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TV, Web

MTV Searching for Internet Addicts for 'True Life' Reality Series

Forget those boot camps for Internet addicts in China. In America, we work out our problems on television. That's why MTV is searching for Internet addicts to star in a new installment of its 'True Life' series. According to urlesque, the episode will be titled 'I Can't Disconnect.' If you've never watched the documentary series, each episode focuses on a different topic, from the absurd ("I'm a Southern Belle") to the sad ("I'm Addicted to Crystal Meth"). Camera crews follow people as they deal with the issues and problems surrounding the topic.

For this episode, MTV wants people, aged 16 to 28, who are living in "fear of missing an email, tweet or text," or who have "problems with family, friends, co-workers, boyfriend/girlfriend" due to the time they spend on the Web. While this might sound like it falls into the absurd category, scientists are beginning to take Internet addiction much more seriously. It's not just that kid barricaded in the basement, playing 'World of Warcraft' for hours on end, who's addicted.

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Celebrities, TV, Web, Social Networking

Lil Mama, Kanye Set the Internet Abuzz With VMA Antics


The MTV Video Music Awards (or, VMAs) haven't really been terribly interesting or exciting over the last decade or so. But last night, thanks to a couple of crazed celebrities with no sense of boundaries, and an Internet thirsty for a new meme, the VMAs are once again a topic of conversation.

Lil Mama decided to crash the stage during Jay-Z and Alicia Keys's performance of 'Empire State of Mind.' She strode up unannounced and uninvited, bobbing along to the music. She even struck a pose alongside the performers at the end of the song. The Web, of course, latched on to this bizarre outburst. The #lilmamais tag has turned into a trending topic on Twitter, and Twitpic has been plastered with images of Lil Mama inserted into various scenes, including the Last Supper.

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Video Games, Editor's Picks, Reviews, Back to School

Is 'The Beatles: Rock Band' Worth the Hype?



Hype Check
:

'The Beatles: Rock Band' (MTV Games/Harmonix)

What it is: A little band called The Beatles has joined forces with a little game called 'Rock Band' to create what is arguably the most highly anticipated music game to date. It includes 45 songs by the seminal British band, and a full-on visual overhaul to depict the Beatles' members and style. The game comes either bundled with Beatles-themed instrument controllers, or as a standalone game that can be played with any 'Rock Band'-compatible instruments.

Why it's different: You may not have noticed, but the Beatles' back catalog has never been released digitally -- no iTunes Store, no Amazon Music Store. And, of course, no Beatles song has ever been featured in a music game -- neither 'Rock Band,' nor 'Guitar Hero.' So, it's something of a coup that MTV and Harmonix (the game's publisher and developer, respectively), have scored approval to Rock-Band-ify the Fab Four's back catalog. The game was developed with creative input from Apple Corps (the Beatles' label), as well as with that of surviving band members Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr. Even the gameplay, though fundamentally the same as prior versions of 'Rock Band,' includes some new ideas, the three-part vocal harmony system being the most significant.


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Audio/Video, Celebrities

Will 'Auto-Tune' Ever Die? Jay-Z Hopes So

There's a great debate going on in popular music, and it centers on a software program called 'Auto-Tune.' Its name might not sound familiar, but if you've turned on the radio lately, you've heard it used. From country artists like Faith Hill to rap artists like T-Pain, musicians are using 'Auto-Tune' to change the pitch of their vocals, thus adding a robotic effect to the sound of their already overly processed voices, according to a report from MTV News.

Now Jay-Z, king of hip hop, has added his two cents with a new track titled 'D.O.A. (Death of Auto-Tune).' In the song, he issues a call to arms against the pitch-correction software. The rapper said it officially became a 'gimmick' when it was used in a Wendy's television commercial.








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Video Games, Celebrities

Jerry Bruckheimer and MTV Officially Making Games



It has happened before and it will undoubtedly happen again: the movie suits are trying to figure out the whole "video game" thing. This time, it's mega-producer Jerry Bruckheimer ('Gone in 60 Seconds,' 'The Rock') who's giving it a try. Bruckheimer and MTV have just announced a new joint venture, Jerry Bruckheimer Games, following 17 months of rumors and speculation (apparently, it took that long to come up with the name).

Execs were plucked from top game publishers around the biz; Jim Veevaert, who served as executive producer at Microsoft on a little game called 'Halo 3,' will be the company's president of production. Jay Cohen, who recently left his position as North American VP of publishing at Ubisoft, will be serving as president of development.

No word yet on other hirings, and, more importantly, not a peep about what types of games the company will be developing. The press release suggests that the studio is aiming to create original gaming franchises that "convey and reflect the high standards of entertainment value set by Jerry Bruckheimer." What, like 'Con Air' or 'National Treasure?' The gaming world is on pins and needles, Mr. Bruckheimer... [From: Joystiq]

Celebrities, TV, Web, Social Networking

MTV's TRL Successor to Integrate Twitter and Facebook



MTV is hopping on the Twitter bandwagon, and will soon be relying upon the microblogging service as an integral part of what the cable network is billing as the spiritual successor to 'Total Request Live' (TRL). 'The Alexa Chung Show' will be broadcast live during the all-important after-school time slot and will feature many of the same ingredients as TRL -- fan interaction, live performances, and celebrity guests -- but all updated for the social networking age.

Model and TV host Alexa Chung, a celebrity in the U.K., but a relative unknown in the U.S., will host the show and field fans' feedback via Twitter, Facebook, and an application developed specifically for the show called 'RockYou,' which will let users share and upload viral videos that may then be aired on the program, itself.

TRL featured plenty of audience interaction; viewers were encouraged to send in messages and questions for guests, and were asked to vote in order to determine what videos would be played. But 'The Alexa Chung Show' takes that theme of interaction a step further by not only adopting popular social networking tools, but also by being accessible even when off the air.

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Computers, Video Games, iPod

'Rock Band' to Feature Beatles Songs -- Take That, Steve Jobs!

'Rock Band' Scores Beatles Songs. Take that Steve Jobs!After years of negotiations, rumors, and quite probably begging, the Beatles catalog will finally be available for digital download -- but not on iTunes, and we're sure Steve Jobs is none too happy (despite numerous teaser announcements and rumors, the Beatles still aren't on Apple's online music store, or anywhere else online, for that matter).

So if not Apple with its iTunes Store, then who's the lucky distributor? Amazon? Napster? Actually, they've all been upstaged by 'Rock Band' makers Harmonix and MTV. That's right, a video game has succeeded where Apple's army of lawyers and messianic father figure couldn't.

MTV will have access to the entire back catalog of the biggest (and arguably best) band ever for the creation of a Beatles play-along game that will stand separate from its already established 'Rock Band' series. Details such as pricing, release date (all that's been announced is 2009), and exactly what songs will be included will have to wait for another day -- today's news was merely a victory lap.

Activision, Steve Jobs, you just got served. [From: Wall Street Journal]

Computers, TV

MTV's Backchannel Turns 'The Hills' Into Online Snark-Fest



MTV's dopey-yet-addictive 'The Hills' is one of those shows that's best watched with other people -- you need them around to constantly diss the 'characters' onscreen and just generally complain about how contrived and stupid the whole thing is. Sadly, some of us end up getting our weekly half-hour 'Hills' fix by ourselves, so we kind of just have to sit there in silent shame (for watching such a mind-numbingly-bad-but-surprisingly-watchable program, of course).

As of this evening, however, solo 'Hills' viewers will be able to get their prime-time-socialization on by playing MTV Backchannel, an innovative new game that mixes the best of Web 2.0-style chat and social-networking with the traditional experience of sitting around with your friends and bitching about a show.

Here's how it works: You go online, sign in to Backchannel, and decide to either be a TAGGER or a CLICKER. TAGGERs submit "tags" -- essentially a one-sentence comment -- about something that's going on in the show onscreen ("Spencer's an ass," "Lo's an evil dork" -- we're making this up here, but let us know if you agree). Meanwhile, CLICKERs are asked to click on the tags they like. The most popular tags grow in size, and the taggers with the most-clicked-on tags get ranked in an online chart. Of course, the site has the requisite online profiles and such, giving it that extra bit of social-networking cachet.

In our brief hands-on we found it to be as silly and alluring as the show itself, but at least it allowed us to vent about the sheer emptiness of each and every character from LC and Brody to Spencer and Heidi. Try Backchannel out yourself when it premieres on tonight's episode of 'The Hills.' [From MTV Backchannel]

Audio/Video, Computers, TV

HP and MTV Offer Thinly-Veiled Commercial as TV Show

HP and MTV Offer Thinly Veiled Comercial as TV ShowHewlett-Packard (HP) and MTV are joining forces (again) to launch a new reality mini show thats being pitched as "the 'Real World' with more computers." 'Engine Room' is a show that gathers young creative types from around the world, sticks them in an apartment in Brooklyn, and makes them create digital art using HP PCs. Episodes will run only five to seven minutes each and will air both on mtvU (MTV's channel targeted at college kids) and will be available online.

If this sounds as much about advertising as it does about programming, you're not too far off. 'Engine Room,' like 'Meet or Delete' and 'College 500' before it, fall into the category that is being called branded-entertainment. Branded-entertainment generally consists of usually short-form reality shows with heavy branding from a sponsoring company, in this case HP. In other words, it's just like the soap-operas of yore, only with more of a reality-show-twist and the 'product' actually being used in the show.

In 'Engine Room' 16 contestants will be divided up into four teams and compete for a prize of $400,000 and a chance to program the giant MTV screen in Times Square. Filming is complete and the editing is almost done. If you feel like you really need a multi-part infomercial posing as a television show in your life, then check out 'Engine Room,' which premieres tonight. To be fair, we haven't seen it yet, so it just might be good -- but if it stinks.... [From: New York Times]

Video Games

Konami Sues Harmonix, Viacom, and MTV Over Rock Band


Alright, this is getting a little silly. First it was Gibson claiming that Rock Band and Guitar Hero violated a patent covering "simulating a musical performance," and now Konami is suing Harmonix, Viacom, and MTV Game because Rock Band allegedly violates a similar set of patents covering "simulated musical instruments" and "musical rhythm-based matching games."

Filed in good ol' Marshall, the suit seeks the big green in damages and an order preventing the sale of Rock Band's instruments. Interestingly, Gamasutra noticed last year that the fine print on Activision's Guitar Hero homepage says the game is covered by the Konami patents in question, so it appears that Activision's managed to reach a licensing agreement with Konami -- which, if true, doesn't necessarily bode well for Harmonix and company. No one's commenting yet, but we hear Harmonix's lawyers are furiously punching in the old up-up-down-down trying to get this to go away.

Read - Wired article on the lawsuit
Read - Gamasutra article
Read - Konami's complaint (PDF)
Read - Konami patent covering simulated musical instruments (PDF)
Read - Konami patent covering musical arcade machines (PDF)
Read - Konami patent covering musical game machines (PDF)

Video Games

Jerry Bruckheimer, MTV To Launch Video Game Studio

Bruckheimer Teaming with MTV for Video Game StudioWhile the name Bruckheimer may not inspire much confidence in those who prefer their movies to have deep meanings and thought-provoking storylines, you have to admit that the guy has made some of the greatest action movies of all time. ('Top Gun,' despite all its cheese, ranks up there pretty high on most peoples' lists.) So, it's with mixed thoughts that many will take the news of Bruckheimer forming a video game studio with MTV, a combination that will likely result in some big-budget gaming blockbusters in future years.

The question, of course, is whether the games will be any good.

MTV is spending $500 million on video games in the coming years, with its first big investment being 'Rock Band,' the 'Guitar Hero III' competitor which adds drums and singing into the mix. It's unclear just what Bruckheimer has in store for gamers, except that he says he will not produce games based on his movies.

Ironically enough, Bruckheimer is flipping his rule, though: He's producing a movie based on a game called 'Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time', which is due for release in 2009.

He also says his studio's games won't fit into any existing genres like shooter or role-playing game. Instead, Bruckheimer plans to form new gameplay types and series where none exist today. Lofty goals, indeed.

Will he succeed where other Hollywood to video game crossovers have failed? Time will tell, and while we're not expecting any paradigm shifts in the gaming world to come out of this, a little fresh blood wouldn't hurt.

From Reuters

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Audio/Video, Computers, Celebrities, TV

Every Episode of 'South Park' to be Available Online for Free

All of 'South Park' Going Online
MTV Networks, the company behind MTV (obviously), VH1, Comedy Central, Nickelodeon, CMT, Spike, and The N, has announced plans to offer every episode of 'South Park', ever, online, for free.

Are you done dancing for joy yet? We'll wait. So here's the deal. SouthParkStudios.com, which currently hosts a small video clip collection as well as some downloadable extras, will include every clip of 'South Park' since its inception.

Just a couple of months ago, 'The Daily Show' went digital with over 13,000 video clips at TheDailyShow.com. That test of the digital waters was very successful. It turned out that hosting the videos online didn't hurt the show's TV ratings. It also turns out that hosting episodes online actually helps shows increase viewership. Who would have guessed?

Is MTV going to take this strategy to the rest of their stable of shows? Let's hope so, as there are many great shows sitting the company's vault ('The Maxx' anyone?).

From Tech Digest

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Audio/Video, iPod

MTV Closing URGE Music Subscription Service

MTV Killing URGE, Chooses RealNetworks Over Microsoft

Reports are emerging this morning that MTV is on the brink of abandoning URGE, the company's iTunes-challenging service that was launched in partnership with Microsoft just over a year ago. Turns out Microsoft betrayed that partnership a few months later with the release of the Zune Marketplace, an online store optimized to work with Microsoft's iPod-wannabe, the Zune. MTV, playing the part of lover scorned, is running to the arms of RealNetworks and its Rhapsody online music service to turn it into a proper iTunes challenger.

This new partnership between MTV and RealNetworks is said be a bit of a love triangle with Verizon Wireless coming into the fold to provide wireless distribution of content straight to mobile phones. It remains to be seen whether Verizon will include this service in its VCAST network of mobile content or start offering some new, separate music-based service.

What we do know is this: With MTV ditching URGE and Microsoft focusing on the Zune, it's likely that URGE's days are numbered. Sorry subscribers.

From AOL Money & Finance

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CNET provides the latest tech news, unbiased reviews, videos, podcasts, software, and downloads, making tech products easy to find, understand and use.

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