Shauncastic Podcast – Disney Afternoons

Category : Featured, Guest Appearances

If you are lucky enough to be my age, you had an amazing childhood. You played outside and your parents didn’t need to know where you were as long as you were home by the time the street lights came on; you experienced the evolution of video game consoles into the media machines we know today; and, you remember Disney afternoon cartoons.

Recently, I made a guest appearance on Shauncastic to talk about Disney afternoon cartoons. Together, with Shaun and Nathan, we discuss how these programs weren’t just cartoons for kids. Plus, Shaun sits down with Christina to review Barbarella: Queen of the Galaxy in the “Intro to Geek” segment.

Courtesy of SPANengRISH Ramblings

Click the link below to listen to the episode on the Shauncastic website!
Shauncastic 122: Disney Afternoons

While you are there, be sure to check out the other great episodes!
Like them on Facebook!
Also, check out the Women of Geekdom 2013 Calendar!

 

RevNews 10/31/12 – Disney Buys Star Wars

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Category : Bytes, Featured, Geek Out, Geek Rants, Guest Appearances, News

Unless you have been residing under a very large rock, you have heard the big news – Disney bought Lucasfilm, Ltd. In a move no one saw coming, the house that Mickey built found the droids they were looking for when they paid George Lucas $4.05 Billion dollars for the Lucasfilm empire. Among it’s vast holdings, Lucasfilms owns the rights to two hugely successful franchises, Star Wars & Indiana Jones. Along with the rights to these franchises and many more, Disney picks up the production powerhouses Industrial Light & Magic (ILM), as well as Skywalker Sound, which provide production services to a large percentage of the film and television industry.

 

 

I had the opportunity to appear as a guest on the RevolutionSF RevNews podcast to discuss the sale and the ramifications this transfer could have on the future of some beloved franchises. Also on this episode of the RevNews podcast are Gary Mitchel (Host, RevolutionSF.com), Dash (Shauncastic, Women of Geekdom Calendar), Shaun Rosado (Shauncastic) and Matt Cowger (RevolutionSF.com).

Click here to listen to the episode: http://traffic.libsyn.com/revolutionsf/121031_RevNews_Disney_Buys_Star_Wars.mp3

A Conversation with The Guild Co-Star Amy Okuda

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Category : Candid Conversations, Conventions, E-vents, Featured, Geek Out, GraniteCon, Watching the Web

 

I don’t go to conventions for the costumes. I don’t go to conventions for the swag. I go to conventions for the guests. Granite State Comicon has always been able to produce some pretty amazing guests, and this year was no exception.

Seeing guests like Jason Ciarmella, writer of Joe Hill’s The Cape, and Godzilla, and Mark McKenna of Invincible Ironman and The Punisher fame, was exactly the kind of guest list I was hoping for. Then I saw another familiar face. Amy Okuda, star of the award winning web series The Guild. In only a matter of minutes, I composed and sent an email to her manager requesting an interview.  Being very proud of myself (as I am prone to be), I got on twitter and told everyone about my intention to interview “Tinkerballa” at the convention. The reply I soon received was not the overwhelming excitement I had hoped for.

It actually went something like this…

FRAK!!!! I should have checked that out, before I got all email and twitter crazy! It felt like I was crit by an 85 Mage.  But hey, the guest lists are always subject to change. That’s just the nature of the business. How could I be disappointed hearing Amy was filming?

Fast forward two days and I hear Professor Farnsworth exclaim, “Good News Everyone!”(That’s the email alert on my phone, btw.) Amy’s manager had replied to my email with an apology for Amy’s inability to make it to Granite State ComiCon, and asked if I would be able to do a phone interview. So, alas, here it is.

TJ:  Hi, Amy.

Amy: How are you?

TJ:  Thank you so much for taking the time to talk to me today!

Amy: Oh, of course.

Amy: I was supposed to meet you in New Hampshire, right?

TJ:  Yes!

Amy: I’m sorry about that.

TJ:  No, that’s perfectly okay, you have a job you have to keep up with, so that’s understandable.

Amy: Yeah, thankfully I have a job. It’s good to have work.

TJ: Yeah, they don’t just give those away in L.A.

Amy:  Yeah, you take what you can get.

TJ:  So before you started acting, you were a young basketball player?

Amy: (Haha) I was. Yeah, a lot of basketball.

TJ:  Then from basketball you went into dancing.

Amy: Yeah.  I injured myself playing basketball.  I think I was 12 or 13, and playing against girls who were already six feet tall.   I got injured and my chiropractor told me to go and take dance classes to stretch out my body, and I kind of fell in love with it.  So, I dropped basketball and went in to dance.

TJ:  Was the transition from dancing to actress a natural one?

Amy: Yeah, kind of. I met my manager that I’m still with when I was dancing. I probably met her when I was 14, and she started managing me when I was about 16. I was doing a lot of commercials and print jobs as a dancer, kids’ kind of stuff, and she told me, “You need to get into acting so you can get more work.” I liked it more, mostly because the dance world was a little much for me. I think if I were to go into it now, it probably wouldn’t be as overwhelming.  I was 16, and you had to get out and party with the right people. The dance world is very small, even smaller than Hollywood, and I don’t think I was ready for the social aspect of it when I was 16.

TJ:  I bet dancing was super competitive, too.

Amy: It’s really competitive. Yeah.  I mean, when I was actually doing it I was still working in kids’ jobs, so it wasn’t as bad.  I think when you’re getting older and you’re auditioning for the real stuff, like touring with Britney Spears, it probably is very competitive, because not very many people get to that.  But, you know, acting is really competitive too, so it’s not like it’s getting easier.

TJ:  I can imagine that the realm of acting is probably as cutthroat as dancing is.

Amy: Yeah, yeah, it really is.

TJ:  So, you had a role in Californication.

Amy: (Haha) Yeah.

TJ:  Which was pretty early on in your career, which I think is a big get for someone that was your age.

Amy: Yeah, It got me my SAG card so that was good (Haha.)

TJ: …and now Chastity Bites is in postproduction.

Amy:  It was my first movie.  I was really excited.  I had a lot of fun.  It was an indie, so it was pretty similar to filming something like The Guild, just because it was still pretty low-budget. The scheduling and everything was pretty similar also, because we shot everything…umm…I think it was about six weeks that we were in production.  It was really, really fun.   I got to work with a lot of really cool young actors on it.   I got to work with Allison Scagliotti from Warehouse 13, and that was really cool.  It’s a horror-comedy.   I think it’s in the same sci-fi geek genre, so my fans would like it.   It’s not like some romantic comedy or anything, so I think it was a good first film for me.

TJ: Awesome. I’m excited. Do you know when the release date is?

Amy: They’re still in postproduction. It’s a horror and everything, so there’s a lot of special effects and all that stuff happening. They’re aiming for September I believe, or that’s what I’ve been told, so they can start submitting it to film festivals.  They can get into that circuit for next year, probably.  I’m excited.  I want to go to a film festival.  I’ve never been to one. Well, I’ve been to a couple of very small ones, but hoping to get into some other really cool ones.

TJ:  Maybe when the time comes we can do a Chastity Bites interview.

Amy: I know! Yeah, for sure, I would love to.

TJ:  Now you just mentioned The Guild, which I think is probably your most obvious work. It has an amazing cult following.

Amy: Yeah.  It’s crazy.  It’s really crazy, because when I auditioned for it we were just making a random YouTube video, you know? We weren’t getting paid.  It was just Felicia [Day] writing the script and she thought it was funny, and we all thought it was funny too, so we were all just making it, and now it’s a real job.

TJ:  The writing is spectacular.  It’s top-notch comedy, and it’s a great commentary on not only gaming, but about the social life of gamers.   I think gamers often have an anti-social stigma.

Amy: Yeah, I think it’s really cool because The Guild‘s cast is so diverse, you know? We have Jeff Lewis, who is a 40-year-old guy.  Then we have Vince, who is a 15-year-old.  Then there’s me and Robin.  Everyone is so diverse. It goes to show that gaming can be social because these people would never be friends if it wasn’t for the game.  I think [Felicia] really portrays that well.

TJ:  Now speaking of social, you seem like a really happy and upbeat person, but your character, Tinkerballa…well, Tinkerballa, not so much.

Amy: (Haha) Yeah, I think we all have the bitchy side to us, and I just kind of channel that. It’s really fun to play her.  Tink is kind of what everyone else wants to be but can’t, because of the social protocols we have to follow.

TJ:  Yeah.  There’s not much of a filter with Tink.

Amy: I know and I love that, you know? I have my moments where I’m very much like her.  I just blurt out what I think and I don’t really care, you know? If I don’t like you, I don’t like you.  I’m not going to be fake about it, and that’s how Tink is.

TJ:  I have noticed though, through the progression of the seasons, especially season five, there’s a lot more humanity in Tink.   I think she’s a lot more tolerable of other people.

Amy: Yeah. This season was really exciting to play just because I didn’t even know much about Tink playing her for the last four seasons.  So, when Felicia let me read the script for season five, I felt like I finally understood her.  In a sense, it was like, “Oh, hello, nice to meet you character I’ve been playing for four years.” (Haha)

TJ:  There was a major character development for Tink in season five.

Amy: *SEASON FIVE SPOILER ALERT* Yeah.  It was really, really cool.  I felt like I really related to her a lot this season because I didn’t really tell people that I was acting when I first started The Guild.  Literally, the last one or two years is when my friends found out about The Guild because it has gotten so big that people would find me on Netflix. The girls in my sorority would be like, “Oh my God, Amy’s in this show and it’s on Netflix.” Even though they don’t really understand it, they just know that I’m in this thing and it’s on Netflix, and [they think] if it’s on Netflix it’s a really huge deal.  So, people found out about it like that.  You know personally, I felt better when people knew.  I think it was the same way with Tink when she came out to her parents about her major.  So I totally had that connection.

TJ:  There was also social commentary telling people to follow their dreams as well.  Who knew Tink could be an inspiring character?

Amy: (Haha) Yeah, who knew?

TJ:  Now, it has been announced that you’re going to be unable to make it to the Granite State ComiCon.

Amy: Yeah. I mean, I’ve never really had to cancel going to a convention before, so I told my manager,  I asked what I should do. I still want to send them head shots or autographs to give away at another event or something. I feel bad because I’ve seen other people cancel at conventions that I’ve been to, and I see how disappointed people can get. You think you’re going to get to meet somebody at this event and if they don’t show up it’s like, “Well, what the heck?” But, I think people understand.

TJ:  It seems like people have been very supportive and understanding.

Amy: Our fans are so great. They’re so loyal and happy and they understand that we’re real people.  I think that’s what’s great about being on a web series, is that no one really puts you on a pedestal. You’re just human, and people are just happy when you get work and you are doing a good job.  It’s very encouraging.

TJ: What is it that you’re filming? Is it something new, or a secret?

Amy: I don’t really know if it’s a secret, so I’m going to be vague about it in case it is a secret.  You’re probably aware that YouTube is launching a bunch of channels for their initiative for original content, so I am going to be on a series on one of those channels.  It’s actually an Asian American channel.  It’s not all Asian American, but it’s very much promoting Asian American talent and whatnot. It will be a web series.   Yeah, it will be exciting to do something different.  My character is very different than anything I’ve played before, so it will be fun.

TJ:  I think that’ll do.  It gives us something to look forward to. So what questions do you usually get asked by fans, or when interviewed?

Amy: Questions like, “How did you get involved in The Guild?” Or, lately it’s been a lot of questions about season five like, “How did you feel about your character storyline?” From fans I get asked, “Are you like your character? Are you a bitch, too?” Or, “Do you actually game?” That’s actually a big one I get asked by everybody.

TJ:  Well, I’ll be scratching a couple questions off my list.  So, after looking at your website and having talked to you, I’m going to guess that you’re not a gamer.

Amy:  No, I am not a gamer. You can tell that just by talking to me?

TJ: By seeing all of the projects you have going and the time that I’ve spent talking to you today, it sounds like you wouldn’t have a lot of time to be a gamer.

Amy: Well, I do like to play some games.  It’s more like console games than computer MMOs. I actually tried to play WoW, because we got a free subscription one year.  I thought, “Okay, I’ll try this out.” It took two hours to even create a character.  You choose your hair color, and your eye color, and your fingernail color.  You come up with a name and it’s your name forever, so there’s a lot of pressure.

TJ: It’s pretty involved.

Amy: Yeah, it was little too much. After two hours I was just tired and I was over it.  I thought, “If it takes this much effort to even create a character, what will I have to do when I’m actually playing?” So, I actually just gave my subscription away to somebody else and they enjoyed it.  Other than that, I went through a phase where I was always playing my Nintendo DS, like Mario Kart.  I have a Nintendo Wii that I play a lot, but other than that, not too many games.

TJ:  So not completely excluded from the genre?

Amy: Yeah, I feel like when I first started The Guild, I had no idea what the culture even entailed in any sense at all.   There were a lot of lines that had WoW lingo and I was like, “What am I even saying?” I’m learning.

TJ:  So, you went to San Diego Comic Con.  Do you get invited to hundreds of conventions a year?

Amy: Not that many, but I feel like in the past two years I’ve been to a lot and I’ve been able to really cool places, so that’s been fun.  I just came back from London a couple weeks ago.  I went to a convention and that was awesome because I have never been to Europe before. We went to London and Paris and I thought, “This isn’t even a job anymore.”  I just get to meet fans that enjoy what I do, and travel the world.  I’ve had a pretty good life.

TJ:  I bet there are a lot of people who would love the opportunity to live a day in your shoes.

Amy: I cannot complain.  I mean I do catch myself a lot after I’ve been on the set for 12 or 15 hours and I say to myself, “I’m so tired, blah, blah, blah,” but I have no reason to complain.  I have a pretty easy job. I mean, I just say words that are written on paper, and have makeup on me, and do my hair, and I get to travel the world.  I like what I do and I get paid for it, so I really don’t have much to complain about.

TJ:  Do you bring Lola [Amy’s dog] around with you?

Amy:  No.  Lola has never flown before.  Actually, Felicia is always like, “We have to put her in the show,” but we never actually do.  It’s really sad.  She’s just waiting for her big break, still.

TJ:  Obviously everybody has a good dynamic on set, what is the cast dynamic off set?

Amy:  We all get along pretty well.  I know everyone has to say that because they work in a show together.  Honestly, I do enjoy everyone’s company. It has been awesome because we’re able to travel together and go to cons, but unfortunately, the whole cast doesn’t get to go very often.  We get to go in groups of two or three and we have a lot of fun.  It’s just crazy, because in real life I would’ve never met them if it wasn’t for The Guild, but they’re my best friends. Like Robin, she’s one of my best friends and it’s really cool that I like the people that I work with.  Felicia teaches me a lot and so do Jeff and Sandeep, because they’ve been acting for so much longer.  It’s pretty cool to be on set and just learn from them.  Jeff lectures me a lot on life.  Sometimes he yells at me, but it’s all out of love, we all love each other.

TJ:  Speaking of traveling together, in season five, The Guild went to a convention. How close are your convention experiences to that which was portrayed on The Guild?

Amy:  I guess it was pretty accurate.  I mean, I guess our production designer, the art department, and our crew made these booths look way better than any convention that we’ve been to, like the steam punk booth. If real conventions looked like that, I would never be at my autograph booth.  I’d walk around the whole entire time.   So I thought they did a really good job on that.   I mean, everything is just a little heightened for comedy and for the show to be entertaining. The whole celebrity aspect of it, I thought, was kind of a little over exaggerated in a sense. I think that’s what Felicia wanted to do with season five was kind of have it be a homage to conventions, because that’s how we grew as a show. By going to conventions, and growing our own show, and having fans talk about it.  So the whole part where Bladezz was giving out his head shots and people were throwing them into the trash can, she said she got that from when we went to the comic con for the first time.  This was probably maybe season two, or very early on.  No one knew about the show,   really.  We were at comic con at this really tiny booth, and maybe one or two people would come by and be like, “Love the show.”  She would go out and give out The Guild bookmarks and say, “Watch my show, watch my show!” No one would take bookmarks from her.  People would just ignore her and a lot of that.

TJ:  What was the turning point?

Amy:  When Dr. Horrible came out it really gave us a big push.  I think because Felicia was in it and people were like, “Oh, who is this girl?”  I realized this was really cool when the “Date My Avatar” video came out. We premiered it at the San Diego Comic Con.  It’s kind of unfortunate, because we were outside when the video was playing.  They played the video first at the panel, and we were listening at the door.  So, the whole thing was going to be, they would play the video, and then we come out in our avatar outfits and do our panel in our costumes.  They loved it so much, and after the video we all came out, and everybody was standing up and cheering.   It was the first time I ever saw the physical reaction from people to our show, and I thought that was really cool, because we see comments on YouTube and a lot of them are really mean.   They’re just writing, and you don’t actually see the physical applause or craze, I guess, for the work you do, so I was like, “Wow, people actually like this. All these people came out and watch this video.” That was really cool.

TJ:  If you could tell someone about yourself who hasn’t met you and only has your body of work to reference, what would you like people to know about Amy Okuda?

Amy: Good question, no one has asked me that before…that I’m not a bitch? I think a lot of people actually think that this is their job, and that they’re famous, and that they’ve made it, but I’m still very much a struggling actress. I think that we all just work really, really hard, and it’s fun, but it’s not always smooth sailing.  A lot of people, when they see you on the show, they just think that life is so easy and that everything is taken care of, even though we are a web series.  I know that there are a few people that ask, “Oh, well, what’s it like to be famous?” I’m definitely not famous.

TJ:  I told a few friends of mine that I was going to be interviewing you today, and they got excited like you are famous, so I wouldn’t sell yourself short.

Amy: I still feel like I have a long way to go.

TJ:  And you’re just about to tell me about season six of The Guild?

Amy: Oh, yes, I will tell you every detail.  No, I think that we all have good intentions of it happening, so we’re working on it.  You don’t always know until you’re on set that it’s actually going to happen, and even when you’re on set they could just cancel production one day, so it’s kind of hard to say.  I want to do it, so if they told me to be on set on a certain day I would be there. But look out for it, it could happen.

TJ:  Any other upcoming projects?

Amy: I’m also guest starring on another new web series.  It’s called, Away We Happened.  One of my episodes already came out, but I think I may be in one or two more, so check that out. If you type that in YouTube it will do its little magic and I’m thinking you will be able to find it.  It’s also on my tumblr, and I tweet about it all the time @amyokuda. My movie will be out later this year.  Not that my fans watch it, but I’ll be on three episodes of Disney’s Shake it Up in August.   That’ll be cool to actually see me on TV. Just keep checking my Twitter, I always update it, and my tumblr.

TJ:  I will.  Actually, a friend of mine looked at your Twitter account yesterday and noted that you really talk back to people who talk to you, and I think that’s awesome.

Amy:  Yeah, I try my best.  I think what really made me start doing it even more, was when a couple months ago I went to a Kansas City convention.  I’ve never had so many people tell me that it’s really cool I talk to my fans, like,  ”Oh, we had this conversation on twitter.” I actually remembered some of it, and just the fact that people appreciate me made me want to do it even more.

TJ:  Thank you for talking to me today!

Amy:  It was my pleasure!

Good To Be A Gamer Podcast, Episode 119 – Week of 03/18/2012

Category : Featured, Good To Be A Gamer

Episode 119 – Week of 03/18/12 through 03/24/12

Recorded 03/25/2012

 

 
Good To Be A Gamer is Available on iTunes! http://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/good-to-be-a-gamer/id476489256
Good To Be A Gamer RSS Feed! http://goodtobeagamer.libsyn.com/rss


NEWS
Prey 2 canceled (rumor)
http://zoknowsgaming.com/2012/03/25/prey-2-cancelled-bethesda-rumor/

Socom dev to be shut down? (rumor)
http://games.on.net/article/15210/Rumour_Sony_to_Close_SOCOM_Dev_Studio

EA Shuts Down Game Servers [EA]
http://www.ea.com/1/service-updates

Silicon Knights resurrect “most requested” IP
http://www.vg247.com/2012/03/25/silicon-knights-to-resurrect-most-requested-ip/

Epic Mikey 2 Promises to Build A Better Mouse [1UP]
http://www.1up.com/previews/epic-mickey-two-preview
Announcement Trailer -http://youtu.be/p6ymMqNzTZk
Nicole Wakelin “Total Fan Girl” Reviews Disney Epic Mikey -http://www.goodtobeageek.com/?p=507

GameStop Goes Big on Mobile with New Business Unit, BuyMyTronics Acquisition [Gamasutra]
http://www.gamasutra.com/view/news/167119/GameStop_goes_big_on_mobile_with_new_business_unit_BuyMyTronics_acquisition.php?

Playing Dead with Telltale Games & The Walking Dead Game Available for Pre-Order [Telltale Games]
http://www.telltalegames.com/walkingdead/page1

When ex-BioWare Devs Make Their Own Strategy RPG [Gamasutra]
http://www.gamasutra.com/view/news/165823/When_exBioWare_devs_make_their_own_strategy_RPG.php?

BioWare done with Dragon Age II [Destructoid]
http://www.destructoid.com/bioware-done-with-dragon-age-ii-224263.phtml

Darksiders II to be Wii U Lanch Title, Adds Enhanced Controls [Digital Spy]
http://www.digitalspy.com/gaming/news/a372533/darksiders-ii-to-be-wii-u-launch-title-adds-enhanced-controls.html

Adventure Time Game in Works at WayForward [GameSpot]
http://www.gamespot.com/news/adventure-time-game-in-works-at-wayforward-6367736

PSA: Hunger Games: Girl On Fire Out Today [Joystiq]
http://www.joystiq.com/2012/03/22/psa-hunger-games-girl-on-fire-out-today/

Video Games Live “Off The Grid” Tour – Coming To a Small Town Near You [Video Games Live]
http://www.videogameslive.com/index.php?story=288

ITEMS OF INTEREST
The Witness – Latest work in progress from Braid designer Jonathan Blow
http://the-witness.net/
Zynga’s CEO on Leadership, Startups & Mobile Gaming [GigaOM]
http://gigaom.com/2012/03/19/mark-pincus-interview-by-om-malik/
Get a Tattoo or Mohawk from Ubisoft at PAX East [Destructoid]
http://www.destructoid.com/get-a-tattoo-or-mohawk-from-ubisoft-at-pax-east-224455.phtml

Mass Effect 3 ending explained (by a fan) (SPOILERS!!)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ythY_GkEBck

Bioware responds to ME3 outcry
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-501465_162-57401660-501465/mass-effect-3-apology-bioware-co-founder-releases-statement/

 

EVENTS
PAX East
BCEC – Boston, MA
April 4-8, 2012
http://east.paxsite.com/

CONTACT
Questions? Comments? We want to hear from you! Feel free to post a comment on the podcast entry athttp://www.goodtobeageek.com, or email us at gamer@goodtobeageek.com. You can also email David at dlucier[at]goodtobeageek.com, email Jessa at jphillips[at]goodtobeageek.com.
Special thanks to Sterling for the use of his music in the podcast. Be sure to check out hisMagnatune profile pageto learn more about him and discover more of his music.


Good To Be A Gamer is sponsored by Good To Be A Geek – let your geek run wild! Opinions expressed on Good To Be A Gamer are those of the hosts and/or guests and do not necessarily represent those of Good To Be A Geek.

 Good To Be A Geekis licensed under aCreative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License

 

How Betty & Veronica, Uncle Scrooge and a Lonely Octopus Save Christmas

4

Category : Comics, Entertain Me, Featured, Geek Out, Holiday

Horsefeathers! Hildy just e-mailed me and I say, Ba-loney! I’m absolutely zozzled with disbelief!

I don’t want to make a beef about this, but here’s the dish. If you recall my previous post, I told you cats I was off to Boston for a Beacon Hill Christmas. I also mentioned it’s no simple jaunt, spending up loads of my energy to get there. Sure, ghost travel ain’t the big brodie yours is, but it’s still no basket of blackberries in July. Well, guess what, kids? Dr. Harvey & Hildy, good ol’ Mum and Daddy, won’t be having a Beantown Christmas this year because they’re headed for Hawaii! Well, I told them that’s all wet! How could they? I’ve been saving up since summer for the Road to New England and they go all Santa-in-a-grass-skirt on me!

 

Hannah Hart? We found these in an old Next Day Air igloo at Lindbergh Field

 

To make matters worse, they’re taking big bro Hugh with them. It looks like I’m all alone, Santa Baby. Just my little dog Lindy and Moi. Home for the holidays suddenly doesn’t seem quite the raspberry I thought it was. Plus, how am I supposed to get all my presents? Try to receive a package as a ghost, or deliver one for that matter. The current residents inevitably either keep the goods or send them back marked No longer at this address. Duh, Dumb Dora. Even brown can’t do that. Murder!

 

 

Well, I’m nothing if not a Pink Gin is half-full kind of kitten. I suppose the upside is not only do I get a respite from Harvey & Hildy’s foxtrot flaunts, but I also get to remain in San Diego, in my gorgeous Hotel del Coronado. Boyzo! Is it ever bonkers with Christmas spirit! Better than that? I think I spied an old chum lurking over a Gibson in the Babcock & Story – and I do mean old . . . she’s been here longer than I. Dr. Lucia Devereaux, oceanographer, was the first hot scientist at Scripps Institution of Oceanography. She also had a knack for tinkering and a fascination with the new electricity fads of the day: a deadly avocation when combined with her vocation.

Pauvre Onslow: as commemorative holiday decor

Dr. Lucy’s been haunting the hotel since 1904 when – The Del being the world’s first resort to use electrical lighting – she naively tried to teach Onslow, her pet octopus, whom she housed in the hotel pool, how to run the nighttime deck lights. One sad splash! and that was it: she would reside where she died. Legend has it Onslow scuttled back out to sea before he died and today he still tarries about the shoreline, only able to see his Lucy from afar. Sometimes at night, you can see them waving to each other: Onslow’s tentacles from the sea, she her handkerchief from her attic laboratory. Each Christmas Eve since then, if one listens carefully over the crashing waves of midnight, one hears Dr. Lucy singing his favorite poem, Lord Octopus Went to the Christmas Fair by Stella Mead (1934). It’s haunting, really. Lord Octopus went to the Christmas Fair; an hour and a half he was traveling there …

 

She’s been adventurous lately, leaving her lab, now that steampunk is all the rage. Lucy’s a sucker for anything Victorian and mechanical. Lucky for her, the hotel gift shops have a plethora of steampunk décor and accoutrement: Onslow Christmas ornaments, clockwork art, vintage styled jewelry and sartorial finery galore for gentlemen and ladies in the posh hotel boutiques. If I can keep her out of the lab, I think it could be a nobby Christmas! Maybe Harvey & Hildy going to Hawaii is the best pressie after all. These hotel holidaymakers won’t know what hit when we jazzy kittens jolly up the joint!

 

Until the Christmas wingdings begin, I’ve got more than enough seasonal cheer and swell weather to keep me chipper. Best of all, I’ve got a stack of Mickey Mouse Magazines, Carl Barks’ Uncle Scrooge Adventures and even a few modern copies of Betty and Veronica. Oh, I do like that sassy and shiny Veronica! You wouldn’t find Miss Veronica Lodge at The Del in flip-flops and elastic-waist shorts … like some of you. (Cats, try to remember it’s an upscale resort when you visit. U.S. presidents, dignitaries and film stars holiday here. At least, please don’t wear your jim-jams out of your hotel room.)

Comic books for a chickadee like me? And how! You think all you alligators with your Superman, Spiderman and Star Wars tales cornered the market on comic book furor? Think again, dolls! Disney ink first hit the pulp in 1930 and I’ve been hooked like an old lady on a favorite Atlantic City slot machine ever since. I’ve even still got my very first comic book ever, a stocking stuffer in either ’31 or ’32: Mickey Mouse in Death Valley. Uncle Scrooge, Huey, Dewey, Louie and those brazen Beagle Boys have been taking this muffin on adventure after adventure for over eighty years. Topping the stack currently is my 1949 Walt Disney’s Christmas Parade.  My faves though? The Egyptian escapades; nothing’s funnier than a mummy chasing Donald Duck! Throw in Mickey and Goofy afoot of a mystery in the Scottish Highlands and you’ve got some rip-roaring good yarns! Don’t forget to check your Junior Woodchuck Guidebook for tips on overseas mysteries, just in case you’re headed to exotic lands for the holidays. (I hope Harvey & Hildy packed their copy!)

 

Now, I’ve got to go change. The Travel Channel is on the premises shooting Skating by the Sea: The Del’s beachside ice skating. First, I have to dig up my fur-trimmed, Sonja Henie skating dress, my white, velvet muff and then it takes forever to do my finger curls. (Listen up, broads. Ghost locks are paper-thin and refuse to hold a curl; whatever you died with, you pretty much keep forever. So, if you have some idea of when you’re going out, make sure your hair is looking spiffy.) As soon as I’m cute n’ camera-ready, I’ll dash over and make a few spins around the ice rink. See, when they get around to editing next year’s Travel Channel Hallowe’en specials, they’ll remember they think they saw yours truly in some of the Christmas footage. Hey, it’s good B-roll for them and I get to keep my footy in the flickers.

 

Dr. Lucy, wait!

 

Okay, dolls. Tootles and Happy Holid … wait, is that Dr. Lucy? Ahhh, it is! Sure enough, she’s headed for the bar! I think I have time for a quick G&T à la B&S. Damn, I’m never going to get to my comic books. Whilst she and I catch up, perhaps some of you can suggest other great comics (any new steampunk series?) and holiday cocktails for Lucy, Lindy and Moi this Christmas @JennyPopNet.

 

 

 

Abyssinia, babies!
@JennyPopNet
Hannah’s fave place to haunt online? https://www.amazon.com/author/jenniferdevore

Game Review – Epic Mickey: Where is Oswald?

2

Category : Game On, Reviews

cross posted at Total Fan Girl

We’re an Xbox 360 family because my husband is a hardcore gamer.  I can’t generally play games with him because he’s so good, that he leaves me in the dust where I inevitably get shot to pieces by the enemy.  Many times.  And then I get angry and controllers fly….it’s a bad scene.  I do really enjoy watching him play though because so many games now have fully developed story lines and characters.  I wanted to see if Shepard would save the world and get the girl in Mass Effect, and I kept hoping beyond hope that Marston would find his family safe at the end of Red Dead Redemption.  If a game is just about hopping from level to level, shooting bad guys and racking up points, it’s just not as interesting to me.  Those games have their place, but they are not as immersive or as impressive as games with fully fleshed out worlds and characters.  Epic Mickey promised to be my kind of game.

Everyone is familiar with Walt Disney and his amusement parks.  We all know Mickey and Goofy, but very few know about Oswald the Lucky Rabbit.  This little rabbit was Mickey’s predecessor way back in the 20′s and he was hugely successful.  But despite Oswald’s popularity, it was Mickey that became Disney’s greatest success when the rights to Oswald were lost in 1928.  Mickey became famous and Oswald, under different ownership, gradually disappeared from the limelight.  It wasn’t until 2006 that Disney finally got those rights back and Oswald came home.  His original shorts were re-released in 2007 and the first new hints of him in Disney merchandising appeared in the form of t-shirts and Christmas ornaments.  This was all pretty exciting for Disney Geeks, but the most exciting development for this Geek was his pending appearance in Epic Mickey.

I could not wait to see Oswald again, newly animated, running around my TV screen with Mickey.  I don’t own a Wii and I was so desperate that I convinced a friend’s kids to give up their Wii so I could play, with the promise that I’d give them the game when I returned the console. So, for the last month my family has been playing Epic Mickey until today, when I returned the Wii and the game, unfinished, and somewhat disappointed.  The game itself was a classic platformer.  Nothing new or exciting and honestly it’s a bit tricky to play with the nun chucks.  The “paintbrush” with either paint or thinner is a neat idea in an animated world, but aiming it is so flaky that you often miss your target.  My biggest disappointment though, despite downright frustrating gameplay, is something else entirely.

The alternate universe of the Cartoon Wasteland is fun.  Disney fans will easily recognize the different rides, like It’s A Small World, turned into something a bit creepy and odd.  I know, the real ride in the real world might be called creepy and odd but you get my point.  The music is ever so slightly different and a bit off key, the boats float in paint thinner, and there are evil brooms right out of Fantasia throwing buckets of the stuff in your direction as you jump Mickey from boat to boat.  This part of the game was well done and appeals to my inner Disney Geek.  Mickey then moves from one land to the next by jumping into old black and white film reels.  This is also very cool as are the little glimpses of Oswald, who Mickey is chasing.  And of course there are cut scenes, which, given that this is Disney, should be amazing, but….

The cut scenes aren’t actually animated.  Nope.  They’re static images that the camera pans across.  And they’re done in a very minimalist style, more like storyboards from a work in progress than a finished product, and you have to read the words that pop up on screen to know what the images are telling you because the images themselves convey so little.  What?  This is Disney.  What the heck happened?  Oh, and you know that cute little rabbit, Oswald?  The guy who was touted as getting his first new appearance in 50 years and who hasn’t been part of the Disney family in even longer….you hardly see him at all.  Other than his appearance in the opening animated sequence, which is fantastic, Oswald is as elusive as a seat on the Monorail after the fireworks.

I didn’t come to this game as a Gamer.  I came to this game as a Disney Geek who couldn’t wait for the opportunity to see a beloved character of old make a triumphant return to the masses.  I couldn’t wait to show my kids the cute, trouble-making rabbit.  Sadly, I’m going to have to wait a bit longer since his role in this game is practically non-existent.  Epic Mickey held such promise as a reintroduction for this long forgotten character, but instead it turns out to be a poorly executed platformer, with dull cut scenes and very little of the spark of brilliance that is the hallmark of the best stories created by Disney.  Epic?  Not even close.

Movie Review – Prince of Persia: How Disney Missed an Opportunity to Exploit One Fine Man

Category : Entertain Me, Movies, Reviews

Now my geek/gamer buds tell me this was yet another movie developed from a popular video game (which I, of course, have never heard of). Nevertheless, I was signed up to see it for the simple “tar power”of the film – Jake Gyllenhaal’s body. I have enjoyed his acting in many films for sure, but the previews for this particular film seemed to promise a fresh new perspective of Jake in leather and yielding knives . . . my kind of cinema.

The film begins with some blah-blah story about a time period, people, myths and legends. Then we are thrust into nonstop action.  Sadly, a lot of this nonstop action seems to be borrowed from another Disney film – Aladdin, which was frankly, better written. Don’t get me wrong, if action is your thing, this film delivers tirelessly.

The chic in the film (Gemma Arterton) is mad hot with nice lips – the strong, brave, feminist type. Geeks seem to love these female heroines, am I wrong? The guy, in comparison, is brawny and doofy, with a hot bod. It crossed my mind that there is no way a chic like that would be attracted to a dude that is all muscle and no plan. Magically, we get our subplot love story and after a lot of aggression and annoyance with one another (read usual Hollywood love formula) they fall in love, kiss once and never get naked.

There is more to the film but it’s all predictable and Jake’s shirt comes off barely once. He’s half shaven-down hairy which really doesn’t look natural for the time and setting. Jake’s muscles are bulging throughout the film with the help of leather straps about his arms that, at times, makes me think he’s about to shoot up. In the end, if this truly was a great video game, they should have let another company produce it and make it darker and sexier. Perhaps the dude who remade the Batman flicks could take a stab at it and give us some T&A at least.

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