November 2007


We will soon be seeing Will Smith’s I Am Legend on the big screen, as it will be released worldwide in either December or January, depending where you live in the world. Speaking of globalness, here are some pretty cool posters of well known landmarks after the virus took a hold of the population.

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It’s not really fair to poke fun I suppose. Our kids will laugh with we’re 60 and we don’t know which button turns on the garbage disposal and which one vents plasma from the starbord nacelles.

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MTV Networks plans to make every clip from every episode of hit animated comedy “South Park” available for free online next year as part of a strategy to reach consumers everywhere.

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“A visit to Gamespot shows that the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 game has taken over the site very prominently, with backgrounds and multiple banner ads all featuring Kane & Lynch.”

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Dual emotions of surprise and confusion hit our faces when we heard that Sony’s redesigned PSP-2000 had shipped 1 million units in Japan in just about two months. Wasn’t the DS the portable gaming machine everyone preferred, especially in Japan?

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Ten years ago, the actions of a sitting President led to a debate most Americans never expected to see. Oh, for those happy carefree days.

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When the Daily News reported on an exhibit at the New York Public Library of photos of George Bush, Dick Cheney, Karl Rove, and Condoleezza Rice doctored to look like prison mug shots, it touched only lightly on the artistic purposes of the display and appeared to be deliberately aiming to stir up political controversy.

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A bill recently passed in the House has some observers upset over its finding that the Internet has “aided in facilitating violent radicalization.” Ars takes a closer look at the bill to see if there’s really cause for concern.

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During the November 28 CNN special Campaign Killers: Why Do Negative Ads Work?, CNN “anchor” Campbell Brown propagandized, err reported: “General David Petraeus made his reputation taking on insurgents in Iraq. But when he came to Capitol Hill in September, he was confronted by American insurgents, a liberal anti-war group called MoveOn.org.”

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5. Each time she posted a new photo, someone she knew would post an image that looked almost exactly the same.

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