Archive for the ‘win’ Category

Sorry, Hugo. It’s been done.

Tuesday, November 11th, 2008

The United Socialist Party of Venezuela, the result of a cooptation union between the leftist parties of the country, has released a CD with the latest revolutionary hits. President Hugo Chavez is the featured star in one of the songs. [Fox News, PSUV Wesbite]

But Hugo isn’t the first Latin American leader to sing in public to promote his goals.  The region has a long history of cheap populists, socialists, and occasional right-wingers who stage these shows to gain popular support.  The most famous politician who did this in the 1990s was Abdala Bucaram, former President of Ecuador.  Called the “madman,” the Ecuadorian Congress eventually declared him mentally unfit to rule and removed him from office less than a year after his election.  He danced, sang, and released his own music CD as capital fled the country and inflation began to wipe out the middle class.  Here he is onstage with the Irancudos, an Uruguayan band:

Not to be outdone, Alberto Fujimori, former President of Peru, also released a song.  This is a real advertisement from his 2000 campaign:

Note that the commercial calls him the “Chino” (Chinese) even though he is ethnically Japanese.  He was popular in the early 1990s in part because he wasn’t perceived as a member of the small, white oligarchy.  Fujimori later fled the country to avoid charges of corruption and human rights abuses during his presidency.  He became involved in Japanese politics at one point to avoid extradition.

Bucaram and Fujimori met in the mid-1990s to negotiate a peace process between Ecuador and Peru.  What people saw on TV that day was an ethnic Japanese and an ethnic Lebanese dressed up in indigenous garbs, complete with alpaca hoods and native ponchos, eating roasted guinea pigs and other local delicacies.  This is what Gabriel Garcia Marquez must have envisioned when wrote about magical realism in Latin America.

So Chavez isn’t the first and probably won’t be the last political figure in Latin America to lend his voice and image for the cause, whatever the cause may be at the moment.  He has practically been doing it for years on his seven-hour long Sunday talk show. The only noteworthy part is that the PSUV finally put up an mp3 of Chavez singing on their website, which makes us wonder why it took them so long to capitalize socialize on this.

The real question is:  when will he sing about Obama?  [CNN]

John McCain not the Original Maverick

Sunday, October 19th, 2008

According to the Star Tribune the title belongs to Rosella Sonsteby, a 92-year-old woman running for mayor of Andover, Minnesota.  She is almost as old as McCain and considers Ron Paul her hero.  Why didn’t she run for POTUS? [Star Tribune]

“Put away the video games”…except when they are about Obama

Saturday, October 18th, 2008

Barack has so much cash to burn that his campaign is spending it on video games (even though in the last debate Obama said that parents need to “put away the video games”). [CNN]  Up until about November 3, the Obama campaign is making use of in-game advertising in some EA games to convince people to vote for the Democratic candidate. [MSNBC]  I guess ACORN wasn’t working out after all.

Yet while Obama may be the first candidate to use in-game advertising, he isn’t the first politician to use video games to present his message.  Last year former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich held a forum in the online video game Second Life, and it was a total success.  Not really.  [Game Politics]  Earlier this year supporters of Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul spammed the online community virulently, eventually leading a rally in World of Warcraft. [YouTube]  And weren’t the 1993 Congressional hearings on Mortal Kombat just a ploy to boost the image of Joe Lieberman?  Ok, maybe that’s stretching it a bit.

Players tend to view in-game advertising as a double-edged sword.  If one is cynical, then this is just another scheme to get more money into the pockets of greedy executives, at little to no benefit to the consumer.  But the case can be made that as games become more expensive (and expansive–MMORPGs) gaming studios need to pull in more money regularly to make a decent profit and remain competitive.  Even if the cynical viewpoint holds water, why does it necessarily  matter?    The only compelling argument I’ve heard is that ads in a game can take one out of the mood.  I would agree with this if, say, I could hire the Sneak King in Fight Night as my cornerman–oh wait. [YES, HE IS IN FIGHT NIGHT]  On the other hand, seeing an ad for Tropic Thunder in Rainbow Six Vegas 2 was in a small way part of the experience, and if anything contributed to the mood.  So the only time ads absolutely don’t work is when they are antithetical to the game one is playing.  At least the Obama ads don’t fit into this category.

But what if they did?

1) Here is Kitsch/Posh’s Obama ad in Battlefield 2142:

2) And because we just had to do it, Counter-Strike:

Actually, never mind.  The Sneak King was awesome.

P.S.: The MSNBC article has a factual error.  Dynamic in-game advertising has existed longer than eighteen months.  I remember seeing a billboard ad for The Longest Yard in the Splinter Cell: Chaos Theory co-op mode and reading about in-game ads for years. [GameSpot]  Static advertising has existed for decades since every gaming company basically promotes itself–as in those classic sports games where the EA logo would flash constantly.  There have also been entire games based around third-party products. [Angry Video Game Nerd, NSFW]

KING OF THE HILL BATTLES AL-QAEDA

Tuesday, September 16th, 2008

Last week various news outlets reported that Al-Qaeda planned to release a new video on the seventh anniversary of the September 11 attacks.  It now appears that good ol’ hackers blocked their effort:

Western intelligence suspects two hackers who have targeted Islamicist sites before were responsible: Aaron Weisburd from Internet Haganah and Rusty Shackleford from the web group My Pet Jawa.

Yes, Rusty Shackleford.  Win.

Liveblogging WALNUTS!

Thursday, September 4th, 2008

Replay after the jump!

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Beijing LOLympics 10: Good ol’ Boris

Wednesday, August 27th, 2008

Apparently Boris Johnson, Mayor of London, was his usual self in China this past week, and as a result he pissed off the Chinese establishment.  Not only did he walk with his hands in his pockets for parts of the closing ceremony, he wore an unbuttoned jacket and held the Olympic flag with one hand (madness!).  Boris hilariously entertained his Chinese hosts later at a dinner by stating that the British had invented or codified every international sport, including China’s favorite, ping-pong.  Then he said: “Ping-Pong is coming home.  Athletics is coming home.  Sports is coming home.”

Forget London 2012.  We need Boris 2012.