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Al Jazeera America Will Air An Insanely Small Amount Of Commercials

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Al Jazeera English

Al Jazeera America will provide viewers with one perk that stands out from other network: It will only air six minutes of ads for every hour of television.

Ad Age reports that other cable news networks have 15 to 17 minutes of ads in that time frame. A 2009 study by TNS Media Intelligence found that hour-long TV shows were 36% commercials.

Al Jazeera CEO Ehab El Shihabi said that the compact commercial space is "one of our key competitive advantages ... we are not infotainment."

(of course, the network is new and has far fewer advertisers than its rivals, too.)

The network launches Tuesday at 3 pm.

SEE ALSO: Why Activists Are Demanding Procter & Gamble React To Russia's Horrific LGBT Discrimination

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Robin Thicke Files Lawsuit To Protect 'Blurred Lines' From Claims It Copies Hit '70s Songs

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blurred lines pharrell robin thicke

It's hard to not love Robin Thicke's catchy "Blurred Lines" featuring Pharrell unless you believe the song is unoriginal.

Marvin Gaye's family claims the song of the summer has the same sound as Gaye's '70s hit "Got to Give It Up," while a company that owns the rights to some of Funkadelic's songs, Bridgeport Music, claims the song copies 1974 "Sexy Ways."

Both are allegedly threatening litigation should they not receive a monetary settlement, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

Thicke, Pharrell, and Clifford Harris, Jr. wasted no time seeking pre-emptive copyright protection. The trio filed a suit against those parties in California federal court on Thursday.

"Plaintiffs, who have the utmost respect for and admiration of Marvin Gaye, Funkadelic and their musical legacies, reluctantly file this action," the suit states. "Defendants continue to insist that plaintiffs' massively successful composition, 'Blurred Lines,' copies 'their' compositions. ... But there are no similarities."

It explains that the intent of "Blurred Lines" was to "evoke an era," but that being "reminiscent of a 'sound'" is not copyright infringement.

"Gaye defendants are claiming ownership of an entire genre, as opposed to a specific work," they argued.

Read the full court document here.

The plaintiffs are seeking a judgment that the song in fact does not duplicate Gaye's and Funkadelic's songs, and that Gaye's family does not have sufficient interest in pursuing claims.

Earlier this month, The New York Times reviewed "Blurred Lines," saying it was "influenced heavily by Marvin Gaye’s 'Got to Give It Up.'"

The former leader of Funkadelic George Clinton has since tweeted out that he supports Robin Thicke and Pharrell citing no copyright infringement.

Listen to the tracks below and decide for yourself:

  

SEE ALSO: Here's What 'The Cosby Show' Credits Look Like Mashed Up With 'Blurred Lines'

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Pandora Shares Are Surging After A Huge Upgrade From Goldman Sachs (P)

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Pandora shares are up 6.5% today to $21.15 after a team led by Goldman Sachs' Heath Terry upgraded the online radio service to "buy" with a $27 price target. 

It's an interesting development given the results of our (admittedly small sample size) survey showing Spotify beating out Pandora for most popular streaming service among BI'ers, and also revealing that none of us is paying for Pandora's premium, ad-free subscription service.

So let's see what Heath and co. had to say.

The bump comes primarily from three-straight quarters of accelerating ad revenue, especially on mobile devices.

Below is a chart of where Pandora's share of mobile listening stands compared with other, selected competitors.

goldman pandora mobile

Heath and co. also note that for the first time, ad growth has surpassed the growth rate for the cost of buying music licenses.

Subscription growth has also accelerated in the past three quarters, they say, thanks to continued expansion into cars, televisions and on Android phones.

And the company recently imposed a new cap on free listening on mobile devices. Heath and co. say this will continue to be a "big boost" to subscriptions, and also hold margins down by cutting of some of Pandora's heaviest users.

Somewhat surprisingly Heath and co. say the threat from competitors has now "diminished." Here's how they frame it:

Competitive concerns better understood. Since going public in mid-2011, seven of the 10 days in which Pandora has sold off 10% or more have been the result of news or speculation around emerging competitive risks.

With iTunes Radio, Google Play, and Spotify’s Internet radio services better understood, we believe the potential for major competitive headline risks has largely diminished.

In addition, over the past 16 months, Pandora’s share of mobile Internet radio minutes has remained relatively unchanged, hovering around 80% despite the introduction of multiple competitive services.

Note that they're comparing Pandora to Spotify radio.

They actually make the case that there is little overlap between users of Spotify's core service of selecting your own song, and core Pandora streaming service:

we believe at this point, customers care most about the brand and the type of listening model, with Pandora and services like Songza being known for “lean-back capabilities” (selecting a song, artist, or album, or in Songza’s case, a mood or activity, and allowing the service to generate a playlist for you), or something like Spotify’s more well-known “lean-forward model” (allowing the user to select particular songs and generate their own playlist).

Heath and co. acknowledge that we are well past Pandora's heyday when its first launched in 2005, and that people have moved on to other platforms.

Usage growth has steadily decelerated since Pandora went public, albeit on large rates of growth, and where that growth could stabilize is a point of contention. While listener hour growth had slowed to 50% in 4Q13 from over 100% just a year earlier, the decline from 50% down to 18% in 2Q14 was largely driven by the free mobile listener hour cap which was imposed in March (April listener hour growth slowed to 24% from 49% in April). Active listener hour growth has remained more stable at 30% growth in 2Q14 from 35% in 1Q14 and 40% in 4Q13.

They also note the cost of licensing music has grown 25% per song over the past three years, and is expected to rise 16% per song over the next two. The initiative to get Congress to change the royalty rate Pandora must pay has stalled.

But those concerns appear to be muted by all the other acceleration going on.

Let's see what happens.

SEE ALSO: Now See The Full Results Of Our Internal Music Listening Habits Survey

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'Entertainment Select' Delivers Everything You Need To Know About Entertainment

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Entertainment SelectGet caught up on the latest media news with Entertainment Select, a daily email newsletter.

What is it? A daily roundup of top headlines, analysis, and video covering the media and entertainment industry

Signing up is quick and easy.  Use the form below to enter your information then click the "Sign Up" button.

 

 

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This ESPN Slideshow Explains Why It's The Most Valuable Media Brand In America

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I like charts, and I love sports, so when I asked ESPN executives in New York how their company became the most valuable media brand in the world, I was delighted when Artie Bulgrin, director of research, answered my question with ... a bunch of charts. 

ESPN deserved to be the richest cable channel in the bundle, he argued, because research showed that as the bundle grew over the last decade, our favorite channels multiplied, and certain networks rose and fell on the strength of their programming. But one thing stayed the same: ESPN has been the favorite channel among men every year since Clinton's presidency.

When I finished the column, I asked ESPN if they would share those charts with readers. They agreed to share the whole presentation. So here is the heart of ESPN Research+Analytics' annual survey of America's favorite TV channels. (Remember: It's ESPN asking people if they like ESPN, so grains of salt, and so forth.)

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This chart illustrates one of Bulgrin's point about ESPN's consistent popularity: "Other networks need to create hits. We don't. People tune in to ESPN without even knowing what's on." Every few years, the History Channel and Discovery Channel have a hit that launches them into the top five (see: 2005, 2010-2012). But mostly, there's only room at the top for the four broadcast networks plus ESPN. NBC was the top channel for adults for nine straight years after 1998. Every year since 2006, it's been either ABC, NBC, or CBS.

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This is the "money chart." ESPN is the favorite network among adult men, year after year. The History Channel makes a surprising showing, finishing second in six of the last seven years.

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One of the most surprising things about ESPN is that, until the launch of Fox Sports 1 this month, no one channel has stood out as an obvious competitor.

espn

Okay, this chart is a little confusing at first glance but it makes a simple point. As the number of channels has grown, the number of favorite networks has grown, too. ESPN would tell you this undercuts the argument that the cable bundle has "a lot of channels that nobody watches." (I would respond that there are a lot of channels that very, very few people watch or would miss if they were cut.)

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Sports isn't like other programming because you can watch a drama whenever you like but games lose their social currency hours after they end. So, if you're going to be the worldwide leader in anything where live-advertising is a part of the business model, better make it sports.

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ESPN has become synonymous with its subject in a way that few other channels have. MSNBC isn't the only place for politics. CNBC isn't the only place for business. The History Channel isn't the only place for quirky reality shows. But for the vast majority of viewers, ESPN is the only reliable place for sports on TV. And that's why it's the most valuable channel in the bundle.

espn7

Click here to follow The Atlantic.

More From The Atlantic:
Murder By Craigslist
How To Catch A Liar On The Internet
Why Would A Millennial Become A Priest Or A Nun?

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19 Awesome Movies That Are Secretly Libertarian

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brontosaurus jurassic parkA movie with a political message? Obviously not unheard of — film is one of the most common ways to make an ideological statement.

Takes Matt Damon's latest, "Elysium." Damon and director Neill Blomkamp insist there's no agenda, but it's been called a "transparently lefty" tale of the haves and have-nots, advocating for immigration reform and universal health care. 

John Osborne's "Miss Liberty's Guide to Film and Video: Movies For The Libertarian Millennium" compiles over 250 movies that spotlight libertarian ideology, from anti-war films to dystopian portrayals of totalitarian governments to feel-good flicks about being yourself.

We picked our favorites from Osborne's list and added some of our own for the 19 movies that best combine politics and cinema. They'll make you think and might incite some small-government enthusiasm. Get popcorn and prepare to embrace your personal liberty, for better or worse. 

Also check out Osborne's full book here.

Ratings are courtesy of Rotten Tomatoes.

"A Bug's Life" (1998)

Rating: 92% Fresh

Why It's Awesome: Gorgeous Pixar animation gives life to Flik, an entrepreneurial ant looking to liberate his colony from oppressive ant overlords. It's a kid's movie but the dialogue is great and the the traveling bug circus makes a great ensemble cast. 

Why It's Libertarian: Flik is the consummate innovator, always searching for an invention to improve the monotonous feudal lifestyle of his colony and help them break free from the greed and oppression of the grasshoppers. 



"Apocalypse Now" (1979)

Rating: 99% Fresh

Why It's Awesome: One of the most high-intensity war movies of all time, "Apocalypse Now" is a cinematically stunning Vietnam War tale heavy on the gunfire and violence. It's not for the squeamish. 

Why It's Libertarian: War comes with certain horrifying truths, and in "Apocalypse Now" they come in the form of Colonel Kurtz (Marlon Brando), deemed an insane enemy of the state who's abandoned the American army and commands his own forces in Cambodia. The true enemy here is war promulgated by imperialist states masquerading as moral crusaders. 



"Jurassic Park" (1993)

Rating: 92% Fresh 

Why It's Awesome: Dinosaurs walk among us in a magical theme park we all kind of wish were real. 

Why It's Libertarian: Man thinks they've got the dinosaurs completely under control but "nature finds a way" to let the impressively intelligent prehistoric beasts act in their own self-interest to reproduce and run wild. 



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Kim Kardashian Blasts Katie Couric On Instagram As 'Fake Media Friend'

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Kim Kardashian is not happy with Katie Couric.

The new mother posted an image to Instagram with an accompanying message putting the talk show host on blast.

The image contains what appears to be part of a card that came with a gift from Couric wishing both her and Kanye well on the birth of daughter North West.

Here's the message and photo:

"#IHateFakeMediaFriends #MayIHumblySuggestYouNotSendGiftsThenTalkShit"

The reason for the call out appears to stem from a quote in In Touch magazine that said Couric "still struggles to grasp the Kardashian phenomenon" saying "I don’t understand — why are they so famous? I think it’s mostly teenage girls that are interested."

SEE ALSO: Obama slams Kanye West and Kim Kardashian for complicating the American Dream

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'Paranoia' Is Harrison Ford's Worst-Reviewed Movie Yet

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gary oldman harrison ford paranoia

With summer movies winding down, the selection for this weekend is pretty scant.

Three of the four films out this weekend have a collection of poor reviews.

"Kick-Ass 2," the action-comedy sequel to the 2010 film, is currently sitting at 27% on film review site Rotten Tomatoes while Ashton Kutcher's low-budget Steve Jobs' film "jOBS" has earned 25%.

Leading the pack is Weinstein Company's "Lee Daniels' The Butler" which is sitting at 72%. As of yesterday, the film was Fandango's top ticket-seller.

Out of all of the films premiering this weekend, the one you least likely heard about is a Harrison Ford and Gary Oldman flick called "Paranoia" starring Liam Hemsworth (Chris Hemsworth's a.k.a. Thor's brother). 

The Relativity film cost an estimated $35 million to produce and has been floating between 2-3% on Rotten Tomatoes. It's just creeped up to a 5% rating (2 fresh / 40 rotten reviews).

The two fresh reviews come from Movieline's Pete Hammond who calls the thriller "not terribly original but entertaining" and The Hollywood Reporter's Stephen Farber commends the film as "slick" but not a "pulse pounding" action film.

It certainly has an interesting premise.

Corporate rivals Nicholas Wyatt (Gary Oldman) and Jock Goddard (Harrison Ford) use entry-level Adam Cassidy (Liam Hemsworth) in their own personal game of cat and mouse.

Ford and Oldman look undeniably enjoyable as adversaries in every single trailer and clip for the film. 

However with mostly "rotten" reviews, the film is the worst-rated for Ford by far behind '94's "Jimmy Hollywood." 

Currently, BoxOffice.com is tracking the film to earn $6 million opening weekend.

Ford shouldn't worry too much as he's appearing in the anticipated adaptation of "Ender's Game" in November.

Check out a preview for the film:

SEE ALSO: 'Star Wars: Episode VII' could bring back Emperor Palpatine in ghost form

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Spike Lee Reaches $1.25 Million Kickstarter Goal

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It's taken less than a month, but Spike Lee has surpassed his Kickstarter goal of $1.25 million for his next project. 

The 56-year-old filmmaker recorded a video thanking everyone who supported his project currently titled "The Newest Hottest Spike Lee Joint." 

His next movie will be a "new kind of love story" that's "funny, sexy and bloody."

Lee received a lot of criticism after launching his Kickstarter campaign with many saying he was taking money away from young filmmakers who use the resource and suggesting he has never backed anyone on the site, and therefore, doesn't deserve to be backed.

"This is not necessarily new to me, going out there and trying to rally the troops, trying to mobilize the community. The budget for 'She's Gotta Have It' was $175,000, but we never had that money in one lump sum. I was making phone calls, I was writing letters, I was showing up at people's homes." Lee responded to the criticism by saying he's been doing Kickstarter before it existed. 

"Malcolm X, we knew that when we started shooting we did not have enough money to finish the film. I knew it, Warner Bros. knew it … There came a point where the money ran out, and, consequently, the bond company took over the movie." 

As a result, Lee called up stars ranging from Bill Cosby to Prince, Oprah Winfrey, and Michael Jordan to help him donate the funds to finish the film. 

"The last time I self financed a film was 'Red Hook Summer.' This misconception that Spike Lee does not put his own money in my films is … ludicrous." 

Watch his entire response below:

Lee has until August 21 to raise more funds. 

Those who pledged money received a lot of goodies.

Among the best: 

$20: Watch a special screening online opening weekend with behind-the-scenes updates.

$50: A "Jim Brown: All American" poster autographed by Spike Lee 

$100: Inside Man poster autographed by Spike Lee 

$100: Michael Jackson "Bad 25" documentary Blu-ray signed by Spike Lee 

$150: "Malcolm X" poster signed by Spike Lee 

$250: Two tickets to the premiere of Lee's new film in NYC, L.A., or Chicago 

$500: Phone call with Lee OR autographed Nikes worn by Lee. 

$1,000: You can be an extra in the new film. 

$10,000: One of the four flags from the opening credits of "Malcolm X."  

From Lee: "To Me This Is The Best Reward We Have Had So Far. You Slow, You Blow. You Snooze, You Lose. Again Only 4 Exist In This World. Denzel And I Are Not Giving Ours Up. Thank You. Please Give This Serious Consideration."

SEE ALSO: Spike Lee Is Using Instagram To Tell Wonderful Little Stories About How He Made His Movies

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'The Butler' Expected To Clean Out 'Jobs' In Biopic Battle — Here's What's In Theaters This Weekend

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"Lee Daniels' The Butler" should clean up well at the box office in its opening weekend.

The first Oscar contender of the year stars Forest Whitaker, Cuba Gooding, Jr., Oprah Winfrey, and an A-list ensemble. Directed by the powerhouse behind "Precious," Lee Daniels, this historical drama may take in $25 million.

The rest of the competition — "Jobs," "Kick-Ass 2," and "Paranoia" — disappoints by comparison.

Get the details on what hits theaters this weekend, what to check out, and what to avoid.

1. "jOBS"

ashton kutcher as steve jobs

Estimated Budget:$20 million
Opening Weekend Outlook:$10 million
Critics:25%

"jOBS" profiles the tech giant's life in the early 1970s as he builds Apple from the ground up. Ashton Kutcher stars as Steve Jobs, in a performance that's "simply beyond Kutcher's ability," The Huffington Post wrote.

Consensus: iPass. 

Watch the trailer.

2. "Kick-Ass 2" 

kick-ass 2

Estimated Budget: $28 million
Opening Weekend Outlook: $19 million
Critics: 27%

In the sequel, superheroes Kick-Ass and Hit Girl band with a citywide wave of masked vigilantes to take down the world's first super villain. Chloe Grace Moretz gives a terrific performance, but the film fails to nail the first movie's blend of ultra-violence and ironic humor.

Consensus: Unless you can't "support that level of violence," as star Jim Carrey cannot, go see. 

Check out the trailer.

3. "Lee Daniels' The Butler"

the butler forest whitaker

Estimated Budget: $30 million
Opening Weekend Outlook: $22.5-25 million
Critics: 72%

There's early Oscar buzz surrounding this historical drama, recounting the life of a White House butler who served during eight presidential administrations. An all-star cast includes Forest Whitaker, Cuba Gooding, Jr., Oprah Winfrey, Alan Rickman, and Jane Fonda, among a million celebrity cameos.

Consensus: What are you waiting for? 

Watch the trailer.

4. "Paranoia"

paranoia harrison ford liam hemsworth

Estimated Budget: $35 million
Opening Weekend Outlook: $5-6 million
Critics: 4%

Despite the brains of Harrison Ford and Gary Oldman and the brawn of Liam Hemsworth, this techno-thriller falls victim to "thunderous clichés" and "bland performances."

Consensus: Run in the other direction.

Watch the trailer.

SEE ALSO: The First Trailer For Weinstein's 'The Butler' Already Looks Oscar-Worthy

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This Is Why All New YouTube Videos Get Exactly 301 Views

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We watch a lot of YouTube videos here at Business Insider. Especially new videos, as they break news and go viral.

We noticed something strange with newly published videos: Many of them seem to get exactly 301 views, right after they go up.

Here's a new video from the Dollar Shave Club, displaying the 301 phenom:

Dollar shave youtube 301

And here's one from GE, showing the same thing:

GE Youtube 301

It turns out there's a reason for this. Google's YouTube unit does this on purpose ...

Hyundai 301 youtube

When a new video goes up and starts to attract attention, Google wants to make sure that the views it is getting are real, and not dubious clicks coming from botnets or unscrupulous publishers who want to make their videos look more popular than they really are ...

Coca-Cola youtube 301

So YouTube pauses the counter at 301 views while its systems subject the video — and its cached duplicates on servers all over the world — to a statistical process that verifies the traffic.

It's not clear why Google chose exactly 301 as the place to pause the view count. Ted Hamilton, product manager at YouTube analytics, says he doesn't know why they chose that number, although any video that quickly attracts views in the hundreds needs to have its traffic verified. (Unviewed videos, by definition, aren't being played by bots.)

YouTube freezes the public counter at 301 for up to half a day or more while verification takes place. Internally, YouTube's counters are continuing to count views. Once the traffic is verified, the total number of views is added back onto the public counter. None are missed.

Hamilton says that one flaw in the system means that really popular videos can end up with thousands of likes yet only 301 views, at least for a period of time. The 301 phenom is one of the things that video publishers ask YouTube most about, he says.

Here's a video — which has more than 301 views — explaining the whole process:

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Two Of Apple's First Employees Review The New Steve Jobs Movie: 'The Whole Thing Is A Work Of Fiction'

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jobs movie ashton kutcher josh gad

Two of Apple's earliest employees, Bill Fernandez (employee #4) and Daniel Kottke (who officially joined a little later), talked about the new Ashton Kutcher biopic on Steve Jobs. 

Their conversation was transcribed by Vijith Assar at SlashDot.

Fernandez says, "the whole thing is a work of fiction," though he didn't see the movie. When it was in production, he says, "I talked to Victor Rasuk, the actor who was playing me, and he would say, 'Well, did this happen?' and I would say, 'No.' And ultimately I understood that they were not trying to create a historical document, they were doing a dramatic piece. From those variety of hints or clues, I formulated the opinion that I’d probably be really upset if I saw it."

Kotkke, who did see the movie, and even consulted a bit said, "Well, Ashton’s very good. I have no complaints with him at all, no complaints with his portrayal of Jobs. The complaint that people would rightly have about the film is that it portrays Woz as not having the same vision as Steve Jobs, which is really unfair."

He also says, "The early versions were painful. Really painful. I forwarded the first draft to Mike Markkula because they wanted his feedback, and Mike took such a bad reaction to it, he wouldn’t have anything more to do with the project. By the time it got to the fourth draft, it was okay. It wasn’t making me cringe. But they still had a scene of me arguing with Steve, which never ever happened, but, you know, in the realm of artistic license."

You can read the full interview here >

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Film Critics: Stop Comparing Bad Movies To Video Games

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ElysiumBrothers

This is a notice to all film critics that you need to step up your game when it comes to comparing movies to video games in your reviews. You're not paying attention. You're still doing it wrong, and it's getting embarrassing. 

The most recent round of movie-to-video game comparison fails come with the release of Neil Blomkamp's terrific "Elysium," a special-effects heavy, science fiction action-adventure film filled with high tech gun-play and big ideas. And as a result, ripe for a few of you reviewers to totally miss the point yet again.

Here, one of your rank and file says of "Elysium," "None of the characters are particularly memorable or worth caring about which means that any of the scenes meant to generate poignancy fall flat. Ultimately, Elysium is yet another shallow, dumb blockbuster that could easily be turned into a video game."

Fox New's Justin Craig, while not as harsh, your comment isn't any better, "People expecting another 'District 9' or who expect a little more substance from their science fiction films will most likely be disappointed by “Elysium,” but those who like their videogame-style sci-fi shoot-em-ups will have no problem here."

Both of you are calling out the weaknesses of Elysium by comparing the film to video games and intoning that games are "shallow and dumb" and those who would enjoy video games won't mind the fact that a movie might be lacking in substance.

Such remarks usually get made by somebody with little knowledge of what its actually like to play video games.

I want to help you with that. 

"Elysium" is the latest, but not the first film to draw the comparison

Many of you have repeatedly over the years made the comparison, and those picked out here in this story are only a small sampling.

In an AP review for the 2009 film "Raid: Redemption" you — the film critic — made a similar comment when you said, "Small amounts of backstory bleed out of the action, but there's little propelling things beside the simple kinetic kick of the film's video game-like plot, the next guy coming around the corner."

Joe Neumaier of New York Daily News, you're off base when you say, "World War Z the film, however, feels like a video game. It’s merely fast-moving flesh-rippers with clicking jaws giving chase." 

Have you ever played "The Last Of Us" or any of the episodic "The Walking Dead" games? Both are compelling experiences that do the overexposed zombie genre better than the film-adaptation of WWZ, which wasn't nearly as good as the book it was based on. The book did not feel like a video game, but it probably would have worked better as one than a film.

Leonard Maltin, you're guilty as well. From your 2004 "Van Helsing" review": "After a b&w prologue that pays homage to classic Universal horror films, this noisy, interminable, video-game-like movie discards all semblance of story or characterization." 

The fact that you compared "Van Helsing" to video games is an insult to video games, and even nine years later that statement still stings.

Brothers A Tale Of Two SonsWhat many of you don't seem to recognize, is that a video game can actually pack more substance and emotion into three hours than a movie can.

A game such as "Brothers: A Tale Of Two Sons" is such a compelling, emotional experience with a deep plot that even with only three to four hours of game-play, it left more of an impact on me than any film I've seen this year. And I'm not the only one.

But you seem to think all video games feature "Call Of Duty" shoot ups and machismo or "Killzone" aliens and "Halo" space marines and generally lack that emotional connection with the viewer/player. They don't. Even in many of those big name games the emotional connections, plot and overall experience goes beyond the cliché and grabs you in ways a film simply cannot. 

Susan Granger, your "After Earth" review implies that when a filmmaker writes a long backstory for a movie, then it must be for the video game tie-in. Just because there's a lot of backstory written about a movie, doesn't mean it was created for a video game spinoff. Nobody wants more "After Earth," gamers included. 

When a movie has bad special effects, that doesn't make it like a video game

Movie-to-game comparisons like those with "Elysium," WWZ, "After Earth," and "Van Helsing" are nothing new, but you've also failed when you've tried to compare unrealistic special effects in film to that of a game. For example, this gem comes from David Edelstein'sNYMag's 2009 review of the dud "Transformers 2: Rise Of The Fallen" where he likens some of the effects to "video game weightlessness."

Video game weightlessness? Dave, have you played "Portal"? Tried out the physics in a "Red Faction" game? What gaming experience exactly are you basing this "weightlessness" issue on? 

Richard Lawson of The Atlantic, you unfortunately throw up a brick in your review of "The Hobbit" titled "The Hobbit: Like One Bad Video Game," where you point out that what was great about the previous "Lord Of The Rings" movies is that they have an elegant, painting-like wonder and the new one just looks like a video game.

BraidThe issue with your analysis and analogy is that there are some incredibly artistic games out there that don't actually look or feel like video games. "Braid," "Limbo," or "Killer 7" are all prime examples of great art direction in a video game.

They are but a few of many vibrant and immersive titles that exist "somewhere between imagination and the real world." "Braid" actually looks like a painting in motion. 

Watching a bad movie isn't like watching somebody play a video game

Over the years, you've compared the inability to connect emotionally to a movie to watching somebody else play a video game. Efilmcritic's "Avatar" review called it impossible for the audience to have any genuine connection with the heroes "beyond the kind one might develop while watching someone else play a video game."

Circling back around to the game "Brothers: A Tale Of Two Sons," my wife watched me play through all three hours. She was completely enthralled. She is by no means a "hardcore gamer." She enjoys puzzle and cooking games on her smartphone. But she developed a connection with the unfolding story of Brothers in the same way she might have with a Harry Potter film. She participated in solving the puzzles in the game and helped me — as the controller of the main characters — move the story along to its heart-wrenching ending.

So Richard Roeper, when you say a movie is "relentless and monotonous" and that watching it is "like watching somebody else play a video game!" maybe that's true for some games, but in general that's a false statement. There are many people out there who would tell you that watching somebody else play a "Halo" game is more entertaining than watching "Battle Los Angeles."  

Some of you just be hating

Rex Reed, here's looking at you. Your "Battleship" review goes out of its way to make the video game connection:

"As another cookie-cutter ripoff inspired by comic books and video games (this time, Hasbro’s naval-combat pencil and paper-cum-board-turned-video game), you’re better here than with the idiotic Marvel’s The Avengers."

The movie was inspired by a board game. Not a board game turned video game, but a board game that happened to be made into a couple little video games. You're stretching, reaching, and failing to make the connection.

"Now, in a grave, last-ditch effort to join the youth brigade, they sit around playing violent video games and discussing the merits of endless installments of Iron Man, The Avengers and The Wolverine. Bring back Ray Bradbury." - Rex Reed, Pacific Rim review.

Worse still, your "Pacific Rim" review stereotypes those who might be interested in the movie with such an intensity that it makes the reader wonder if you actually have any idea of who the main demographic is that tends to read about movies online. Here's a hint, they sit around playing video games and discuss the merits of endless installments of "Iron Man," "The Avengers" and "The Wolverine."

Your review also implies you've probably never played a video game in your life. Those same fanboys and gamers you're trying to stereotype are also the same ones reading Ray Bradbury obsessively, who you want to bring back.

Even if everyone of your stereotyped lonely dorks who love violent games went to see "Pacific Rim," that's not enough to account for the $97 million it has earned domestically, and certainly doesn't account for the $247 million its raked in internationally. The world's taste in entertainment might be more varied than you realize. Maybe a lot of folks even like video games.

Rex, stop hating. It's childish and does nothing but make you look like a critic who's so set in his ways that he has to go out of his way to insult people. 

Your homework assignment

For those with knowledge of video games — even a rudimentary knowledge — consistently reading the misused analogies by film critics is grating and quite honestly, insulting. 

Luckily, there is a solution to save you from continuing to make yourselves look like you're out of touch.

Go into your kid's room and play some of their games. Try to get the hang of it and play something all the way through even if your thumbs don't initially cooperate. 

No kids? Then get to a friends house who has a PS3 or Xbox 360 and fire up "Journey" or "Brothers: A Tale Of Two Sons." Neither game will take long to finish, so even for those with shorter attention spans they're both doable. Borrow "Bioshock: Infinite," "Uncharted," or dive into the "Mass Effect" series if you're really feeling ambitious. The list goes on. A little research goes a long way.

Oh, and Candy Crush doesn't count. You get an F if try to pass that one off.

As entertainment writers, it makes sense to have a well-rounded understanding of the different mediums does it not? You read books I'm sure. You go to live theater. You can probably even appreciate art and photography. How is it then you still have no clue how to reference what is a $70 billion entertainment industry

It's time for you to understand what exactly it is about those darn games millions of people play that they love and why, just maybe, you need to avoid weak analogies and transparent attempts at being clever for marketing cover quotes.

SEE ALSO: People are spending millions of hours every month watching others play video games

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29 Celebrities Who Inspired Hit Songs

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Justin Bieber Selena GomezCelebrities tend to stick to their own kind.

With all that VIP partying and hobnobbing, it's no surprise that some stars have managed to influence others in very major ways.

Wondering who has inspired who? We've got answers—some of them surprising!

Miley Cyrus: "Wedding Bells"

Soon after Miley Cyrus announced her engagement to Liam Hemsworth in the summer of 2012, the Jonas Brothers unveiled a new song in concert: "Wedding Bells." The song, written by Cyrus' ex Nick Jonas, includes the line, "don't wanna hear the wedding bells prove / That we can't try / One last time." Miley later admitted she knew it was written about her.



Jennifer Aniston: "Shadow Days"

Jennifer Aniston and John Mayer only made it through one awards season together, but the relationship left its mark. A source (probably Mayer's publicist) told UsWeekly the song "Shadow Days" was a "farewell" to Jen: "It really took him a long time to get over her. He really loved her a lot."



John Mayer: "Dear John"

Taylor Swift never confirmed that her song "Dear John" (which included the line "Don't you think I was too young / To be messed with?") was written about her rumored fling John Mayer, but he certainly thought it was. In 2012, he told Rolling Stone the song "humiliated" him, adding, "I will say as a songwriter that I think it's kind of cheap songwriting."



See the rest of the story at Business Insider
    






Spike Lee Is Using Instagram To Tell Wonderful Little Stories About How He Made His Movies

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A lot of celebrities use Instagram to share photos of themselves or tease new projects with fans. 

Spike Lee is using the photo-sharing platform for something else entirely.

Recently, he's been uploading photos from a series of his old films, sharing small anecdotes that went into the film-making process with them. 

Check out a few below:

1. "Miracle at St. Anna" (2008) 

"I love this film. It's from a Novel by the Great James McBride, who adapted the Screenplay. This was one of my best experiences ever making a Film. The majority of the shoot was in Italy (Rome and Tuscany) with an All-Italian Crew. There was no language problem, we all spoke Cinema. It was also fantastic being in the World Famous Cinecitta Studios in Rome, in the same stages where one of my Heros Federico Fellini shot many of his classic films. To me this Film is a Tribute to the African-American Men and Women who fought and died for the Red White and Blue from The American Revolutionary War to WWII that have been marginalized or completely ignored by The Hollywood Studio System. We salute you."

2. Inside Man (2006)

"Inside Man is my Biggest Box Office Hit. I was slipped the script on the low low. Imagine Pictures had bought the Script (Auction) in a bidding War for Ronald Howard to direct. I loved the script and I reached out to my Man Denzel Washington, this would be our 4th Joint Together (Mo' Better Blues, Malcolm X and He Got Game). D signed up quickly followed by Clive Owen and Jodie Foster. We studied Sid Lumet's Bank Heist Classic DOG DAY AFTERNOON starring AL PACINO. We had so much FUN making this FILM. It was BANANAS and I feel it's all on the screen. We start the Film Jumping with The Bollywood Track Chaiyya Chaiyya from The Film Dil Se."

3. "When the Levees Broke: A Requiem in Four Acts" (2006)

"I was in Venice for the Festival when I got a call from my Wife Tonya to turn on the television. I spent the next 2 days switching back and forth between The BBC and CNN International. I could not believe the images I was seeing. Day 1, Day 2, Day 3, Day 4 and finally Day 5 The United States Government comes to the rescue of it’s own American Citizens. Right then and there I knew I wanted to put a Camera and a Microphone in front of these Survivors. I want to thank Sheila Nevins, Jackie Glover and Richard Plepler at HBO for giving us the Money and Broadcast Time to present our Epic 4 Hour Documentary on Hurricane Katrina."

4. "Malcolm X" (1992)

"This was the hardest and most rewarding Film I ever had to do. Malcolm X almost put me under, it was not just the physical toll of the long shoot but it was a test to my mental toughness. When we ran out of money, we were up the Creek without a paddle. It was one of the most stressful times I had ever been in. I couldn't eat, sleep, couldn't function. In doing my research of Malcolm X prior to shooting, I turned back to his teachings. I thought maybe there was the answer. Malcolm always preached about Self-reliance, Self-determination amongst us Black folks. That we have the Power within ourselves to do for ourselves, and that's when it hit me like a TON of BRICKS. I had epiphany. I began to call Black Athletes, Celebrities and Business people for gifts. They all came through and that's how we got to the stage to finish the film. To this day Denzel Washington's performance is one of the greatest of All-Time. Thank you Denzel."

5. "Crooklyn" (1994)

"Crooklyn is the semi-autobiographical Story about my Family growing up in the Fort Greene section of Da Republic of Brooklyn, New York during the early 70's. My siblings Joie and Cinqué Lee had written the script before they even told me they had done it. I read it, said let me do a revision of the script. Their title was Hot Peas and Butter, I changed it to Crooklyn And it has become one of my most loved films. People absolutely love this film."

Read more of them on his Instagram.

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Miss Teen USA Says Someone Hacked Her Bedroom Computer Webcam

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Miss Teen USA

TEMECULA, Calif. (AP) — The FBI is investigating allegations that the newly crowned Miss Teen USA was the victim of someone who hacked into a webcam in her Southern California bedroom several months ago in an attempt to extort nude photographs from her.

Agents believe they have identified the person behind the alleged "sextortion" scheme, Laura Eimiller, spokeswoman for the FBI in Los Angeles, said Friday. No arrest has been made.

Cassidy Wolf, a 19-year-old graduate of Great Oak High School in Temecula, won the Miss Teen USA crown Saturday.

Wolf has said she would use her fame to highlight cybercrime, and earlier this week told the website of NBC's "Today" show that several months ago she received an anonymous email in which the sender claimed to have stolen images from the camera on her home computer.

The emailer threatened to go public with images captured from Wolf's webcam unless she would provide nude pictures of herself, Eimiller said.

Instead, Wolf went the authorities.

"Many victims are embarrassed or keep it to themselves," Eimiller said. "Coming forward is key to stopping the criminal activity."

Based on an investigation launched in March the FBI believes there are more than a dozen victims in all — from Riverside County, where Temecula is located, and beyond, Eimiller said.

Wolf's mother told the Riverside Press-Enterprise that her daughter was in New York, where she will attend the New York Film Academy. A phone message left Friday by The Associated Press for the mother was not immediately returned.

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Join The Party — 2 DJs Are Still Killing It 16 Hours Into A 25-Hour Livestreamed Dance Party In Mexico

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pachanga boys, rebolledo and superpitch

Usually during a dance marathon the dancers have to last all night and the DJs get a break. Not so at "Lost Track Of Time," a 25-hour DJ set and dance party going into its 17th hour in Mexico City right now.

The two DJs on this no-sleep team are known as 'The Pachanga Boys.' If you've never heard of them, just ask your nearest dance music addict or Berlin hostile regular. They'll tell you that when the duo's single 'Time' hit dance floors in 2011, the entire world wanted a piece. This party experiment is trying to capture that energy in one long (potentially exhausting) stretch.

Click here if you want in. The crowd dancing seems to be loving it. The word 'pachanga', after all, is Spanish slang for a complete and total rager.

Or if you need convincing, check out The Pachanga Boys' 'Time' below to see what all the fuss is about:

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Here's The Preview For Next Week's 'Breaking Bad' Episode You're Looking For

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We're still processing everything that happened in the latest episode of "Breaking Bad."

However, if you've been wondering why a new teaser hasn't been airing at the end of each new episode, AMC has been waiting to air the preview trailers until after its new series "Low Winter Sun" which follows "Breaking Bad."

If you didn't stay up to watch the preview, check it out below.

Next week's episode is called "Confessions" and sounds like it will revolve a lot around Jesse if you've been reading the short episode summaries

SEE ALSO: The 16 most jaw-droppingly insane moments from "Breaking Bad" ranked

More "Breaking Bad": The most talked about moments from season 5 episode 10

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Ashton Kutcher's Steve Jobs Movie Bombed At The Box Office This Weekend (AAPL)

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Steve Jobs movie

Ashton Kutcher's biopic film on the life of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, "Jobs" was released over the weekend.

Both critics and fans did not like the movie much and the general consensus is that it bombed. 

"Jobs" only pulled in $6.7 million nationally, placing it in seventh place overall. The movie has a pretty pathetic Rotten Tomatoes score of 25%, where the average rating is 4.9 out of 10.

The Huffington Post's Sandy Cohen said that "Jobs" focused too much on Apple the company and not enough on Steve Jobs. Cohen argues that a better title for this film might have been, "the history of Apple computers."

The WSJ echoed other reviews, noting that critics didn't believe that the film paid the same meticulous attention to detail or focus that Steve Jobs brought to his projects.

Just last week, Ashton Kutcher slammed Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak for being critical of his "Jobs" film. Kutcher alleged that Wozniak was being paid by another company to support their film about Steve Jobs. In light of the generally negative criticism, it seems like Kutcher might have just been acting out.

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Comedian Patton Oswalt Invented Two-Part Tweets To Troll The Heck Out Of Twitter This Weekend

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Comedy fans everywhere were probably pretty surprised to see some of Patton Oswalt's tweets over the weekend. Here's one:

Screen Shot 2013 08 19 at 9.07.31 AM

Here's another:

Screen Shot 2013 08 19 at 9.08.42 AM

But let's not forget that Patton's a comedian, please. It turns out that he was tweeting longer messages that, when split up to meet Twitter's 140-character requirement, left the second tweet to say something completely unreal. Here's what one looks like in context:

Screen Shot 2013 08 19 at 9.17.15 AM

Screen Shot 2013 08 19 at 9.17.31 AM

This is some high-level trolling, and boy, did it get some people riled up.

Screen_Shot_2013 08 19_at_9.25.04_AM 4

Thankfully there were enough people who got the joke:

Screen Shot 2013 08 19 at 9.14.29 AM

To read all the tweets in context (or out of context, if you like), head over to Oswalt's Twitter feed.

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