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13 Superhero TV Shows That It's Hard To Believe Somebody Greenlit

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13 Superhero TV Shows That It's Hard To Believe Somebody Greenlit

We’re living in the Golden Age of superheroes on television. But capes and superpowers have lived on the small screen for decades—and there have been some truly bizarre ideas for how to translate them from comics. Here are 13 superhero shows it’s hard to believe someone thought were a good idea.

1) Captain Caveman

Always looking to expound on the Scooby-Doo formula, Hanna-Barbera had the idea to mesh the cute, central character of their programs with a superhero character.

They landed on Captain Caveman: a nude man, wrapped in his own body hair, who solves weird crimes and mysteries with the help of the three teenagers who unthawed him from the glacier: Taffy, Dee Dee and Brenda, parodies of the cast of Charlie’s Angels. Captain Caveman could also fly, but his own superpowers would fail at any moment—his catchphrase, “Bad time for energy crisis!” referenced the gasoline rationing shortages of the 70’s. Captain Caveman could pull dinosaurs, tools, gadgets and other helpful items out of his thick body hair, and he had a “cape” made of animal skins.

Somehow, the series managed to last three seasons and enjoyed a spinoff series, Captain Caveman and Son—a segment of Flintstones Kids. And the Teen Angels became regulars on Scooby’s Laff-A-Lympics. If nothing else, Captain Cavemen featured excellent villain designs by Space Ghost creator Alex Toth.

13 Superhero TV Shows That It's Hard To Believe Somebody Greenlit

13 Superhero TV Shows That It's Hard To Believe Somebody Greenlit

2) The Cape

When police detective Vince Faraday is framed for a crime he didn’t commit, he decides to dress up as a character from his kid’s comic books. He fights crime, under the tutelage of the Circus of Crime and it’s ringmaster, Max Malini (played by Keith David!). That’s a lot of set up for a series ultimately about a magician fighting crime—a tried and true recipe—and those multiple layers of contrivance may have dissuaded viewers from tuning it. Cancelled after ten episodes, the show did manage to rack up a fun roster of delightfully “Golden Age” super villains:

13 Superhero TV Shows That It's Hard To Believe Somebody Greenlit

Chess (James Frain), the man with Chess pieces for eyes!

13 Superhero TV Shows That It's Hard To Believe Somebody Greenlit

Scales (Vinne Jones), a career criminal with an undefined ichthyotic skin condition plating his body with impenetrable green and gold clusters.

13 Superhero TV Shows That It's Hard To Believe Somebody Greenlit

Dice (Mena Suvari) a maths genius with a “portable future predictor” called T.R.A.C.E.

13 Superhero TV Shows That It's Hard To Believe Somebody Greenlit

The Lich (Glenn Fitzgerald)

Another villain with a skin condition – this one’s called “Morgellons leiche” – imbuing him with constantly necrotizing skin!

13 Superhero TV Shows That It's Hard To Believe Somebody Greenlit

Pokerface (Michael Irby)

He never blinks, due to surviving a bullet to the head.

And The Cape did get more enjoyable as it went along, giving us the deathless catchphrase “No cake for you!”

3) Fred & Barney Meet the Thing

In a series sharing airtime with the Flintstones, Hanna-Barbera got its hooks into The Thing from The Fantastic Four, reimagining the character as the gawky teenager “Benjy” Grimm. When Benjy touches his magic rings together, and shouts “Thing Ring, do your thing!” he transforms into the ever-lovin’, blue-eyed Thing.

There’s a twist, though: The new Thing’s voice and persona is based on the great Schnozzola himself, Jimmy Durante.

4) Automan

Following the success of Tron, a series like Automan seemed like a no-brainer: a blue-glowing hologram who fights crime with a shifting, polyhedron sidekick named Cursor, able to draw things into reality. Why not?

Where the series fails is all those scenes of Automan’s creator, Walter Nebicher (Desi Arnaz, Jr.), serving as district attorney. It was a pretty whiplash-inducing transition, and simply not as exciting.

5) Turbo Teen

The Cronenbergian origin of Turbo Teen features the young Bret Matthews, enjoying his new driver’s license during a rainstorm, when a lightning bolt derails his sports car into a nuclear facility. A molecular beam fuses the boy and car together instantly into the boy/car—Turbo Teen!

His arch nemesis is the monster truck driving Dark Rider, a mysterious figure hell bent on learning the secret behind the Turbo Teen’s abilities.

While the transformation sequences have a twinge of body horror to them, the overall conceit is closer to John Carpenter’s Christine— by way of Abel Ferarra’s The Gladiator.

6) The Super Globetrotters

The Super Globetrotters received their orders from an OMAC-like orbiting basketball-satellite called the Crime Globe. And most episodes would end with the Globetrotters challenging the villain-of-the-week and his/her henchmen to a winner-take-all basketball game.

Curly became the basketball-headed Super Sphere, while Sweet Lou was granted a TARDIS-like afro of unlimited interior dimensions. Twiggy became Spaghetti Man.

Together they defeated foes like the Museum Man, Whale Man, and Atilla the Hun—both on and off the court!

7) Bibleman

As Bibleman, Willie Aames uses the Bible against such foes as the Wacky Protestor, 2Kul 4Skul and Baron Ulysses Tantamount von Braggart, protecting God-fearing children from atheist villains (no, really). The series of direct-to-video tapes ran from 1995 to 2011, but you can sometimes see them on local religious television networks across the United States.

8) The Adventures of T-Rex

Set in a world of anthropomorphic dinosaurs, The Adventures of T-Rex concerned a vaudeville group of dinos with superpowers unique to each group member’s anatomy. For example, one member has a super strong tail, while another features telekinetic eyes. They wore super suits and rode the Rexmobile into battle against their arch-foe, “Big Boss” Graves.

While each member of the team is visually identical, aside from their colors, you can tell them apart by their voices—imitations of Jack Benny, Art Carney, Bing Crosby, Humphrey Bogart and Jimmy Durante. Kids love Jimmy Durante.

9) Mummies Alive!

An insane premise, but one you can’t help but admire—DiC’s take on the virtually identical Gargoyles concerned a team of crime-fighting mummies!

10) Going Bananas

The third Hanna-Barbera show on this list, Going Bananas featured a superhero Orangutan called Roxanna Banana. She gets her powers from a lightning bolt that came from a passing UFO.

11) Stone Protectors

A late attempt to revivify the sputtering Troll doll craze, The Stone Protectors concerned a band called the Rock Detectors finding magical stones that imbue each member with their own unique power set:

Cornelius became a samurai with the power of the blue stone.

Chester is an expert wrestler, with the red stone.

Clifford becomes very good at rock climbing under the blue stone.

Angus, with the yellow stone, can turn ordinary objects into deadly weapons.

Maxwell becomes an “accelerator” on roller blades when he uses the orange stone.

Together, they battle the evil saurian Zok, whose greatest offense is hating their terrible, terrible music.

12) France Five

A localized take on Super Sentai and Power Rangers, France Five focused on a new group of color-coded heroes—one where each member reflected a different facet of French culture.

Red Fromage!

Black Beaujolais!

Blue Accordion!

Yellow Baguette!

Pink a la Mode!

And of course, the mysterious sixth member: Silver Mosquetaire!

The France five must stop the evil Lexos Empire from destroying the Eiffel Terror—the locus of a force field protecting the Earth from alien invasion.

And yes, before you ask: The entire series is on Youtube:

13) Gotham

Keeping a tenuous grasp on the characters of the Batman franchise we know and love, while simultaneously supplying them all-new backstories, Gotham walks a very precarious tightrope indeed.

One episode may feature a man who handcuffs balloons to criminals, sending them skyward to their stratospheric deaths (it was the Balloon Killer, after all, who gave the young Bruce Wayne the idea to be a vigilante—who knew?), while another will illustrate The Riddler brutally murdering his co-worker, Ms. Kringle in a lengthy strangulation scene.

Let’s say it’s pretty violent, for a superhero series in which we meet a lot of people’s dads.


Here Are All the Space Stations in History

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Here Are All the Space Stations in History

Sending something up into space? Having it stay up there while people live there as it orbits the Earth? Becoming an outpost far, far away from home? Just incredible. Building a habitable space station satellite will always be an amazing feat of engineering and planning and sheer human ingenuity. Here are all the space stations that have ever orbited Earth, from the Salyut to Skylab to ISS and everything else in between and after.


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There Are Some Major Revelations in the Latest Batch of Batman v Superman Footage 

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There Are Some Major Revelations in the Latest Batch of Batman v Superman Footage 

A large amount of new Batman v Superman footage and promo material was released today, and strangely all it includes some major new information on the heroes who will be v-ing each other in the film. Here are four things we gleaned from the new trailer, TV spot, and images.

1) Batman wants to kill Superman just in case.

We don’t know if Ben Affleck’s interpretation of the Dark Knight will follow his famous “no killing” policy from the comics. But if he does, he’s clearly going to make an exception for Superman—even if there’s only a 1-in-100 chance of Superman turning evil. Now, I find it strange that Batman would be so determined to “destroy” Superman when he is presumably putting his supervillains in Arkham Asylum instead of killing them. So it’s okay to kill the Man of Steel if he has a one percent chance of killing more people, but the Joker, who has a 99.9 percent chance of killing more people, is allowed to live? That’s messed up.

3) Bruce Wayne is basically Lex Luthor.

Obviously, Jesse Eisenberg is actually playing Lex Luthor in the movie, but he’s portraying Lex as a sort of elfin, non-superpowered Mr. Mxylzptlk, looking to cause trouble for the heroes. Affleck’s Bruce Wayne is much more like the comic Luthor, the brilliant billionaire who distrusts Superman and his powers, and wants to stop him by any means necessary. Given how much Batman hates Superman in all the BvS footage so far—here, Batman literally wants to murder him on the 1-in-100 chance he turns bad—I have no idea how what’s going to make him set aside his anger and partner up with Supes.

3) Darkseid is coming.

Here’s the biggie: This new photo (the upper-left pic in the Tweet above), revealed in Empire magazine, shows a moment in the much-vaunted dream sequence from BvS where a giant Mega symbol can be seen on the ground. Comic fans know that “omega” is Darkseid’s symbol, seeing as he wants to end basically everything. There’s literally no other reason for this than as a prelude to the arrival of the DC’s universe’s biggest, baddest villain.

Now, some people have interpreted this as meaning Darkseid will be in Batman v Superman; this is absolutely not (necessarily) true. It’s infinitely more likely that the dystopian nightmare is a prelude to the Justice League movies, where Darkseid will be the main villain.

I have also seen that the existence of Darkseid means that the New Gods are “confirmed” to exist in the DC movie-verse, but unfortunately that’s not necessarily true either. It would be extremely easy for Darkseid to show up and no one ever mention the other New Gods. In fact, it would likely be preferable not to bring them up. I imagine even DC/WB isn’t insane enough to try to convince mass audiences to get interested in Mister Miracle, divine alien escape artist extraordinaire. (I’m not knocking the beautiful insanity of Jack Kirby’s work, but I’m also not sure it would translate into 21st-century box office success.)

4) Wonder Woman flies commercial.

Last and somehow least, this fourth official trailer for the film is basically the footage revealed at last year’s San Diego Comic-Con, with a few brief new shots, the biggest of which is... uh... Wonder Woman storing her luggage in a plane? It seems kind of weird to me to include footage of Diana that features her doing something so mundane, especially when all the other footage is about Bats and Supes glowering, sulking and/or fighting. Is the luggage-putting-up scene really worth including in a trailer? Do they not have other Wonder Woman footage that they can use that hasn’t been in all the other trailers? Hmm...


If You Loved The X-Files, You'll Probably Still Like The New X-Files

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If You Loved The X-Files, You'll Probably Still Like The New X-Files

This Sunday, The X-Files returns for a six-episode miniseries. It’s been eight years since the last movie, and fourteen since the last TV episode. We’ve already watched the first three episodes of the new series, and are here to tell you, with no spoilers, that it’s worth your time. But it may not be worth the wait.

The X-Files always mixed long-running “mythology” arcs with standalone cases. And the new miniseries does the exact same thing. The first episode, “My Struggle,” is a hardcore mythology episode. Whether or not you enjoy it is going to depend on whether or not the show’s complicated mythology interests you. Even though it seems to throw out everything the show spent nine years building, explaining, retconning, and re-explaining, “My Struggle” is exactly like any of the mediocre mythology episodes that the X-Files aired over the years. There’s an abduction victim and an informant. There’s a government lab. There’s men in black, disappearing evidence. Mulder runs headlong into danger, while ignoring Scully. People monologue about truth. Go back and watch one of the other Chris Carter-penned episodes, and it will all look very familiar.

The only thing separating this episode from the old series is raised expectations. This is the first episode of the revival and everyone’s back, so we’re all hoping for something that blows us away. What you get is just The X-Files—exactly as it has always been.

Which isn’t a bad thing. It’s just not revolutionary.

Chris Carter announced a while back that the first and last episodes of the miniseries would be mythology episodes. The middle four are standalone cases, which is where the show always excelled. There’s incredible variety in The X-Files, and in the standalones in particular. And that’s exactly what the miniseries provides.

The second episode, “Founder’s Mutation” is heavy on paranoia and body horror. It’s not for the squeamish and does bring to mind some of the creepiest old school X-Files episodes. It’s a solid episode, with some interesting character work revolving around Mulder, Scully, and their past. Plus, we get the requisite “Mulder and Scully report to Skinner” scene.

If You Loved The X-Files, You'll Probably Still Like The New X-Files

But the third episode, “Mulder and Scully Meet the Were-Monster,” is where the revival finally starts approaching the high highs of the original show. Darin Morgan’s script is weird, twisty, and—as usual—hysterically funny. Everyone’s back on their game here. Mulder’s got a crazy theory, that is both wrong and right. Scully’s doing autopsies and calling Mulder out on being “batcrap” crazy. Just like previous Morgan triumphs, “Clyde Bruckman’s Final Repose” and “Jose Chung’s From Outer Space,” this episode has a superb guest cast. Rhys Darby’s performance deserves to go down in X-Files history. He’s got to be sympathetic and annoying at the same time. It’s a hard line to walk, and he is brilliant at it.

The only sour note in the episode is a run of transphobic jokes that aren’t just offensive, they’re unoriginal, and out of date.

Which is kind of how everything that doesn’t work about the revival feels. It’s recaptured the feel of the old show, but hasn’t updated anything. Mulder, Scully, and the FBI feel a bit like they were put in cold storage until now. They haven’t advanced or changed at all since we last saw them. Their understanding of the internet and politics, and everything else, feels as though it froze in the early 2000s.

The show goes to great pains to put everyone right back where they “belong.” Mulder and Scully aren’t together any more. The X-Files is reopened, and they’re back in the FBI. Skinner is their boss. You could slot these episodes in almost any season and, except for the age factor, they’d fit right in.

For fans, the X-Files revival has everything they loved about the show. And everything that drove them crazy about it. It’s six episodes of pure, concentrated X-Files. Which is exactly what we want—just not what we may have hoped for.

This review originally ran on January 20.

Top image: Frank Ockenfels/FOX. Middle Image: Ed Araquel/FOX

Contact the author at katharine@io9.com.

Here's Some Eye-Popping X-Wing Propaganda To Start Your Week

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Here's Some Eye-Popping X-Wing Propaganda To Start Your Week

We never see it, but you have to think there’s propaganda art in the world of Star Wars. Be it the Rebellion, Empire, First Order or Resistance, it’s a simple, striking way to get your message across the galaxy. And if it is, artist Mike Kungl would be their go to guy.

Kungl just released a brand new, propaganda style Star Wars poster through Acme Archives and we’re excited to debut it. It’s called “Fly and Defend,” and it shows a Resistance X-Wing in all its glory.

Here's Some Eye-Popping X-Wing Propaganda To Start Your Week

This isn’t the first piece of art Kungl has done in this style either. Here are a few others, all available at the Acme website.

Here's Some Eye-Popping X-Wing Propaganda To Start Your Week

Here's Some Eye-Popping X-Wing Propaganda To Start Your Week

Here's Some Eye-Popping X-Wing Propaganda To Start Your Week

Here's Some Eye-Popping X-Wing Propaganda To Start Your Week

Here's Some Eye-Popping X-Wing Propaganda To Start Your Week

[Acme Archives]


Why Terror of the Zygons Is the Ultimate Doctor Who Story, for Better or Worse

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Why Terror of the Zygons Is the Ultimate Doctor Who Story, for Better or Worse

There’s an age-old adage in Doctor Who fandom, most often credited to 1980s screenwriter Ben Aaronovitch: “Talent borrows, genius steals, and Doctor Who gets it off the back of a truck, no questions asked.” It’s meant to symbolize the show’s brazen yet endearing, lifting of story ideas from all over genre fiction over the years. But sometimes, it’s also about the show’s ability to look back into its own history and gussy up old ideas.

With the recent tragic passing of their creator, Robert Banks Stewart, I wanted to revisit the story that introduced the Zygons—a serial that wholly encapsulates everything that makes Doctor Who, well, Doctor Who. If there was ever a story in the show’s long, long history that showcases its strengths, its weaknesses, and its weirdness, it’s Terror of the Zygons.

http://io9.gizmodo.com/rip-robert-ban...

The first story of Tom Baker’s second season as The Doctor in 1975, Terror takes place in Banks Stewart’s native Scotland (it’s jam-packed with comical sterotyping, its first line featuring a mention of haggis, its last a joke about the mean nature of Scots), and sees The Doctor, Sarah Jane, and soon-to-be-exiting companion Harry called upon by UNIT to investigate mysterious attacks on North Sea Oil rigs. They soon discover the people responsible for the attacks are in fact aliens: The Zygons, shapeshifters infiltrating the local human community and disguising themselves, priming for a move to take over the world.

Why Terror of the Zygons Is the Ultimate Doctor Who Story, for Better or Worse

If that sounds familiar, it should. Terror of the Zygons was at a crossroads for Doctor Who at the time—it was the era of the Third Doctor’s exile on Earth, and UNIT was on the way out. Terror acted as its death knell. The presence of the Brigadier and his soldiers was familiar ground for the show, but Tom Baker’s Doctor interacting with them gives it an alien twist. He mocks UNIT and humanity for its reliance on oil in such a way that wouldn’t be out of place coming from Jon Pertwee, but there’s an ethereal, foreign bent to Baker’s insults that are distinctly more threatening than playful, a sign of a Doctor who’s just about done with hanging around being someone’s science-y lapdog. Even with the spookiness that would later define the 1976-1977 seasons of the show, Terror feels blatantly like one last hurrah for the format the show had in the early half of the 1970s, before it moved on to pastures new.

Then there’s the Zygons themselves. They’re cut from the same cloth as so many “aliens walk among us” villains, both outside of Doctor Who (Invasion of the Bodysnatchers is an obvious touchstone) and within it (the Autons and Axons from the Pertwee era instantly spring to mind). But despite not really bringing anything new to the table as sneaky alien infiltrators—they are about as “monster of the week” that you can get in that regard, and it’s unsurprising that they never returned to the show during its classic era—they’re stunningly realized.

The costume design and the set design of the Zygon lair are incredibly well done, creepy and organic and wonderfully bizarre. The first reveal of the creatures at the end of the first episode is iconic, and for a good reason; director Dougie Camfield framed it petrifyingly perfectly. It’s a moment of true horror and shock as Harry wails in horror at the transforming monster before him, before the full reveal of the Zygon grabbing Sarah Jane shrieks into the show’s end credits. They even get to be surprisingly murderous for Doctor Who aliens, offing several members of the supporting cast in grisly manners. If the UNIT-era was getting a send off here, the horrific undertones of the Zygons themselves were a look to the future of the show under Phillip Hinchcliffe and Robert Holmes, where the series got progressively into Gothic horror.

Strangely, even in the stories’ more poorly-executed moments, Terror is still thoroughly committed to embracing past Doctor Who tropes. Zygon leader Broton’s first encounter with Harry in the second episode leads to him spilling his guts about the history of Zygons, how their shapeshifting works, and how he wants to take over the world in a scene so full of droll infodumping that not even Dougie Camfield’s otherwise excellent direction can save it—and a moment that’s ripped from countless other villains in the show, from The Master to the Daleks.

When the Zygons are spurred into pushing their plans to rule the world into action, the more interesting aspects of their design (that they’re meant to be sneaky, patient infiltrators, not just overtly evil monsters) get lost for a classic, but thematically unjustified bit of Doctor Who alien attack scenes between the creatures and UNIT that once again, wouldn’t be out of place in any Jon Pertwee story.

And yes, the Skarasen—the monster that’s behind the Loch Ness legends, and is in fact the Zygon’s cyborg bodyguard/food source—is a practical effect so laughably dire it’s hard to imagine that it comes from the same story as the excellently-realized Zygons:

Why Terror of the Zygons Is the Ultimate Doctor Who Story, for Better or Worse

It’s right up there with the Taran Wood Beast and the original Mara as one of the least-threatening creatures in Doctor Who history. But as bad as it is, you can’t help but almost love the Skarasen as it goes about stomping on hapless UNIT soldiers—a dodgy monster is part of the charm of classic Doctor Who, and while no means intentional at the time, looking back, it’s taken on a sort of retro charm that works... in a certain way.

Terror is, ultimately a lot like its titular aliens. There’s a chameleon-esque element to it as Banks Stewart gleefully picks moments and ideas and beats from Doctor Who’s past for it to transform into, and weaves them into something that, is, in hindsight, a “greatest (and not so great) hits of Doctor Who” checklist. Exactly the sum of its parts—and all those parts familiar to Doctor Who already—but executed so well in terms of its production and direction (Skarasen aside) that, at times, it rises above the familiarity.

It’s a love letter to the show’s then-recent past and a sign of its increasingly creepy future. It’s even, in a few places, a little bit rubbish. It embraces all of those things becomes a sort of Ur-Doctor Who tale, representative of everything the series was, and could be. What makes Terror of the Zygons remarkable to watch all these years later is that it reveals just how much Robert Banks Stewart understood the show, even in his first attempt at writing for it. He managed to encapsulate everything that Doctor Who was about, for better or for worse, into a single story—something that’s still admirable and enjoyable to watch, all these years later.

Please Help Me Figure Out What Hulu's New Show Citizen Is About

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Please Help Me Figure Out What Hulu's New Show Citizen Is About

Hulu’s putting the final touches on a deal for a show called Citizen. The people behind it sound great. The actual description is so filled with meaningless PR buzzwords I have literally no idea what’s happening.

Citizen comes from Alfonso Gomez-Rejon, director of Me and Earl and The Dying Girl. Which sounds like a good person to have on a project! But then there’s the description of the show from Deadline:

Created, written and executive produced by Gomez-Rejon, Josh Pate and ‎Nicholas Schutt, Citizen is described as a fresh take on the hero origin story blending elements of magical realism and gritty vigilantism set against the backdrop of a vibrant, “supernaturalized” Los Angeles. Anonymous Content’s David Kanter, Matt DeRossand Steve Golin also executive produce.

And I get that you have to talk the meaningless talk to get studios to sign on, but this is crazy: “Fresh take,” “hero origin,” “magical realism,” “gritty,” “supernaturalized,” are all fairly meaningless. Take out “Los Angeles,” and this exact pitch could have been used for later seasons of Arrow. And the name Citizen doesn’t really help clear anything up.

It’s a brand new origin story of a gritty vigilante in an alternate Los Angeles that has the supernatural and magic. That’s clear as mud. As a description it completely turns me off of something I should be interested in. Let’s hope the creators do a better job hashing out the idea for screen than they have in this teaser copy.

[Deadline]


90s Flash Takes on Modern Flash in a Mashup Battle for the Ages

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90s Flash Takes on Modern Flash in a Mashup Battle for the Ages

One of our favorite things about the current Flash show is how it’s embraced, and integrated, members of the cast of the short lived 90s Flash series. But what if instead of John Wesley Shipp being Barry’s dad, what if he showed up as his former self, the Scarlet Speedster himself? Well, let’s find out.

This is another excellent remix from Vulture and New York Magazine, superbly mixing footage from Jay Allen’s arrival on The Flash (and Barry’s battles with the Reverse Flash) and the classic John Wesley Shipp show to create some hostilities between the two incarnations of the Scarlet Speedster.

It works really well, even though we’ve had a season-and-a-bit of Shipp and Grant Gustin being awesome together as father and son. Seeing them duke it out, and getting a taste of Shipp’s Flash with the modern show’s effects magic is pretty great. If only we could see this on TV someday, too... although preferably as a Flash team up rather than a battle.


Star Trek Getting a New Convention for Its 50th Anniversary Is Highly Logical

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Star Trek Getting a New Convention for Its 50th Anniversary Is Highly Logical

One of, if not the, biggest anniversaries in pop culture this year is the 50th anniversary of Star Trek. A new TV show is in the works, a new film is being released, and now there’s official news of a massive, three-day convention coming to New York.

It’s called Star Trek: Mission New York and will take place from September 2-4 at the Javits Center in New York, New York. Info on tickets, hotels and all that convention goodness is coming soon at the official Star Trek Missions site.

Star Trek: Mission New York will be a completely unique fan event unlike anything seen before,” said Lance Fensterman, Global Senior Vice President of ReedPOP. “[It’ll give] them the chance to go beyond panels and autograph signings, and immerse themselves in the Star Trek universe.”

ReepPOP, who organized New York Comic-Con, promises “interactive exhibits, exclusive merchandise, celebrity guests, panels, screenings and much more.” It sounds like something all Trek fans should keep an eye on but, if you can’t attend, I have a sneaking suspicion we’ll have some coverage.

And if you want to know about more 50th anniversary Star Trek events, head over to USA Today.


This Week's TV: Magic Is Addictive, But the Devil Wants to Help

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This Week's TV: Magic Is Addictive, But the Devil Wants to Help

The Magicians and Lucifer premiere, and The Venture Bros. return after three years! The Vampire Diaries, The Originals and Grimm return from hiatus! Best of all: Amanda Pays is back on The Flash, Goth Felicity returns to Arrow, and Supergirl gets an impressive spike in the FX budget! Plus X-Files, Jaws, and Agent Carter! Your eyes will bleed and beg for mercy after this week’s TV!


Tonight

Uncle Grandpa (5:30PM, Cartoon Network)

A new episode of Uncle Grandpa airs every day this week at 5:30PM.

Supergirl (8PM, CBS)

“Kara must help Hank face his painful past when a White Martian, a member of the alien race that wiped out his people, kidnaps Senator Miranda Crane (Tawny Cypress), an anti-alien politician. Also, Cat’s estranged son, Adam (Blake Jenner), arrives in National City.”

The White Martian looks really good—there’s some Pumpkinhead mixed in with the standard Buffy the Vampire Slayer demon-shape of TV monsters we’ve had since 1997. Little bit of Lord Zedd in there, too.

The X-Files (8PM, Fox)

“When a scientist suddenly commits suicide, Mulder and Scully investigate what unseen force may have driven him to it. What they uncover is a laboratory where extreme genetic experimentation has been going on for decades, breeding subjects who possess unexpected and dangerous powers - and who harbor deep resentments.”

A question to anyone who tuned into last night’s premiere: when Mulder was laying out the conspiracy against the human race, was Joel McHale’s retort “more odious and far-reaching!” intended to be a laugh line? I think it was. Reasonable people could disagree. (I loved it.)

The Magicians (9PM, Syfy)

Two-hour series premiere! It’s like Last Exit to Brooklyn, but with wizards.

Lucifer (9PM, Fox)

“Upon leaving hell, Lucifer Morningstar retreats to Los Angeles for a more exciting life. When the murder of a friend connects him with LAPD detective Chloe Decker, Lucifer becomes intrigued with the idea of punishing criminals, sending the devil himself into a struggle between good and evil.”

Series premiere. It’s a show about how Lucifer is actually a really cool dude.

_______________________________________________

Tuesday

The Flash (8PM, CW)

“When Cisco (Carlos Valdes) gets a vibe of Eobard Thawne (guest star Matthew Letscher), Barry (Grant Gustin) and the team don’t believe it. But, after an attack at Mercury Labs, Christina McGee (guest star Amanda Pays) confirms that the Reverse Flash is back. Meanwhile, Iris (Candice Patton) and Francine (guest star Vanessa A. Williams) share a nice moment that brings Iris closer to her brother, Wally (Keiynan Lonsdale).”

Amanda Pays is back! Oh, and the Reverse Flash.

Agent Carter (9PM, ABC)

That’s one hell of a promo.

Shadowhunters (9PM, Freeform)

“With Simon being held captive at The Hotel DuMort, Clary pleads with Jace, Alec and Isabelle to help her rescue her best friend. As the team readies for the mission, Jace helps Clary learn more about her Shadowhunter powers, Isabelle turns to her favorite Seelie for Intel, and Alec begins to question Jace’s motives and his place in their partnership. Meanwhile, a very scared Simon gets very up close and personal with Camille, the leader of the vampire clan.”

Not to be confused with Shadow Chasers, the lowest-rated program of the 1985-86 TV season.

Teen Wolf (9PM, MTV)

‘As Scott tries to put his pack back together, Malia and a new ally set out to rescue Deaton from The Desert Wolf.’

This episode, “The Sword and the Spirit,” gets its title from Ephesians: 6:17.

“Take the helmet of salvation and the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God.”

Make of that what you will. Also, the Desert Wolf is a were-coyote.

The Expanse (10PM, Syfy)

“Holden finds the remains of Julie Mao’s ship, and with it lots of answers. But it’s Miller who is in for the biggest surprise of the season.”

Killing Fields (10PM, Discovery)

In this week’s episode, forensic anthropologists bludgeon a severed pig’s head.

The Shannara Chronicles (10PM, MTV)

…what do they say about elves? Tune in to find out, presumably.

_______________________________________________

Wednesday

Arrow (8PM, CW)

“Diggle must learn to trust his brother Andy (guest star Eugene Byrd) when an enemy of their wartime past, an agent of the criminal organization Shadowspire, pays a visit to Star City. However, Diggle learns more than he bargained for about their shared time at war. Meanwhile, Oliver has to learn a whole new way of life.”

They’re burying the lede: Felicity the Goth returns!

Face Off (9PM, Syfy)

The artists must create lost races based on custom languages.

Star Wars: Rebels (9PM, Disney XD)

Getting into some deep Mandalorian history with this one!

Supernatural (9PM, CW)

Dee Wallace guest stars.

_______________________________________________

Thursday

Clarence (5PM, Cartoon Network)

“Clarence and his pals venture to the Aberdale Renaissance Faire.”

Yes.

Adventure Time (7:30PM, Cartoon Network)

Finn and Jake crossover into Farmworld Finn’s dimension.

Legends of Tomorrow (8PM, CW)

Second half of the pilot! The Atom loses a boot in the past, so Rip Hunter has to get it back.

You, Me & The Apocalypse (8PM, NBC)

Series premiere. Diana Rigg is back on television.

The Flying Guillotine Double Feature (8PM, El Rey)

Parts 1 & 2! You’ll want to see them if you haven’t.

The 100 (9PM, CW)

Part 2 of Wanheda.

Angel from Hell (9:30PM, CBS)

Colony (10PM, USA)

“Katie’s (Sarah Wayne Callies) first mission with the Resistance leads her to a major discovery, but she begins to question her commitment to the cause. Meanwhile, Will’s (Josh Holloway) hunt for the mysterious Geronimo draws him into the Resistance’s crosshairs. Later their son Bram’s (Alex Neustaedter) girlfriend reveals a big secret about their colonized surroundings, his thirst to discover more leads him down a dangerous path.”

Elementary (10PM, CBS)

“Holmes’ tentative reconciliation with his father suffers a setback when Holmes and Watson discover Morland has been keeping a secret that threatens all of their safety. Also, Holmes and Watson investigate two murders connected to a for-profit college and its illegal recruitment practices.”

Where you can currently find John Noble these days.

_______________________________________________

Friday

The White Cockatoo (6:30PM, TCM)

A gothic whodunit from 1930 featuring a kidnapping plot, a miniature sword and a crime-solving cockatoo.

The Vampire Diaries (8PM, CW)

Winter premiere! Now on Fridays.

The Originals (9PM, CW)

Ditto.

Grimm (9PM, NBC)

Grimm is also back this week. This is exhausting!

City of the Living Dead (12AM, El Rey)

Incredible movie! Guaranteed to retain all the intestines and head-goo when it airs this Friday at midnight on El Rey!

_______________________________________________

Saturday

Jaws Marathon (10:30PM, Syfy)

All four Jaws movies! Don’t stop till you get enough.

Power Rangers: Dino Super Charge (12PM, Nickelodeon)

“The Rangers believe their work is done after they’ve defeated Sledge and his evil monsters. Unbeknownst to them, an even more powerful monster is picking up where Sledge left off and is closer to the Rangers than they think.”

The season 23 premiere!

Black Sails (9PM, Starz)

Beowulf (10PM, Esquire)

Beowulf on the Esquire network—where he belongs!

Svengoolie Presents This Island Earth (10PM, MeTV)

The battle between guided meteors and deadly rays.

_______________________________________________

Sunday

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (11AM, Nickelodeon)

“The Turtles must gain the trust of the Utrom Council in order to find the next piece of the black hole generator!”

Galavant (8PM, ABC)

The one-hour second season finale!

The Venture Bros. (12AM, Cartoon Network/Adult Swim)

Three years after the season five finale, season six finally premieres.


Contact the author at fisharebeautiful@gmail.com.

The Silly But Serious History of the International Flat Earth Society

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The Silly But Serious History of the International Flat Earth Society

The conspiracy theory-laden social media onslaught unleashed by rapper B.o.B. got us thinking about another famous “the Earth is flat!” believer. Charles K. Johnson was the most notorious name associated with flat-Earth theories since Christopher Columbus. And he became something of a celebrity because of it.

Charles Kenneth Johnson was born in 1924. He became president of the International Flat Earth Society in 1972—but he’d believed the Earth was a flat planet since he was a child growing up in Texas and couldn’t wrap his head around the concept of gravity. He kept those beliefs with him during his 25 years working as an airplane mechanic in San Francisco. Eventually, he moved to the Mojave Desert and made a career shift into activism. He took over running the Society when its previous leader, Johnson’s good friend Samuel Shenton, passed away and designated him as successor. Shenton had founded the group in the 1950s but traced its origins back to 19th century England.

That Johnson’s desert abode was so close to Edwards Air Force Base, home of NASA’s Armstrong Flight Research Center, only made it more curious how strongly Johnson stuck to his beliefs. He believed the space program was a full-on hoax. In 1980, he gave an interview to Science Digest in which he opined “You can’t orbit a flat earth. The Space Shuttle is a joke—and a very ludicrous joke.”

Though he hadn’t achieved more than a high-school education, Johnson was a well-spoken, passionate advocate whose fame even landed him an ice cream commercial. Thanks to his promotional efforts through regular newsletters (tagline: “Restoring the World to Sanity”) on topics such as “Charles Lindbergh Proved Earth Flat,” he grew the Society’s membership from a handful of believers to some 3,000 strong.

After he died in 2001, his New York Times obituary offered certain admiration for a life spent so dedicated to his cause:

Mr. Johnson, who called himself the last iconoclast, regarded scientists as witch doctors pulling off a gigantic hoax so as to replace religion with science. He based his own ideas on the Old Testament references to a flat earth and the New Testament saying that Jesus ascended into heaven.

‘’If earth were a ball spinning in space, there would be no up or down,’’ he told Newsweek magazine in 1984.

His essential suggestion was that people should just look around and trust their own eyes. ‘’Reasonable, intelligent people have always recognized that the earth is flat,’’ he said.

In quarterly newsletters, Mr. Johnson seemed to have an answer for almost everything. Sunrises and sunsets? An optical illusion. The moon landing? An elaborate hoax with a script by the science fiction writer Arthur C. Clarke, staged in a hangar in Arizona. (And Mr. Johnson was not alone; a Washington Post poll in 1994 found that 9 percent of Americans thought the landing was faked.)

Eclipses of the sun? ‘’We really don’t have to go into all that,’’ he told The New York Times in 1979. ‘’The Bible tells us the heavens are a mystery.’’

In 1995, Johnson and his wife Marjory (“who believed in a flat earth because she did not hang from her toes in her native Australia”) lost their home in a terrible fire; it destroyed all of the Society’s archives. Marjory died in 1996; when Johnson died five years later, the group had dwindled to very few members. But thanks to the internet, the Flat Earth Society lives on. Its website, which has a PDF library of Johnson’s original newsletters as well as an online forum, notes that it officially started accepting new members in October 2009.

In 2010, its American-born but England-based new president, Daniel Shenton, gave an interview to the Guardian in which he spoke about keeping Johnson’s message alive in the 21st century. Unlike his predecessors, he believes in global warming and evolution. But the shape of the Earth ... not so much:

The Earth is flat, he argues, because it appears flat. The sun and moon are spherical, but much smaller than mainstream science says, and they rotate around a plane of the Earth, because they appear to do so.

Inevitably, Shenton’s ­argument forces him down all kinds of logical blind alleys – the non-existence of gravity, and his argument that most space exploration, and so the moon landings, are faked. But, while many flat Earthers have problems with the idea of orbiting satellites, ­Shenton navigates the ­London streets using GPS. He was also happy to fly from the US to Britain, but says an aircraft that flew over the Antarctic ­barrier would drop from the sky, and from the planet.

Interestingly, unlike Johnson, Shenton spent most of his life believing the Earth was round but “began ­asking questions after hearing musician Thomas Dolby’s 1984 album The Flat Earth;” subsequent research into the Flat Earth Society turned him into a believer. As of 2014, the group was still keepin’ on, and has an active Twitter account, retweeting articles about the cause and spreading holiday cheer to its followers:

Top image: Charles K. Johnson, left,, and his wife, Marjory, are shown outside their home near Lancaster, Calif. (AP Photo/RG)

Astronaut Scott Kelly on Liquid Salt, a Stinky Station, and Sleeping in Freefall

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Astronaut Scott Kelly on Liquid Salt, a Stinky Station, and Sleeping in Freefall

There are lots of things most of us never contemplate when we fantasize about living in space: What happens to your arms when they don’t naturally fall at your sides? Do you keep your callouses when you aren’t walking? What’s it like to sleep in free fall?

NASA astronaut Scott Kelly—he of the Year in Space experiment, excellent Instagram feed, the not-so-first flower, and water ping-pong—answered these and other burning questions when he swung by Reddit on Saturday for an Ask Me Anything.

Astronaut Scott Kelly on Liquid Salt, a Stinky Station, and Sleeping in Freefall

Southeast Asia at night. Image credit: NASA/Scott Kelly

Kelly’s feet are getting all-new calluses.

For months, Kelly hasn’t worn shoes and tromped the ground like the rest of us Earth-bound folk. Instead, he’s been floating and scrambling, using his feet for leverage instead. This means the calluses on the bottoms of his feet have fallen off, and he’s developing new ones on the top. “[T]he bottoms of your feet become very soft like newborn baby feet,” Kelly reported. “But the top of my feet develop rough alligator skin because I use [them] to get around here on [the] space station when using foot rails.”

Astronaut Scott Kelly on Liquid Salt, a Stinky Station, and Sleeping in Freefall

It’s not stern, it’s comfortable! Image credit: NASA/Scott Kelly

Kelly keeps his arms crossed so they don’t drift away.

In nearly every photo we see of Kelly, he keeps his arms crossed (unless he’s playing with his food). This stern posture isn’t stylistic, but practical. “Your arms don’t hang by your side in space like they do on Earth because there is no gravity,” he wrote. “It feels awkward to have them floating in front of me.” The tucking and folding continues when he’s out of sight, too: even at night he constrains them within his sleeping bag so they aren’t awkwardly drifting in space.

Astronaut Scott Kelly on Liquid Salt, a Stinky Station, and Sleeping in Freefall

Going to space without your team hat to wear when watching the big game? Inconceivable! Image credit: NASA/Scott Kelly

Even astronauts overpack.

You’d think the strict mass limit on personal effects would keep astronauts from committing the common sin of overpacking, but apparently not. When asked what Kelly would advise his Day 1 self now that he’s going on over 300 days in space, he wrote, “pack lighter!”

Astronaut Scott Kelly on Liquid Salt, a Stinky Station, and Sleeping in Freefall

Astronaut Scott Kelly’s bedroom on the International Space Station. Image credit: NASA/Scott Kelly

Sleeping is hard.

“I am not a great sleeper.” Kelly admitted. “I don’t think I have ever slept 8 hours straight in the last 20 years. I wind up waking up a couple of times.” Unlike astronauts who describe sleeping in space as the ultimate comfort, Kelly finds it actually exacerbates the problem.

“[T]he sleep position here is the same position throughout the day,” he explained. “You don’t ever get that sense of gratifying relaxation here that you do on Earth after a long day at work.” On top of that, it’s noisy. The station constantly hums, so he wears ear plugs every night. The lack of gravity can disorient him. “If I close my eyes, I can give myself the sensation that I am falling,” Kelly said. “Which I am, I am falling around the Earth.”

Despite all that, he keeps to the same sleep cycle as everyone else, reporting, “We use Greenwich Mean Time and we get up at 6 in the morning and go to sleep at 10 at night.”

Astronaut Scott Kelly on Liquid Salt, a Stinky Station, and Sleeping in Freefall

Astronauts Kimiya Yui [far left], Oleg Kononenko, Mikhail Kornienko, and Sergey Volkov, and Scott Kelly [far right] practicing emergency procedures. Image credit: NASA

The crew really does get along.

Although they prank each other “occasionally...” (a story we’d love to hear more about), the astronauts on the space station get along for the most part. Although they sometimes argue (“generally it involves work.”), everyone is aware that they’re tiny, fragile humans a hairsbreadth away from the harshness of space. “We get along very well,” explained Kelly. “We have to because we rely on each other for our lives.”

Astronaut Scott Kelly on Liquid Salt, a Stinky Station, and Sleeping in Freefall

Astronaut Scott Kelly taking photographs through the cupola on the International Space Station. Image credit: NASA

He’s trying to spot the planetary alignment.

Right now, the five visible-eye planets are all visible from Earth before dawn. Kelly’s also trying to catch the view. “I’ve been looking for them,” he wrote. “I don’t think our orbit is where we can see them yet, but we will be. I’m keeping my eye out for it and will certainly share them with everyone when I see it.”

Astronaut Scott Kelly on Liquid Salt, a Stinky Station, and Sleeping in Freefall

Scott Kelly fixing a cooling pump during a spacewalk. Image credit: NASA/Kjell Lindgren

“We need to talk...” is universally terrifying.

When asked about being afraid or alone because of being in space, Kelly downplayed concerns about his environment. “It is a little bit surreal to know that you are in your own little spaceship and a few inches from you is instant death,” he acknowledged. He’s more aware of it during spacewalks. “When I look at the clouds over the Earth, and I know how high clouds are, I get a sense we are really, really far above those clouds,” Kelly recounted. “I wouldn’t call it scary, but I am aware I am in space.”

But he has been scared when NASA wanted to talk to to him privately. “I have been afraid when the ground has called and privatized the audio,” Kelly recounted. “[That] generally meaning something bad has happened.” Although he didn’t clarify the circumstances of the call, we know Kelly was on the space station five years ago when his sister-in-law, Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords, was shot.

Astronaut Scott Kelly on Liquid Salt, a Stinky Station, and Sleeping in Freefall

While not the first, Kelly’s space flowers are the most photographed and most beautiful. Image credit: NASA/Scott Kelly

The station stinks.

On a related note, the space station hasn’t been aired out in fifteen years. It is smelly. “Smells vary depending on what segment you are in,” started Kelly. “Sometimes it has an antiseptic smell. Sometimes it has an odor that smells like garbage.” But the smell of the hatch when transiting back from a spacewalk is entirely different. “The smell of space when you open the hatch smells like burning metal to me,” he concluded.

Astronaut Scott Kelly on Liquid Salt, a Stinky Station, and Sleeping in Freefall

Scott Kelly: astronaut, engineer, medical officer, farmer, and occasional plumber. Image credit: NASA/Scott Kelly

Space toilets are still scary.

When asked what the creepiest thing he’s encountered on the job, Kelly admitted, “Generally it has to do with the toilet.” Considering the previous horror stories we’ve heard of floating messes or broken toilets creating a vacuum seal, we’re not surprised. But he still managed to add something novel and gross to the collection: “Recently I had to clean up a gallon-sized ball of urine mixed with acid.” Why acid? It’s added to the urine to keep it from clogging the system or damaging machinery. Ew.

Astronaut Scott Kelly on Liquid Salt, a Stinky Station, and Sleeping in Freefall

Movie night: The Martian. Image credit: NASA/Scott Kelly

Kelly is a sci-fi junkie.

Kelly joined in the astronaut viewing parties for Gravity and The Martian, but he’s also demonstrated a love for Star Wars with a series of thematic photos leading up to the premiere. He also branches out into other genres, writing that Straight Outta Compton is on his to-watch list when he gets home.

Astronaut Scott Kelly on Liquid Salt, a Stinky Station, and Sleeping in Freefall

Astronaut Scott Kelly briefly leaving the International Space Station to re-dock a Soyuz spacecraft. Image credit: NASA/Scott Kelly

Astronauts use liquid salt.

Any loose powder on the space station is a catastrophe for the ventilation systems. Instead of little packets of salt granules, Kelly explained, “We actually use liquid salt that we put on our food.”

Astronaut Scott Kelly on Liquid Salt, a Stinky Station, and Sleeping in Freefall

High over the Bahamas. Image credit: NASA/Scott Kelly

The hard work is worth it.

Being an astronaut looks so easy and fun from the outside, it’s easy to forget how much work goes into keeping humans living in space. “It is a huge army of hard working people to make it happen,” Kelly reminded us.

But seeing the Earth from afar is gorgeous. “The brilliant and varied colors of the blue water and contrast [of the Bahamas] from here is pretty spectacular,” Kelly glowed about his favorite photography target. And seeing North and South Korea at night, or watching Hurricane Patricia build provides a profound sense of context lacking from the ground. He reported that when he gets home, “I will appreciate nature more.”

He just hopes that NASA will keep being able to explore, discover, and push the boundaries into the future. Although he avoided weighing in on the current Presidential race, Kelly has certain objectives he hopes any candidates will meet. “I would like the next president to support a budget that allows us to accomplish the mission that we are asked to perform, whatever that mission may be,” he wrote.

Astronaut Scott Kelly on Liquid Salt, a Stinky Station, and Sleeping in Freefall

Aurora engulf the planet, backlighting a Soyuz spacecraft attached to the station. Image credit: NASA/Scott Kelly

Kelly launched for the space station on March 27, 2015 with cosmonaut Mikhail Kornienko. They are scheduled to return to Earth on March 3, 2016. Kelly now holds the American long duration spaceflight records for NASA.

[NASA, Reddit]

Top image: Scott Kelly on Day 183 in space. Image credit: NASA/Scott Kelly


Contact the author at mika.mckinnon@io9.com or follow her at @MikaMcKinnon.

Today's Best Deals: Wallet Charger, Mechanical Keyboard, BSN Supplements, and More

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Today's Best Deals: Wallet Charger, Mechanical Keyboard, BSN Supplements, and More

Clever charging gear, TVs for the big game, and the (formerly) complete X-Files box set lead off 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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Today's Best Deals: Wallet Charger, Mechanical Keyboard, BSN Supplements, and More

By my count, this is the fourth protein supplement Gold Box deal Amazon’s run this month, but if you missed out on the others, or if BSN is just your preferred brand, you’ve got plenty of discounted options to choose from today. [Get up to 60% Off BSN Fitness Supplements at Amazon]



Today's Best Deals: Wallet Charger, Mechanical Keyboard, BSN Supplements, and More

You have no shortage of options when it comes to Bluetooth speakers, but the Jawbone Jambox line started the entire trend, and its highly-rated mini model is just $47 today on Groupon. [MINI JAMBOX by Jawbone Wireless Bluetooth Speaker, $47 with code VISA5]

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Today's Best Deals: Wallet Charger, Mechanical Keyboard, BSN Supplements, and More

I’m an unabashed fanboy of Nomad products, and you can save over $100 on a gift set of two today, courtesy of Best Buy.

  • Nomad Roadtrip - A dual-port (one USB-A and one USB-C) car charger with a 3,000mAh rechargeable battery built in. (Normally sells for $60)
  • Nomad Wallet - A genuine saffiano leather wallet with an unobtrusive 2400mAh battery and Lightning cable built in. (Normally sells for $100)

Can you even imagine saving your friend’s dying iPhone with your wallet charger? I bet that alone could earn you a few free drinks at the bar. Just note that this bundle is marketed as a holiday gift set, so my assumption is that once it’s sold out, it’ll be gone for good. [Nomad Holiday Gift Set, $50]

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Today's Best Deals: Wallet Charger, Mechanical Keyboard, BSN Supplements, and More

If your computer is also your favorite gaming machine, we’ve spotted deals on two great Logitech peripherals today.

The venerable G710+ mechanical gaming keyboard (one of your five favorites) is down to $80 on Amazon, which is one of the best prices we’ve ever seen. That price gets you six programmable G-keys, dual-zone backlighting, and quiet mechanical keys. We don’t expect this to last long. [Logitech G710+ Mechanical Gaming Keyboard with Tactile High-Speed Keys - Cherry MX Brown, $80]

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And for all of your chatting needs, Logitech’s G930 surround sound headset is also marked down to $70 for Prime members, which is within $2 of its all-time low price. [Logitech Wireless Gaming Headset G930 with 7.1 Surround Sound, $70]

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Today's Best Deals: Wallet Charger, Mechanical Keyboard, BSN Supplements, and More

We see “toy” drones for $46 fairly frequently, but this model is unlike any other.

Of course, it can fly and record 720p video like similar drones, but with a few modifications, it can also transform into a remote controlled car, or even climb up walls. I own a DJI Phantom, and I still kind of want to buy this thing just to try out the other modes. This was on sale for the same price a few weeks ago, but if you missed out that time, it just came back in stock. [DBPOWER Hawkeye-I, $46]

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B013JNEPNC/...


Today's Best Deals: Wallet Charger, Mechanical Keyboard, BSN Supplements, and More

If you’re still using that $20 metal bed frame you got when you moved into your first apartment, today’s a great opportunity to upgrade to something more...adult.

This platform bed features a faux leather headboard, a wood slat base (read: no box spring), and a clean, simple design. For a limited time, Amazon’s taking an extra 20% off all three sizes when you clip the on-screen coupon, bringing a king down to $200, a queen down to $164, and a full down to $152. Just note that you won’t see the discount until checkout. [Zinus Deluxe Faux Leather Platform Bed with Wooden Slats, $152-$200. Clip the 20% coupon.]

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Today's Best Deals: Wallet Charger, Mechanical Keyboard, BSN Supplements, and More

Assuming it’s legal in your state, a good radar/laser detector can pay for itself over time, and this highly-rated Beltronics RX65 is on sale for just $110 right now, or $26 less than Amazon. [Beltronics RX65 Radar/Laser Detector, $110]

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Today's Best Deals: Wallet Charger, Mechanical Keyboard, BSN Supplements, and More

There’s are many reasons why GoPro’s stock is tanking, but a big one is that you can get a 1080p, waterproof, Wi-Fi and preview screen-equipped action cam for $85. Sure, its picture quality won’t match up to a $500 Hero4 Black, but judging by YouTube videos uploaded by owners, it should be more than adequate for most people. [DBPOWER EX5000 Waterproof Action Camera, $85 with code PP2RP5Z7]

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Today's Best Deals: Wallet Charger, Mechanical Keyboard, BSN Supplements, and More

If your current TV won’t cut the mustard for the Super Bowl, these are your best upgrade options on sale today. Just please, try to refrain from dabbing when the delivery driver shows up.


Today's Best Deals: Wallet Charger, Mechanical Keyboard, BSN Supplements, and More

If you’re having friends over for the Super Bowl, you simply can’t subject them to the feeble, tinny sound of your TV’s built-in speakers. Luckily, this highly-rated LG sound bar comes with a wireless subwoofer for extra bass, and will only set you back $130 today. [LG - 2.1-Channel Soundbar with Wireless Subwoofer, $130]

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Today's Best Deals: Wallet Charger, Mechanical Keyboard, BSN Supplements, and More

I’m not sure if you’ve heard, but The X-Files is back for a six episode revival, and you can get caught up with the (formerly) complete collector’s set for $130 (down from $260), or a double feature with both X-Files films for $15. Just note that this is a Gold Box deal, meaning these prices are only available today, or until sold out.

X-Files: The Collector’s Set ($130) | Amazon

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X-Files Fight Future / X-Files I Want to Believe ($15) | Amazon

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Please don’t poke anyone’s eye out with this thing (said Shep, whose profile picture is a selfie taken with a drone). [Mpow Mini Selfie Stick, $6 with code M6FCSAGN]

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You all seem to love magnetic smartphone dash mounts, but the only major complaint we hear is that they block an air vent. Well, chances are, you have a CD slot in your car that hasn’t been used since the Bush administration, so here’s a clever product that will put it back to work. [Mpow Magnetic CD Slot Phone Holder, $10 with code 5CQWPWP3]

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B01933Q120

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Today's Best Deals: Wallet Charger, Mechanical Keyboard, BSN Supplements, and More

I don’t hunt or shoot guns, but this product fascinates me regardless. Basically, it’s a pair of standard earmuffs to protect your hearing from loud gunshots, but it includes a microphone and speakers in the ear cups to amplify non-harmful noises. That means that normal human speech will come through loud and clear, but once noise levels exceed 82 db, the audio shuts off automatically. That’s really clever. [Howard Leight by Honeywell Impact Pro Sound Amplification Electronic Earmuff, $45]

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A good step stool is something everyone should own, and this highly-rated model folds up to practically nothing. And yet, it can hold up to 300 pounds. Today’s $10 deal is an all-time low. [Greenco Super Strong Foldable Step Stool, $10]

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Today's Best Deals: Wallet Charger, Mechanical Keyboard, BSN Supplements, and More

In today’s era of battery-constrained, USB-powered gadgets, multiport charging hubs are basically a necessity, and we’ve found several great ones on sale today.

Lumsing Smart 40W 5-Port Desktop USB Charger ($15) | Amazon | Use code YHAPSOVW

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Quick Charge 2.0, Anker 60W 6-Port USB Charger ($30) | Amazon

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Tronsmart Titan 10A/90W 5-Port USB Charger Charging Station with Quick Charge 2.0 ($24) | Amazon | Promo code 5USBPORT

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Today's Best Deals: Wallet Charger, Mechanical Keyboard, BSN Supplements, and More

If you want to spend your tax refund on some fresh furnishings for your home, we’ve spotted 30% off at West Elm, $100 off Urban Outfitters couches, and more. Head over here for the complete list. [Home Furnishing Deals]

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Today's Best Deals: Wallet Charger, Mechanical Keyboard, BSN Supplements, and More

If you’ve somehow avoided picking up a copy of Fallout 4 up to this point, Amazon has it for an all-time low $40 on PC, PS4, and Xbox One today, no charisma points required. [Fallout 4 [PS4/Xbox One/PC], $40]

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Today's Best Deals: Wallet Charger, Mechanical Keyboard, BSN Supplements, and More

I’ve got good news and bad news. The truly wireless Moto Hint Bluetooth headset just dropped all the way to $60. That’s bad news for people who bought it for $80 earlier this week (which seemed like a great deal at the time), and great news for everyone else. [Motorola Moto Hint Bluetooth Headset, $60]

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Today's Best Deals: Wallet Charger, Mechanical Keyboard, BSN Supplements, and More

Sometimes, you just have to vacuum in every nook and cranny, if only when you’re expecting guests. This Black & Decker Dustbuster is great for that kind of detail cleaning, or even vacuuming out your car, and $33 is a solid deal. [Black+Decker CHV1510 Dustbuster 15.6-Volt Cordless Cyclonic Hand Vacuum, $33]

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Today's Best Deals: Wallet Charger, Mechanical Keyboard, BSN Supplements, and More

There are plenty of multiport USB chargers with one or two Quick Charge 2.0 ports, but if you’ve fully embraced the Quick Charge lifestyle, this Tronsmart hub has five. [Tronsmart Titan 10A/90W 5-Port USB Charger Charging Station with Quick Charge 2.0, $24 with code 5USBPORT]

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Today's Best Deals: Wallet Charger, Mechanical Keyboard, BSN Supplements, and More

If you’ve ever thought about pulling out your blender to make a smoothie, sauce, or dip, and then held off because you didn’t want to clean 3,000 different parts, this deal is for you.

The big advantage of Cuisinart’s 4.6 star-rated Smart Stick is that, unlike a traditional blender, you can dip it into whatever container you were already using to hold your ingredients; be it a single-serve cup or a huge mixing bowl. That saves you time, and means fewer dishes to clean up once you’re done. Reviewers also say it chops through everything from fruit to ice cubes with no trouble, so it really can be a full blender replacement for most use cases.

As always, we don’t know how long this deal will be available, so be sure to grab one before the price shoots back up. [Cuisinart CSB-75BC Smart Stick 2-Speed Immersion Hand Blender, $31]

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Roll Dice to Smash In Zombie Heads With the Walking Dead Tabletop Miniatures Game

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Roll Dice to Smash In Zombie Heads With the Walking Dead Tabletop Miniatures Game

Thanks to its pervasiveness as both an incredibly long-running comic and one of the most popular shows on TV, The Walking Dead lends itself to a variety of merchandising opportunities. The least expected? A tabletop wargaming venture in the vein of Warhammer, Warmachine, or other games without “War” in the title.

The Walking Dead: All Out War—named after a popular arc from the comic series—comes with the backing of Robert Kirkman and his media company Skybound, sourcing it from the comic book series rather than TWD branded by AMC. Made by Mantic Games, the game will pit groups of human survivors against one another, while zombies serve as a generic third party that throw the spanners in the works while the human groups do battle for resources and survival against the undead hordes.

Roll Dice to Smash In Zombie Heads With the Walking Dead Tabletop Miniatures Game

Rather than going straight to market, Mantic are bringing the game to Kickstarter on February 1, seeking funding for the first run and to essentially act as a preorder system. Fans can pledge more to get bonus models and extra knick knacks, on top of the $125 starter set than includes the rules, accessories, and unpainted models for you to play the game with.

I wonder if there’s some sort of “endless depression” mechanic, just to capture the grim outlook of the comics, a sort of madness mechanic in the vein of Betrayal at the House on the Hill or something. Would be pretty neat! The Walking Dead: All Out War is expected to start shipping in August.

[Via CBR]


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The Witness: The Kotaku Review

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The Witness: The Kotaku Review

While playing The Witness for this review, I wrote an email to its lead creator, Jonathan Blow. It was a moment of weakness.

I feared that Blow’s magnificent new puzzle game had deadended my ability to reach a solution. I sent it on a Saturday afternoon. “I’ve been playing for much of the day and am having a good time,” I wrote. “I’ve solved a LOT of puzzles.” I listed my accomplishments in the game so far. I needed him to know that I hadn’t buckled early.

“One puzzle, though, is really vexing me,” I continued, “I’m not sure if I should be able to solve it yet. I’m wondering if you can tell me if I should be able to solve it or if it is dependent on me doing something else in the game first.”

I view this sort of thing—e-mailing a game developer questions about his difficult game—as a last resort. It’s the thing you do when you’ve tried everything else and are considering, hubristically, that maybe the problem is with the game. You know in the back of your mind that it isn’t, and you’re just a failure.

“It’s this one,” I wrote in my e-mail to Blow, “which seems so simple, and yet...” I attached a photo.

The Witness: The Kotaku Review

A lot of puzzles in The Witness look like that. They’re grids, seldom larger than six by six squares. You come upon them by wandering, in a first-person perspective, through the most beautiful island I’ve ever been to in a video game. The island is densely packed with puzzles, some propped up for you to solve, many others masterfully hidden. Nearly all of them (maybe all of them?) involve drawing lines. That’s it. You walk up to the puzzle, then press a button, which locks you in place and produces a small cursor on the screen. You use the cursor to draw a line.

In the puzzle above, you just need to draw a line from a circle to a nub. That sounds really simple, but trust me, it’s not.

That e-mail to Blow had been a qualified surrender. I didn’t ask him to send me a solution. I just wanted to know if I was in the wrong place at the wrong time. Right after I sent it, I tried the puzzle again and immediately solved it. Three minutes after hitting send, I sent a follow-up: “Never mind. I spent so much time on that one—and way less on the way more complex propellor-symbol puzzles. Man.”

Blow replied quickly, chuckling that that kind of thing happens to him with puzzle games, too. He didn’t say it, but I guess there’s something that happens in your brain when you ask for help; you reassemble the problem and see it from a new angle. I was proud to have figured it out, and to not let Blow get one over on me. That’s one of The Witness’s greatest successes: It creates a wonderfully adversarial contest between its designer and its players.

The Witness’s early puzzles are barely tougher than connect-the-dots. They soon evolve into hour-long stumpers marked with esoteric symbols, governed by hidden rules that must be discovered by solving other puzzles. Sometimes you’ll solve a puzzle and have a eureka moment about a totally different puzzle, halfway across the island. The island is packed with purpose and filled with teases: desert ruins that appear to have broken puzzle panels on them, seemingly unreachable rooftops that have puzzles that surely you’re supposed to be able to access, puzzles on beaches and in jungles, stuff in the town that seems to have to do with stuff in the forest or the temple. What’s the point of that windmill? Of that wrecked ship? Why was there a way-too-easy puzzle all by itself on that log? (I’m dying to tell you the answer to that last one, but I won’t!)

Here’s an early puzzle with just one right answer. You would start by placing the game’s cursor on the circle at the bottom and then trace a line up to one of the nubs at the top. Can you solve it?

The Witness: The Kotaku Review

Figure it out?

Try this:

The Witness: The Kotaku Review


All across the island, simple puzzles are placed next to slightly more difficult ones, each of which wordlessly teaches the player new rules and strategies. The rules for solving one type of puzzle are layered atop the rules for solving another, which gives the game a powerful conceptual depth.

As you play, you emerge from a deep plunge of confusion to bob at the surface and begin to make sense of what’s around you. The more you figure out, the more puzzles you’ll figure out how to access, and the tougher and more satisfying The Witness becomes.

The Witness: The Kotaku Review

I’ve long respected Jonathan Blow’s attempts to do his thing and do it defiantly. He’s suspicious of the way games are typically designed, and was bristling back in 2007 with most video games’ propensity to waste the player’s time with padding like collectibles and scheduled rewards. “I feel like unearned rewards are false and meaningless, yet so many people spend their lives chasing [them],” he told me when I first interviewed him nine years ago. That was a year before he released Braid, the hit time-bending platformer that funded the many subsequent years Blow has spent perfecting this follow-up.

The Witness’s rewards lie in solving its puzzles; in avoiding Blow’s red herrings and other attempts to trick and confound you; in seeing how the puzzles iterate and fit into the game’s larger world, how they interrelate. Sometimes the puzzles unlock new areas or more puzzles. Sometimes they unlock nothing. Sometimes they simply allow you to look at what once seemed impossible and see possibility. Always, solving them is a reward unto itself.

Knowledge is The Witness’s main collectible. The game demonstrates this early on, blocking players’ progress with a puzzle that seems dauntingly complex:

The Witness: The Kotaku Review

When I first saw that puzzle, I assumed it was an end-game challenge.

It’s not.

It’s a laugher, as long as you’ve learned what the black dots, black squares and white squares all mean. You learn most of those things from panels located just a few virtual yards away from the main puzzle, panels that light up one at a time as you solve them:

Solve those rows, go back to that door, and the knowledge you’ve attained will let you easily solve it and pass. When I look at it now, it looks barely more difficult than long division.

Knowing the solutions lets you sequence-break. Replaying the game, I can skip those instructional rows of puzzles and go right to the door. The game has changed me, put something in my brain I didn’t have when I first played it. I didn’t get some virtual ice beam, nor did I unlock a grappling hook or wingsuit. I learned something.

Wander into town after finishing that door and you’ll find puzzles like these, which might as well be written in another language:

The Witness: The Kotaku Review

Right there, as in so much of The Witness, Jonathan Blow is messing with you.

That’s the game.

It’s about me, the player, vs. Jonathan Blow. This is a game in which I have solved more than 450 puzzles and I’d say that in at least 400 of them, he was messing with me, delightfully so, teaching me rules for his puzzles and then guiding me toward a puzzle nearby that twists those rules, that takes my satisfied smartass brain and once again shows me how little I know. His game will teach you that a series of puzzles in a forest is about looking closely at trees and then will present a puzzle where looking closely at trees appears to not produce an answer, except of course it does. You’re just not looking at trees properly. The game will seem to demonstrate that solving a series of puzzles will build a bridge one plank at a time, and then that bridge won’t actually close a gap.

This is The Witness’ most common mode of operation: a staccato series of encounters in which Jonathan Blow fucks with you. He is very good at it. And I’ll be damned if figuring out how to get past each of his tricks hasn’t been the most fun video game thing I’ve done in a long time.

The Witness: The Kotaku Review

I played The Witness with a notebook nearby, scribbling and sketching possible solutions to dozens of puzzles. I took photos of some puzzles with my phone, so I could compare images. The game is dense with well-hidden puzzles, stumbling only when a puzzle requires aiming the game’s first-person camera just so in order to place the cursor and begin tracing a line. Those sorts of perspective challenges can be too finicky, which hurts one of The Witness’s main types of puzzles.

The Witness is a largely abstract game, though it does have a story of sorts. Short, hidden audio files and some videos don’t quite flesh out the narrative—apparently a few that do were not included in my review build of the game—but they reinforce its themes. The puzzles themselves do that as well.

The Witness’s celebration of earnest exploration is articulated by a hidden audio file near the game’s first area, which quotes Albert Einstein: “Of all the communities available to us there is not one I would want to devote myself to, except for the society of the true searchers, which has very few living members at any time.”

A much more deeply-hidden file quotes the spiritual teacher Gangaji reinforces the game’s endorsement of peaceful curiosity over impatient urgency: “...if you choose silence, that is the end of ideas. You are willing to have no idea, to see what is present when there is no idea, past, present, future. No idea of love, no idea of truth, no idea of you, no idea of me. Love is apparent.” In other words, choose silence to recognize the presence of love, rather than actively pursuing it.

Those unmoved by this sort of philosophizing will be free to ignore it, as The Witness leaves the explication of deeper thoughts to its nooks and crannies. The philosophy itself, however, permeates the game.

Taken as a whole, The Witness makes a statement about the lovely balance of knowing and not knowing. Yes, this is a puzzle game, and you’ll be driven to find solutions to puzzles. You may wish that you, too, could email its designer and ask what you’re doing wrong. It is somehow pleasing, though, to play this game while stumped, to let go of the need for satisfaction and victory.

To contact the author of this post, write to stephentotilo@kotaku.com or find him on Twitter @stephentotilo.

A What We Do In The Shadows Sequel Is Coming, and It Has an Amazing Title

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A What We Do In The Shadows Sequel Is Coming, and It Has an Amazing Title

Last year, we named Taika Waititi’s What We Do In The Shadows as one of the best genre films of the year. It’s the mockumentary story of a group of vampires who live together. Now, not only do we have some more concrete news of a sequel, we know its title.

Speaking to Crave Online, Waititi revealed it’ll be called We’re Wolves. As in “We are wolves” as well as “Werewolves.” Previous news suggested the film would focus on the group of rival werewolves in the original film, so this seems like a confirmation. Here’s the clip to refresh your memory.

As for when we’ll see We’re Wolves, it won’t be for a while. Waititi is currently at Sundance promoting his latest comedy, Hunt For the Wilderpeople, and after that will be making a little movie called Thor: Ragnarok. That’s already slotted for a November 3, 2017 release so he has to make that first, and then will work on We’re Wolves.

Waititi and What We Do In The Shadows co-star and co-writer Jemaine Clement are in the process of crafting the story of We’re Wolves—so filming a Marvel movie in the meantime seems like the perfect way to spend two years.

[Crave Online, H/T /Film]

The FBI Claims Not to Have a File on David Bowie

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The FBI Claims Not to Have a File on David Bowie

Hmmmm.......

And yes, I did ask for any files under his real name, David Robert Jones, as well.

The FBI Claims Not to Have a File on David Bowie

Maybe I should’ve asked for Ziggy Stardust. Sounds like an illegal alien if you ask me. Get it. Wait, do you get it? I said, it sounds like an illegal alien if you ask me.

(AP Photo/Matt Dunham)

Take an Audio Tour of Classic Paintings Transformed Into Soundscapes

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Take an Audio Tour of Classic Paintings Transformed Into Soundscapes

Many have savored the arresting visual beauty of Raphael’s “Madonna del Prato” (1505). Now you can listen to it as well, thanks to a new series by Athens-based artist and physicist Yiannis Kranidiotis, who transformed this and other classic paintings into haunting digital soundscapes.

Kranidiotis studied physics at the University of Partas in Greece, but his interest in the interactions between light and sound—also featured in his earlier light installations—has its roots in a course on lasers and optics he took at Essex University in the UK. Combine that with his musical background, and you have the makings of his “Ichographs” series.

Sound and light (color) are both wave-based phenomena and hence have similar properties, such as frequency, wavelength, and amplitude (loudness). “As a physicist, I was always fascinated by these common properties and I was investigating ways to highlight and juxtapose them,” he told The Creator’s Project.

Take an Audio Tour of Classic Paintings Transformed Into Soundscapes

Kranidiotis broke up in Raphael’s masterpiece into 10,000 little cubic particles, and then translated all the colors of those particles into corresponding frequencies of sound. Reds are warmer colors and are associated with higher frequencies (up to 800Hz), for instance, while blues are colder hues and correspond to lower frequencies (down to 50Hz). He chose the Raphael painting in part because of the high contrasts it generated in the digital transformation. As he writes on his Website:

As the camera moves around we hear the sound that all these 10,000 moving colors/frequency generators are producing. The loudness of each particle is proportional to the distance from viewer. As a result, when we pass over over Madonna’s scarlet dress, we hear the high “red” frequencies; conversely, as it scans fragments of the blue sky, we start hearing the low “blue” frequencies.

He’s also turned other paintings into soundscapes, notably Georges Seurat’s “Bathers at Asnieres” (1884) and Claude Monet’s “Rouen Cathedral, West Facade” (1894). Check out a sampling of those soundscapes in the video below.

[Via Open Culture and The Creator’s Project]

Images courtesy of Yiannis Kranidiotis. Used with permission.


10 Movies Based on a True Story That Had Different Endings in Real Life

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10 Movies Based on a True Story That Had Different Endings in Real Life

When movies are based on a true story, every movie goer above the age of twelve knows that movie studios have no intention of actually telling the true story. Things are sensationalized, characters are fictionalized, and the movie ends up looking nothing like real life. But what is interesting is that after the movie ends and that screen of text pops up before the credits telling us what the real life characters are doing now, that that’s expected to be treated with a little more seriousness.

Of course, that’s not true. Things are purposefully tweaked to heighten a happy ending or purposefully left out to hide the ugly truth. Like how Titanic charged its drowned employees families for fees relating their uniform or how Jordan Belfort in The Wolf of Wall Street didn’t serve anywhere close to his sentence or paid back all of his fines. Here’s ScreenRants full list:


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