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This Deadpool Billboard Is the Best Use of An Emoji We've Ever Seen

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This Deadpool Billboard Is the Best Use of An Emoji We've Ever Seen

When it comes to film marketing, we’re used to seeing the same footage and images recycled in posters, trailers, commercials and more. But Fox is doing something different with Deadpool and really playing with people. In fact their latest billboard is one of the best ever.

Comedian Patton Oswalt saw the above billboard in the streets of Los Angeles, tweeted it and it’s since gone viral. For good reason. It’s simple, but genius.

“Dead. Poo. L.” In case you didn’t get it.

And as great this emoji billboard is, it’s just the latest in the hilarious campaign. Did you see this other billboard/banner?

Looks like a romantic comedy, not the violent superhero movie it is. In fact, the film was just given its official rating: an R for “strong violence and language throughout, sexual content and graphic nudity.”

It opens February 12.


Contact the author at germain@io9.com.


Today's Best Deals: Discounted Humidifier, Cheap Pressure Cooker, and More

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Today's Best Deals: Discounted Humidifier, Cheap Pressure Cooker, and More

A deeply-discounted humidifier, an ultra-cheap pressure cooker, and All-Clad cookware sets highlight today’s best deals. Bookmark Kinja Deals and follow us on Twitter to never miss a deal. Commerce Content is independent of Editorial and Advertising, and if you buy something through our posts, we may get a small share of the sale. Click here to learn more.

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http://deals.kinja.com/todays-best-ap...

11 Practical and Cute Winter Boots, Under $100

http://deals.kinja.com/11-socially-ac...


Top Deals


Today's Best Deals: Discounted Humidifier, Cheap Pressure Cooker, and More

If dry winter air is giving you cracked lips and a scratchy throat, you can remedy it today with this discounted humidifier. The Rowenta Ultrasonic 360 can maintain your preferred level of humidity in any room, and at only 40db, you’ll barely even hear it working.

Today’s deal is roughly $60 less than usual, and an all-time low price by a whopping $40. It’s only available today though, so lock in your order before this deal gets wrung dry. [Rowenta Ultrasonic 360 Humidifier, $100]

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00OT5PE8K/...


Today's Best Deals: Discounted Humidifier, Cheap Pressure Cooker, and More

This HooToo gadget is actually three devices in one:

  • Travel Router: Turn any ethernet jack you find into a Wi-Fi hotspot, which can still come in handy at certain hotels and conventions.
  • 10,400mAh USB Battery Pack: Keep your phone and tablet charged during a long day away from any power outlets.
  • File Hub: Transfer files and wirelessly stream content from an USB hard drive, or flash drive to all of your devices. Imagine loading a cheap flash drive up with movies for a long trip, instead of, say, buying an expensive iPad with more local storage.

All of those are ideal use cases for travelers, and since it’s an all-in-one solution, it’ll save space in your bag. [HooToo Wireless Travel Router / 10400mAh External Battery Pack, $40]

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00RVIGY1I


Today's Best Deals: Discounted Humidifier, Cheap Pressure Cooker, and More

If you don’t own a pressure cooker, today’s a great day to fix that. You can score a highly-rated T-fal 6.3 quart model for just $46 today as part of an Amazon Gold Box deal. That’s not just the best price ever listed for that model; it’s actually one of the best deals we’ve ever seen on any pressure cooker, period. [T-fal Pressure Cooker, $46]

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00EXLOW38

http://lifehacker.com/5954077/why-yo...

Not to put any pressure on you, but like all Gold Box deals, this price is only available today, and it could very well sell out early.


Today's Best Deals: Discounted Humidifier, Cheap Pressure Cooker, and More

Today’s ultra-thin laptops have largely dispatched with ethernet ports, and possibly don’t have as many USB ports as you’d like. Luckily, this attractive and affordable hub will give you both, when you need them. [Inateck Unibody Aluminum 3 Ports USB 3.0 Hub with Driver-Free Gigabit Ethernet Adapter, $20 with code 3RJ8B8SH]

http://www.amazon.com/Inateck-Alumin...


Today's Best Deals: Discounted Humidifier, Cheap Pressure Cooker, and More

If you still use your TV’s built-in speakers, drop whatever you’re doing right now and order this popular VIZIO sound bar system. It’s under $100, and includes Bluetooth to stream music from your mobile devices, and a wireless subwoofer for extra bass. [Refurb Vizio S3821w-C0 38" 2.1 Home Theater Bluetooth Sound Bar, $90]

http://www.ebay.com/itm/1214657911...


Today's Best Deals: Discounted Humidifier, Cheap Pressure Cooker, and More

If you own an iPhone 6 or 6s, and you don’t already own a battery case, there’s really no reason not to at $15. [Spigen iPhone 6/6s Battery Case, $15 with code 28FAEX3B]

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...


Today's Best Deals: Discounted Humidifier, Cheap Pressure Cooker, and More

You’re never too old for gummy vitamins, and Amazon’s offering solid discounts on several varieties of Smartypants multivitamins for men, women, and children, today only. [Smartypants Multivitamin Sale]


Today's Best Deals: Discounted Humidifier, Cheap Pressure Cooker, and More

Anyone with even a passing interest in cooking knows that All-Clad is the brand you want in your kitchen when it comes to skillets and pots. Made in America and carrying a lifetime warranty, you’d probably see their wares in the kitchens of most of your favorite restaurants. One of their skillets is also the single most popular piece of cookware we’ve ever listed.

http://www.amazon.com/All-Clad-Stain...

If you want to experience the quality for yourself, Woot is offering a multiple sets of their popular Master Chef 2 tri-ply cookware, which feature a durable stainless steel cooking surface, an even and rapid-heating aluminum core, and a brushed aluminum bottom, starting at $255 shipped for seven pieces. That’s still a lot to spend on a set of pots and pans, but they’ll last you your entire life if you take good care of them, and they’ll make cooking so much more enjoyable. [All-Clad Stainless Cookware Sets, $255-$605]

http://home.woot.com/offers/all-cla...

Note: Most All-Clad pans feature stainless steel bottoms, but these are brushed aluminum, meaning they will not work on induction burners.


Today's Best Deals: Discounted Humidifier, Cheap Pressure Cooker, and More

For a limited time, $700 at Best Buy gets you a flexible Lenovo Yoga 2-in-1 with a 256GB SSD, 8GB of RAM, GeForce 940m graphics, and a 1080p display. That’s a whole lot of computer for the money. [Lenovo ThinkPad Yoga 2-in-1 Intel Core i5 - 8GB Memory - 256GB Solid State 14" Touch-Screen Laptop, $700]

http://www.bestbuy.com/site/lenovo-th...


Today's Best Deals: Discounted Humidifier, Cheap Pressure Cooker, and More

$20 water-resistant Bluetooth speakers are nothing new, but this model from Mpow cleverly includes a suction cup so you can stick it to your shower wall. It’s like one of those old FM shower radios, except you can use it to listen to Spotify and Serial. [Mpow Buckler Water-Resistant Suction Cup Bluetooth Speaker, $20 with code DOFICF4X]

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B014QVKEF4


Today's Best Deals: Discounted Humidifier, Cheap Pressure Cooker, and More

There are better kitchen knives out there, but for $10, you could do a lot worse than this Hiroshi Nakamoto chef’s knife. I love my Victorinox Fibrox, but that wooden handle calls to me. [Hiroshi Nakamoto Premium Sushi and Sashimi Chef’s Knife, $10]

http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/AS...

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...


Today's Best Deals: Discounted Humidifier, Cheap Pressure Cooker, and More

$25 is a great price for any 20,000mAh battery pack, but it’s especially noteworthy when the pack includes a Lightning input for all the Apple devotees out there. And don’t worry, it has a microUSB port too. [AUKEY Micro & Lightning Input 20000mAh External Power Bank, $25 with code VNM6GN3K]

http://www.amazon.com/New-Release-Li...

Don’t care about Lightning? This top-selling Kmashi 15,000mAh pack is also down to $13. [KMASHI 15000mAh External Battery Power Bank, $13 with code FBDXPO7W]

http://www.amazon.com/KMASHI-15000mA...

http://bestsellers.kinja.com/bestsellers-km...


Today's Best Deals: Discounted Humidifier, Cheap Pressure Cooker, and More

Microfiber cloths are great for cleaning your face, wiping down your TV, drying your car, and a lot more, and you can stock up with a 24-pack of AmazonBasics cloths for just $13 today. [AmazonBasics Microfiber Cleaning Cloths, 24 Pack, $13]

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B009FUF6DM/...


Today's Best Deals: Discounted Humidifier, Cheap Pressure Cooker, and More

Alright, this is clever. $7 is a fine price for any dual port car charger, but this one features a stainless steel tip that you can use to break a window to escape an overturned or sinking vehicle. Hopefully, you never need to use that feature, but it never hurts to be prepared. [OXA Safety Hammer Smart Car Charger, $7 with code PDVJF3WI]

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B017YNV5SQ

While you’re at it, you might as well pick up this magnetic smartphone vent mount while it’s on sale for $5. I love mine. [Mpow Grip Magic Air Vent One Step Mounting Magnetic Car Mount Holder, $5 with code ZZSRPFAU]

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00YE6D7I8


Today's Best Deals: Discounted Humidifier, Cheap Pressure Cooker, and More

TV’s first great cyberpunk show just won a Golden Globe for best television series (drama), and you can get caught up with the first season on Blu-ray for $30. [MR. ROBOT Season 1, $30]

http://gizmodo.com/mr-robot-seaso...

http://www.bestbuy.com/site/mr-robot-...


Today's Best Deals: Discounted Humidifier, Cheap Pressure Cooker, and More

The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess is getting an HD remake for the Wii U, and its amiibo bundle is back in stock today on Amazon, with a $12 discount for Prime members. Note: Discount shown at checkout. [Preorder The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess HD Amiibo Bundle, $48 for Prime members]

http://www.amazon.com/Legend-Zelda-T...


Today's Best Deals: Discounted Humidifier, Cheap Pressure Cooker, and More

As if you needed another reason to get Amazon Prime, members can now save 20% on select all video game preorders, including blockbusters like Quantum Break, Uncharted 4, and the open world Legend of Zelda.

http://www.amazon.com/Quantum-Break-...

http://www.amazon.com/Uncharted-4-Th...

http://www.amazon.com/Legend-Zelda-W...

Update: It seems like this is a new, permanent Prime benefit! It applies to all physical games, and is valid during preorders and for two weeks after release.

Head over here to see the full list, and note that you won’t see the discount applied until checkout. [20% Off Video Game Preorders for Prime Members]

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...


Today's Best Deals: Discounted Humidifier, Cheap Pressure Cooker, and More

The Philips Norelco Multigroom 5100 is actually seven different grooming tools rolled up into one device, and you can own one for an all-time low $25 today on Amazon. This is a strong contender for your favorite beard trimmer in this week’s Kinja Co-Op. [Philips Norelco Multigroom 5100 Grooming Kit, $25 after $5 Off Coupon]

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

http://co-op.kinja.com/whats-your-fav...


Today's Best Deals: Discounted Humidifier, Cheap Pressure Cooker, and More

It’s tough to find fault with a 4-port car charger for under $10, especially when one of them is Quick Charge 2.0-compatible. [Tronsmart Quick Charge 2.0 54W 4 Ports Rapid USB Car Charger, $9 with code 4PORTCAR]

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00ZF7XLJU

Need some microUSB cables to go with that? [Tronsmart 6 Pack Durable Premium 20AWG Charge Micro USB Cable, $8 with code 6USBCORD]

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Today's Best Deals: Discounted Humidifier, Cheap Pressure Cooker, and More

Motion-sensing stick-anywhere night lights are super useful for dark hallways, cabinets, and closets, and we’ve found two great options today.

Unlike most of these lights, this model from OxyLED features a rechargeable battery and attaches via an adhesive magnetic strip. When the battery runs low, just pop it off the magnet, plug it into a microUSB cable for a few hours, and snap it back in place. [OxyLED Stick Anywhere Motion Sensing LED Night Light with Rechargeable Battery, $18 with code FCL7VCAX]

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B013WPJ4OM

If you don’t need quite as much light, here’s a cheaper option with fewer LEDs. [BYB Stick-on Anywhere Motion Sensor LED Night Light, $10 with code GCNFSAXA]

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B015MM9ELG


Today's Best Deals: Discounted Humidifier, Cheap Pressure Cooker, and More

I have to say, Mpow’s new Magneto Bluetooth earbuds look a lot nicer than the uber-popular Swifts, and at $26, they’re not that much more expensive either. They even snap together magnetically for tangle-free storage! [Mpow Magneto Wearable Bluetooth 4.1 Wireless Sports Headphones, $26 with code B28QLRB7]

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B018WWQGG4


Today's Best Deals: Discounted Humidifier, Cheap Pressure Cooker, and More

Steaming your clothes might not get them as crisp as ironing, but it does a decent enough job in a fraction of the time, and for $15, why not? [Pure Enrichment PureSteam Fabric Steamer, $15 with code STEAMR15]

http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/AS...


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Commerce Content is independent of Editorial and Advertising, and if you buy something through our posts, we may get a small share of the sale. Click here to learn more. We want your feedback.

Send deal submissions to Deals@Gawker and all other inquiries to Shane@Gawker

Deadspin New Browns Coach Hue Jackson Reportedly Doesn’t Want Johnny Manziel | Jezebel Was I Raped?

Did You Forget What Marvel's Secret Wars Was About? Let Us Remind You!

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Did You Forget What Marvel's Secret Wars Was About? Let Us Remind You!

Marvel finally did it. Eight months after it began, Secret Wars came to a close today, after nine issues of reality-bending madness. No idea what the fuss is? Want to get in on the event that brought us an All-New Marvel universe, juuuust as it’s ending? What the hell happened to the Fantastic Four? Here’s our guide.

Just a warning, going in—we’re not going to be spoiling the final issue of Secret Wars #9, which was released today. But obviously, plot points from the first 8 issues of Secret Wars, by Jonathan Hickman, Esad Ribic, Ive Svorcina, and Clayton Cowles, will be detailed below. You’re been warned!

Did You Forget What Marvel's Secret Wars Was About? Let Us Remind You!

So. Secret Wars. Didn’t that happen in like, the ‘80s?

It did! The 2015 series shares its name with the classic Marvel “event” series that took place in 1984. The new Secret Wars only really shares a name and the concept of the “Battleworld”, which all 9 issues of Secret Wars and its various spinoff series took place on.

Battleworld?

We’ll get to that, first, you have to deal with the Universe exploding.

Whaaaaaaaaaa?

Okay, let’s actually dial it back a little bit further, because Secret Wars is essentially the culmination of a plot that’s been swinging around in writer Jonathan Hickman’s New Avengers comic series. Basically, the New Avengers—Captain America, Tony Stark, Reed Richards, Namor, Doctor Strange, and Black Bolt—faced a terrible battle. Parts of Marvel’s various alternate universes were smashing into each other, creating “Incursions” that essentially destroyed either one of the universes or both in the process. The Avengers had to be willing to do anything to stop that happening to their own reality.

Did You Forget What Marvel's Secret Wars Was About? Let Us Remind You!

Sounds dark.

It was very dark—Hickman’s New Avengers saw some of Marvel’s greatest heroes sacrifice a lot to ensure the safety of their universe. They erased Steven Rogers’ memory when they decided they needed to go beyond Cap’s moral code. They kept a woman from an alternate universe captive. Hell, at one point they actually destroyed another universe to save the main Marvel reality. In the end, even these heroes sinking to their lowest didn’t save them. The Ultimate Marvel universe, known as Earth-1610, smashed into the main Marvel Universe, Earth-616, destroying both.

Wait a second. What the hell is Ultimate Marvel? Doesn’t that mean the best Marvel? Why isn’t that one the main universe if it’s the Ultimate one!?

The Ultimate universe first appeared in 2000, an alternate take on Marvel’s most iconic heroes that updated their origins and stories for the modern day. Peter Parker’s no longer a freelance photographer but the Daily Bugle’s website admin—things like that. The Ultimate universe was one of Marvel’s most popular alternate takes on its heroes, and home to some fantastic characters. Like Miles Morales, who took over from Peter Parker as Spider-Man.

Did You Forget What Marvel's Secret Wars Was About? Let Us Remind You!

So it was a big deal when it ended, seemingly for good, by taking out the prime Marvel universe in a big fiery explosion. Many heroes from the 616 and 1610 Earths survived though, after figuring out there was no point fighting each other and instead getting on some spaceships, hoping to ride out the cataclysm.

So where does Secret Wars take place, if the Marvel universe is dead?

Remember when I mentioned Battleworld earlier? The Battleworld is a mish-mash of different alternate worlds, smushed together into one. The escape crafts of the surviving heroes crash land there, only to find out each region—populated by alternate versions of many heroes, with recreations of old Marvel events, like Age of Ultron or X-Men Apocalypse, alongside new things like the wild-western 1872—was ruled by the iron fist of Doctor Doom, the God-King of the new universe.

Wait. How the hell did Doctor Doom survive? And become god?

While the New Avengers were going around being morally problematic in their quest to save the world, arguably Doom tried to be the most noble—in his own, Doom-y way. Victor realized that the Beyonders, godlike beings who played a part in the creation of the Marvel cosmos, were the ones behind the destruction of the alternate realities. Doom, with the help of Doctor Strange and Molecule Man, managed to thrash the Beyonders, hoping that by taking their power he could save reality. He couldn’t, but he used it to reforge the remaining shards of different universes into one single remaining world.

Did You Forget What Marvel's Secret Wars Was About? Let Us Remind You!

Seems kind of benevolent, for a Supervillain.

Well, having absolute power let Doom basically create a fantasy world for himself to play about it. The “Baron” of each region of Battleworld had to report to Doom, the ultimate ruler of the world—something Doom has wanted forever—and a man who could reshape reality at the click of his fingers.

He commanded an army of alternate Thors to police the world (they were called the Thor Corps. Cute name aside, they were not to be trifled with). He erased the memory of Reed Richards from the mind of Sue Storm and Richard’s children, Valeria and Franklin, and made them his own family, to spite his longtime nemesis. Hell, he even made Galactus his personal lapdog, for christ’s sake.

Okay, less benevolent. No one tried to stop him?

No—the Thor Corps ensured that there was no travel between different regions of the Battleworld, and after all, Doom had godlike powers. He could do whatever he wanted, and Battleworld was mostly fine to exist with him ruling it all. He did so happily for eight years, until the escape ships containing the survivors of the Ultimate and Prime Marvel universes arrived. Being the superheroes we know and love, they didn’t take too kindly to Victor Von Doom being god.

Did You Forget What Marvel's Secret Wars Was About? Let Us Remind You!

But how do you fight god?

Good question. They tried to battle Doom, but with his almighty power they couldn’t beat him. Before he could deal the killing blow that would’ve snuffed out Marvel’s most iconic superheroes, Stephen Strange—who had spent those eight years as Doom’s lackey, believing his closest allies were lost—used his magic to scatter the heroes across the Battleworld, something Doom snapped his neck for.

Oh, and he blamed Strange’s death on the heroes, charging Valeria Richards, who still thought Doom was her father, with hunting them down.

Okay. But when this Secret Wars thing started, Marvel cancelled a bunch of my comics and replaced them with all these Battleworld comics. What’s the deal with that?

With the universe destroyed, those comics couldn’t really continue. Secret Wars was designed to be a total reboot of the Marvel comic universe, something they hadn’t really done on this scale. Its current crop of comics ended, and were replaced by tons and tons of new miniseries that were set in the different regions of Battleworld, exploring these strange places and offering twists on old stories like Civil War or Armor Wars or even things that weren’t wars!

Do I have to read all of them to understand Secret Wars then? I don’t have the time, money, or sanity to do that.

No one does. If you just want to catch up on the main thrust of Secret Wars, just read the main Secret Wars series, which ran for 9 issues and ended today.

Great! So, heroes scattered, Doctor Doom triumphant. What happened next? Were our heroes... doomed?

See what you did there. Well, the heroes were scattered, but not broken. They even managed to find regions that were disgruntled with Doom’s long rule, and slowly built an army of resistance that could march upon Doom’s castle in the appropriately-titled region of Doomguard.

Did You Forget What Marvel's Secret Wars Was About? Let Us Remind You!

And Black Panther got hold of the all-powerful Infinity Gauntlet, because how else are you going to fight a dude with the powers of a god?

So Doom’s armies fight the heroes’ armies. What about Doom himself?

Well, you’ll have to find out by reading the final issue—the heroes and villains of Marvel’s old universe have made their move, and Doctor Doom stands to lose everything he’s made. Suffice to say, it’ll have some big questions about the fate of certain Marvel heroes, especially the Fantastic Four. But this catches you right up, so you can dig in straight away!

VFX Reel Shows Just How They Created Some of The Force Awakens' Most Brilliant Shots (UPDATED)

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Correction: Sorry, apparently we were ahead of the game on this and all embeds of the reel have been made private. Expect it to go back up some time Thursday morning. We will remove this message when that happens. Apologies.

Star Wars has long been a franchise that prides itself on its visual effects and The Force Awakens is no different. Director J.J Abrams expertly blended practical and digital effects to make a Star Wars film worthy of that legacy. And now you can really see his handiwork.

The official Oscars YouTube uploaded the above video, which shows several effects shots in the movie side by side with their original elements. More than anything, the video shows how the film basically used every tool in the toolbox: CGI, green screen, practical effects, and so much more.

Thanks to io9 reader Storymark for the heads up!

[Oscars]


Contact the author at germain@io9.com.

Disney Gave PewDiePie a Giant Pile of Money to Give to Other YouTubers

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Disney Gave PewDiePie a Giant Pile of Money to Give to Other YouTubers

In a flurry of buzzwords, YouTube star PewDiePie and Disney’s Maker Studios announced a partnership that brings us Revelmode. What is Revelmode? Well, that’s a little less clear.

Revelmode is being called a “network.” Which is technically true in that the end result is a bunch of content creators working under a single brand name, “networked” like a bunch of computers. Multi-channel networks are basically the YouTube equivalent of going from indie filmmaker to movie studio contract. PewDiePie (whose IRL name is Felix Kjellberg) even says in the announcement video that joining one loses “hipster cred.” Not that anyone can be blamed for throwing their lot in with Disney money. And Disney security.

Revelmode isn’t just PewDiePie giving money and other resources to a bunch of other YouTubers, of course. Revelmode is going to be a network under the larger umbrella organization of Maker Studios. Maker, of course, is now owned by Disney. It’s a Russian nesting doll of interests, with the hope being that Disney can squeeze some money out of YouTubers.

Disney Gave PewDiePie a Giant Pile of Money to Give to Other YouTubers

Of course, we’re assuming from context that this is going to be a digital network of some kind. Everyone’s talking like we know exactly what this all means, when the actual words are super vague. “Revelmode is me and a bunch of really awesome YouTubers coming together as a group to do awesome things,” was PewDiePie’s opening description in his announcement video.

Including PewDiePie, Revelmode’s roster is nine-deep: CinnamonToastKen, CutiePieMarzia, Dodger, EmmaBlackery, JackSepticEye, Jelly, Kwebbelkop, and Markiplier. And you’ll get to see them all as cartoons in the very first Revelmode show.

It’s going to be fascinating to see if Disney’s investment actually pays off for them. Everyone’s trying desperately to figure out how to monetize internet videos on a more massive scale. And rolling up to established internet figures with bags of cash and offering to give them some of that money is a perfectly valid attempt. But that also brings us one step closer to Disney owning every bit of media we consume.

[Adweek]


Contact the author at katharine@io9.com.

This Giant Spinning Windmill of Fireworks Gives a Spectacular Exploding Light Show

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This Giant Spinning Windmill of Fireworks Gives a Spectacular Exploding Light Show

The maniac inventor Colin Furze cooked up a truly spectacular thing this time around: he made a giant firework wheel. As in, fireworks are attached to a wheel (not unlike a windmill) which is attached to a truck which is then all lit at once which is then spun around in circles which then explodes beautifully, shooting fireworks in every direction. This spinning firework wheel is so awesomet hat it proves that there needs to be more advancements in firework technology.


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This Spectacular Spider-Man Figure Lives Up to the Name

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This Spectacular Spider-Man Figure Lives Up to the Name

There are many, many, awesome figures of Spider-Man out there. Which isn’t surprising, since the character makes a buttload of cash for Marvel. But this latest “Spectacular Spider-Man” version from Diamond Select might be one of the best comic-true renderings of Peter Parker that there’s ever been.

It’s been a few years since the Marvel Select toy line took a crack at Spider-Man and even longer since they did one based on the comics rather than the recent movies. So this latest figure has a lot of ground to cover. Impressively, it re-outfits Spider-Man in such a great way that it makes it feel like it’s worth adding this updated figure to your collection, instead of just buying the billionth Spider-Man toy.

This Spectacular Spider-Man Figure Lives Up to the Name

Aside from the fantastic range of articulation on the 7-inch figure that gives it the proportional flexibility of a spider/man hybrid like Peter, where this toy really shines is the plethora of little accessories it comes with. Alternate “thwip” hands are a must for Spidey, but closed and open hands for punching/wallcrawling are a welcome addition. There’s also an alternate Peter Parker head, complete with a trusty camera for comic book’s most famous photojournalist as well as a brilliantly sculpted “loose” mask for him to hold, like the figure has just nonchalantly pulled it off.

This Spectacular Spider-Man Figure Lives Up to the Name

It’s all little stuff, but the details gives this Spider-Man a great deal of personality, and it makes for a great looking figure. The whole package looks even better when Diamond Select takes it out for its traditional “real world” publicity pictures, which are so much more fun than a picture of the figure on a stark white background.

As with plenty of the Marvel Select line, Spectacular Spider-Man will be an exclusive to online orders and Disney stores. It’ll set you back $30 at Marvel’s own web store when it releases at the end of next month.

[Toyark]


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A Brilliant YouTube Channel Called Action Movie Kid Is Being Turned Into A Movie

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A Brilliant YouTube Channel Called Action Movie Kid Is Being Turned Into A Movie

A young boy’s imagination, a father’s skill with special effects, a YouTube channel, a book deal and now a major Hollywood motion picture. The tale of Action Movie Kid is pretty incredible.

The story begins in 2014 when visual effects artist Daniel Hashimoto posted a video to YouTube enhancing his young son’s penchant for action with effects that brought everything to life. Over 100 million people watched the videos, he made some follow-ups and now, The Hollywood Reporter says the movie rights to Action Movie Kid have been sold and a screenwriter hired.

That writer is Andrew Dodge, who wrote the Jason Bateman comedy Bad Words. He’ll be the second writer to tackle the subject. Action Movie Kid was already turned into a children’s book, released by Simon & Schuster last year, which Hashimoto co-wrote with Mandy Richardville (it with illustrations by Valerio Fabbretti, which you see above)

http://www.amazon.com/Action-Movie-K...

But now, this is becoming a movie, and you can already imagine the franchise possibilities. Or you can imagine that’s exactly what the film’s producers, who also did Twilight and the Maze Runner, are thinking. It’s just a simple, incredibly funny and sweet idea that mixes pop culture, family values and good, clean fun.

[Hollywood Reporter]


Contact the author at germain@io9.com.

Hell Yes: Obama Wants to Spend $4 Billion to Fill Our Roads With Autonomous Vehicles

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Hell Yes: Obama Wants to Spend $4 Billion to Fill Our Roads With Autonomous Vehicles

The American government is officially putting a giant vote of confidence behind self-driving cars. And the cash to back it up.

Today, US Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx is announcing a nearly $4 billion plan that’ll help manufacturers and tech companies develop safe, automated vehicles in the next ten years with real-world pilot projects. It’s all part of President Obama’s plan to make American transportation as futuristic as possible.

The funds, which have been set aside in the proposed federal budget for 2017, will go toward pilot programs in specific transportation corridors in the US. The government will then work with industry leaders to kick the development of automated vehicles into high gear. The goal is to make sure that those robo-cars are safe, and that American infrastructure is ready for them.

Secretary Foxx will revealed the huge game-changer at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit this afternoon with Ford, Google, Delphi and others. In a statement from the Department of Transportation provided to Gizmodo before the announcement, he said this about the plan:

“We are on the cusp of a new era in automotive technology with enormous potential to save lives, reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and transform mobility for the American people. Today’s actions and those we will pursue in the coming months will provide the foundation and the path forward for manufacturers, state officials, and consumers to use new technologies and achieve their full safety potential.”

Secretary Foxx’s announcement will also update the policy guidance on self-driving vehicles developed by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration in 2013. This is crucial as it now points to autonomous vehicles as a valuable tool for creating safer streets and highways.

NHTSA Administrator Mark Rosekind said today, in the same provided statement:

“NHTSA is using all of its available tools to accelerate the deployment of technologies that can eliminate 94 percent of fatal crashes involving human error. We will work with state partners toward creating a consistent national policy on these innovations, provide options now and into the future for manufacturers seeking to deploy autonomous vehicles, and keep our safety mission paramount at every stage.”

How will this change start to roll out? Within the first six months of 2016, the government will hit two major milestones.

First, the NHTSA will collaborate with the industry to finalize guidelines for “safe deployment and operation of autonomous vehicles,” plus state partners, and the American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators on the state level that can help guide a consistent framework on the national level.

Next, to accommodate the folks on the engineering side, Secretary Foxx wants manufacturers to submit “rule interpretation requests” so that the technology aligns with the law. The Department of Transportation points to one example of when BMW inquired about the company’s remote self-parking system, and whether it met federal safety standards.

Self-driving cars are coming to American roads, ready or not.

The New Secret Life of Pets Trailer Has Some Weird BDSM Undertones

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The New Secret Life of Pets Trailer Has Some Weird BDSM Undertones

Based solely on this trailer, I’m pretty sure that The Secret Life of Pets is about a rabbit rescuing his gimp from prison.

The movie’s first trailer seemed so normal. It completely delivered on its title: a bunch of cute pets going nuts after their humans left. But this latest trailer is the first one to indicate the actual plot of the movie, which it turns out is uncomfortably sexual.

Here’s what I know: there’s a bunny named Snowball (voiced by Kevin Hart) who goes to extreme lengths to rescue his “friend” Ripper. The husky hound wears that mask, leather, and spikes outfit even after Snowball’s brought him back to his underground dungeon lair. So that seems to be his actual look. Also, Snowball’s underground amphitheater is the site of an initiation ritual for his new “recruits.” And then the whole thing ends with a cat playing with Snowball’s feces. I’m not kink-shaming any of the animals, mind you; it just shocked me that an animated kids movie would be this hardcore.


Contact the author at katharine@io9.com.

10 Things That Star Trek Got Right (That Have Never Been Copied)

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10 Things That Star Trek Got Right (That Have Never Been Copied)

This year is the 50th anniversary of Star Trek, and even after five decades there has never been another series like Gene Roddenberry’s brainchild. We’ve had plenty of spaceship shows since 1966, but some things about Trek remained unique. Here are 10 Star Trek achievements that nobody else managed to pull off.

1) Scripts by the biggest science fiction writers of the day

Even the later Star Trek series didn’t really do this, although you have the occasional story by someone like Peter S. Beagle. But it’s still pretty mind-blowing that the writers of the original Star Trek included Theodore Sturgeon, Harlan Ellison, Jerome Bixby, Norman Spinrad, Robert Bloch, Richard Matheson, and others. And a few other famous science fiction authors nearly wrote for Trek as well. Among successful TV shows, only The Twilight Zone even comes close to that record. Also notable: Trek was always open to new writers, including over-the-transom submissions for several years, and a lot of television’s best scribes got their start at Star Trek University.

10 Things That Star Trek Got Right (That Have Never Been Copied)

2) Pushing the outer edge of diversity

For its time, the original Trek was pretty revolutionary—the inclusion of Lt. Uhura among the core Bridge crew was such a big deal, Martin Luther King urged Nichelle Nichols to stay on the show. Kirk’s crew also includes an Asian man and (at the height of the Cold War) a Russian. And later Trek series continued to push the envelope: TNG’s crew includes a disabled engineer, for example. And Deep Space Nine and Voyager’s inclusion of, respectively, an African American man and a woman as captains felt extremely cutting-edge in the early 1990s.

10 Things That Star Trek Got Right (That Have Never Been Copied)

3) Heroes whose limits are partly self imposed

One of the things that Star Trek does, which is revolutionary and evolves over time, is to give the men and women of Starfleet limitations that have nothing to do with logistics. It’s not “We can’t nuke the planet from orbit because our planet-nuking device needs another five hours to recharge,” but rather “We can’t, because we have a rule against interfering with the development of their culture.” You could make a drinking game out of all the times that Kirk (and even later captains) break the Prime Directive, but the fact that so much of the storytelling is about having power but being unwilling to use it is fascinating. (And yes, Doctor Who has a vague and wibbly-wobbly rule against the Doctor changing his own past, but that’s usually portrayed as almost a physical limitation, rather than a choice to exercise restraint.)

10 Things That Star Trek Got Right (That Have Never Been Copied)

4) Trying seriously to portray people who had left barbarism behind

This sort of goes along with the Prime Directive and things like it, but it deserves its own item because it’s such an important thing. Gene Roddenberry’s insistence that people of the 23rd century would have evolved past the greed, fanaticism, paranoia and prejudices of the 20th century is often criticized as an impediment to good storytelling. And sure, when you see this taken to its extreme in the first two seasons of The Next Generation, it’s often hard to watch. But as much as Roddenberry’s utopian sensibility got in the way of traditional storytelling, it also forced these shows to come up with new—and often fascinating—ways to generate conflicts. Just having a starting point that these characters have an open mind and want to understand the cultures they encounter feels revolutionary, and is still an aberration in media science fiction.

10 Things That Star Trek Got Right (That Have Never Been Copied)

5) Pushing allegory beyond its limits

Plenty of science fiction indulges in allegories for racism or war or other social issues. Trek is still notable for how far it pushed allegories and thought experiments, week after week. This was not always a good thing: classic Star Trek’s attempts to tackle racism and the Vietnam War were sometimes so clumsy as to be almost unbearable. But at the same time, Star Trek’s tendency to delve into thought experiments is sometimes uncomfortable in the best way, and at its best, all of the Trek series would delve into situations where there’s no easy answer, and the parallels to our present-day reality were inescapable.

10 Things That Star Trek Got Right (That Have Never Been Copied)

6) Creating a shared universe that feels expansive

Everybody’s doing shared universes nowadays, and to a large extent this is an attempt to imitate what Marvel and DC accomplished in their comics, decades ago. But on television and in the movies, Star Trek was one of the first series to create a universe in which different ships, and different crews, felt like they all belonged to the same basic setting without being just “spin-offs.” Add in the book-only series like New Frontier, Corps of Engineers, Vanguard, Seekers and so on, and you’ve got a capacious galaxy. Star Wars always comes back to being about the Skywalkers and their friends, in the main media series, but Star Trek is just about Starfleet, and any Starfleet officer could star in a Star Trek show or movie.

10 Things That Star Trek Got Right (That Have Never Been Copied)

7) Developing alien cultures over time, with human actors

The other thing that’s still largely unique about Star Trek’s universe is how much we’ve gotten to know about the Klingons, Romulans, Vulcans and a handful of other races over several decades. Science fiction books have delved into alien cultures with incredible vividness and insight, but it’s rare for movies or television to spend as much time and energy on alien societies as Star Trek has been able to spend on its core races. Just the fact that the we’ve spent 50 years getting to know the Klingons, with some pretty incredible actors making Klingon characters their own, is kind of amazing. (Although I’m still pissed that Diane Duane’s Rihannsu novels are no longer canon.)

10 Things That Star Trek Got Right (That Have Never Been Copied)

8) Showing the dehumanizing nature of war

Gene Roddenberry and other Trek creators had served in the military, and some of the best Star Trek: TOS episodes are explicitly a commentary on how war turns good people into monsters. I didn’t realize for years that the very first Klingon episode is the one in which the godlike Organians force Kirk to make peace with his enemies, and Kirk is snarling at being denied his right to attack. And the best TOS episode, “The Balance of Terror,” is a remake of the war movie The Enemy Below, in which we spend a surprising amount of time getting to know the Romulan commander and sympathizing with his decisions. TNG dealt with issues like torture and war crimes with more sensitivity than television generally musters, and Deep Space Nine created a study of the costs of war that remains unparalleled.

10 Things That Star Trek Got Right (That Have Never Been Copied)

9) Characters who age realistically

Another thing that’s great about the fact that Star Trek has been around for so long is that we got to see Kirk, Spock and even some of the TNG characters get older and change as people. In retrospect, some of the most memorable moments in Star Trek’s history—especially Wrath of Khan and the TNG finale “All Good Things”—are about characters that we’ve gotten to know grappling with getting older and not being the same people they used to be. Until recently, Star Trek never gave in to the temptation to recast its major characters or try to keep them eternally young.

10 Things That Star Trek Got Right (That Have Never Been Copied)

10) Putting the massive and wondrous on our screens

The “big dumb object in space” genre is a mainstay of science fiction books, and we occasionally get an eyefull of it in movies like 2001. But Star Trek was relentless in its insistence on pitting its heroes against huge phenomena that they couldn’t fully understand—there are huge space amoebas, giant planet-killers, massive holes in spacetime, and much more. We tend to mock the later Star Trek shows for their endless plots about spacetime anomalies and other technobabble items, but the fact that so many of the stories throughout Trek’s history have been driven by “there’s something huge and strange, and we don’t know what it is” is kind of amazing when you think about it. And here’s where I have to give props to J.J. Abrams’ first Trek movie for using real-life images of Saturn from the Cassini Space Probe for its most arrestingly beautiful images.

Top image: Star Trek: Ships of the Line calendar 2016 (and Star Trek: Vanguard: Storming Heaven by David Mack). Enterprise/Saturn image from Star Trek 2009 via Roddenberry Productions (Lenticular Print).

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/078...


Charlie Jane Anders is the author of All The Birds in the Sky, coming Jan 26 from Tor Books. Follow her on Twitter, and email her.

A Mysterious Mammoth Carcass Could Change Human History

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A Mysterious Mammoth Carcass Could Change Human History

The carcass was remarkably well preserved, but something was clearly wrong. A rounded hole through the interior jugal. Deep incisions along the ribs. Dents in the left scapula. A broken mandible.

This 45,000 year-old mammoth’s life ended violently at the hands of hunters. That wouldn’t be surprising—it’s well known that Pleistocene humans were expert mammoth killers—but for the location. It was excavated from a permafrost embankment at Yenisei bay, a remote spot in central Siberia where a massive river empties into the Arctic Ocean.

That makes this brutalized mammoth the oldest evidence for human expansion into the high Arctic by a wide margin. Its discovery, published today in Science, might push back the timeline for when humans entered the northernmost reaches of the world—including the first entries into North America.

“We [now] know that the eastern Siberia up to its Arctic limits was populated starting at roughly 50,000 years ago,” said Vladimir Pitulko, an archaeologist at the Russian Academy of Sciences and lead author on the study. “This makes our window into the remote part [of the planet] open wider.”

Bones of the ancient beast were first discovered jutting out of a river bank in 2012. The Russian Academy of Sciences deployed an excavation team to study it. That team, led by Pitulko and Alexei Bystrov, soon realized they were looking at something unusual.

“When the frozen block with the carcass arrived in St. Petersburg, I went to the Zoological Museum to look at bones and a tusk,” Pitulko said. “The second bone which I picked up (that was the fifth left rib) had a clear pattern of human impact. Then other injuries were discovered.”

The injuries, Pitulko said, were without a doubt caused by human hunters. And when the archaeologists returned to the scene to collect soil samples for radiocarbon dating, things got really interesting.

Radiocarbon analysis revealed the mammoth was killed 45,000 years ago—in a part of the world where humans weren’t supposed to be living at that time. The closest other evidence of modern humans is from dig sites located over 1,000 miles south and ten thousand years later.

The discovery challenges our current understanding of early human history. Archaeologists believe that the ability to survive in far northern climates was related to technological advancements, including the widespread adoption of ivory hunting spears. If those advances had already occurred 45,000 years ago, then people could conceivably have crossed the Bering Land Straight into North America around that time. By comparison, our current oldest evidence for humans in North America only dates back about 15,000 years.

But of course, just because people could have migrated to North America doesn’t mean they did. But now that the possibility is on the table, archaeologists may start looking harder. “These findings are bringing more questions than answers,” Pitulko said. But eventually, he predicts, “they are going to change the story of our spread across the planet.”

Read the full scientific paper at Science.

Follow the author @themadstone

Top: An archaeologist excavating the mammoth carcass described in the study, via Pitulko et al. 2016

In the End, Lady Gaga Really Was the Best Thing About American Horror Story: Hotel

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In the End, Lady Gaga Really Was the Best Thing About American Horror Story: Hotel

Lady Gaga picked up a Golden Globe over the weekend for her role in American Horror Story: Hotel—and even though she was part of an ensemble cast, the designation “Best Actress” made perfect sense, since her character’s storyline was the heart of the season. Stunt casting? Maybe. But it worked so damn well.

Spoilers!

Last night’s remarkably upbeat finale, “Be Our Guest,” saw Liz Taylor and Iris—the new proprietors of the Hotel Cortez—making peace with their permanent residents, as well as strategizing to bring the hotel into the future. We also got a nifty throwback to AHS season one, with Sarah Paulson reprising her role as cheesy psychic Billie Dean Howard (who is so unlike Paulson’s Hotel character, Sally, that the double-up actually worked great.)

With the Countess’ fate already sealed last week, Lady Gaga only had two brief scenes in the finale, which were mostly concerned with where everyone else was gonna land. But even her brief screen time highlighted exactly those qualities that made her character so indispensable all season.

After she got downgraded from a vampire to a ghost by John Lowe, the Countess has been keeping a low profile—but appears, looking drop-dead fabulous as always, to take charge of Liz’s assisted suicide. These two have had their beefs—what with the Countess killing Liz’s true love, etc.—but all is forgiven in this lovely (if insanely gory) moment between them. The scene is important, because it underlines how crucial the Countess is to the hotel’s eco system, even in her new form. She’s no longer the vampire queen, and she’s no longer the hotel’s feared overlord. But she’s still its indisputable superstar, and once she appears, everyone—even bratty Sally—defers to her leadership.

And, naturally, the Countess gets the very last scene of the finale: a moment that lets us know that eternity spent trapped in the Hotel Cortez might not be so bad after all. The best-dressed ghost who ever walked the Earth is posted up in the hotel bar when she sees him: a dark-haired hunk with a sculpted jawline. Just her type! Oozing just as much charisma as she did when she was vampin’, she makes her move.

Over the course of the season, we’ve seen this character transform from wide-eyed silent-movie flapper, to sultry bloodsucker (along with that: heartbroken ingenue, conniving bride, motherly protector, terrifying monster), to reluctant ghost. But if even the Countess can find a bright side to her dreary fate, it seems Hotel’s happy ending—hard-earned, after all the gore and pain we’ve seen all season—might be genuine.

DC's Legends of Tomorrow Is Looking Mighty Guardians of the Galaxy-ish, You Guys

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Don’t believe me? Watch this new trailer and see for yourself. Building off the recently released clip of White Canary getting in a bar brawl in the ‘70s, this promo really plays up the “wacky band of misfits” saving the universe to a ‘70s music soundtrack.

Sure, the Legends crew is using their timeship to guard the timestream instead of using a spaceship to guard the galaxy, and T. Rex’s “Bang a Gong” is a little more rockin’ than Blue Swede’s “Hooked on a Feeling,” but I’d say the sentiment is definitely there. Plus, please compare this LoT tagline—“Not all good. Not all bad. But they’re all we got.”—is just a touch reminiscent of Star-Lord’s line “Something good. Something bad. Bit of both.” Honestly, since the Legends are made up of actual heroes and villains, it works even better here than it did in GotG.

Honestly, this a savvy marketing movie on The CW and DC’s part. Now the real question is if Legends of Tomorrow will bring than Guardians of the Galaxy’s same sense of fun when it premieres next week, on January 21st. It won’t have a talking raccoon, but it will have Wentworth Miller’s hilariously droll Captain Cold, so that’s a very good start.


Contact the author at rob@io9.com.


We Can't Wait to See R-Rated Animated Film The Adventures of Drunky 

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We Can't Wait to See R-Rated Animated Film The Adventures of Drunky 

The Adventures of Drunky is an in-the-works R-rated animated film from Brooklyn-based Augenblick Studios (Adult Swim’s Superjail!, MTV2's Wonder Showzen). Its three main characters: a boozehound (Sam Rockwell), God (Jeffrey Tambor), and Satan (Steve Coogan). Yep, it sounds awesome already.

Deadline, which notes that the hand-drawn Adventures of Drunky is the latest in a growing trend of indie animation aimed at adult audiences, has more on the plot:

As the storyline goes, Drunky, with his life destroyed, must travel through Heaven and Hell to rescue the girl he loves (Nina Arianda) and save the world. Assisting Drunky on his quest are an alley cat (Tyler The Creator) and a demon (Dave Attell).

The site also notes the rest of the voice cast includes Abby Elliot, John Leguizamo, Jon Glaser, Jay Pharoah, Noel Wells, James Adomian, Larry Murphy, Rachel Butera, and Randy Pearlstein, and that director Aaron Augenblick promises his film will be “surreal and funny as hell.” We’ll raise a glass to that!

Image: Sam Rockwell at the Toronto International Film Festival, Sept. 19, 2015. (Photo by Arthur Mola/Invision/AP)

Poe Dameron is Getting His Own Star Wars Comic Series

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Poe Dameron is Getting His Own Star Wars Comic Series

It’s been a miserably sad week in the world of popular culture, but here’s something to cheer us all up: Marvel’s Star Wars comics are officially delving into The Force Awakens content in style, with a series all about our new favorite X-Wing pilot, Poe Dameron.

As revealed by USA Today, Poe Dameron will be an ongoing series from the creative team of Charles Soule (who wrote the excellent Lando miniseries) and Phil Noto (who provided the gorgeous art for the recent Chewbacca miniseries), and follow’s Poe’s career in the Resistance before the events of The Force Awakens, where he’d grown into the ragtag group’s best pilot, going out on personal missions for General Organa.

Poe Dameron is Getting His Own Star Wars Comic Series

Although the pilot already has his fair share of fans after The Force Awakens, we don’t really know all that much about him, so Soule and Noto are aiming to balance some sweeping spaceship dogfights with a little character introspection to give us some insight into the Resistance’s brash and charming X-Wing ace. But character’s old and new—yes, BB-8 is a major supporting character in the comic—will play a part in the series, which basically sounds more and more like a modern update to the classic Dark Horse X-Wing comics, which focused on the daring pilots of the Galaxy far, far away rather than the mystical Force or the main heroes.

As someone who loved Poe enough to consider him the second-best X-Wing pilot in Star Wars after seeing The Force Awakens (sorry, no one beats Wedge), and someone who wanted to see Marvel’s Star Wars series expand into the little-worn ground of the period between Return of the Jedi and The Force Awakens this year, I couldn’t be happier that we’re getting this series, especially from a team like Soule and Noto. Poe Dameron begins in April.

[USA Today]

Guillermo del Toro and Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark Is a Match Made in Hell

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Guillermo del Toro and Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark Is a Match Made in Hell

Guillermo del Toro is starting development on the Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark movie. This is great news! Not just because of how good del Toro is, but because he’s a fan of the source material.

When last we heard about this movie, John August was being hired to write the script. Deadline, which had the exclusive, says that it’s August’s script that is in del Toro’s hands now. Del Toro is signed on to produce the movie and to potentially direct, although any chance of him directing is probably going to depend on his schedule, which is packed full of both confirmed and rumored projects.

Del Toro confirmed his involvement with this tweet:

We still don’t know what the plot of the movie looks like—which means that, in my imagination, it’s “The Wendigo,” a twisted tale that still freaks me right out. But everyone’s going to fight about it, I’m sure. The solution is obviously for del Toro and company to make an ongoing anthology series.

Hope that del Toro is able to take the director’s chair after all, since his live-action realizations of Stephen Gammell’s iconic artwork should prove terrifying in all the best ways.


Contact the author at katharine@io9.com.

Second Chance Is Dumber Than Tooth Decay, But I Kind of Like It

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Second Chance is the latest example of a TV show that has a wacky premise, with “...and then they fight crime!” added to the end of the description. In this one, an elderly sheriff is murdered, brought back as a young hunk, and teams up with the science twins that resurrected him... to fight crime!

As you can see in the clip above, Second Chance is mostly an odd sort of wish-fulfillment fantasy, in which the newly rejuvenated Sheriff Pritchard gets to be supertough and badass and have the strength of five regular sheriffs—oh, and he’s a sex demon who is “Superpotent,” which I think does not indicate a Woman of Tissue Paper scenario but rather means that anyone he has sex with will get pregnant. Woop.

Second Chance is a totally gooftastic show that hardly tries to make you believe in its premise of an old dude suddenly turning into a superstud, and these two mega-genius twins who randomly decide to help him in his crusade against the gutter trash of Greater Seattle. But every now and then, the show hints at having an emotional core, like when the old Sheriff deals with the family he let down. Here’s one moment where the show seems to be fumbling towards having Actual Feelings about the fact that the Sheriff was murdered because he was an old man who got in the way, and everyone believed it was suicide:

But yeah, this show is dumber than a box of dirt.


Charlie Jane Anders is the author of All The Birds in the Sky, coming Jan 26 from Tor Books. Follow her on Twitter, and email her.

Why We Become Such Assholes When We’re Behind the Wheel

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Why We Become Such Assholes When We’re Behind the Wheel

I hate being tailgated. Once, I surprised the hell out of myself when I initiated an exceptionally dangerous game of tit-for-tat with an offending tailgater that involved high speeds and some rather dangerous cutting-off maneuvers. After a few minutes, I snapped out of it and let the driver go. But the incident rattled me. That behavior was so far removed from who I really am.

But it’s not just me. Why does driving turn so many of us into asshats? It’s not merely the rage aspect. We’re constantly doing socially inappropriate things when we’re inside our mobile bubbles. We cut in line, steal parking spots, fail to use our turn signals, and move ahead at a stop sign when it’s not our turn. We engage in aggressive and risky maneuvers that put our lives—and those around us—at risk.

This happens in part because cars exist in a social netherworld somewhere between public and private space. “When we’re in the car we often feel anonymous,” said Erica Slotter, a social psychologist at Villanova University. “That feeling of anonymity can sometimes mean that we behave in ways that we wouldn’t otherwise because we’re less likely to be held accountable.”

Why We Become Such Assholes When We’re Behind the Wheel

Anonymity and a loss of individuality causes us to lose some of our inner restraints and inhibitions. Via Stanford Prison Experiment (2014)

It’s tied to a psychological effect known as “deindividuation.” This idea was first explored in the early 1950s by Leon Festinger, a social psychologist working at MIT. In experiments, Festinger demonstrated that humans have a tendency to dissolve as individuals when they become part of a group. But they also have a tendency to deindividualize others when those others join another group. This diminishes our inner restraints and inhibitions, while making us less empathetic towards others.

Instead of seeing individuals, we simply see a type of car, or an endless stream of automobiles. This, in combination with perceived anonymity, gives us the sense that we won’t be held accountable for our actions. It frees us from the guilt of our behaviors, and gives us the freedom to commit acts that violate our social and personal norms.


“When we feel anonymous, we lose focus of our moral compass and are more likely to behave badly.” — Erica Slotter


“When we feel anonymous, we lose focus of our moral compass and are more likely to behave badly,” Slotter told Gizmodo. “We also perceive very little threat of retaliation in these circumstances, so there is little cost [to] us [for] behaving badly.”

Driving exaggerates our in-group/out-group sensibilities. As social creatures, we love to slot things—including people—into groups. Groups that we belong to—whether it be the people sitting in our car, a group of vehicles belonging to a certain type, or even cars stuck in a specific lane—are referred to as the in-groups, and they tend to be preferred and favored. Conversely, groups that we don’t belong do, or don’t want to belong to, are called out-groups, and they’re often mistrusted. The chemicals within our brains are partly responsible for these urges. Oxytocin is wonderful in that it increases in-group trust, but it also produces the opposite feeling towards members of the out-group.

Why We Become Such Assholes When We’re Behind the Wheel

Via Lord of the Flies (1963).

A famous study by social psychologist Muzafer Sherif brought this phenomenon into focus back in the 1950s. In his Robbers Cave Experiment, Sherif recruited a dozen 12-year-old boys, and divided them equally and randomly into two segregated groups. After a short bonding period at a camp, they boys were told, unexpectedly, to prepare for a sports competition against the other group. Over time, the two groups became so hostile and aggressive towards one another that the researchers had to keep them physically separated.

Afterwards, the boys described their own group in favorable terms, but they had some very nasty things to say about the other. Sherif’s experiment showed how quickly conflict can arise between groups even when the divisions separating them are arbitrary.

Competition between groups can trigger prejudices and discriminatory behavior. In the context of driving, these in-group/out-group “contests” can be equated to times when we feel it’s our turn to go at a 4-way stop, or we deserve access to an open spot during a lane change, and even the collective norms we hold about safe and courteous driving. We all too often put ourselves in a position of competition, rather than cooperation, while driving.

According to Slotter, Sherif and other researchers have had success creating different groups “even in experimental settings where no groups existed naturally.” So, if we feel that all Prius models are part of our in-group because we drive a Prius, but all trucks are part of our out-group, “it’s conceivable that we might experience greater anger or aggression toward truck drivers when on the highway,” she said.

Driving is easily the most dangerous thing we do on a regular basis (in the U.S., around 34,000 people die each year in traffic accidents), so it’s natural to feel threatened when an irresponsible driver seemingly puts our lives in danger. The problem is when anger turns into aggression—an intentional behavior designed to harm another person.

http://gizmodo.com/how-to-prevent...

Statistics compiled by the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration show that 66% of all traffic fatalities are caused by aggressive driving, and that males under the age of 19 are the most likely to exhibit road rage.

NHTSA data shows that the number of fatal accidents involving angry drivers has increased 10 times in the past 10 years. A Washington Post survey found that the percentage of drivers in the DC area who felt “uncontrollable anger toward another driver on the road” increased from 6% in 2010 to 12% in 2013. The reason for the increase may have to do with the fact that we’re spending more time in our cars.

Why We Become Such Assholes When We’re Behind the Wheel

Via Washington Post/Wonkblog. Data courtesy NHTSA.

According to by Christine Wickens of the Canadian Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, the most common triggers include weaving/cutting (by far the most common complaint), speeding, hostile displays, tailgating, improper lane usage, no turn signal, and erratic braking.

A number of years ago, Colorado State University psychology professor Jerry Deffenbacher conducted an analysis of angry drivers. He found that drivers who are quick to anger:

  • Engage in hostile, aggressive thinking, and typically report more judgmental and disbelieving thoughts about other drivers
  • Take more risks on the road, and often speed, rapidly switch lanes, tailgate, and enter an intersection when the light turns red
  • Get angry faster and behave more aggressively, and frequently engage in swearing, name-calling, yelling at drivers, and honking in anger
  • Have twice as many accidents, along with more more near-accidents and speeding tickets

As Deffenbacher explained, anger is not a chronic experience for high-anger drivers, but “something prompted by different triggers or events on the road,” provocations that are “frustrating and provoking in some way—and then what they bring to the wheel [that determines] how angry they will get.”

Self-control is a limited resource, and driving most certainly taxes our ability to exercise restraint. Florida State University psychologist Roy Baumeister has likened self-control to the gas that fuels our cars. We use it to control our thoughts, impulses, and feelings, but there’s only so much of it to go around before we use it all up.

When our willpower expires, we experience “decision fatigue,” a degraded state of mind that can lead to diminished self-control. Slotter says that decision fatigue makes us less likely to override gut impulses that lead us towards aggressive behaviors. This may explain why we’re more gracious to our fellow drivers during our morning commute, but less forgiving on the way home.

Julia Galef, the president and co-founder of the Center for Applied Rationality, agrees that our “higher order” thinking is often compromised when we’re behind the wheel.

Why We Become Such Assholes When We’re Behind the Wheel

A failure of “higher order” thinking. Via Fast and Furious 6.

“A big part of rational decision-making is the ability to perform an ‘executive override’—to check our initial gut reaction, and say to ourselves, ‘Wait a minute, is this right?’” she said. “That override function is performed by our prefrontal cortex and is sometimes called ‘System 2' thinking, in contrast to our gut ‘System 1' thinking.”

Galef is referring to the work of John Bargh, a social psychologist from Yale who divided cognitive processes into two broad types. We use System 1 thinking for general things like awareness, efficiency, and controllability. But when we engage in System 2 thinking, we’re being more rational, and we tap into the logical parts of our brain. Unfortunately, System 2 thinking is more cognitively demanding. It’s slow and methodical. So, when we’re frustrated or annoyed, it’s easier to fall back on our more primitive urges. Applying a rule-based, rational approach to challenging situations—a cognitive trait that only recently evolved in humans—requires more energy, time, and concentration. Performing an “executive override” is often easier said than done.

“Engaging that override takes some effort, and the situations in which we’re least able to do it are those in which we’re very distracted or emotionally stressed out,” Galef told Gizmodo. “Driving fits the bill—we are trying to pay attention to a lot of things at once, watching the road, checking our mirrors, monitoring our speed, thinking about whether we’ll make it on time. And if we’re also stressed out—about running late, or about getting cut off by another driver—it becomes increasingly hard to engage that override function.”

But that’s not to suggest it can’t be done. When we find ourselves in a calm and focused state, it’s helpful to acknowledge that “we aren’t really always stuck in the slowest lane, and that it really isn’t a big deal to get to the store ten minutes later than we had expected, and that it isn’t really useful to curse at that other driver,” said Galef

We can also engage in “implementation intention”—the practice of taking our intentions and translating them into “if-then” statements. We can use these pre-packaged statements to plan for scenarios that are likely to tax our self-control. For example: “If I’m being tailgated, then I’ll just change lanes and let the driver go past,” or, “If I want to start getting fewer speeding tickets, then I have to respect the speed limit.”

http://io9.gizmodo.com/how-to-make-yo...

Griffith University psychologist Megan Oaten has shown (pdf) that we can build up our self-control, and get better at it over time, if we practice self-discipline in small doses. Self-control improves when we use our non-dominant hand as often as we can for about two weeks, for example, or use proper English (no slang, bad grammar, or abbreviations) for an extended period.

Psychologist Mark Muraven discovered that people with depleted willpower will still perform well on self-control tasks after being told their efforts would benefit others. So we can strengthen our willpower when we’re behind the wheel by reminding ourselves that, by being calm and courteous, we’re not putting ourselves or our passengers at risk.

Many of us feel annoyed when we have to stop as an amber light turns to red. In these moments, we need to remind ourselves that it’s not productive to get upset by something beyond our control. We also need to think about the actual amount of time we feel we’re losing or wasting, whether it be the time we spend at a red light, or the time lost to a slow motorist in front of us. It may only be an actual minute or two.

Failing these tips, Slotter recommends consulting a mental health professional for those who still struggle with angry outbursts or impulse control. If you can’t control yourself, particularly when you’re behind the wheel, you need to do yourself and everyone else around you a favor and get professional help.

Sources: American Psychological Association, American Safety Council, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Washington Post, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

Top illustration: Sam Woolley

Email the author at george@gizmodo.com and follow him @dvorsky.

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