Keys, Wallet, Glasses, and Phone Archive

  • Back to the Borderlands

    Back to the Borderlands

    While most of what goes on in New Robot Revolution is a rehash, it is a rehash of a great game; entertaining missions, scads of villains and buckets of loot.

    Full Story

  • The Shams Band Releases Champagne

    The Shams Band Releases Champagne

    The Shams Band is releasing it's first full length album, Champagne, tomorrow night at Fitzgerald's in Chicago. Go check 'em out.

    Full Story

  • An Apology + Fun with Spam

    An Apology + Fun with Spam

    I had comments from advertisers pushing everything from Australian barbecue grills to a Shanghai massage parlor.

    Full Story

  • The Empire Wants You

    The Empire Wants You

    A few great posters by artist Cliff Chiang.

    Full Story

  • The Naked Cowboy

    The Naked Cowboy

    Because my wife has never heard of him, here is a picture of New York's own Naked Cowboy.

    Full Story

  • Mass Effect: Great Game Cheap and New to You

    Mass Effect: Great Game Cheap and New to You

    You can sprint straight through the core missions if you like, but I suggest you ignore them, at least for a while. Mass Effect is a Star Wars quality universe. If you get hung up on the plot you’ll miss a lot of it.

    Full Story

  • Open Source Sixth Sense

    Open Source Sixth Sense

    This is so far over my head I can't really even comment. It's also so cool I had to share it with you.

    Full Story

  • An Escape: The Prisoner

    An Escape: The Prisoner

    You don’t really need an excuse to watch Ian McKellan as a twinkle-eyed villain, do you?

    Full Story

  • Hook Up with a Poet Tonight

    Hook Up with a Poet Tonight

    Keats is dead. So is Shelley. Byron, Milton, Dickinson, Eliot… even Shakespeare; they’re all dead. Nearly everyone your Lit teachers tortured you with in high school have joined the Robin Williams Society.

    Full Story

  • This Just In: The Half-Naked City

    This Just In: The Half-Naked City

    The preferred method of media coverage was a whipped up controversy over semi-nudity and morality that often included man-on-the-street interviews with passers-by, featuring parents with their children when possible, in front of the offending objet d'adverte.

    Full Story

  • Meta