Torchwood — Starring John Barrowman

http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/news/cult/news/drwho/2005/10/17/25634.shtml

Captain Jack gets his own show.

Torchwood will debut on BBC Three late next year. Created by Russell T Davies it stars John Barrowman as Captain Jack.

“Torchwood will be a dark, clever, wild, sexy, British crime/sci-fi paranoid thriller cop show with a sense of humour – the X Files meets This Life,” says Russell T Davies.

“It’s a renegade bunch of investigators charged by the British government to find alien technology that has fallen to Earth,” BBC Three controller Stuart Murphy told The Independent.

The show will be set in Cardiff, and will be 13 45-minute episodes, transmitting between series of Doctor Who. Confirmed writers include Sapphire and Steel creator PJ Hammond.

This should be VERY interesting. I thought Captain Jack made for a very interesting companion, and was disappointed he wouldn’t be returning to Doctor Who next season. This more than makes up for it, though…

As seen over at Draugr’s journal…

http://www.theonion.com/news/index.php?issue=4133&n=2

KANSAS CITY, KS–As the debate over the teaching of evolution in public schools continues, a new controversy over the science curriculum arose Monday in this embattled Midwestern state. Scientists from the Evangelical Center For Faith-Based Reasoning are now asserting that the long-held “theory of gravity” is flawed, and they have responded to it with a new theory of Intelligent Falling.

“Things fall not because they are acted upon by some gravitational force, but because a higher intelligence, ‘God’ if you will, is pushing them down,” said Gabriel Burdett, who holds degrees in education, applied Scripture, and physics from Oral Roberts University.

Yes, it’s a joke. It’s still damn funny, though.

Once again, a news article which reaffirms my lack of faith in humanity.

http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/front/3312743

RICHMOND, Va. — A rush to purchase $50 used laptops turned into a violent stampede today, with people getting thrown to the pavement, beaten with a folding chair and nearly driven over. One woman went so far to wet herself rather than surrender her place in line.

“This is total, total chaos,” said Latoya Jones, 19, who lost one of her flip-flops in the ordeal and later limped around on the sizzling blacktop with one foot bare.

An estimated 5,500 people turned out at the Richmond International Raceway in hopes of getting their hands on one of the 4-year-old Apple iBooks, which retail for between $999 and $1,299. The Henrico County school system was selling 1,000 of the computers to county residents.

Officials opened the gates at 7 a.m., but some already had been waiting since 1 a.m. When the gates opened, it became a terrifying mob scene.

People threw themselves forward, screaming and pushing each other. A little girl’s stroller was crushed in the stampede. Witnesses said an elderly man was thrown to the pavement, and someone in a car tried to drive his way through the crowd.

*sigh* What else really needs to be said? They’re just computers, people…

Something of interest to Jenn Dolari…

http ://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/headline/entertainment/3301613

DENVER — A man suspected of shooting Grammy-winning singer-songwriter Marc Cohn during an attempted carjacking was arrested after a 5 1/2 -hour standoff with police.

Cohn, who had a hit with the song Walking in Memphis and won the Grammy for best new artist in 1992, was shot in the temple late Sunday when a man fired into his band’s van in a parking garage.

Cohn, who is married to ABC news reporter Elizabeth Vargas, was treated at a hospital and released Monday. He canceled the remaining five stops on his tour with Suzanne Vega.

(Jenn saw Suzanne Vega and presumably Cohn in concert this weekend, hence me thinking this might be of interest to her…)

Well… shit.

When I went to E3, one of the games I went out of my way to go see was Stargate SG-1: The Alliance. Those people who saw my gallery of E3 photos also saw a number of pics from the JoWooD booth, including a life-size Stargate. (Damn, those things are huge!) Well, this is what I happened to see when checking GameSpot News this evening…

http://www.gamespot.com/news/2005/08/05/news_6130425.html

Austrian publisher JoWood has terminated its contract with Perception, the Australian studio that was, until now, developing Stargate SG-1: The Alliance. As per the contract, all rights to the game, as well as the developed source code, have transferred to JoWood’s possession. Namco was originally slated to release the action game to the Xbox, PlayStation 2, and PC in North America this fall.

In the announcement, JoWood CEO Albert Seidl designated the game’s quality as the primary issue that led to the contract’s termination. Apparently, JoWood did not believe that Perception could produce a game that would both satisfy fans of the series and arrive on time. “In recent months we have invested a lot of time and resources in helping Perception finish the development, but we now simply have lost confidence in their ability to finish this project in time and sufficient quality,” Seidl said.

Executive producer Michael Paeck stated that the future of the Stargate SG-1 is largely up in the air and that the company has to determine if it is economically viable to finish production before trying to find another developer. Interestingly, Paeck also said that one of the options in front of the publisher is to move development of the game to next-gen consoles.

To be honest, I wish I could say I was surprised. While the demo they had of the PC version seemed to run reasonably well, the console versions were of fairly poor quality. I only hope they don’t decide to scrap it altogether, especially seeing as the plotline revolves around my favorite of the Goa’uld…. namely, Anubis.

*sigh* Oh, well…

Media outlet ambushes guest… again.

http://www.1up.com/do/blogEntry?bId=5179663&publicUserId=5345401

I’ve never walked off the set of a TV show in disgust before, but this week I did. There’s a first time for everything, I guess. I was in the studio for a live-to-tape session of the Donny Deutsch show on CNBC, “The Big Idea” on Tuesday morning this week. After enduring it for about 10 or 15 minutes it was clear that the whole situation had been a set-up from outset.

I know a few of you saw the show (as you’ve messaged me with your support) but I thought it might be interesting to shed some light on the background and highlight a problem that we all share as gamers; that of total ignorance on the subject of videogames from “big” media. Deutsch comes from the Michael Moore school of “journalism.” He has a point he wants to make, and isn’t particularly interested in anything that might contradict that point. It’s his show, after all. His website points out that the show is “smart, sexy, hip, and irreverent television.” The description also says that the show is “provocative, spontaneous, and real.” We’ll come back to that.

The show’s director originally contacted me on Monday this week. I was told that Deutsch would be talking about videogames, and they wanted someone from the gaming media to talk about a bunch of things. The subjects listed to me ran the gamut from “the future of videogames” to “online clans and community.” I was told that the violence thing might come up, in light of the recent 25-to-Life exposure, to which my response was a dismissive “that’s been done to death, it’s boring.” The director simply asked me if I would “just say that on air.”

When I arrived at the studio, and after being caked in layers of makeup, I sat down in front of the camera and soon learned that the entire show was about violence. It kicked off with Donny holding up a copy of Computer Games magazine declaring that there wasn’t a single game in there that wasn’t violent, and they then immediately cut to scenes of CJ stamping on a girl until she bled over the pavement in San Andreas. I was introduced as pretty much the bad guy who thinks this doesn’t have an effect on kids, and…well…things just deteriorated from there. I tried to discuss the ratings system, I tried to talk about how the majority of games are sold at Wal-Mart, Target, and Best Buy, and how they all take the ratings system very seriously…but this isn’t what the show was supposed to be about. Donny had an agenda. “All games are violent” was his proclamation, and nothing was going to sway him. We weren’t here to test a hypothesis. While this was happening, the director kept nagging me through the earpiece to “jump in and talk about what you’re here to talk about.” I was pissed. “That’s not what the show appears to be about, darling.”

*sigh* I hate when people do that. Seriously.

I actually know someone who got the same treatment from The Jenny Jones Show. He and his then-gf were invited to be on an episode where they were allegedly going to talk about couples who met over the internet. When they got there, they found to their shock that the episode was actually a hatchet job about older men who prey on underage girls on the net. (It’s a long story; in my acquaintance’s defense, the girl had lied to him about her age and even had a fake ID when they met for the first time.) He should have just walked off the show like John Davison did in my opinion, but then he was afraid that the show wouldn’t pay to send him home, as he didn’t have the money for airfare back. Still, that is extremely dirty and underhanded, and in my opinion completely undermines the message of the person hosting the show once the truth comes out.

What made the whole thing even sadder in Davison’s case was that one of the people they brought on was Brooks Brown, who had attended Columbine High School and was an acquaintance of Klebold and Harris. In fact, he had warned police a YEAR before the shooting that Harris had threatened him and was building pipe bombs. Brown was also arguing that violence in video games wasn’t the huge problem it was made out to be, and he and his parents also got railroaded. (Brown’s comments on the show are in the link above in the comments.)

Like I said, this kind of treatment of guests is dishonorable and counterproductive. Granted, while being the senior editor at MK Online is hardly the best example of professional journalism, I always took the attitude that the primary responsibility of being a journalist is to tell the truth. You’re supposed to be a reliable and accurate source of information, and if you cannot be honest with your sources and your audience, then you have failed in your task. Such dishonesty will only damn you in the long run, and I speak from experience.

Doctor Who’s oldest enemy… now a fan?!

http://www.bbc.co.uk/cult/news/drwho/2005/06/21/20120.shtml

BBC Chairman fan of new Doctor Who series.

Nearly seven million said goodbye to Doctor Who this weekend, including the show’s most surprising new fan… Michael Grade, the man who axed Doctor Who in the 80s.

News has rearched the Doctor Who website that the BBC Chairman was so moved about the new series that he sent an email of praise to Director General Mark Thompson…

This is not easy to write – as you will readily understand. But here goes Ã¥ congratulations to all involved in Dr Who: to whoever commissioned it, those who executed it, the writers, the cast, the publicity folk that promoted it, the schedulers and of course the late Sydney Newman who invented the whole thing.

I truly enjoyed it and watched it every week with my six and half year old son who is now a fan.

A classy, popular triumph for people of all ages and all backgrounds – real value for money for our licence fee payers.

PS never dreamed I would ever write this. I must be going soft!”

Oh… my…

http://www.cnn.com/2005/SHOWBIZ/Music/06/12/pink.floyd.reut/index.html

LONDON, England (Reuters) — Four members of seminal British rock band Pink Floyd will play together for the first time in 24 years at London’s Live 8 charity concert for Africa on July 2, publicists for the event said on Sunday.

Guitarist David Gilmour, drummer Nick Mason and keyboard player Richard Wright will be on stage with bassist Roger Waters for their first public performance since they played at London’s Earls Court in 1981.

The rock legends will join a star-studded line-up including Coldplay, Elton John and Paul McCartney at the Live 8 concert in Hyde Park, organized by activist rocker Bob Geldof to pressure rich nations to ease African poverty.

“Like most people I want to do everything I can to persuade the G8 leaders to make huge commitments to the relief of poverty and increased aid to the third world,” said Gilmour.

“Any squabbles Roger and the band have had in the past are so petty in this context, and if reforming for this concert will help focus attention then it’s got to be worthwhile.”

:-D

… and again, I can’t make stuff like this up.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/somerset/4077698.stm

Dalek ‘kidnappers’ demand Doctor

“Kidnappers” who stole a Dalek from a Somerset tourist attraction have sent its owners a ransom note – and the alien’s amputated plunger.

The 5ft model, believed to be an original from the cult BBC Dr Who series, was taken from Wookey Hole Caves near Wells on Monday.

On Thursday, staff found the plunger arm and a ransom note on a doorstep.

The note read: “We are holding the Dalek captive. We demand further instructions from the Doctor.”

The group, signing themselves Guardians of the Planet Earth, added: “For the safety of the human race we have disarmed and removed its destructive mechanism.”