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31 Oct 22:03

TV: Great Job, Internet!: This guy’s recreation of a Cheers title card is the best pop-culture Halloween costume you’ll see today  

by Kevin McFarland

This Halloween has seen the usual glut of topical pop-culture costumes—the best Miley/Robin Thicke combination definitely goes to Alex Morgan and Sydney Leroux from the U.S. Women's soccer team. But one man had the ingenuity to engineer a costume that both makes a clever pop culture reference and has an extremely practical use at a bar: recreating the final title card from Cheers with a suit, a bowler hat, a glass of beer, and well-designed way to get the creators' names in frame. We sometimes get easy costumes in the mail, but this guy had an inspired idea. Here's the actual title card from the show for comparison:

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31 Oct 21:58

kateoplis: 'Morning.

31 Oct 21:58

Photo





31 Oct 21:57

theantitumblog: All of my wat



theantitumblog:

All of my wat

31 Oct 21:21

Antiquated California Law Singles Out Horror Comic Books

Everyone loves Halloween, but horror comic books were once targeted by California state legislature in a still-on-the-books law.
31 Oct 21:20

Dept. of Corrections: Allie Brosh Reading

by Alison Hallett

Hyperbole and a Half creator Allie Brosh is reading at Powell's on 4 pm on Saturday, not 7:30 pm as we have listed in the My, What a Busy Week section of the paper this week.

I know that people who read the paper in print don't necessarily read the blog, so who knows if this will be helpful, but the thought of sad little Allie Brosh fans missing the reading is just tugging at the ol' hearstrings! We do what we can.

I wrote about Brosh's Hyperbole and a Half in the books section this week: It's one of the better blog-to-print collections I've seen. She's great!

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31 Oct 21:17

lissyfishy: MYSTERY SCIENCE THEATER 3000



lissyfishy:

MYSTERY SCIENCE THEATER 3000

31 Oct 21:16

Samsung ousts Apple from top spot in JD Power tablet satisfaction rankings

by Vlad Savov
Samsung ousts Apple from top spot in JD Power tablet satisfaction rankings | The Verge

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By Vlad Savov on October 31, 2013 02:21 pm

Don't miss stories Follow The Verge

galaxy tab

The great tech rivalry of recent times has a new milestone in its narrative today, courtesy of JD Power whose tablet owner satisfaction study has placed Samsung ahead of Apple for the first time. Apple has in the past cited these very rankings as indicative of the iPad's preeminence and superiority — having noted back in June that iOS devices were on a run of nine consecutive JD Power awards — so it's a blow to the company's public image to lose out in a comparison that it has shown itself to care about.

The margin between Samsung and Apple is razor thin, with the Korean maker of Android tablets gaining a score of 835 to Apple's 833. Tim Cook and company will find solace in the more detailed breakdown, where Apple's tablets earn the full five stars for performance, features, ease of use, physical design, and overall satisfaction, falling only at the final hurdle: cost. Samsung's victory looks to have been built on tablet buyers' sense of getting more value for their money.

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  • Nexus 5 bumper case

    Google releases pricy new 'bumper' cases and QuickCover for Nexus 5

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    Google launches new wireless charging pad for the Nexus 5 and Nexus 7

  • Nexus 5 Google Now KitKat PRESS

    Google Now and speech recognition get big updates in Android 4.4 KitKat

  • Verizon 4G LTE (verge stock)

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31 Oct 21:15

Photo



31 Oct 21:13

Feeling Crabby? Just Come Look at Patrick Stewart’s Halloween Costume

I just hope the costume doesn't get him in any hot water.
31 Oct 20:41

What happens when you don't keep some distance from your customers

by sharhalakis

image by Mr. MT

31 Oct 20:40

Costume update

31 Oct 20:28

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31 Oct 20:27

Photo



31 Oct 20:14

Photos of Janelle Monáe's Show on Tuesday

by Ned Lannamann

Janelle Monáe, the Electric Lady herself, swung through town Tuesday night, electrifying a sold-out Roseland crowd with her far-out futuresoul. Jason Quigley was there to grab some seriously excellent photos. But you won't see 'em here—jump on over to End Hits for an eyeful.

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31 Oct 20:08

Because It's Halloween

by Ned Lannamann

A classic, from the fourth season of Mr. Show.

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31 Oct 20:04

Photo



31 Oct 19:59

Halfway home: How each AFC team can still make the Super Bowl

by Jason Chilton
firehose

" Like Voldemort, the evil spirit of Al Davis could only be banished from the mortal world for so long. Having manipulated the Raiders' coaching situation from beyond to place the young and vulnerable Dennis Allen in the job. Taking over Allen's body, Davis summons the dark mana so prevalent in greater Oakland and his vile magics power the Raiders to a six-game winning streak. Emerging from the broadcast booth, Jon Gruden sweeps aside his foppish locks to reveal a telltale lightning scar and battles his ancient enemy once more. Gruden ultimately banishes Davis, but with the rest of the West already transformed into newts the Raiders take the title by default."

With a look at the NFC division races in the books, it's time to turn our attention to the goings-on in the AFC.

AFC East

How the Patriots Will Win It: A few consecutive weeks with Danny Amendola, Rob Gronkowski and Julian Edelman on the same field means Tom Brady's "inaccurate" passes start hitting receivers who actually read the defense and break when they're supposed to. Shane Vereen's return provides another moveable mismatch-generating chess piece while Stevan Ridley stays out of the doghouse by continuing the bring the ball with him on his end zone plunges. Aqib Talib, Alfonzo Dennard and Devin McCourty battle Kansas City for the title of AFC's Best Secondary, and a little Belichick witchcraft keeps the run lanes plugged despite the loss of Vince Wilfork and Jerod Mayo.

Miami meltdown?

Tensions are starting to boil over in the Dolphins' locker room. Can Joe Philbin get things back on track before it's too late?

How the Dolphins Could Win It: Light bulbs start appearing over peoples' heads at 347 Don Shula Drive, and Ryan Tannehill starts throwing two deep balls per half to Mike Wallace no matter what while giving 70 percent of the backfield touches to Lamar Miller. Jonathan Martin gets back on the reservation, puts Tyson Clabo back on the bench and forms a half-decent tackle tandem with Bryant McKinnie, who is strapped to a gurney Hannibal Lecter-style during the week to keep him the hell away from South Beach. Cam Wake rises up with a fury to lead a fierce pass rush while the secondary finally equals the sum of quality parts like Brent Grimes and Chris Clemons.

How the Jets Could Win It: Jets team physicians find the "good QB/dreadful QB" switch on Geno Smith's back -- the same one that accidentally got flipped down midseason at West Virginia -- and use some athletic tape to keep it locked in the "Good" position. The Chris Ivory/Bilal Powell running game is so ugly that some defenders actually have to avert their eyes from it, allowing for several 40-yard runs that take nine seconds to complete. Rex Ryan says to heck with it (OK, he probably says $** it) and lets Dee Milliner just use the Saban Shuffle rather than learning new footwork, and he immediately becomes a top-flight corner. Tom Brady actually goes on a protest hunger strike after Aaron Dobson and Kenbrell Thompkins knock each other unconscious on opposed crossing routes, and in the ensuing confusion New York sneaks away with the title.

How the Bills Could Win It: Bills team doctors give C.J. Spiller a bionic ankle, and he returns to doing the "Madden on Easy" stuff he was doing down the stretch last season. Kiko Alonso tackles every single ball carrier within a yard of the line of scrimmage. The Football Gods remember how much fun it is to taunt Buffalo fans, and they guide them to an improbable division title before cruelly crushing their hopes in a last-second playoff loss.

The Critical Stat: 9 and 1

Those are the number of times that the Patriots have won the division over the last decade compared to everyone else. With history of that magnitude in hand, even a reeling champion -- and make no mistake, the Pats are reeling -- requires someone to step up with authority to knock them off. And while the other contenders have had their moments, Geno Smith's turnovers and Miami's dreadful OL and Buffalo's low-wattage passing game will prevent any of them from making up two games on the Pats down the stretch. Maybe next year.

Projected Finish: Patriots 11-5 (Division Winner), Dolphins 7-9, Jets 6-10, Bills 5-11

AFC North

How the Bengals Will Win It: Andy Dalton proves that his last three games were more than one of the great all-time fantasy teases by continuing to deliver on-target throws down the field. The AFC's best tackle tandem keeps the Ginger Avenger clean while opening holes for Gio Bernard - which is a lot like opening holes for BenJarvus Green-Ellis, only Bernard actually hits the hole before the seasons turn. The Bengals' defensive front continues to rain fire on opposing passers, and Dre Kirkpatrick starts to live up to his first-round billing while replacing the criminally underrated Leon Hall.

How the Ravens Could Win It: The Ravens' run blocking rights itself, allowing Ray Rice and Bernard Pierce to punish defenses and keep Baltimore ahead of the chains. Joe Flacco proves he wasn't playing over his head in last year's playoffs and turns Torrey Smith into a superweapon while coaxing chain-moving efforts from young (Marlon Brown) and old (Dallas Clark). Lardarius Webb rediscovers his game, Suggs and Dumervil keep meeting at the quarterback and the Ravens take down Cincy in Week 17 to claim the division.

How the Browns Could Win It: Unbeknownst to all of us, we've actually been living in a massive,Truman Show-style production with Jason Campbell as the star. A long-suffering audience finally gets to see their hero climb the mountaintop as the scrappy Campbell leads the Browns' offense to victory as opposing corners trip on sprinkler heads and "mysteriously" let interceptions go through their hands. In a heartwarming subplot, Paul Kruger and Barkevious Mingo are Odd Couple-style roommates who learn to appreciate each other's differences while beheading opposing QBs.

How the Steelers Could Win It: Drawing on Pittsburgh's civic learnings from the Dark Knight Rises shoot, the Steelers lure the entire Ravens team into the sewers and trap them, and later detonate the surface of Heinz Field to send the Bengals plunging to their doom. Forced to play the remainder of their home games in one of the remote parking lots painted green, the Steelers call upon the hardscrabble legacy of Jack Lambert and Mean Joe Green to out-scrabble the Browns in Week 17.

The Critical Stat: 15.8

That's Andy Dalton's Vertical Yards per Attempt figure this season, which is good for fourth among QBs with 10 or more downfield attempts this season. Consistent downfield passing has been Dalton's bugaboo despite frequent heroics from A.J. Green. If he can even come close to maintaining that pace down the stretch, the Bengals' offense will have too much pop for anyone else in the North to stop.

Projected Finish: Bengals 12-4 (division winner), Ravens 10-6 (Wild Card), Browns 6-10, Steelers 5-11

AFC West

How the Broncos Will Win It: The bye week rejuvenates Peyton Manning's right arm, and the league's most unstoppable air attack doesn't miss a beat.  Knowshon Moreno and Montee Ball become a thunder-and-lightning backfield combo that continues to punish dishonest fronts. The return of Von Miller provides a much-needed jolt for the Denver defense, and cover men like Chris Harris and Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie start looking a lot better once the pass rush starts getting home. The division comes down to a climactic showdown with the Chiefs. Miller rushes from everywhere, tormenting Eric Fisher and Jeff Allen and forcing quick throws from Alex Smith. Unconcerned with the deep ball, Denver keeps Duke Ihenacho close to the line of scrimmage to contain Jamaal Charles as the Broncos D chokes the life from the Chiefs to claim a narrow win.

How the Chiefs Could Win It: Jamaal Charles continues his MVP-caliber campaign, and second-half growth from RT Eric Fisher provides more running lanes and more chances to rip off more of his signature 50-yard jaunts. Andy Reid pores over his list of 10,000 passing plays and finds three or four that can allow the Chiefs to make plays of more than 20 yards in the air. Dontari Poe becomes the league's most unblockable interior force while Hali and Houston keep bringing the heat from outside. The division comes down to a climactic showdown with the Broncos. Brandon Flowers controls Wes Welker, Sean Smith provides the muscle to slow down Demaryius Thomas, and a punishing Eric Berry hit jars loose a critical fumble to win a nail-biter and return to the top of the AFC West.

How the Chargers Could Win It: Philip Rivers keeps dealing, and Keenan Allen grabs 40 balls -- and Rookie of the Year honors -- in the season's second half. Danny Woodhead keeps up his West Coast Darren Sproles act, and the fact that his head makes up a third of his body mass helps to extend numerous Charger drives with helmet-to-helmet penalties. The Chiefs and Broncos do so much damage to each other that both teams drop numerous other games down the stretch, and San Diego wins just enough Air Coryell-style shootouts to sneak out with a division title.

How the Raiders Could Win It: Like Voldemort, the evil spirit of Al Davis could only be banished from the mortal world for so long. Having manipulated the Raiders' coaching situation from beyond to place the young and vulnerable Dennis Allen in the job. Taking over Allen's body, Davis summons the dark mana so prevalent in greater Oakland and his vile magics power the Raiders to a six-game winning streak. Emerging from the broadcast booth, Jon Gruden sweeps aside his foppish locks to reveal a telltale lightning scar and battles his ancient enemy once more. Gruden ultimately banishes Davis, but with the rest of the West already transformed into newts the Raiders take the title by default.

The Critical Stat: 163

That's the total number of sacks, hits and QB pressures that Von Miller amassed during his first two seasons in the NFL. In a Broncos-Chiefs battle that's almost too close to call, his extra degree of disruption will prove to be the critical difference.

Projected Finish:

Broncos 14-2 (division winner), Chiefs 14-2 (Wild Card), Chargers

AFC South

How the Colts Will Win It: Andrew Luck continues to make jaw-dropping throws and timely scrambles to keep the offense rolling. T.Y. Hilton pulls a successful Torrey Smith transition from fly route maven to all-around No. 1 receiver. Finally realizing that they actually traded a first rounder instead of a fourth rounder, the Colts front office mandates 20 touches a game for Trent Richardson and he elevates the Indy ground game from "three yards and a cloud of dust" to "FOUR yards and a cloud of those little black rubber pellet thingies in Field Turf". Someone emerges in the season's second half to complement Robert Mathis and Cory Redding on the pass rush, and Vontae Davis keeps living up to his talent and locking down No. 1 wideouts.

How the Texans Could Win It: Like any CEO concerned with short-term performance, Arian Foster is inspired by his IPO of himself and puts forth a fanatical effort to single-handedly return the Texans run game to 2011 levels. Case Keenum plays turnover-free ball thanks to hours of film study  -- not of opponents, but of the white-hot rage in J.J. Watt's eyes after every Matt Schaub pick six. Fear of Watt proves an effective motivator for the defense as well, and the front seven annihilates opposing QBs before they can take apart D.J. Swearinger and (Walking D)Ed Reed at safety. Houston gets by Indy in both second-half matchups and ekes out another division title before suffering the long-awaited revenge of the Bengals in the Divisional Round.

How the Titans Could Win It: After the Bye week, Jake Locker strides onto the field wearing a pair of Rick Vaughn black horn rims and suddenly stops missing wide open receivers by five yards. Dr. James Andrews, in a groundbreaking nine-hour procedure, successfully removes Kenny Britt's head from his own backside, allowing him to live a normal life and become a devastating deep threat. In addition to providing lockdown coverage, Alterraun Verner turns out to be the evil genius that his Bond-villain name suggests. Taking a page out of the Goldfinger playbook, he rigs the pregame flyover jets with nerve gas to incapacitate the Colts in their Week 11 matchup, and the Titans ride that momentum all the way to a division title.

How the Jaguars Could Win It: After consultation with the British Prime Minister, Roger Goodell learns that merry old England couldn’t give two farthings about acquiring the Jaguars unless they actually win some games. Desperate to bring his harebrained scheme of a London franchise to fruition, Goodell reaches out to Her Majesty’s Secret Service for assistance. Q Branch outfits Chad Henne with a laser sighting system and radio-controlled football to make Shorts and Blackmon into a 21st-century Clayton and Duper. Meanwhile, Agent 007 (the down-and-dirty Daniel Craig Casino Royale version) embarks on a series of covert assassinations of key opponents. Unfortunately, Mr. Bond has to get pretty frisky with the ol’ Walther PPK to do enough damage to get the Jags into the playoffs. Jacksonville ends up taking the 2013 and 2014 Lombardi Trophies with them to London because every other roster is totally decimated. After a climactic struggle with Alterraun Verner, 007 cuddles a trio of Jaguars cheerleaders as we fade to black and the credits roll on the latest Bond blockbuster, Sort of Goldenhelmet.

The Critical Stat: 3

That's the number of wins the Colts have logged over teams that will be contending for home field advantage throughout the playoffs. While they aren't a perfect squad by any means, Andrew Luck's crew has the ability to hang with the best, and it should be enough to help them seal up the South.

Projected Finish: Colts 11-5 (division winner), Titans 8-8, Texans 7-9, Jaguars 0-16 and your 2013 Troubles for Bridgewater Award Winner

More from SB Nation NFL

Breaking Madden: Let's put Brett Favre on the Rams | More

The Notebook: Blown coverage and broken plays

London's lukewarm reception to the NFL

NFL power rankings: Broncos back on top

Fumblr: Can Calvin Johnson save football? | More

Sidney Rice suffers a torn ACL

31 Oct 19:54

Photo



31 Oct 19:44

lnav An advanced log file viewer for the small-scale ...



lnav

An advanced log file viewer for the small-scale

Watch and analyze your log files from a terminal.

Just point lnav to a directory and it will take care of the rest. File formats are automatically detected and compressed files are unpacked on the fly.

31 Oct 18:17

Online, “being a teenager in love” might now be a legal defense

by Christopher Mims
firehose

"If someone sends messages online that resemble harassment, and the recipient doesn’t block or unfriend the person sending those messages, this can constitute evidence that those messages weren’t really harassment."

ugh

Teenagers are especially vulnerable to what Romeo called "a madness most discreet."

“We hold that unrequited teenage love is not a crime, and is not elevated to a crime by the disapproval, and even annoyance, of the object of the erstwhile lover’s affections, or by that of her father.”

The People of the State of New York v. Isaiah Rodriguez

That’s but one of a string of remarkable passages from a just-surfaced 2008 decision handed down by a court in New York state, where an 18-year-old had been accused of criminal harassment because he wouldn’t stop pestering a 14-year-old girl on the social network Myspace. Incredibly, the same decision references the science of teenage love, and specifically the parallels between puppy-love and “hypomania,” a mental state in which teenagers tend to be more impulsive and exercise poor judgement.

The decision also cites a remarkable body of case law that defines harassment online and off, and is itself a fascinating example of how judges have had to get creative in the face of new communications technologies, and especially social networks. Here are the takeaways:

1. If someone sends messages online that resemble harassment, and the recipient doesn’t block or unfriend the person sending those messages, this can constitute evidence that those messages weren’t really harassment.

From the court’s decision:

“At any time, a MySpace user may remove friends from his or her network, or may block unwanted communications. (Id.) Thus, while it is reasonable to assume that, at some point, complainant added the defendant under his nom de plume “looking4therightoneinmylife” to her list of friends, the complaint contains no allegations that complainant attempted to quell defendant’s love by blocking defendant’s messages or by asking him to cease writing her.”

2. The First Amendment right to free speech broadly protects Americans’ right to express their adoration for someone else online and elsewhere.

This applies even when it’s unrequited and creepy. The court writes:

“The complaint before us […] merely alleges that the defendant, who was then 18 years old, told the 14-year-old complainant that he loved her, and told her to come away with him over the objections of her father. We decline to find that a teenager’s attempt to woo another teenager, albeit misguided and clumsy, constitutes endangering the welfare of that child.”

3. Modern neuroscience and Shakespeare agree on this: Teens are crazy.

In something resembling the insanity defense, the court suggested that simply being a teenager may excuse a defendant’s behavior, especially when it bolster’s the argument that he or she is professing his or her love rather than communicating an intent to harm another.

“When teenagers fall in love, as song lyrics and studies show, they are more likely to exhibit almost manic behaviors, take risks, act compulsively, and sometimes pursue, with reckless abandon, the objects of their affection.”

That passage of the court’s decision references a 2007 article from New Scientist, “Puppy love makes teenagers lose the plot,” which notes:

“Adolescents who claim they are “madly in love” might not be too far off the mark: a new study suggests that they show almost manic behaviours. […]  Lovestruck teenagers showed many behaviours resembling “hypomania” – a less intense form of mania. For example, they required about an hour less sleep each night […] They were also more likely to report acting compulsively, [and] they were also more likely to say they drove fast and took risks on the road.”

Of course, this particular teenager also showed up at the home of the 14-year-old girl with whom he was obsessed, and criminal trespass is criminal trespass. New and more comprehensive cyberstalking laws aside, the lesson is clear. If you want to awkwardly declare your undying love for people, do it on social media—at least until they block you.

31 Oct 17:57

Books: Newswire: Here's an exclusive preview of Batman ’66, where the retro dynamic duo meets the Queen of the Cossacks

by Oliver Sava
firehose

powsky

Nothing says "retro" quite like Cold War tension, which explains the appearance of Olga, Queen of the Cossacks, in DC Comics’ phenomenal Batman ’66 digital series. Played by Anne Baxter on the Adam West Batman TV series, the Bessarovian love interest of the villainous Egghead makes her comic-book debut thanks to writer Jeff Parker and artist Ted Naifeh, the creator of Oni’s beloved Courtney Crumrin books. And here The A.V. Club has an exclusive preview of this week’s issue. Check out these pages from Batman ’66 #18, then grab a copy via Comixology or DC Comics.

  

Read more
    






31 Oct 17:56

3D-printed gun maker Cody Wilson is raising $50,000 for an anarchist Bitcoin wallet

by Adrianne Jeffries
firehose

bitcoin is for sociopaths beat

Cody Wilson, founder of Defense Distributed, in the crowdfunding campaign video for a new Bitcoin wallet.

Cody Wilson, creator of the 3D printed gun, is raising $50,000 on the crowdfunding site Indiegogo to develop a service aimed at returning the digital currency Bitcoin to its anarchist roots.

Dark Wallet is an app for storing, sending, and receiving Bitcoin, with some extra security features built in. As law enforcement cracks down on services using Bitcoin to evade authorities — the recent bust of the underground drug market Silk Road being the most notable example — Wilson and his cofounder Amir Taaki decided it was important to add new protections.

To accomplish this, Taaki and developer Pablo Martin built a protocol called "trustless mixing." This tactic, which will be built into Dark Wallet, allows a group of Bitcoin users to mix their coins together into one big transaction before it is encoded into the "blockchain," the currency's public ledger.


Some Bitcoin advocates believe the virtual currency should be overseen by the government. Government agencies around the world have shown an increasing interest in regulating the currency, and venture capitalists are investing millions in businesses built on Bitcoin.

Wilson believes the currency should operate entirely outside of government

Wilson and his collaborators at the digital anarchist collective Unsystem believe the currency should operate entirely outside of government. "The basic opposition is usually either personal — that I or 'we' are arrogant, or ideological — that Bitcoin 'needs' the legitimization mechanisms of institutional or state power," Wilson tells The Verge in an email. "Pretty tired and familiar by now. That last bit of messaging is the one I hope to blunt."

Dark Wallet will be finished in early 2014, the founders say. "Bitcoin is what they fear it is. A way to leave... to make a choice," Wilson intones in a Fight Club-esque video. "There's a system approaching perfection. Just in time for our disappearance."

31 Oct 17:56

How I feel after proving someone wrong

firehose

via THANKGODYOUREHERE

31 Oct 17:55

Listen, Banksy in NY

31 Oct 17:55

Vladimir Stankovic


Vladimir Stankovic


Vladimir Stankovic


Vladimir Stankovic

Vladimir Stankovic

31 Oct 17:54

Rumor: Deus Ex dev cancels unannounced, original IP

by Earnest Cavalli
firehose

never new IP

Rumor Deus Ex dev cancels unannounced, original IP While Eidos Montreal continues work on both the Deus Ex franchise and on the upcoming Thief, a third, unrevealed project has been scrapped.

Kotaku cites unnamed sources for this revelation, but notes that "two different developer sources" had linked the now-canceled game to the Japanese side of publisher Square Enix. Furthering that tenuous connection, the site points to a recent OXM interview with Lightning Returns: Final Fantasy XIII gameplay director Yuji Abe, in which Abe suggests that Square Enix might one day allow Eidos to develop a Final Fantasy entry.

"Obviously, Square Enix bought out Eidos a number of years ago, and now we have direct access to American development teams," stated Abe. "That's certainly been discussed within the company, the possibility of say, Eidos or maybe someone else to look after or maybe take on the Final Fantasy series."

Was this canceled game a new Final Fantasy entry? Did it even exist? We attempted to contact Square Enix for more details, but never received a response.

JoystiqRumor: Deus Ex dev cancels unannounced, original IP originally appeared on Joystiq on Thu, 31 Oct 2013 13:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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31 Oct 17:54

Real Madrid kid given Barcelona jersey for birthday

by Ryan Rosenblatt
firehose

gpoy/ifapom being handed falcons gear

Kids are happy to get anything on their birthday. To them, it's the best day of the year and every gift is the greatest gift ever.

Unless he is a Real Madrid fan and he's given a Barcelona jersey.

If only the kid had yelled "Hala Madrid," run gel through his hair and then stood over the jersey like Cristiano Ronaldo readying for a free kick, but this will do. He gets 100 loyalty points and, hopefully, a new birthday gift.

31 Oct 17:53

Former safety Hamza Abdullah goes on Twitter rant against NFL

by Jeff Gray
firehose

"During his career, Abdullah suffered four concussions in a span of 15 months, the last one ending his 2011 season. He has not played since. He alleges multiple incidents when medical staff covered up concussions, providing false reasons for his departure from games."

In the blossoming age of social media, athletes have been known to voice controversial and provocative opinions for all the world wide web to see. Rarely, however, have we seen a tirade as jolting as former NFL safety Hamza Abdullah's epic Twitter outburst on Thursday.

Abdullah, a devout Muslim who spent seven years in the league with the Denver Broncos and Arizona Cardinals, began the morning by criticizing fellow Muslims for perceived hypocrisy, but quickly changed the focus of his scathing and profane rant to the NFL. Specifically, he targeted the league's treatment of players and concussion protocol.

Screen_shot_2013-10-31_at_12

He than addressed the issue of the suicide rates among former NFL players, placing blame firmly on the league.

Screen_shot_2013-10-31_at_12

In a candid and rather disturbing turn, Abdullah acknowledged his own ongoing issues with suicidal thoughts.

Screen_shot_2013-10-31_at_12

During his career, Abdullah suffered four concussions in a span of 15 months, the last one ending his 2011 season. He has not played since. He alleges multiple incidents when medical staff covered up concussions, providing false reasons for his departure from games.

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To his credit, Abdullah offered solutions to the issues he so vehemently criticized.

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At one point in the tirade, Abdullah compared the relationship between the league and its players to that between a slave master and slaves.

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The outburst, which began around noon ET, spanned over 52 tweets and roughly an hour.

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31 Oct 17:51

Hallmark stirs criticism for using 'fun' in place of 'gay' on holiday ornament - Washington Post


KSHB

Hallmark stirs criticism for using 'fun' in place of 'gay' on holiday ornament
Washington Post
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — What might have been just another ugly holiday sweater has become something of a public relations issue for greeting card giant Hallmark. The company recently released an ornament in the shape of a tacky holiday sweater, ...
Hallmark nixes 'gay' from Christmas carol lyric on ornamentFox News
Hallmark takes the 'gay' out of ChristmasKansas City Star
Hallmark Gets Rid of 'Gay' on Christmas OrnamentEDGEOnTheNet
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