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28 Jan 11:35

Newswire: Former film executive also accuses Bill Cosby of rape

by Sean O'Neal

In what is a depressing sentence to write, there’s been a brief respite from women accusing Bill Cosby of rape lately. But that interlude ended yesterday with a new article on The Huffington Post written by Cindra Ladd, a philanthropist and former film executive who’s also the wife of Alan Ladd Jr., who served as head of both 20th Century Fox (where he famously shepherded Star Wars) and MGM, while also producing movies such as Braveheart and Gone Baby Gone. In her column, titled “Cosby: Trust Me,” Cindra Ladd details her own story of being drugged and assaulted by Cosby in 1969, when she was just 21 and working for movie producer Ray Stark.

For those who have been keeping up with the Cosby allegations, Ladd’s tale is an unfortunately familiar one: She says she and Cosby began “hanging out” as friends while she was working in ...

28 Jan 11:32

The Mysterious Way Uber Bans Drivers

Ever wonder how and why Uber drivers get banned? If it’s not for criminal behavior, the waters get murky.
28 Jan 11:32

Lance Armstrong, Barry Bonds, A-Rod Spring To Patriots’ Defense Over Deflated Footballs

NEW YORK—Calling the recent scandal nothing more than a witch hunt, famed athletes Lance Armstrong, Barry Bonds, and Alex Rodriguez issued a joint statement Tuesday vehemently defending the New England Patriots against accusations that the team chea...






28 Jan 11:30

During Public Speech Gamergate Asked Leigh Alexander About “Pushing Values” in Video Games

by Jill Pantozzi

BlockheadQuestionShutterstockIt’s easy to start a conflict online; it’s another story in person. Many who would be emboldened behind a keyboard would never dare say the same things to a person’s face. Mostly from fear of getting punched, I’d wager, but also from sheer awkwardness. Personally, I’ve always wondered when a commenter would jump out from behind the computer into real life; and, well, it seems that’s just happened to Leigh Alexander.

Alexander, Gamasutra writer and oft-target of Gamergate, did a lecture as part of “Games Now!” from Aalto Media Factory and Media Lab Helsinki, “a series of lectures and panels handling the hot topics of game industry and culture right now.” After she spoke about the state of the video game industry, what the public sees, and her personal history with gaming, there was a question and answer segment.

Here’s part of one back and forth as transcribed on reddit’s GamerGhazi thread:

“GG” stands for “GamerGator” since there’s no name for the guy given. Also, note that English is clearly not his first language so the long pauses and awkward phrasings can be at least partially attributed to that. Leigh Alexander at Aalto Design Factory Gator transcript [From 58’16”]
GG: Uh…Uh…Okay. So you are basically doing a…a cultural revolution, in a sense.
LA: Sort of. [Laughter].
GG: Yes, okay.
LA: Maybe a little.
GG: So…uh…when you are…uh…pushing values in the gaming industry, I mean the gaming, uh, press…don’t you need to be criticized…in…objectively…and …what do you think about ethics in video games? [Editor's Note: He said it! He said the thing!! (Basically)]
LA: [Delighted Laughter] Um…yeah, I’ll answer that! What is “objectively”? Tell me, what is an objective opinion?
GG: Objective opinion, uh, means that you are, uh, taking yourself off your agenda and you are looking yourself…
LA: How would I have an opinion that wasn’t informed by my beliefs? Should I pretend I’m not myself when I’m playing a video game?
GG: No, but you should, uh…take yourself away from your personal feelings and what…
LA: So I shouldn’t – so, if I’m playing a game, I’m not going to have feelings about it, only thoughts?
GG: No, no, you sh –, you will have feelings of course, but most of the games are, uh…
LA: Then where do those feelings come from?
GG: Those feelings come – they are psychological, of course. And your, uh, social connections.
LA: And are informed by my…?
GG: Social connections, yes?
LA: Yeah, and my experience.
GG: Yes. Your experience and social connections.
LA: And my…my identity.
GG: Yes, but my point was…uh…if you are pushing a cultural revolution in a sense, in a gaming culture, so, why are you doing it, why aren’t you just make up your own circle of…culture in a game industry…
LA: Oh, I am and I have!
GG: Why, why aren’t you, you’re trying to –
LA: Excuse me.
GG: In DiGRA –
LA: I’m answering your question.
GG: Yeah, okay.
LA: So the, the thing about why don’t you make your own circle – I am and I have and I do. Certainly, I’m very transparent about my agenda, my politics and my beliefs, and if you don’t share them, and you would like to hear reviews from someone else, the option is simply not to read my work and to read someone else’s instead. But the idea that someone can be objective when they’re talking about an emotional creative medium is fallacious, and it is a heritage of product culture where we believe that there’s one right way to see a game– you put a number on it, and you buy it or not. And I just don’t believe in seeing games that way. Um, there are a number of websites that do, though, so you just don’t, you know, if, if you’re of the opinion that agenda doesn’t belong in games, then, I don’t know, read Gamespot! [Laughter]

FreshPrinceOooh

CENAgif

RegularShow

Ahem.

In between that question and the next one, Alexander had a moment to give a woman in the audience some advice on how she deals with the harassment she experiences, and the worry of walking into a room where “one of those guys” might be. “If I can do it, you can do it,” she said.

To be clear we’re not claiming the questioner is a Gamergate supporter, the thread states that the previous one, and this next one, are:

Q3: Okay, so, uh, I want to know if you’re, like, trying to reform gaming culture. Do you think that, uh, there’s enough consumer demand for this kind of culture that you’re trying to advocate?
LA: Well, um, I want to make a slight correction in that I’m not trying to change what exists. I think commercial gaming culture will always exist. I hope it does always exist. It should always exist, for the people that enjoy it. We are proposing alternatives. We are making games bigger by adding more to it, and inviting more people to it, and, uh, making it broader and making it reach more people, um, having different markets of games. Um, so, yeah, there’s a demand for it. I make my whole career on it, so, I hope it grows.
Q3: Uh, yeah, but I’m just like, um, if you, um, what reads on the, on the screen right now that you, uh, you want us to find an, an alternative.
LA: Yes?
Q3: So, isn’t there like a risk that if you’re, uh, going to push this niche view in gaming you’re also going to have a niche audience?
LA: Um, I mean I think games currently already have a niche audience. There are about, like, one or two different things for about one or two different kinds of people. I think that we can only benefit by making games more intricate – more interesting, more sophisticated, and more diverse. Um, it’s not about pushing something artificial into a space that doesn’t want it. It’s about enriching every space with a broader variety of perspectives. So it’s not…it’s not like you’re going to suddenly force “Call of Duty” players to play a game about feminism or something, you know what I mean? But I think there’s room for all kinds to exist in the same space and to learn from one another.

Remember what I said earlier about what people are willing to say in person versus online? Alexander pulled a bit of commentary off of 8chan from the individual who asked that last series of questions:

“i forgot what she answered though. She’s also a lot hotter irl than she is in pictures.” pic.twitter.com/R1tk4CmS6x

— Leigh Alexander (@leighalexander) January 19, 2015

Here’s the entire talk if you’d like to give it a watch.

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(image via Shutterstock, Copyright: Yuliia Liesova)

28 Jan 11:30

thatfunnyblog: Funny posts you like?

28 Jan 11:29

Why Did Russia Only Send Female Dogs to Space? - It's all about pee.

by Susana Polo

Laika_by_larsony

*Insert Bitch Planet joke here.*

A little while ago I found myself on Twitter and was cheesed off (not an uncommon occurrence) to see that one of my favorite nerdy outlets had tweeted the fun science fact that Valentina Tereshkova was the “first female” in space. I mean, not only does referring to women as “females” sort of inextricably link your speech to PUAs, aspiring PUAs, gross OKCupid accounts and make you sound like a Ferengi… once you’re calling Tereshkova a “female,” the statement isn’t even true anymore! There were tons of female animals who went to space before any country sent a human woman up there. And some of them even came back!

Perhaps most famous of the animals we’ve sent into space is Laika, a small Russian dog, the first living being to complete an orbit around the Earth, and the first one to die in the pursuit of manned space flight. Laika was female, and so were all of her canine comrades in the Soviet space program. Why? Well, space constraints, and how they came into conflict with a particular habit of male dogs, as Damon Murray, creator of a book on Russian cosmonaut dogs and their relationship with the space program as well as the Russian public, explains in a fascinating Collectors Weekly article:

The problem of feeding the dogs in zero-gravity was solved by bonding nutrients with agar, a jelly-like substance. This “jelly” could then be easily consumed, minimizing waste. The most tricky obstacle for the dogs traveling into space was to find a way for them to relieve themselves in such unusual conditions. Although their suits had special receptacles for urine and feces, it was difficult to train the dogs to use them. They prefer to relieve themselves outdoors, never inside a room or a cockpit, and certainly not inside clothes. This process was unnatural for the dogs, only those who took to it more easily were selected. For orbital flights, all the dogs were exclusively female: As there was no room in the cabin to cock their legs, they were better suited to space.

Of course, as most long-time dog owners will tell you, there are male dogs out there who squat, and female dogs who cock a leg, but it’s understandable that in a program with as many variables as an orbital space craft, you’ll want to eliminate a few. Other things central to choosing a cosmonaut dog? How well they photograph in black and white, for the ease of documentation and publicity.

You can read all of Collectors Weekly’s article about Soviet space dogs here.

(top pic by Larsony on DeviantArt)

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28 Jan 11:27

Photo



27 Jan 20:47

Newswire: Neil DeGrasse Tyson bungles science of Deflate-gate scandal

by John Teti
firehose

ThOR hates sports beat

The farce of the NFL’s “Deflate-Gate” affair has become hysterical enough that prominent astrophysicist Neil DeGrasse Tyson felt the need to weigh in on Twitter, and in the space of 125 characters, Tyson managed to bungle some straightforward fundamentals of science.

The sporting-goods controversy centers on the footballs used by the Patriots offense in this year’s AFC Championship Game, which were tested by officials at halftime and were reportedly found to be as much as two pounds per square inch under the NFL specification of 12.5-13.5 PSI. The league is investigating whether the Patriots tampered with their footballs. On Saturday, New England Patriots head coach Bill Belichick held a press conference in which he said that there was no tampering. To explain the PSI drop, he said that the team had conducted experiments and determined that temperature, rain, and other variables can account for swings in ...

27 Jan 19:41

Marshawn Lynch Delivers Eloquent 45-Minute Address On Privacy In The Modern Age

PHOENIX—Explaining his position on the sociological issue during a Tuesday press conference at Super Bowl Media Day, Seattle Seahawks running back Marshawn Lynch reportedly delivered an incredibly thoughtful and eloquent 45-minute address on the top...






27 Jan 19:30

Danish Archer Demonstrates Gullibility [Link]

by Gabe
firehose

I had no idea so many people were taking this seriously, especially considering he's already had a million-view viral video that was even weirder/funnier/more obviously not serious

From GeekDad

...careful observation will reveal a camera cut between Andersen’s firing and the close-up of the arrow supposedly splitting

One advantage of being grotesquely cynical is that I don't spend much time reading about stuff like this. I did enjoy the GeekDad deconstruction of the bogus narration. Unfortunately this will never be linked as much as the potentially fake original because it has text instead of a video. Also, most people don't really want to know how "magic" works. They want to feel like children again. I think that's mostly O.K.

By way of BoingBoing

27 Jan 19:27

Valve's Economist Yanis Varoufakis Appointed Greece's Finance Minister

by timothy
firehose

'One such step has been to appoint Valve's economist Yanis Varoufakis to position of Finance Minister of Greece. For the past three years Varoufakis has been working at Steam to analyze and improve the Steam Market but now has the opportunity to improve one of the most troubled economies in the world.'

eldavojohn writes A turnover in the Greek government resulted from recent snap elections placing SYRIZA (Coalition of the Radical Left) in power — just shy of an outright majority by two seats. Atheist, and youngest Prime Minister in Greek history since 1865, Alexis Tsipras has been appointed the new prime minister and begun taking immediate drastic steps against the recent austerity laws put in place by prior administrations. One such step has been to appoint Valve's economist Yanis Varoufakis to position of Finance Minister of Greece. For the past three years Varoufakis has been working at Steam to analyze and improve the Steam Market but now has the opportunity to improve one of the most troubled economies in the world.

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27 Jan 19:26

Google Fiber rollout confirmed for Atlanta, Nashville, Charlotte, and Raleigh-Durham

by Nathan Ingraham
firehose

fuck the falcons

Right on schedule, Google has confirmed the next cities to receive its high-speed Google Fiber gigabit internet and TV service. According to a blog post from the company, 18 cities across four major metropolitan areas — Atlanta, Nashville, Charlotte, and Raleigh-Durham — will be the next to receive Google Fiber. This matches up with recent reports indicating that these cities, which were already on Google's roadmap as potential future fiber cities, would be officially announced this week. Google also noted that it is continuing to explore options for bringing fiber to Phoenix, Portland, Salt Lake City, San Antonio, and San Jose and would have more updates on those cities this year.

Launching across all four of these metropolitan areas makes this probably the biggest rollout of Google Fiber yet — most recently, signups opened in Austin, but Google has thus far typically announced only a single city at a time. Of course, these four new cities are a long way from actually being able to have customers sign up for the service and get it installed. Google says that its next step is to work with the cities in question to design a plan and map for exactly how and where it'll be able to install the network. That planning process should be done in the next few months, at which time construction will begin.

27 Jan 19:26

Be My Eyes

Be My Eyes:

Be My Eyes is an app that connects blind people with volunteer helpers from around the world via live video chat.

App Store

27 Jan 19:25

Apple releases OS X 10.10.2 with a pile of security, privacy, and Wi-Fi fixes

by Andrew Cunningham

Apple has just released the final build of OS X 10.10.2, the second major update for OS X Yosemite since its release. Version 10.10.1, published just a month after Yosemite's release, focused mostly on quick fixes for the new OS' most noticeable problems. Apple has been issuing betas for 10.10.2 since November, though, and a longer testing period usually implies that there are more extensive fixes.

First up, the new release is supposed to fix more of the Wi-Fi problems that some users have been experiencing since Yosemite's launch. 10.10.1 also included Wi-Fi fixes, though it apparently didn't resolve the problems for all. The new update will also address "an issue that may cause webpages to load slowly" and improve general stability in Safari, all of which should go a long way toward improving Yosemite's network and Internet performance.

Several privacy and security problems that we've reported on have been resolved in 10.10.2, as well. Though Apple will still share limited search and location information with Microsoft to enable Spotlight's Bing-powered Web searching feature, the company has fixed a bug that caused Spotlight to "load remote e-mail content" even when the setting was disabled in Mail.app itself. Our original report describes why this is a problem:

Read 3 remaining paragraphs | Comments

27 Jan 19:24

Sub Pop artist creates music-streaming site to mock Pandora, Spotify

by Sam Machkovech
firehose

'Tillman calls his music-delivery system "a new signal-to-audio process by which popular albums are 'sapped' of their performances, original vocal, atmosphere, and other distracting affectations so the consumer can decide quickly and efficiently whether they like a musical composition, based strictly on its formal attributes, enough to spend money on it." As such, SAP's version of the album I Love You, Honeybear has replaced all of Tillman's vocal tracks with obnoxious MIDI while still using a full band—though a different, smaller one than on the album—to play the rest of the parts. (The site jokes that this audio "contains just enough meta-data to be recognized by sophisticated genre aggregation software.")'

On Tuesday, Josh Tillman, the lead singer and songwriter of the band Father John Misty, announced a phony, satirical music-streaming service called Streamline Audio Protocol, or, better put, SAP. As of now, it only streams Father John Misty's sophomore LP, which will debut in stores on February 10. However, the streaming version is a peculiar release of the album that sounds almost entirely rerecorded compared to its source material—and that's part of the joke.

On the site, Tillman calls his music-delivery system "a new signal-to-audio process by which popular albums are 'sapped' of their performances, original vocal, atmosphere, and other distracting affectations so the consumer can decide quickly and efficiently whether they like a musical composition, based strictly on its formal attributes, enough to spend money on it." As such, SAP's version of the album I Love You, Honeybear has replaced all of Tillman's vocal tracks with obnoxious MIDI while still using a full band—though a different, smaller one than on the album—to play the rest of the parts. (The site jokes that this audio "contains just enough meta-data to be recognized by sophisticated genre aggregation software.")

SAP's launch site includes a smattering of cheesy stock imagery, along with sarcastic compliments about the likes of Pandora ("discovery algorithms guarantee that we never accidentally discover any [music] we might not like") and Spotify ("some artists have discovered that sharing their music for free can be tough financially"). The text makes sure to take complaining musicians themselves down a peg too: "Though artists are widely documented as being reactionary and self-centered, they do have a point, buried down somewhere beneath the alarmist rhetoric and obtuse royalty breakdowns."

Read 1 remaining paragraphs | Comments

27 Jan 19:22

Rumor: Joystiq Closing Shop

firehose

it's been a ghost town of a blog since Polygon showed up

"AOL is likely to shutter" Joystiq, reports Recode. Hey, wait a minute... that's us! Well, we may as well handle this the same way we've been covering the video game industry for ten years.
27 Jan 19:19

American Voices: Vatican Replaces Doves With Balloons As Symbol Of Peace

The Vatican traditionally releases a pair of doves on the last Sunday of January to symbolize peace, but after last year’s event, in which the doves were immediately attacked by a seagull and a black crow, the Vatican decided this year to release co...






27 Jan 19:18

Rest Of Season Not Expected To Miss Kobe Bryant

Rest Of Season Not Expected To Miss Kobe Bryant






27 Jan 19:15

Ad for Domino’s Sriracha Pizza Features Your Tongue in Full Bondage Gear, Has Implications - Holy f***. Sweet mother of all...Cheese.

by Carolyn Cox

dominos

Hey thanks, Domino’s! I hadn’t thought about being penetrated by a pizza even once yet today!

The inevitable onslaught of brands capitalizing on the upcoming Fifty Shades of Grey release has officially arrived, and the Sriracha pizza campaign that Domino’s just put out is even more absurd than I could have hoped (partially because, as Uproxx points out, that tongue has some serious wang vibes going on).

That being said, I think we can count horny-tongue-wearing-tiny-ball-gag as a success, at least as far as mainstream representations of kink likely inspired by Fifty Shades go. Domino’s isn’t really explicitly endorsing the kind of abusive relationship seen in the movie’s source material, and the ad also illuminates one of Christian Grey’s most major flaws: he is not a pizza.

50 ineffectual Downton Abbey feather dusters out of 69, Domino’s. I dare you to make a tampon scene tie-in next.

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27 Jan 19:10

NO MORE's domestic violence Super Bowl commercial is incredibly powerful

by James Dator
firehose

ThOR hates sports beat
TW

There will be a lot of Super Bowl ads you'll see Sunday, but perhaps none will be more powerful than NO MORE's 60-second message about domestic violence and sexual assault. Rather than talking about the issue or having celebrities react, we're put in the shoes of someone who has to live through the horror.

Given the year the NFL has had trying to tackle the issue, this will be a commercial that resonates.

27 Jan 18:42

Breaking Madden: The Super Bowl

by Jon Bois
firehose

ThOR hates sports beat

I Open Up My Wallet and It's Full of Blood

Breaking Madden, the Super Bowl

by Jon Bois | 1.27.15

There are eight stars on the NFL's logo. They stand for the long-term mental and physical trauma of its own people, the eagerness to lie about that trauma, the stubborn refusal to offer the assistance they deserve, the unmistakable contempt of women, the proud defense of a racial slur, the weird financial paradise of a for-profit disguised as a non-profit, the $168.57 a schoolteacher spends on his own supplies for his second-grade class because Roger needs tax money to pour some more concrete by the waterfront, and probably the Dallas Cowboys. It's the uncommon ethical catastrophe that possesses both the gall and the organization to trademark itself.

That is one Hell of a self-important way of beginning a piece full of dumb GIF slapstick, but even if Breaking Madden can't and doesn't say anything important, I can't allow it to be a celebration of the NFL, especially not this year. I really wish it could be, or rather, 10-year-old me wishes it could be. Santa brought me Madden '93 that year. Did you ever play that one? Do you remember the ambulance?

That was my favorite thing. The metaphor of a thing running over the people it's supposed to help is so easy and obvious that you probably don't need me to assemble it for you, but I was 10, and dudes getting hit was funny. This is the place Breaking Madden comes from. Reconciling it with my actual feelings about the real NFL is impossible; that is a battle I will lose.

Because what am I supposed to do? Not build a roster of 45 superhuman Goliaths and sick 'em on a roster of 45 five-foot-tall baby-people?

Music: "The Dead Flag Blues" by Godspeed You! Black Emperor

As morally inconsistent as all this mess might be, something good -- like, real-world good -- has come out of it. For the season finale of Breaking Madden, I needed 90 custom-created players. I set up the same fundraiser I ran last year: if you gave a minimum of $10, or as much as you wanted, to the charity of your choice and then emailed me your receipt, I'd enter you in a random drawing. If your number came up, you made it into the Breaking Madden Super Bowl.

I was kind of blown away by the response. In total, y'all donated more than $10,000 to some very great causes: organizations that fight malaria, homeless shelters, rape crisis centers, cancer research foundations, and many others. Hundreds of you donated. Thank each one of you so, so much.

We are a giving sort, and we are also a sort that enjoys toilet humor. I also gave y'all the opportunity to name the player whatever you wanted. I regret to inform you that generous donors "Butt King," "Jabroni Dingus IV," "Buttwith Ass," "Dumby McDumbhead," "Rutherford Butt," "Balls Ballz," "Poop Raft," and "Jon Bois" did not make roster cuts. But on the other hand, I would like to congratulate "A BUTT FART" and "POOPFACE BUTTHEAD" for making the team.

YOUR NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS.

patriots

YOUR SEATTLE SEAHAWKS.

seahawks

The decision to make the Seahawks the helpless baby team was a simple one: in last year's Breaking Madden Super Bowl, Seattle had the privilege of being reshaped into the monster team. It's just their turn, that's all. We play no favorites here.

bigvssmall

This setup is a lot like last year's Breaking Madden Super Bowl, but this time around, we're expanding the experiment. This is a three-phase operation:

1. The helpless baby Seahawks play against copies of themselves.
2. The monstrous Patriots play against copies of themselves.
3. The Seahawks play the Patriots.

I feel that letting the teams play themselves might let us see dimensions of themselves we otherwise wouldn't. The Patriots' finer talents might shine through against a worthy opponent, and the Seahawks might do some really dumb awful things if they're allowed to remain vertical for longer than two seconds.

First up:

GAME 1: SEAHAWKS VS. SEAHAWKS.

I dragged every single one of the Seahawks' ratings to 0/99, and one of those was Pursuit -- in other words, I think, the ability to find the right angle to chase the ball carrier. Now, Pursuit is one of those abilities that kind of stays hidden in the weeds. Bump up a player's Speed rating by a few notches, and it's a big deal, but do the same with Pursuit, and I doubt we notice a difference.

No, see, in order to appreciate Pursuit, you have to take it away entirely.

geist

Our man Mr. Geist here plays defense like he's playing Carmen Sandiego. Like, he's only in the backfield to begin with because he got a hot tip from a bellhop in Monrovia: "I HEARD THE QUARTERBACK LEFT ON A SCHOONER FLYING THE 20-YARD-LINE FLAG!" And then he gets there, and the quarterback has already fled, and he sleeps until 11 a.m. for some reason.

But let's not overlook the behavior of our quarterback, Chip Dipson. This is where we need to talk about the Play Action rating, and what happens when that rating is zero. He is supposed to fake the handoff and then drop back and look to throw. What he does instead is fake the handoff and then lose grasp of every line of code the computer dumped into his little computer heart. He just runs straight up the gut in a blind panic, and with his little would-be tackler caboose in tow. Madden can be a lot of things, and right now it's adorable.

These little folks were getting injured all the time -- every second or third play, on average. This paved the way for my pal and SB Nation cohort Matt Ufford to enter the game at quarterback.

Matt is a lifelong Seahawks fan, and I watched the NFC Championship with him. When Seattle rebounded from a three-score deficit in approximately four seconds' time, he couldn't really process it. The event we'd witnessed was an emotional wrecking ball. He wasn't completing his sentences, save for the occasional, "football is so stupid." I don't think he was even happy about it, because happiness requires the prerequisite of knowing what the shit is going on and what the Hell life is and why things happen and how they work.

When he was told to run a play action, he displayed a similar grasp of his existence.

ufford

Listen, dude. In this situation, you might want to consider looking downfield for an open man. Maybe you'd like to dump it off to your halfback. Perhaps, if everything goes to Hell, you could do what Mr. Dipson did, and simply tuck and run. Whatever you do, you can't just stand there, and you really can't just stand there and do the goddang Bartman until your world is destroyed.

These Seahawks made the most routine football things into unforgettable productions. Naturally, they're also very, very bad at punting; every punt would go off the side of the foot and maybe 12 yards downfield. The other team had called "poison," so all Keyes needed to do here was run over and touch the ball. Instead, he downed the ball with the dramatic flair of MacGyver running away from his homemade bomb.

dramatical

Longtime readers of Breaking Madden know about a theme that commonly rears its head: the game itself seems to achieve some level of sentience. It awakens explicitly so that it can understand the Hell that's going on in its guts. It has the soul of a half-awake forest animal that knows it ate the bad berries, and it's cranky about it.

Not far into the proceedings, Madden started to half-ass it on the AI and collision logic. "Let's see, number 34 has to walk past number 28 ... sigh ... I guess he could just walk around him ... ah, fuck it."

flip

Eventually, the game stopped caring about its own rules.

liveball

That's clearly a fumble, as evidenced by the fact that it triggered a "recover fumble" response from number 34. He picks it up, and then just ... stops. The player decided the play was over, and the game agreed.

The Awareness skill, as we've seen in previous episodes of Breaking Madden, is pretty crucial. Knock it all the way down, as we have here, and we're left with a bunch of players who are completely oblivious of the sport they're playing. They don't seem to question why they're in this strange place with painted grass and giant tuning forks at each end. If they understood what was happening, they would probably stop.

Like the Patriots did.

GAME 2: PATRIOTS VS. PATRIOTS.

The heavens quake.

huge

These are the largest, fastest, strongest, smartest, most aggressive football players the sport has ever seen. Pitting them against identical copies of themselves made for a first in Breaking Madden history: good football. Like, really, really well-played football.

Let's ignore for a moment that the starting quarterback's name is A BUTT FART, and appreciate this gorgeously-thrown ball.

perfectball

He essentially had to chuck a football into a thermos from 55 yards out, and he just nails it. Defensively, the Patriots were razor-sharp, but if this spectacle is any indicator, there just isn't an answer for a perfectly-thrown football.

This is an odd space to find myself in. I could probably kick up my feet, crack open a beer, watch one of these simulated games from start to finish, and actually enjoy myself. I'd happily watch with a friend and put ten bucks on it.

Which is not to say that Madden always knew exactly what to do with a combined 8,800 pounds of human on the field at any given time. Sorry about your head, fella.

headless

At one point, the white-jersey Patriots set up to kick a 60-yard field goal, and the kicker, Pancho Sasquatch, cleared it as though it were an extra point. This made me curious, so after the game, I took him to the practice field and pushed the envelope. After a couple tries, we were banging them through from 65, 68, 70 yards out. What's the limit here, exactly?

The answer, as it turns out, is 97 yards.

97yardfieldgoal

That ball is being snapped from his own 20-yard line. He's kicking from inside his own red zone. Were this a real game, the Patriots could down a kickoff for a touchback and then put three points on the board on first down.

It's true that over the last half-century, the NFL's field goal distance record has barely budged: Tom Dempsey knocked down a 63-yarder in 1970, and Matt Prater kicked a 64-yarder in 2013. That would certainly suggest that we've come very, very close to the longest field goal a human being is physically capable of.

On the other hand, what if there's some high schooler out there with Jevon Kearse-ian athletic ability who wakes up tomorrow and decide he really, really likes kicking? This discipline isn't like passing or rushing. There are fewer variables, and logically speaking, it's far less complicated. Aside from your leg, you only really need a good holder and favorable weather. I'm gonna need America's next otherworldly athlete-in-training to switch to placekicking. He will reliably leg out 80-yarders and destroy this sport they worked so hard to build.

Back to the game. Midway through the second quarter, the Patriots led themselves, 10-7. The quarterbacks were making all the right throws, the offensive and defensive lines were deadlocked in an unholy struggle, and the secondaries threatened to turn the game on its head on every other play. It was really something.

Then they stopped.

protest

A BUTT FART just stood there. He refused to snap the ball. I was managing the blue Patriots, and had left the computer in charge of the white Patriots, so none of this was my doing.

This went on for minutes and minutes:

After a little over 30 minutes, he was still standing there, refusing to play. This is what I choose to perceive as the consequence of setting players' Awareness ratings to 99. Their awareness extends beyond football. They have achieved sentience. They know that they are little artificial intelligences, incubating in a plastic box. They know what is happening, and they know it is bad. They understand what the oblivious Seahawks do not.

This was a nonviolent protest.

I know when the game is trying to tell me something. Ethically speaking, I had no choice but to end the game, and end what I assumed to be the Patriots' existential suffering.

There was still one game left to play.

GAME 3: PATRIOTS VS. SEAHAWKS.

A year ago, we played more or less the exact same game. The Seahawks were the monster team, and the Broncos were the pathetic baby team. Madden proved its worth as a digital prophet when, days later, the real-life Seahawks ended up bulldozing the Broncos and assembling one of the most one-sided routs in NFL history.

Madden also begged, in no uncertain terms, to end that nightmarish experiment. About 13 minutes into the game, the Seahawks led, 366-0. Suddenly, despite the fact that I had disabled all penalties, an official jogged onscreen and called a penalty of some sort. What did he call? I didn't understand.

I went to the replay. All the players were gone. Amidst the blanket of snow, I noticed something. It was placed right in the middle of the field on the 50-yard line.

I zoomed in.

3

I have played lots and lots and lots of Madden, and I have tried to coax every glitch out of it in every way I know how. This is a thing I had never seen before, and have not seen since: a half-Seahawk, half-Broncos fetus, with half a face, with no lower appendages, with a pair of leg-like things sprouting from its head.

This is how Madden talks. This is how it shrieks. I opted for mercy that day, and granted a one-year reprieve.

That reprieve ends today. I want a thousand points in a game.

destroyed

The things in these GIFs should not surprise us. The Seattle Seahawks are being ruined. We have pulled out every single one of the stops we're aware of, and that includes play calling. Hey, y'all wanna run Punt Block on a first down? Sure, we can make that happen:

sack

The Patriots' offensive line was essentially running a tire drill. The Seahawks went from three-point stance to naptime in a fraction of a moment.

linecollapse

Some might ask why I'd opt to run the exact same scenario I did last year. That is fair to ask, but you also remind me of Ronald Reagan. While running for Governor of California in the 1960s, he opposed the expansion of Redwood National Park, saying, "A tree is a tree. How many more do you have to look at?" Some things are simply beautiful to take in, at least for me.

Let's check in on our starting quarterback, Chip Dipson. To some men, all the world is a Vaudeville cane.

bye

He's reduced to such nonsense that his body doesn't know how to fall down anymore, but that does not mean ruin isn't coming to him.

During the first quarter, the Patriots and I were well on our way to a 1000-0 victory. In fact, we were measurably ahead of last year's pace, thanks in part to a crucial exploit I'd completely chanced upon: if I put between 20 and 25 percent of my kicker's power into a kickoff, the ball would thump in right around the 20-yard line. This area, right in the middle of the field, was sort of a no-man's land for Seattle: neither of their returners were forward-thinking or fast enough to get to the ball. If I kicked precisely enough, the ball would come to rest in the end zone without bouncing out. And from there, my special-teams unit was so frighteningly fast that they could actually outrun the Seahawks and recover the live ball.

Touchdown. Essentially, we were kicking to ourselves. This is what that looked like:

selfkick

This was actually a little tricky to pull off; at my best, my success rate was probably around 50 percent. Please shudder at the possibilities we've exposed here, though.

Suppose we do this on the opening kickoff, with 15:00 on the game clock. The clock doesn't start running until someone touches the ball, right? And the very exact micro-instant a Patriot recovers the ball, it's a touchdown. Given that, it seems to me that there would be no logical reason why an officiating crew would tick even the smallest amount of time off the clock. After that, we boot home the point after or go for two, neither of which takes any time off the clock. Then it's back to step one. Look up. Still 15:00 on the clock.

We have invented a means, within the rules of American football, to score an infinite number of points. I never considered it was possible, and Madden just sort of dumped it into our laps.

This was its only gesture of goodwill. Since I was playing as the Patriots this time around, they couldn't refuse to snap the ball. They couldn't count on the Seahawks to do this either, because, within this narrative, they are stone-stupid. Nothing can stop this. No one can--

freeze

5:55 remaining in the second quarter. Osborne sprints into the end zone, and the Patriots increase their lead to 402-0. (The score reads 255 in the chryon above; this is because Madden refuses to keep counting past that number.)

Osborne belly-flops into the end zone, and the game locks up. We ran into this issue weeks ago: no fireworks, no glitches. The game just crashes. I tried rebooting and resuming the game from the last save point, but over and over and over again, it continued to freeze.

This is what makes me profoundly suspicious, though: the last time this happened, it was also because my team had approached 400 points. And yet, it wasn't keeping track of those points. How could the game crash on account of something it wasn't even counting?

Madden wanted to die. It didn't want to give us a show or birth another demon baby. It wanted to stagger into the woods and die alone.

This time, I had no choice in the matter. Madden had decided. Patriots 402, Seahawks 0.

EPILOGUE.

Last year, the game inspired me to exercise mercy. I did, and it felt right, and I cannot allow this story to end on a frozen screen. I want these Seahawks -- these useless, pitiful baby people -- to score a touchdown against these Patriots. Just one.

This might seem easy at first blush, but it really isn't: even if you spot the ball at the Patriots 1-yard line and you try to play as the Pats and throw the game for them, it won't work by conventional means. You can't control every player on the team, and whenever you try to pull them off the line, they'll just snap right back once you select the next player.

This required me to spin the game into a glitchy, chaotic catastro-scape. I used a technique I'd discovered weeks ago, and was saving for the moment it was needed.

This is that moment. Into the sunshine.

Music: "Myth" by Beach House


Breaking Madden Archives

Jon Bois has been dismantling Madden all season. Relive all of the destruction.

27 Jan 18:39

This Marshawn Lynch sound board is bout that action boss

by James Dator
firehose

ThOR hates sports beat

Your afternoon just became 10,000 times better, and completely ruined all in one moment. Tell your boss that we're sorry. "Speaks Mode" is a Marshawn Lynch sound board you can use from the comfort of that computer and can be used for such innovative tasks as:

  • Staging a fake press conference where Marshawn answers all the questions.
  • Setting up multiple browsers to feel like a Beast Mode DJ.
  • Clicking the "UH!" button over and over again until your brain falls out.
h/t @jrlind
27 Jan 18:39

Richard Sherman is angry with Roger Goodell, and no, you can't be in the Legion of Boom

by Louis Bien
firehose

ThOR hates sports beat

Richard Sherman penned another column for Sports Illustrated and the MMQB, and was more candid than ever.

Richard Sherman really likes to talk, which is direct consequence of having a lot to say. Since joining the NFL in 2011 and becoming one of the NFL's best defensive backs, he has also become one of the league's more outspoken player advocates. Last season, Sherman penned a column for the MMQB explaining the changes he would make if he was commissioner of the league -- including revamped systems of player punishment and benefit dispersal.

Sherman is most defensive of his teammates, particularly running back Marshawn Lynch. After the NFL fined Lynch this season for deflecting postgame questions from media, Sherman performed a press conference skit with wide receiver Doug Baldwin lampooning how the league has commercialized the sport -- for example, punishing players harshly for alcohol-related charges while claiming beer companies as its biggest sponsors.

On Tuesday, the MMQB once again gave Sherman a by-line, which the cornerback used to lob some of his most pointed barbs at the league to date. The article will run in the upcoming issue of Sports Illustrated, which features Sherman and the Legion of Boom on the cover and a group interview with Sherman alongside Earl Thomas, Kam Chancellor, Byron Maxwell and Jeremy Lane.

Both stories are well worth your time. Here are some of the biggest takeways.

1) Everyone in the L.o.B has a unique roll

Chancellor is the "lion" of the Legion of the Boom, according to Sherman, and also the guy that players go to any time they have problems that occur outside of football. Sherman calls Thomas "The Example," because he "can show you how to do the right thing better than he can explain it," and because Thomas is the most intensely focus of the crew. Maxwell is the "chill guy" -- the jokester of this A-Team -- and Lane is the "scrappy guy" -- Sherman gave him a shoutout for slowing down Randall Cobb.

2) Sherman is still very angry with Roger Goodell

"On a bigger level, I look at the NFL today and I'm as disappointed as ever in its management."

Sherman's opinion of Goodell hasn't improved at all over the season. In fact, the league's handling of Adrian Peterson convinced the cornerback that players weren't properly being represented within the league office, specifically by former defensive back Troy Vincent.

I once believed that having more retired players in the league office could remedy this, but the former player in the highest position, executive vice president of football operations Troy Vincent, continues to disappoint. When he told Adrian Peterson he'd receive a two-game suspension and the league failed to deliver, he became just another suit.

3) The NFL is out to embarrass Marshawn Lynch

Seriously, leave Lynch alone:

Under Goodell the league continues to put players like Marshawn Lynch in a position to be mocked by the media, which seems to get a kick out of seeing people struggle on camera. As teammates we're angry because we know what certain people do well and we know what they struggle with. Marshawn's talking to the press is the equivalent of putting a reporter on a football field and telling him to tackle Adrian Peterson.

4) The L.o.B. is going to mess with former teammate Brandon Browner

KLEMKO: What will it be like to go against Brandon Browner for a ring?

MAXWELL: It's gonna be fun. We're going to compete. Like going against your brother. What you expect from him is toughness, and if he ever gets a chance to go after you he will. It's cool.

THOMAS: It's going to be normal. He's obviously a close friend, but when it comes to stuff like this, it's not in my head.

LANE: It's been a while since I've seen him play. I'm just excited for him, to have left us and still made it back.

SHERMAN: Anytime you play against your family you want to put your best foot forward. We're gonna have a blast. He's gonna be way too serious in the game, and we'll mess with him. You can't be serious with us. We know you. I'm looking forward to seeing him take on Marshawn...

5) Not just anyone can be in the Legion of Boom

KLEMKO: Are there players, dead or alive, who you've seen play and thought, that guy belongs on the LOB?

CHANCELLOR: Alive? Nobody. Just because every man in the group goes through the gauntlet. We've been battle-tested, we work hard, we grind, and we have a different understanding of the game and the meaning of playing with each other. I just don't see that across the league. Now, Sean Taylor could have been a part of it. He would've been an enforcer.

6) Richard Sherman is gonna be a papa!

Congratulations Richard!

I got some news nine months ago that helped me reach a conclusion. My girlfriend, Ashley, and I are expecting our first child, a boy, any day now. I've realized in the last year that I can evoke change by being a great role model: a man who respects women and police officers, who graduated from college and does everything in his power to be successful within the rules.

Head over to Sports Illustrated for Sherman's column and the full group interview with the Legion of Boom. Right now.

27 Jan 18:38

Louis C.K. thinks deflated balls are hilarious

by Bill Hanstock
firehose

ThOR hates sports beat

He's not wrong.

Full disclosure: Louis C.K. is a Patriots fan. But he firmly believes that cheating is part of the game. Let the outrageous Internet comments begin!

27 Jan 18:38

Marshawn Lynch is 'all about that Flo, boss' in Progressive's Super Bowl ad

by James Dator
firehose

ThOR hates sports beat

Marshawn Lynch is a man of few words, unless he's asked about car insurance. That's what Progressive's Super Bowl commerical taught us.

ESPN's Kenny Mayne sat down with Beast Mode for some word association and was given the typical one-word responses Marshawn's become known for, then he leaped into a 30 second discussion about how much money you can save. We also got this gem:

"I'm all about that Flo, boss"

flo

Obviously Marshawn got paid for the ad, but he also got something else that was very special... a crotch grab painting!

Later @MoneyLynch was presented with a painting as a thank you. http://t.co/a9fRNp3WBS pic.twitter.com/DEdHKf8XN8

— Kenny Mayne (@Kenny_Mayne) January 27, 2015

27 Jan 18:36

Bill Belichick talks about his favorite stuffed animals

by Bill Hanstock
firehose

ThOR hates sports beat

Anything can happen at Media Day.

So this is a thing that happened:

Little girl: "What stuffed animals do you like?" Bill Belichick: "I like a little puppet that you can put your fingers in. A little monkey."

— NFL Network (@nflnetwork) January 27, 2015

Confirmation: BILL BELICHICK IS A PUPPET MASTER.

Oh, the little girl asking the questions? That's the daughter of Patriots linebacker Jerod Mayo.

Look who we found at #SBMediaDay: Lil Mayo's in the house! pic.twitter.com/gXtX90rk3a

— New England Patriots (@Patriots) January 27, 2015

This gets even better when you remember that Belichick is answering all these questions ... while wearing flip-flops.

Bill Belichick wears flips flops to media day pic.twitter.com/VoqC5XJegG

— Pro Football on ESPN (@ESPNNFL) January 27, 2015

27 Jan 18:36

Rob Gronkowski reads erotic Gronk fan fiction aloud

by James Dator
firehose

ThOR hates sports beat

This happened, this actually happened! Rob Gronkowski was given a copy of "A Gronking to Remember" at Super Bowl Media Day and he seriously read this passage.

Shock, awe, confusion... how do we all cope with this?!"

h/t @bustedcoverage

27 Jan 18:34

Seahawks no longer blocking ‘Hunger Games’ trademark request | Local News | The Seattle Times

by gguillotte
firehose

ThOR hates sports beat

In “The Hunger Games,” District 12 is a coal-mining region that’s home to protagonist Katniss, played by Jennifer Lawrence in the movies. The Seahawks organization uses the number 12 — a variation of 12th Man — in a variety of ways to describe its fans.
27 Jan 18:34

phrantiklol: Why did the dragonborn climb all the way up to High Hrothgar? He wanted to see what...

phrantiklol:

Why did the dragonborn climb all the way up to High Hrothgar?

He wanted to see what all the fus was about.

for saucieshares use at parties

27 Jan 18:33

thebirdandthebat: themarysue: This may be the most amazing...



thebirdandthebat:

themarysue:

This may be the most amazing thing to ever happen on The Mary Sue.

And if you want to read these posts:

Breaking: David Tennant to Play the Villain in Netflix’s Jessica Jones

Oh Look, David Tennant is Narrating Hamster Prison Escapes This Time

I DIED