All posts by Scott Meisner

New PS3 slim Japanese commercials are bizarre, the usual

Sony is known for making such crazy and strange commericals for their Playstation products.  Who can forget one of the original PS3 commercials that featured the scary crying baby doll?  Now the marketing team has done it again for the new PS3 slim.  Check it out above.

[Via Engadget]

Colbert gets his liftoff

After receiving the most votes at NASA’s website, actor Stephen Colbert won the contest to put his last name on the next ISS module to launch into space.  After deeming the situation inappropriate, NASA decided to name the module “Tranquility” and gave Colbert a consolation prize.  After all, he did give the International Space Station a boost in popularity on his show “The Colbert Report.”  His prize?  NASA came up with this acronym: C.O.L.B.E.R.T. is the Combined Operational Load Bearing External Resistance Treadmill.  Better than nothing, I guess.  Check out his response video above.

[Via Gizmodo]

London’s Shard is beautiful

the-shard-by-renzo-piano-31.jpg

“The Shard, a mixed-use tower at London Bridge in London, designed by Renzo Piano Building Workshop.”

“Construction work has started on the 306 metre-high building, which will sit on an irregular-shaped site adjacent to London Bridge station as part of a new development called London Bridge Quarter.  The design consists of several glass facets that incline inwards but do not meet at the top, and is inspired by the masts of ships that once anchored on the Thames.  The  72-storey building contains offices, apartments, a hotel and spa, retail and restaurants and is topped by a 15-storey public viewing gallery.”  The Shard is “due to be completed in 2012.”

Check out the gallery below for more images of this architectural marvel.  It is very sci-fi-esque; it reminds me of a structure from the Halo series.

[Via Gizmodo; Dezeen]

‘Narrow Stairs’ is wide in scope

Simply put, Death Cab for Cutie’s Narrow Stairs is what music is all about.  All eleven tracks, from the rhyming “Bixby Canyon Bridge” to the soft yet entrancing “The Ice is Getting Thinner,” reveal to the listener a doorway to a place where vocals do not just provide words to a song–they are there as a vital piece of the instrumentation and wholeness of the song.  Death Cab is comprised of a guitarist in Chris Walla, a bassist in Nick Hammer, a drummer in Jason McGerr, and the lead vocalist, guitarist, and pianist in Benjamin Gibbard.  Although one can sit and review the meanings behind the emotion embedded within each track, this is not my mission.  It is far more worthy to discuss Gibbard’s attempt at going against the status quo and creating a spectacular album that shines in almost every way.

Continue after the break.

Continue reading ‘Narrow Stairs’ is wide in scope

Inglourious Basterds

Inglourious Basterds is one of Quentin Tarantino’s finest films made to date.  It is dramatic, it is comedic, it is gory, and it is very Tarantino.  The film is separated into five different “chapters” each involving its own storyline that connects to the one before it.  In traditional Tarantino style, emphasis is put on the (often subtitled) dialogue and subtle character interactions and expressions.  Those who are looking for immediate action may find this mildly irritating, though the eventual over-the-top gruesome action is quite satisfying.

From the trailer and overall buzz of the movie one would probably expect that Brad Pitt is the main protagonist and star of this film.  Although he does play an integral part as the leader of the Basterds, the “star role” is shared with the entire main ensemble and the supporting cast.  Christoph Waltz’s portrayal as “Jew Hunter” Col. Hans Landa is magnificent, Mélanie Laurent’s Shosanna Dreyfus is disturbing and enticing, and Diane Kruger shines as sexy actress and undercover German Bridget von Hammersmark.  It is worth mentioning that Pitt’s role as Lt. Aldo Raine from Maynardville, Tennessee is one of his most real and convincing characters he has ever played.  It is clear to see that Tarantino wrote the part for him.

Basterds is a WWII movie unlike any you have ever seen before.  It will have you clapping (if not standing in your seat cheering softly, like me) at the end of the movie.  Tarantino strikes gold yet again with a great storyline, a successful mix of drama, comedy, and violence, a fierce musical score, and a brilliant cast that lifts this movie over their shoulders and holds it high throughout its lengthy but deserved duration.

Megan Fox is hosting the season premiere of SNL

Life and Style picked up the scoop from “an insider close to the star” that Megan Fox will be the host of the season premiere of Saturday Night Live.  The source says, “Megan is psyched to have gotten this opportunity.  She has a lot of surprises in store for the audience.  This is the perfect opportunity for her to show off her comedic skills, as she’s launching her new movie Jennifer’s Body [on Sept. 18].”  The source also hinted that she will star alongside funnyman Andy Samberg in the season’s first SNL Digital Short.  I am so excited, I cannot wait for–…and I just jizzed in my pants.  Be sure to catch the 34th season premiere of Saturday Night Live on September 26 on NBC.

[Via IGN]