p8WnT. Decide.com: Online Shopping for TVs, Computers, Cameras & Electronics. Write For Us - boxofficeBUZ.com. Box Office Buz is a website devoted to entertainment and new-media news and information. Our goal as such, is to keep our readers up to date on what’s new in movies, video games, TV, and technology. We provide news coverage, reviews, opinion pieces, and miscellaneous tidbits of entertainment to keep our site informative and enjoyable to read.
We have worked hard in the past few years to help provide our readers with quality and informative content about things in which our team is interested. As our site grows, so too does the content that we would like to be able to provide. To do so, however, we would like to invite any of our interested readers to join our team as content writers/reviewers. What We're Looking For We're looking for writers who are interested in blogging about things in the entertainment industry in general. Another critical skill is being able to write grammatically and clearly, and we reserve the right to reject articles that do not meet this standard.
How To Apply. Fusion Radio. Felicia Day's Dragon Age Series: "The Ultimate Experience" The premiere of the sure to be fanboy/girl favorite original companion web series to video game publisher BioWare’s role-playing title Dragon Age II went live late last night/early this morning on Machinima’s YouTube channel. The first of six installments of Dragon Age: Redemption introduces us to our star Felicia Day’s character Tallis, an ‘knife eared’ Elvin assassin in moderately protective fantasy armor with crazy skills on the hunt for the dangerous and recently escaped Qunari mage Cerebus. Take a look: In addition to slaughtering pigs and humans in front of the camera, Day contributed a helluva lot to the series behind the camera, too. She wrote Redemption, executive produced the series along with Kim Evey and Dan Kaplow, and her Knights of Good Productions (the same crew behind her uber-hit web series The Guild) took on the physical production duties of the program.
Tubefilter: How’d Redemption come to be? TF: What about during production? TF: Why’d you choose to play an elf? The Coolest Guy in the World. Don't Censor Censorship Opponents: Let Us Testify. Don't Censor Censorship Opponents: Let Us Testify! Irony Alert: The House is holding hearings on sweeping Internet censorship legislation this week -- and it's censoring the opposition! The bill is backed by Hollywood, Big Pharma, and the Chamber of Commerce, and all of them are going to get to testify at the hearing. But the bill's opponents -- tech companies, free speech and human rights activists, and hundreds of thousands of Internet users -- won't have a voice. As if you need a reminder: This is the most offensive Internet legislation we've seen in years. It will give the government and corporations new powers to block Americans' access to sites that are accused of copyright infringement, force sites like YouTube to go to new lengths to police users' contributions, and put people in prison for streaming certain content online.
This sham of a hearing represents everything that's broken about our political system. Open Rights Group | Ask your MP to support the United Nations report. On June 3rd Frank La Rue, the UN Special Rapporteur for the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression, released a report looking at the Internet. The report strongly criticises measures such as 'three strikes' disconnections and website blocking, and calls Digital Economy Act and similar laws 'alarming' violations of people's rights. New “voluntary” website blocking proposals, with cursory legal oversight, are being pushed by copyright lobbyists. Leaked yesterday, these censorship proposals would mean a dangerous revocation of the rule of law, in favour of a lawless Internet, where lobby groups would decide what you are allowed to see and read.
MPs Julian Huppert, Tom Watson, Robert Halfon and Eric Joyce have written a parliamentary motion (EDM) that calls for the government to reconsider the Digital Economy Act and its many proposed website blocking schemes, and for an examination of these matters by the appropriate Parliamentary Select Committee.