A man has been given a ticket after he was hit by his own vehicle. Brian Reynolds in Lynn, Massachusetts was run over by his 1987 Chevy on Monday (November 26) when the brakes failed. The 40-year-old initially tried to stop the pickup truck with his foot, according to Boston.com. An officer stated: "The brakes to his pickup truck failed on the decline of the roadway just before the entrance to Mack Park. As a result, he opened his driver's door and put his left foot out trying to stop his truck." When that didn't work, (more)...
- 11/29/2012
- by By Ben Lee
- Digital Spy
While on the red carpet last night for the world premiere of the horror-comedy anthology Chillerama at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery in Los Angeles, we caught up with the Reynolds brothers, who had some very interesting news regarding genre filmmaker Tom Holland’s near-future feature project. Read on!
Brian Reynolds, who previously produced Chaos! Comics creator turned filmmaker Brian Pulido’s 2009 flick The Graves (which stars Clare Grant and Bill Moseley) along with his brother Dean and who is currently in pre-production on the edgy drama Sprawl, leaked the following, “Here’s something news-breaking. Tom Holland is going to direct our next feature. It’s called Screamers, and Dean and I wrote it. Tom Malloy is producing it with us, and we are very excited about that!”
Nudging him for details, Brian stated of the narrative, “Screamers is about a very successful web company that decides to up the game...
Brian Reynolds, who previously produced Chaos! Comics creator turned filmmaker Brian Pulido’s 2009 flick The Graves (which stars Clare Grant and Bill Moseley) along with his brother Dean and who is currently in pre-production on the edgy drama Sprawl, leaked the following, “Here’s something news-breaking. Tom Holland is going to direct our next feature. It’s called Screamers, and Dean and I wrote it. Tom Malloy is producing it with us, and we are very excited about that!”
Nudging him for details, Brian stated of the narrative, “Screamers is about a very successful web company that decides to up the game...
- 9/16/2011
- by SeanD.
- DreadCentral.com
Zynga's chief game designer Brian Reynolds has stated that Zynga has no interest in bringing its social games to consoles through networks like Xbox Live and Psn. "The thing that seems to make social gaming and networking magical is the fact that all my friends are potentially there and they might see the things that I'm posting or doing or expressing," Reynolds said in an interview with IndustryGamers. "[Xbox Live's] too small a demographic. Twenty or maybe even thirty percent of my friends might have an Xbox 360, but effectively 100% of them have Facebook and effectively (more)...
- 3/21/2011
- by By Scott Nichols
- Digital Spy
Videogame designers, including industry pioneers, are betting on Facebook as the next gaming platform. With 500 million users, this could mean big money.
The wildly popular videogames Doom and Quake have been accused of everything from preaching Satanism to inspiring the Columbine school shooting. By comparison, the latest game from one of the original Doom and Quake designers could be found guilty of nothing worse than inspiring children to set up lemonade stands.
Related story on The Daily Beast: Google's Desperate Groupon Gambit
If John Romero's earlier games were marked by gore, his Ravenwood Fair is as clean as a Singapore sidewalk. In Quake, gremlins feasted on corpses. In Ravenwood Fair you guide a raccoon or bear around a forest, felling trees and erecting carnival attractions in the clearings. Should you encounter a monster, you simply scare it off with a few mouse clicks. But though Ravenwood Fair lacks the bluster of Romero's early shooters,...
The wildly popular videogames Doom and Quake have been accused of everything from preaching Satanism to inspiring the Columbine school shooting. By comparison, the latest game from one of the original Doom and Quake designers could be found guilty of nothing worse than inspiring children to set up lemonade stands.
Related story on The Daily Beast: Google's Desperate Groupon Gambit
If John Romero's earlier games were marked by gore, his Ravenwood Fair is as clean as a Singapore sidewalk. In Quake, gremlins feasted on corpses. In Ravenwood Fair you guide a raccoon or bear around a forest, felling trees and erecting carnival attractions in the clearings. Should you encounter a monster, you simply scare it off with a few mouse clicks. But though Ravenwood Fair lacks the bluster of Romero's early shooters,...
- 12/18/2010
- by Ben Crair
- The Daily Beast
For years they've been associated with 1970s suburbia. Now, thanks to a global makeover, today's Avon ladies are becoming millionaires, and even men are starting to knock on doors. But in the age of online retail, why is Avon beating the recession – and catching the eye of Hollywood?
The night before I went to meet one of the most successful Avon ladies in Britain, I dreamed swear words had been scrawled on my front door in lipstick. I arrived in Weymouth two hours into one of Gail Reynolds's monthly coffee mornings with visions of violent make-up still hot in my mind.
Gail Reynolds, a mother of three who started selling the products door-to-door eight years ago, now runs an Avon business worth around £5m. She herself earns about £113,000 a year, and has 2,000 Avon representatives (each paying her up to 12% of their sales) in her team. A handful, half men, half women,...
The night before I went to meet one of the most successful Avon ladies in Britain, I dreamed swear words had been scrawled on my front door in lipstick. I arrived in Weymouth two hours into one of Gail Reynolds's monthly coffee mornings with visions of violent make-up still hot in my mind.
Gail Reynolds, a mother of three who started selling the products door-to-door eight years ago, now runs an Avon business worth around £5m. She herself earns about £113,000 a year, and has 2,000 Avon representatives (each paying her up to 12% of their sales) in her team. A handful, half men, half women,...
- 11/28/2010
- by Eva Wiseman
- The Guardian - Film News
Zynga's just revealed its latest tool to sucker you in to spending hours "casual gaming" on Facebook: FrontierVille--a revamped, updated version of its FarmVille app. But is this really a reminder of how fickle the casual gaming biz is?
Over at Venturebeat they're labeling FrontierVille as the most "elaborate" title from Zynga yet. It'll be extremely familiar to the millions of players of the older FarmVille title, and is essentially the same core game set in a different context. Your farm is now a "homestead" and your objectives include growing enough crops to feed your family and keeping your livestock from wandering off, and eventually growing into a frontier town. Unlike FarmVille, the game is extremely social, and you can actually tend your friends' fields for them--and the technology of the game code intelligence has been improved so that more "natural" events occur. For instance, trees grow large from little...
Over at Venturebeat they're labeling FrontierVille as the most "elaborate" title from Zynga yet. It'll be extremely familiar to the millions of players of the older FarmVille title, and is essentially the same core game set in a different context. Your farm is now a "homestead" and your objectives include growing enough crops to feed your family and keeping your livestock from wandering off, and eventually growing into a frontier town. Unlike FarmVille, the game is extremely social, and you can actually tend your friends' fields for them--and the technology of the game code intelligence has been improved so that more "natural" events occur. For instance, trees grow large from little...
- 6/9/2010
- by Kit Eaton
- Fast Company
Last night's Private Practice featured four story lines barely connected to each other. We'll examine the ups and downs each in our review of "Slip Slidin' Away" below ...
Addison is treating a woman for stage four ovarian cancer, but the woman won't go to the hospital until someone she trusts agrees to watch Milo, her cat. Naturally.
We now have Addison becoming crazy cat lady. She's not quite Angela from The Office, but she gets into it. It's cute. Also cute? The oncologist, Dr. Brian Reynolds.
He asks her out and she accepts. Unfortunately, they then discover that their patient has passed away. Addison fears she may end up as Lily, dying alone with a cat.
Kind of cliched, but entertaining enough all around.
Naomi meets Dr. Gabriel Fife, a wheelchair-bound specialist in complex implantation in high risk groups such as little people. He's a bit arrogant but quite brilliant.
Addison is treating a woman for stage four ovarian cancer, but the woman won't go to the hospital until someone she trusts agrees to watch Milo, her cat. Naturally.
We now have Addison becoming crazy cat lady. She's not quite Angela from The Office, but she gets into it. It's cute. Also cute? The oncologist, Dr. Brian Reynolds.
He asks her out and she accepts. Unfortunately, they then discover that their patient has passed away. Addison fears she may end up as Lily, dying alone with a cat.
Kind of cliched, but entertaining enough all around.
Naomi meets Dr. Gabriel Fife, a wheelchair-bound specialist in complex implantation in high risk groups such as little people. He's a bit arrogant but quite brilliant.
- 11/6/2009
- by steve@iscribelimited.com (Dr. Shepherd)
- TVfanatic
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