felipepepe
Codex's Heretic
It's revolting how since she removed her tweets/resume, Eurogamer can't just go into court and prove they have facts to back them up, even with screenshots...
It's revolting how since she removed her tweets/resume, Eurogamer can't just go into court and prove they have facts to back them up, even with screenshots...
can't they have twitter give evidence or something? p. sure with all the twitter comment arrest stuff it's a possibilityIt's revolting how since she removed her tweets/resume, Eurogamer can't just go into court and prove they have facts to back them up, even with screenshots...
Interesting how that douche can bring up lots of valid things, yet I still get the impression the only thing going through his mind were these things I will now quote out of context:http://www.destructoid.com/from-a-bag-of-doritos-to-a-bag-of-dirty-laundry-237619.phtml
Jim Sterling's new article. I don't particularly care for him but am giving it a read now.
The story throws up a plethora of questions, so many that no single article could cover them all. Most importantly, people have been asking, "Why is nobody covering this?"
...
Then again, the size of the GAF thread alone proves there's a huge audience for these kinds of stories, so there is definitely something to gain from writing about it.
That's the thing: the internet is killing journalism, and rightfully so. Every event on earth can now have everyone participate as a live witness. No need to rely on anyone for the facts. As far as opinions and analysis, there's no shortage of those; all it takes is a very minimal effort to find the people whose opinions and analyses you respect and follow them. The entire media industry is choking to death on a series of tubes; why would journalism be spared?
If you didn’t know already, I’m joining the dark side and trying out games PR for 3-months. A few people have asked, and no, I’m not giving up writing. DO NOT PANIC! Not that anyone would.. panic :’( But you know, just in case!
So, who will I be serving? Barrington Harvey of course! Make sure to follow them on twitter and win stuff, but follow me first! We will be doing F1 2010, International Cricket 2010 and Mafia II while I am there. Hopefully it will go well. In other news: I start tomorrow and I’m shitting bricks!
Games PR is something I wanted to get into eventually and this will give me a good heads up to what it’s all about. I still have my heart set on writing though so unless something goes horribly wrong, then no future plans have been changed.
Said a Barrington Harvey rep on the phone this afternoon: “That’s right. We’re trying to manage the review scores at the request of Eidos.”
When asked why, the spokesperson said: “Just that we’re trying to get the Metacritic rating to be high, and the brand manager in the US that’s handling all of Tomb Raider has asked that we just manage the scores before the game is out, really, just to ensure that we don’t put people off buying the game, basically.”
British site Eurogamer has already gone live with a 7/10 score, an act the rep said had caused “problems”.
I had Saints Row flashbacks when I saw the picture of that hotel room. That's some pimpin' shit right there. Yeah, she stayed completely impartial after having all that money thrown at her, right...This is about a fully paid trip to Vegas with stay in expensive hotel room (depicted), free food, driving in Hummers, party and drinks (on Gearbox)
The picture on the main page is one of their King suites, she was staying in a Queen suite, which looks like this: http://www.hardrockhotel.com/las-vegas-hotel/suite-tower/supreme-city-view-queens-suite
Not really that fancy, especially for a business trip. Their 'Living Art Ultra Lounge' on the other hand, is quite nice indeed.
However, ANY room is too much for a PR firm to pay for if a journalist's impartiality is to remain unquestioned. It should be paid for by one's own company, or out of pocket. Journalism is not like other industries, where such things are more acceptable.
I didn't do it because I felt it was tantamount amount to a sponsored tweet, a form of advertising that the Guardian would not permit, but the fact that some attendees did enter the competition angered a lot of industry watchers.
Guardian games writer, general freelance-for-hire, Spurs fan, cricket aficionado & electronic music lover.
http://www.polygon.com/2012/10/30/3575978/halo-4-avatar-costume-offered-free-from-u-k-pizza-huts
1. look at article
2. read comments
3. giggle
ITZ COMING!
I am sorry that your company doesn't put you in nicer rooms though. Just a bed and a desk, not even a small suite with a kitchenette and some chairs or a sofa? That's unusually bad if you're talking about a business trip longer than a night or two for a reasonably sized company.