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Let's Do Launch

Tuesday, November 21, 2006
wii launch flickr album
Alex Camped Out For the Wii
This is old news, but we just put up a Flickr album with pictures from the Best Buy parking lot.

Flickr Album

Go Penguin, It's Your Birthday...

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The Anti-Fanboy Celebrates Its One Year Anniversary!
One year ago today, two punk kids, a japanese girl and a penguin started a revolution. Fed up with misleading game reviews, they started The Anti-Fanboy, a site dedicated to letting people know what games they should spend half a Benjamin on. Three hundred and sixty-five days later, our articles are longer, better written, and have capital letters. We started on one console launch and are still going strong after two more. Our readership is much larger, our layout is a whole lot prettier, and I'm a whole lot broker. Here's to many more anniversaries, many more articles, and many more readers.

What's New Pussycat?

Monday, November 20, 2006
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No New Posts Make Me a Sad Panda
I've gotten some reader responses lately to the tune of "Hey guys, are you still posting?" The easy answer is yes. The explanation isn't. Week after week articles go un-posted, and I won't lie to you, it's all my fault. As editor (founder, writer, etc) I have to keep the quality of posts higher than a lot of other blogs and review sites, so most of the time good posts are given the axe. Whether the reason is timing (Splinter Cell, Vice City Stories and Gears of War's reviews), relevance (no more posts about Brownie Bites, I promise) or coherence (most of our articles are written around 2-6 am), lots of articles never make the front page. But I think keeping those posts off the front page is what keeps readers coming back. If we posted any little thing that came into our heads without a run through QA, we'd compromise the integrity, quality, and professionalism (what little we have) in doing so. And dammit, Janet, we got scruples. Once our time frees up (especially this Holiday season) expect a torrent of activity over here at the good 'ol AFB. We strive to be the last bastion of hope in a world filled with bloggers paid to post, games journalists pandering to their advertisers, and critics who don't want to burn bridges.

Other things to look forward to: "AFB[TV]". The newly revamped streaming video site is being redesigned from the ground up. Channels include game videos, movie trailers, music videos, original and user submitted content. The layout we're working on resembles a cross between the security room at the mall and that white room with all the monitors from the Matrix sequels. Very clean, very organized, with the same look as the homepage. New message boards are also in the works, so don't bother with these. For updates on the big... updates, contact us with the subject line, "AFB Mailing List". We promise not to spam you. Honest Injun.

Fall Television Rant

Sunday, November 12, 2006
tv night
My Thoughts On The New Fall Shows
I always feel dirty when I take a liking to any shows on network television. CBS, NBC, ABC and FOX have seen to it to cancel any show I'm remotely interested in, halfway through the season. It happened to Freaks & Geeks, Firefly, Wonder-Falls, and I'll admit I even got sucked into John Doe. They barely get a chance while reality shows about marrying midgets for money, spoiled yuppie douche-bags eating gross things and ugly girls getting plastic surgery are renewed over and over, and awful sitcoms starring fat, failed comedians with un-realistically hot wives last to the point where they recycle their own material. I swore after they canceled Family Guy and renewed the Simpsons for another shitty season that I wouldn't stray below channel 31. I just couldn't have my heart broken again.

Lo-and-behold I found new shows on these upper channels, ones that were better than anything on network television, and not only were they given a fair chance, they proved network execs wrong and excelled. Shows like Rescue Me, Nip/Tuck, It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, The Shield, Battlestar Galactica, Eureka and Monk would have been canned on network in a heartbeat, but they now have growing audiences that return week after week, loyal and entertained. Monk floundered when it was first on ABC, and was canceled. USA snatched it up and now it's their flagship show (with much better writing and production values). What amazes me is that these basic cable channels are becoming more successful than their parent networks, Fox and NBC.

FX started as an experimental channel, showing the occasional movie and the original programming was geared toward the average suburban housewife. Now it's completely changed into a groundbreaking network playing shows you'd expect to be on HBO or Showtime, albeit with more f-bombs and full frontal. Fox has the War at Home. If they keep House (one of the best shows on TV) they'll be on the right track at least. USA and Sci-Fi were purchased by NBC, who promptly led a multi-million dollar overhaul on all three networks. While Sci-Fi mostly stayed the same, it was given a much bigger budget for original programming. USA got the TBS treatment, picking what type of programming they wanted it to have from that point forward and sticking to their guns. NBC started taking chances (finally) after Friends' ridiculous run, and took on a few new shows. Good for them.

Heroes and Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip were two big chances that are paying off. They both have excellent writing (especially the latter) and are different enough to give their programming lineup a diverse, fresh new start. Picking up Friday Night Lights and 30 Rock this close to the launching of the first two was a huge mistake, though. 'Lights is a decent enough show, but it doesn't flow well next to any of the other shows. There's a difference between diverse programming and a show just not fitting in. 30 Rock is another show about SNL with a two decimal number in the title. Comparing 30 Rock and Studio 60 is like comparing Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn to Franz Kafka's The Metamorphosis. They are both great books in their own way, but are so different they should never be in the same sentence, much less the same season. Studio 60 was almost canceled (due to scheduling problems) but this last week had the rest of the season ordered. It's nice to see the powers that be grew a pair and realized just how biased Nielsen ratings are (it's a flawed system, but I'll get to that later). Heroes got off to a great start, but like Lost, Twin Peaks, and countless other shows, it has gone from interesting to non-sequitur. Let's hope they turn this around, because with Jeph Loeb producing and Tim Sale doing the infamous "future paintings", it has the potential to blow us away.

As for the Fall shows on the upper channels, Man vs Wild and Rob & Big have me snared. Bear Grylls, the star and consultant of Discovery Channel's Man vs Wild is quite possibly the coolest person on earth. Unlike previous shows where a moron strands himself in harsh terrain with nothing but a camera crew and emergency supplies, Bear's approach is as if you were stranded with him, and while you watch him find shelter and sustenance on his way to civilization and extraction, he teaches you everything from what to look for to how to climb. He was in various Foreign Legions, Special Forces, and he speaks with a cool British accent, so while brutal, it's quite the enjoyable experience. I've always loved Gary Paulsen-type situations, so I love it. It's amazing how these beautiful landscapes can be so harsh and unforgiving. The show in a nutshell is like a cross between going on a tour with a guide who knows everything about the location (and tells you everything) and half-way through you get stranded and find out he's a total badass survivalist. If he wore a fedora and fought Nazis he'd be Indiana Jones.

Rob & Big, MTV's newest reality show doesn't fit the bill of reality show. It has no ridiculously contrived drama, overt racism, lewd sexuality, or cat-fights. It's a look into the friendship between skateboarder and DC Shoes mogul Rob Dyrdek and his bodyguard and long time com-panda Chris "Big Black" Boykin. It's pretty much my dream to get wealthy doing something I love and in turn have a big black bodyguard/buddy. I'd have to come up with a clever nickname for him, and since "Chocolate Bear" is taken, I guess my dream is never to be. But you can watch Rob and Big get into all sorts of monkeyshines and shenanigans without unnecessary drama, thanks to show producer and Jackass alum Jeff Tremain. The show's got a nice flow to it, keeping things everyday but not boring without staging events (like Dane Cook's god-awful Tourgasm). I hope they keep up the good work. It's a funny show about real people who are buddies. Gotta love it.

Avoid LIKE THE PLAGUE SIMPLE LIFE "House of Carters". I swear to you, you'll spiral into a deep dark hole that you just can't climb out of. You'll tear your hair out wondering just how the hell this family of ugly, talentless, spoiled wiggers not only got their magnificent home, a show on E!, millions of dollars and the virginity of both Hilary Duff and Lindsay Lohan, but somehow manage not to choke on their own crap as they eat it, because these people are sub-monkey. Thinking about them makes me vomit a little. The first time I saw the show I thought Kevin Federline had a litter. I just know it was mentioned somewhere in the Geneva Convention.

Hopefully television will get better. Nielsen families are supposedly picked at random, but they are in fact centrally located along the Bible Belt in the South and in the most rural, conservative sections of the Midwest. It's the reason Jim Belushi's show is still on the air. For some reason these Red State Puritans are dead set against any foul language or healthy sexuality, but they eat up CSI. They freak out if anyone on television takes the Lord's name in vain, yet they glue their eyes to the screen whenever a hooker's arterial spray paints the walls. Hell, they'll stick around during the autopsy.


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