Angry Birds Transformers Gives iOS A 15-Day Head Start

ab transformersIf there is one particular gaming franchise on the mobile phone and tablet platform which has reigned supreme for some time, it would be Rovio’s Angry Birds. There has been different “episodes”, so to speak, that have been released over the years, where each new version of Angry Birds will offer a slightly different gameplay and setting, although the premise remains the same – gain as many points as possible using the least number of birds. Having said that, Rovio has just released Angry Birds Transformers for the iOS platform, giving it a 15-day exclusivity period to boot.

As for those of you who are rocking to the Android mobile operating system, it would require some patience on your part – patience to the tune of 15 days, actually. It remains to be seen whether this is some sort of exclusivity deal that Rovio and Apple have arrived at, or is Rovio simply not taking the massive popularity of Android into consideration? Chances are it is the former, considering how large Android has grown to these days.

I guess there really isn’t much that one would miss from having to wait for a couple of weeks more. After all, it is not as though this is the “must have” game of 2014 – and beyond, and frankly, the entire Angry Birds thing has grown rather old, don’t you think so? [Press Release]

Angry Birds Transformers Gives iOS A 15-Day Head Start

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Moto X (2014) launches at Verizon tomorrow

Following the recent leak that hinted such an announcement was forthcoming, Verizon Wireless has announced that the latest Moto X (check out our review) and accompanying Moto Maker will be arriving at the carrier on September 26 (that’s tomorrow). We’ve got all the details and pricing after the jump. Says the carrier, the new Moto X will be available in … Continue reading

Derek Jeter Shows Once Again That He Knows How To Seize The Moment

In his final game in the Bronx, Derek Jeter gave New York Yankees fans one final moment they’ll always remember.

With one out and a baserunner on second in the bottom of the ninth, The Captain lined a walk-off single to right field to give the Yankees a 6-5 victory over the Baltimore Orioles. The 14-time All-Star was mobbed by teammates after he rounded first base as a sellout crowd of 48,613 fans went into a frenzy.

“I want to thank everyone here. I’ve said it time and time again. Everybody is chanting ‘Thank you, Derek.’ And I’m thinking to myself, ‘For what?’ I’m just trying to do my job. Thank you guys,” an uncharacteristically emotional Jeter said after the game. “If I’m going to be honest with you, these last few weeks have gotten tougher and tougher. I’ve told you members of the media I didn’t want to talk about it because I try not to think about it. But it was very, very difficult. But it was all worth while.”

Jeter, whose name was chanted by the home crowd seemingly throughout the entire game, drove in two RBIs earlier as well. The 40-year-old put his team on the board when he launched a double to left field with his first at-bat of the game, then scored to tie it at 2-2. In the seventh frame, Jeter drove in two more runs (only one earned) after O’s shortstop J.J. Hardy made a throwing error on a softly hit ground ball.

After hugging his current and former teammates, along with his former manager Joe Torre, Jeter walked toward the middle of the diamond to thank the Yankees fans one last time. Even the Orioles players stayed in the dugout and applauded him.

Almost immediately after the dramatic finish, several players throughout Major League Baseball were quick to honor Jeter on Twitter.

All The Crazy Things That Happened On The 'Scandal' Season 4 Premiere

“Scandal” is back for Season 4 and we finally know where Olivia Pope went on that plane. Here are all the crazy, insane, bonkers, “Scandal”-rific moments from the season premiere. For the record, we’re on team Uggs-wearing Mellie.

1. Liv was on a beach 100 miles off the coast of Zanzibar reading “Gone Girl” with Jake.
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2. Liv, now Julia Baker, got five of the best bottles of red wine delivered to the most remote island in the world … like a BAWSS.

3. Harrison is dead, which forced Jake and Liv to go back to reality. She straightened her hair, headed to the office and started to clean up D.C.

4. Quinn! It was Quinn who found her via wine shipments. She’s also the only one left at Pope & Associates.

5. Huck became Randy, the IT guy who refuses to hope unless Olivia is back for good.

6. Liberal Abby turned into the new White House press secretary.

7. Mellie lost it. She’s now walking around the White House in pajamas and Uggs, eating cereal, and going bowling.
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8. Portia De Rossi is the RNC chairwoman.
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9. Abby and Quinn hate each other.

10. Jake confronted David Rosen to find out if he took down B613. He did not.

11. Liv had dinner with her dad, who said he had nothing to do with Harrison’s murder. He did, however, “take care” of Mama Pope.

12. “Scandal” came in with an incredibly timely sexual assault case: Kate, Senator Vaughn’s aide, called Olivia to cover up her boss, who almost killed Senator Sterling after he allegedly attacked her.
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13. Cyrus made David the U.S. Attorney General.

14. Mellie visited her dead son’s grave. Yes, she wore Uggs and a bathrobe.

15. Jake basically said he’s, uh, bigger than Fitz.

16. Olivia schooled audiences everywhere on rape culture and harassment in the workplace.

17. Quinn was back on Olivia’s side, totally a gladiator in a suit.

18. Olivia figured out that Sterling assaulted Kate, not Vaughn, and Vaughn dangled her aide in front of Sterling because she knew Kate was his type. She wanted to secure an equal pay vote.

19. Harrison’s past was finally revealed. He grew up in a group home, and had no family besides Pope & Associates. They were the only people who showed up to his funeral.
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20. “Add it to the list. Dead kid. Missing mistress. Mellie’s rape. Fitz’s suicide.”

21. Mellie stopped waxing and came in with one of the best lines of the show: “It’s 1976 down there.”

22. Olivia and Fitz maybe/ barely/ sort of touched FINGERS. Shut it down, it’s over.
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Everything You Need To Know About The 'How To Get Away With Murder' Premiere

Welcome to “How To Get Away With Murder,” where a law procedural turns into a college murder mystery, which turns into a sexy story of lust and betrayal. All will end disastrously, we hope.

The last show in ABC’s highly marketed “TGIT” night, was written and created by Pete Nowalk, and executive produced by Shonda Rhimes. Starring Viola Davis, Alfred Enoch, Jack Falahee, Aja Naomi King, Matt McGorry, Karla Souza and Liza Weil, the premiere was a slam dunk for the network.

Davis stars as Annalise Keating, an intimidating rock star of a law professor who recruits students to work at her law firm for the year. Armed with supporting characters who bend at her will (ahem, Olivia Pope) and dark secrets that lay the show’s groundwork (hi again, Olivia) she’ll break, test and inspire the law students (Enoch, Falahee, King, McGorry and Souza) to bend the rules, win the case and, yep, get away with murder. Here’s what we learned in the show’s series premiere (spoilers ahead!):

Don’t expect answers.
Come on, the show is called “How To Get Away With Murder.” As if they’d actually tap that out in the pilot. The premiere puts one murder mystery to bed, only to introduce another one that rolls out dozens of questions. Nowalk seems to be playing the long game, revealing bits of an 1000-piece puzzle slowly and with purpose.

Viola Davis is brilliant. We need more Viola Davis.
I wanted to be the show.” That was the reason Davis gave for wanting to star in “How To Get Away With Murder.” She’s the face, the promo material, the name brand and the star, but it’s easy to fear that she won’t be in the show as much as we want her to be. There are so many other moving parts and B-plot questions. Sure, she has a lot to do — she tries to seduce Wes and manipulates her boyfriend into lying on the witness stand, all before winning a huge trial — but while everything orbits around Annalise Keating, we still want more.

There are plenty of Shonda-like monologues.
Have no fear, Shondaland devotees. Peter Nowalk learned well from his time as a staff writer on “Private Practice,” “Grey’s Anatomy” and “Scandal.” There are plenty “Gladiators in suits“-type speeches us to remind us of Shonda’s greatest hits. Near the end of the premiere, Wes gets an earful from Annalise: “Everything after this moment will not only determine your career, but your life. You can spend it in a corporate office drafting contracts and hitting on chubby paralegals before finally putting a gun in your mouth or you could join my firm and become someone you actually like.” Mic. Drop.

“OITNB’s” Matt McGorry is more than just a C.O.
Litchfield’s favorite correctional officer is now a law student, and, wouldn’t you know, he’s got pretty great comedic timing. McGorry’s character, Asher Millstone, is an entitled, over-prepared, over-educated, blazer-wearing country club bro who Keating totally believes in, for some reason. (For the record, McGorry has said that “How To Get Away With Murder” won’t prohibit him from continuing his role in “Orange Is The New Black,” so we’re all good.)

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SEXY SEX SEX.
Think “Grey’s” Season 2 exam room scene but with none of the romance and all of the secrecy. Here, Wes catches Annalise mid-cunnilingus (we assume?) with her boyfriend, Detective Nate Leahy (Billy Brown). Connor Walsh (Falahee) seduces a random IT guy for info on Annalise’s case. Bonnie Winterbottom (Liza Weil) elbow nudges Frank Delfino’s (Charlie Weber) tendency to sleep with students, and a storm is definitely brewing between Wes and his goth neighbor Rebecca (Katie Findlay). SEXY SEX SEX.

One character is dead before the episode ends.
Duh, maybe, because “Murder” is in the title. In the final moments of the premiere, we see the dead body the students have been lugging around all episode through three-month flash forwards is Sam (Tom Verica), Annalise’s husband. At this point, the mystery is laid out. Who killed him? Why are they burning him in the woods? Who is going to get away with murder? How do you get away with murder? Good luck finding out.

“How To Get Away With Murder” airs Thursdays, 10 p.m. ET on ABC.

Nōbody's Business: <em>This Lingering Life</em>

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Pictured L to R: Stephanie Weeks, Meg MacCary, Marta Kuersten. Photo credit: Natassia Jimenez.

Though the average American theatergoer has not seen a play from the classical Japanese theatrical style of Noh (Nō) theatre, they likely have seen playwrights influenced by that style. Bertolt Brecht conceived of his idea of verfremdungseffekt (“distancing effect,” often mistranslated as “alienation effect”) after watching Noh plays. Brecht misunderstood that, for the upper class audience of this centuries old form, the stylized elements don’t seem any stranger than the conventions of operas do for an operatic audience.

I admit that I’m eager to give you all much more background on Noh theatre, now that I have the opportunity, but I will instead leave most of that work to Chiori Miyagawa’s new play This Lingering Life, now playing at HERE Arts Center. This play is very interesting, not only because it gives me chance to talk about Noh theatre, but more so because it manages to bring something of the essence of Noh theatre into an entirely western theatrical context in a way I’ve never seen before.

Miyagawa’s plays have always struck me first with their impressive ability to create worlds. You might be thinking that every play is its own world, but actually most of the theatre today tries to fit into this world a bit too much for my take. Miyagawa’s plays, this one especially, sit somewhere between this world and another world. They also commit so fully to their own aesthetic that I usually find myself pondering the fascinating rules of this alternate existence hours or even days later (this lingering life indeed).

This Lingering Life is a complex, yet seamless, weaving-together of nine Noh storylines. Noh plays fall into five categories and are done on the same set with very stylized costumes, intonation, movements, music, and character roles. The texts are short, but the performances are long. Miyagawa’s contemporary contemplation of the world of Noh takes place in modern times, on a flexible, but minimalist set (designed by Kate Noll). A series of panels, covered in white scrim-like fabric and moved by the actors, change the scenes. The rest is done by the cast of talented actors, four of whom are from Cake Productions.

This is what I meant when I said that Miyagawa has managed to capture something of the essence of Noh. I do not mean, nor do I think she intended, that this would be the same thing as seeing a Noh play, but rather she managed to take some of the most important philosophical aspects of Noh and make them more palatable to an unfamiliar audience.

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Pictured: Vanessa Kai. Photo credit: Natassia Jimenez.

For example, the aspect of time is very important in Noh. There are a great number of ghosts who come back again and again because they cannot find peace. This cyclical aspect is also repeated by the fact that the most famous writers of Noh, Kan’ami and his son Zeami, wrote plays in the 14th and 15th centuries and have had their plays done repeatedly since that time. The stories repeat in the theatre the same way the characters’ lives repeat in the stories. This is clearly articulated and engaged with in This Lingering Life, as is the idea of karma in the Buddhist basis of these plays.

Another aspect of Noh that translates well in this piece is the casting. Men play all roles in Noh, though there are female characters in the plays. Indeed one of the five Noh categories is referred to as “Woman Plays”. This Lingering Life modernizes this aspect by having men and women both play men and women, and also by having a more diverse cast than one generally gets to see on stage these days. These aspects both showcase the versatility of these actors while simultaneously allowing us to look through their bodies to the story itself. They also manage this without masks, which Noh plays traditionally use.

Though I am familiar with this form, the friend who joined me at the theatre was not, and still enjoyed the show. She confirmed what I suspected to be the case: that the play actually teaches you about its own interpretation of form as it goes. So, if you don’t know anything about Noh, don’t let that stop you from going to the show!

I will say that this is a different kind of play, which means that it might take a few minutes to get adjusted to the new style. But if you just trust Miyagawa, director Cat Miller, and the talented cast (Ronald Cohen, Amir Darvish, Francesca Day, Luke Forbes, William, Franke, Vanessa Kai, Marta Kuersten, Meg MacCary, Enormvs Muñoz, and Stephanie Weeks), you will be in for a great night at the theatre. There is an especially wonderfully theatrical moment at the end that I don’t want to ruin, but you should definitely wait for.

If you’re curious to see something different on stage, written by someone who truly wants to experiment with form, and who is intelligent and witty about it, go and see This Lingering Life by Chiori Miyagawa. If you do know about Noh theatre, there will be jokes there just for you! If not, you will learn a lot without. Either way, This Lingering Life is a Noh Aesop’s Fables, and one that nōbody should miss.

The hypnotic and relaxing beauty of paper marbling

The hypnotic and relaxing beauty of paper marbling

I can watch Oguz Uygur marbling paper forever. This must be the less stressful work in the world. So satisfying and relaxing.

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What people around the world would wish for if they got three wishes

What people around the world would wish for if they got three wishes

Tim Urban of Wait But Why traveled to Russia, Japan, Nigeria, Iraq and Greenland and asked dozens of people if they had three wishes what they would wish for. A lot of the wishes are obvious: money, happiness, a house, love and peace come up often. But others just want something simple, like a biscuit.

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The second wave of iPhone sales is getting underway in 20 more countries, with New Zealand leading t

The second wave of iPhone sales is getting underway in 20 more countries, with New Zealand leading the pack, with other countries like Russia, Switzerland and Austria to follow when the sun rises. New Zealand’s taken a sensible approach to waiting in line, with NZ carrier Spark letting people reserve their spot in line with a life-size cardboard emoji. [9to5Mac]

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FAA gives Hollywood yellow light for drone operation

Six drone operators for movies and TV won’t have to do things on the down low anymore, now that the FAA has granted them special permission to legally film aerial shots. While the agency still hasn’t come up with a set of official rules for unmanned…