Pro Gamers Are out of a Job too

Posted by JEREMIAS25

Pro Gamers Are Out Of A Job Too The business of being really, really good at playing video games is hurting. Professional gaming leagues are shutting down left and right, meaning that many people who participate in those leagues are out now jobless...

RG1 - Podcast

Posted by SIDSIDSID

PRIMEIRO PODCAST! Caros ouvintes, começa aqui um novo projecto, aliciante, interessante e crítico com a comunidade gamer. Traduz-se aqui uma vontade em dinamizar esta comunidade online e de dar voz ao GAMER.

Study Finds Games Reinforcing Positive Behavior, Too

Posted by Jeremias25

Last year some researchers at three universities found, of course, that "violent games normalize our children to violence." The same researchers, this year, say "prosocial" games can normalize kids to good behavior. Middle schoolers in Singapore and Japan, and college students in the U.S. were observed in three studies, according to the research, which has been released online and will be published soon in a professional journal. Here's the breakdown:

Melhora o teu jogo no SF IV

Posted by SIDSIDSID

Então lê estas dicas... e treina! Algo en que falla mucha gente es "mashear", que es aporrear teclas o exagerar los movimientos con la esperanza de hacerlos. Si te esta saliendo un Hadouken, puede ser que esta pasando lo siguiente: QCF = Quarter Circle Forward o Cuarto de Luna a) Estas haciendo el doble QCF pero estas dando al boton de puño o antes de hacer el segundo QCF, o estas soltando el boton en medio camino del segundo. b) Alguno de los QCF son demasiado lentos.

Blue Man Group

Publicada por J25 On 11:27

3 Response to 'Blue Man Group'

  1. J25 Said,
    http://radiogamer.blogspot.com/2009/03/blue-man-group.html?showComment=1237824900000#c9216114369296374426'> 23 de março de 2009 às 09:15

    Testes Testes Testes

     

  2. SIDSIDSID Said,
    http://radiogamer.blogspot.com/2009/03/blue-man-group.html?showComment=1237965840000#c8110708733082186869'> 25 de março de 2009 às 00:24

    Who killed Blue Man Group?
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    Matinees failed to draw school tours
    Show may have been past its prime
    Sep 29, 2006 07:52 AM
    Be the first to comment on this article...
    Richard Ouzounian
    Theatre Critic
    Two things led to the decision to close the Toronto production of Blue Man Group after a disappointing 18-month run, but they were not the aftermath of 9/11 and SARS, according to theatre experts from the U.S. and Canada.

    The backlash from the show's union difficulties and the sheer age of the property itself are the more likely culprits — and not the same general audience malaise blamed for the early departure of The Lord of the Rings.

    In other markets, Blue Man had been allowed to function in a non-union situation. But Canadian Actors' Equity wanted it to abide by local agreements and use performers who were members of the union.

    The organizers of Blue Man refused and Equity launched a powerful boycott which enlisted the support of The Ontario Teachers Federation and effectively killed all performances for school children.

    "The teachers' boycott had a crippling effect on them," said Susan Wallace, executive director of Canadian Actors Equity, adding that it eliminated the thousands of students who pack matinee performances for Blue Man in other cities.

    "You go by the theatre when the show is letting out," says Chris Jones, theatre critic for the Chicago Tribune (Blue Man has been running in Chicago since 1999) "and a lot of the time the audience seems to be totally made up of high school kids."

    The second problem was that the antics of the toilet-paper-hurling percussionists were no longer as fresh in 2005 as they had been when they first opened in New York back in 1991.

    "If they had opened (in Chicago) last year, I doubt they would have had the same impact," Jones said. "It's a little late in the day for Blue Man."

    With shows running in New York for 14 years, Boston for 11, Chicago for seven and Las Vegas for six, most American tourists would have had sufficient opportunity to catch up with Blue Man in other cities, minimizing the potential appeal of the Toronto run.

    Laura Camien, the organization's publicist, admitted the union situation in Toronto "didn't help matters any, but no one can say how much for sure." She shrugged off questions of the show's dated appeal, saying, "We try to update it all the time."

    She preferred to put the blame on Toronto's supposed inability in recent years to attract substantial audiences.

    "It's disheartening that Toronto hasn't rebounded yet and has lately been unable to support long-run shows," she told the Star Wednesday.

    Wallace was infuriated by her comments. "Placing the blame for the show's failure on our city, instead of squarely where it belongs, with the show's deliberate inability to make itself part of our community, continues a pattern of disrespect for Toronto evidenced by Blue Man from Day 1."

    Labour problems have dogged Blue Man in other cities. When their Las Vegas production moved from the Luxor Hotel to the Venetian this year, their technical employees sought to become unionized and Blue Man resisted. On Sept. 14, the U.S. National Labor Relations Board cited Blue Man Group for unfair labour practices.

    Camien did not feel that the Toronto situation had any impact on the organization's actions in Las Vegas.

    "I don't think it's changed the way we look at anything," she said. "We do a case-by-case situation and examine the needs of each market."

    So where does this leave Toronto?

    As of Jan. 8, the $12 million Panasonic Theatre owned by Live Nation will be empty. Independent producer Jeffrey Latimer calls it "a beautiful commercial facility, a much-needed 700-seat venue."

    There is speculation that Mirvish Productions might assume control of the space, the way it did with Live Nation's Canon Theatre, but John Karastamatis, director of communications for Mirvish, categorically denied any such scenario.

    While producers are anxiously eyeing the Panasonic as the possible home of smaller shows like Avenue Q and The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee, a more likely scenario is that Live Nation will convert the space into a venue for music performances, not unlike The Opera House on Queen St. E.

    In the end, Blue Man Group's failure to produce a lengthy run in Toronto says more about the show and its management than the cultural climate in this city.

     

  3. SIDSIDSID Said,
    http://radiogamer.blogspot.com/2009/03/blue-man-group.html?showComment=1237965840001#c6998037320452936123'> 25 de março de 2009 às 00:24

    em: http://www.thestar.com/article/96561

     

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