CrustyBot
Arcane
- Joined
- Dec 29, 2011
- Messages
- 814
I salute you if you were doing both simultaneously, while opening this thread, with your dick.I was eating Doritos and drinking Mtn Dew when I opened this thread
EDIT: Also, that dude needs to be an emote.
Indeed, anyone who cares already knew about these things, and the unwashed masses aren't going to become informed overnight.Well, hope this sparks some healthy debate over there and maybe some day changes in the legislation over journalism.
I don't see this having any meaningful impact on either. But some kind of change is under way and has been for a while.
Bethesda does happen to be the source of the only free gaming goodie I ever got, a Fallout 3 T-Shirt I picked up when previewing the game for NMA, but if that was meant to color my perspective, then I don't think it worked.
I'm a VIDYA GAME JOURNALIST for an European gaming website (which I shall not name for obvious reasons). I've had my fair share of PR events, previews and such. During one of the previews, we dined at an expensive restaurant with the PR guy from a publisher I will not name (again, for obvious reasons).
It's fun and all, but at the end of the day, I just care about the game and I write my opinion about that game. Sure, dining at a fancy restaurant is fun and all, but it shouldn't cloud your judgement. If they want to give me free food, that's their decision. It's not hard to still write an unbiased (although every review is subjective because of OPINIONS) article after getting all sorts of things from them.
We haven't highlighted how Intent Media has been at the forefront of debasing videogames journalism for years, along with VG24/7 and many others. We haven't even told you the story of how IGN's Colin Campbell, mentioned above and a winner of the GMA's "Games Industry Legend" award, is directly implicated in the practice of covertly selling review scores for advertising – something this writer can verify from first-hand personal knowledge.
(Indeed, we haven't gone into how just about every single player in this entire sorry saga is a GMA winner, and how the awards are widely regarded as a badge of shame, even by some of their own recipients.)
DarkUnderlord is a bad judge of character! We even have a gaylord as mod!Still doesn't explain it!
I work in the supposedly cut-throat TV industry. But today I was effectively put out of a job by another writer. Holy shit, games writing.
But dude, think about all the swag and courtships and money to be made!There's a nice Roger Ebert review where he talks about being sent a bagful of macadamia nuts from the Rock, and says in these situations he usually just mails the gift back to the sender along with a polite note. Thinking you can hold on to all of the perks and treats you can stuff into your fat little arms and maintain your credibility, because you possess a rock-solid ethical code and a cold ruthless critical detachment towards the petty material goods you've been plied with - which your readers will just have to take your word on - is downright demented. Would it be that unthinkable just not to go to the fucking restaurant, to send back the luxury crap that comes with your game, to make a constant day-to-day proof of your integrity instead of sucking on endless cigarettes and telling anyone who asks you about it, 'No, it's okay, I don't get addicted, it doesn't affect me'?
..I've been thinking long and hard about this, and the only conclusion I can come to is that this is ethically indistinguishable from bribery. Even if no quid-pro-quo is formally required, the gift creates a social obligation of reciprocity.
Watch the Totalbiscut vid above Trash. It is very informative.