Boing Boing tv visits
New York Comic Con, the largest comics convention on the Eastern seaboard, and we find games, geeks, and graphic novels galore. Our guide through the event's board game realms is
Dr. Gregory Wilson, author and fantasy fiction professor at
St. John's University of New York, who teaches us little-known tools for game quality evaluation. "You can tell this one is awesome because of the
weight of the box -- it's probably about 15 pounds," he says as we pass one title. "This one takes two hours
just to set up! Clear evidence that it, too, is awesome."
Part two of today's episode is a little alternate reality game of our own design -- we like to call it "Count the Cosplayer."
BONUS AWESOMENESS: In related news, Paddy Johnson of Art Fag City blog says: "I set up a small online quiz asking people to label unidentified visitors as either art fair or comic-con attendees. There are a few surprises in there, which keeps it interesting."
Continuing in
Boing Boing tv's "best of" our first 6 months, as chosen by you, our viewers, we revisit the dulcet tones of....
Gabe and Max, who have taught so many of us how to achieve the dream lives of our dreams using the internet. Today they answer questions from the Bing Bong audience. Then, aliens discover Mark Frauenfelder's book, "Rule the Web."
Posted on March 26, 2008 12:33 AM
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Science fiction and folk music had a baby, and its name is
filk. This little-known DIY music subculture involves songs composed and performed by
sci-fi and fantasy fans, and revolves around fandom themes. Today on
Boing Boing tv, Xeni visits the
Consonance Filk Convention in the Bay Area, and learns that it is possible to combine vampires, computer virii, LOLcats, Battlestar Galactica, Tolkien slashfic, string theory, and World of Warcraft characters in a single Klingon lyric sung to the tune of "Kum Ba Ya."
Update: Special thanks to Brooke Lunderville, "the Banjo Goddess of British Columbia," whose smiling face you see above in the opening sequence for this episode.
An Alternate Reality Game (or 'ARG') revolving around the storyline of the Fox tv series
Sarah Connor Chronicles (and the
Terminator movie trilogy). The footage describes the development of a camera from
Enitech Labs that can take pictures of a future event by capturing faster-than-light "tachyon" particles. When pictures of ordinary scenery foretell post-apocalyptic outcomes, the developers find themselves in a race against time to publicize their findings and warn the public of the horrors to come...
(Thanks, Bart Cheever / millionsofus!)
Posted on February 21, 2008 5:40 AM
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In today's Boing Boing tv, Xeni visits
Machine Project in LA to check out artist
Brody Condon's piece "
Performance Modification," in which....
10 performers outfitted in medieval/space/fantasy armor re-create Bruce Nauman’s 1973 work “Tony Sinking into the Floor, Face Up and Face Down”. Performed in slow motion and combined with movements based on computer game death animations, this piece is accompanied by a high volume binaural beats reputed to induce out of body experiences.
Condon has a history of work involving computer game modification, and performance events with medieval re-enactment and fantasy live action role playing games.
In part two, an impressionistic montage of iPhone snapshots taken among those living, slow-mo dead.