invent new recipes is to enlist the help of a supercomputer, says IBM. Data-driven delicacies—dishes created through the work of a cognitive computer system—are being served by IBM out of a food truck. Right now it’s only parking at events like the IBM Pulse conference and tech/music/film festival SXSW. But while the IBM food truck may be a promotional gimmick, you can expect to be consuming more and more dishes—and media—created by computers. Here’s why:

Intuition is great, but recipes are formulae—and formulae can be perfected with data

Computers have been managing “creative” work for a while now. They’ve written a novel that combines the plots of Leo Tolstoy with the style of Haruki Murakami, they’ve written beautiful (and controversial) music, and they’ve perfected the art of short, if dry, news coverage.

That’s because these “arts”—or at least, certain aspects of them—can be distilled into science: By creating huge databases of songs, books, news articles, and now recipes, computers can parse them into tiny phrases and movements that can be recombined into totally new works. With feedback from researchers, the computers learn how to better string these components together. One day, IBM researcher Lav Varshney told IEEE Spectrum, the system could produce menus for those with even the oddest combination of dietary requirements and preferences. Perhaps one day we’ll be able to order books and music created to suit our tastes precisely—even if they lack some of the heart of the great classics.

We’re limited by our own “knowledge” of what tastes good

Human culinary genius won’t be any less relevant. We’ve done a great job of creating delicious food for the past few thousand years or so. But IBM’s project is showing that the common sense of a human cook can get in the way of creating a stellar meal.

By evaluating a heap of existing recipes and looking at what flavor-imparting molecules their ingredients contain, the computer can come up with radical combinations. One of the IBM food truck’s current recipes, the “Swiss-Thai Asparagus Quiche,” brings together Swiss gruyère, Greek feta, and Thai curry spices. If IBM keeps churning out combos like that, it’ll give fusion cuisine a run for its money.

Those taste limitations extend beyond food, too. Consider House of Cards, the political thriller now its second season on Netflix. In creating it, Netflix was informed by existing viewer data: It knew that lots of its customers enjoyed Kevin Spacey, who plays the lead role, and a good proportion of those viewers were also fans of director David Fincher. Throw in another preference—one for political dramas—and the company knew it was the perfect show to bet on.

We can be culinary cyborgs

Yes, it’s true that anything created solely by a computer runs the risk of missing the point. But who’s saying that computers have to work alone? With human chefs informed by data-driven recipes, we could get some amazing dishes. The same is true for other content; After all, Netflix didn’t use its algorithm to actually write House of Cards—just to confirm that a particular flavor profile would get viewers salivating. The human creatives took over from there. The same could be true of any supercomputer creation.

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