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Wysłany: Czw 20:02, 26 Kwi 2007 Temat postu: Promorionis presend:spider man movie and south park movie |
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[link widoczny dla zalogowanych] Stieghorst, 33, the cheeriest crime victim you ever saw, invited at least one television crew into his apartment. He let them take close-ups of the television and speakers he uses to watch DVDs like the one in question, "Casa de Culo." That's right, he speaks porn as a second language.
"I only bought it for the hot chicks," Stieghorst told a Journal Sentinel reporter who passed that quote along to half a million readers.
Times must be changing. I thought at least a modicum of shame was part of the appeal of porn. In his defense, it was adult porn and he wasn't watching at work.
[link widoczny dla zalogowanych] Hotels in this class feature standard rooms and a standard level of customer service. All have pools, and most have fitness areas.
[link widoczny dla zalogowanych] ‘Sabotage’ blamed for news show porn
An act of “sabotage” caused hard-core pornography to cut into a Monday night news show hosted by Tom Brokaw.
Valley viewers called Cox Communications and flooded local news media outlets following the 9 p.m. program about national health care, which aired on KPPX-TV (Cox Channel 17).
Chandler parent Brenda Schodt said she was shocked when a series of graphic sex acts suddenly appeared on her television screen.
“Maybe five or 10 minutes into the show there was no volume,” Schodt said. “I thought it was the TV, but when I looked up, there were these images.”
Cox spokeswoman Andrea Katsenes said Tuesday that the unexpected clips were not caused by Cox, and that the problem was a “source issue” with the broadcaster.
ION Television, which operates KPPX, called the problem “an act of human sabotage” at its station.
The company, based in West Palm Beach, Fla., declined to say if the pornography aired nationwide or only in the Phoenix market.
“We have launched a rigorous investigation, and any implicated employees will face strict disciplinary action and termination,” ION Media Networks spokeswoman Leslie Monreal wrote in a prepared statement.
Monreal apologized to viewers and said any unauthorized programming is taken seriously and will be prevented in the future.
The Federal Communications Commission was unable to be reached for comment.
ION Television, which was formerly PAX TV and “i,” advertises its commitment to airing family-friendly programming.
And that’s what concerns Schodt the most.
“I’m an adult with college-age kids,” she said. “But I was thinking of what it must be like for someone who has children at home.”
KPPX’s chief engineer, Ken Sell, said he raced to the studio Monday night to figure out what went wrong.
He told the Tribune he was going over the “air check tape” that records what KPPX has aired, but said he found no evidence that pornography was shown.
When contacted Tuesday, Sell declined to comment further. “Someone has to be responsible here because you certainly don’t want these things happening repeatedly,” Schodt said.
“I can’t imagine what it’s like for these younger kids to see these things and ask their parents questions.”
[link widoczny dla zalogowanych]
[link widoczny dla zalogowanych] Technology Technology HOME
Consumer Electronics Show
By Bryan Gardiner
It's a dirty little secret that's not all that dirty (or secretive) for those who follow technology trends.
The porn, or "adult industry" — to use today's preferred nomenclature — tends to serve as something of an oracle when it comes to predicting which technologies eventually make their way into the marketplace and which ones don't.
If you want to know where consumer technology is heading, look to porno and war, or so the axiom goes.
• Click here to visit FOXNews.com's Personal Technology Center.
Twenty-five years ago, it was the adult industry that played a major role in shaping the future of American home entertainment, at least for the following 15 years or so.
Suffering from stagnant theater and video-booth revenues, the industry made a bold decision to shift toward a new method for distributing its content.
In the process, porno cozied up to a budding VHS format in lieu of what many considered to be its superior Betamax cousin.
Copy-Protection Body Probing Hack of HD DVD Format LG Unveils Dual-Format High-Definition DVD Player Ulanoff: Hybrids Won't Lure Consumers to High-Definition DVDs Hybrid Discs, Machines May Soon End DVD Format War Granted, Sony (the progenitor of Betamax) had a lot to do with that ultimate decision, essentially refusing to let its burgeoning format be sullied by pornography hawkers.
But nevertheless, when the adult industry gave the thumbs up to VHS, the result of the format war was pretty much a foregone conclusion.
What followed is now common knowledge. The explosion in the early 80s of VCRs and home-video rentals did for the adult industry pretty much what TV did for pro football.
Today, of course, there is a new format war at hand, one between two high-definition discs whose similarities far outweigh their differences.
Nevertheless — whether it be out of habit or simply a wish for the whole thing to be over and done with — many have started looking toward the adult entertainment industry to get a better feel of which way the high-definition winds are truly blowing.
As was expected, the 2007 Consumer Electronics Show saw even more posturing and politics between the Blu-ray Disc and HD DVD camps, with each side announcing a new set of alliances and predicting that the end of the war was imminent.
Indeed, the success of this high-definition duel, as many have noted, will likely hinge on the partnerships that each coalition creates both with the consumer electronics and film industries.
And while today's home video market environment is far different from that of the 1980s, the adult industry is again poised to play another leading role in the final outcome. That is, if it can choose.
Porn outsells Hollywood
Although the vagaries of entertainment accounting have become legendary, it is universally acknowledged that the U.S. adult-film industry, at around $12 billion in annual sales, rentals, and cable charges in 2006, is an even grander and more efficient moneymaking machine than legitimate mainstream American cinema (the latter's annual gross came in at $9 billion for 2006).
During this year's AVN Awards — AVN (or the Adult Video News) is a glossy magazine that's basically the Variety of the U.S. porn industry — the media network released its annual survey of the U.S. adult entertainment industry.
The figures were impressive. Total revenue for 2006 came in at an astounding $12.92 billion. Overall, delivery costs were down for the year, according to AVN, a fact that supposedly accounted for the industry's continued growth.
On the video side of things, while the adult industry saw a significant decrease (15 percent) in sales and rentals last year, the sector managed to remain the largest (28 percent) in the adult entertainment market, accounting for $3.6 billion in 2006 — this, despite increasing competition from alleged Internet-based methods of pornographic distribution.
And with video sales remaining the industry's main breadwinner, it was only a matter of time before the first high-definition adult film made its way to the public. The industry, not so surprisingly, chose HD DVD.
Like with a 108-inch LCD television, it wasn't really about practicality as much as it was being first to market — and finding a cheap way of doing so.
In December of last year, Wicked Pictures released the industry's first HD DVD title, "Camp Cuddly Pines Power Tool Massacre."
Vice President of DVD Production, Jackie Ramos, characterized it as a movie about people having sex ... and then getting killed.
"Camp Cuddly" also happened to be one of Wicked's more popular titles (it had already seen a DVD release earlier in the year) and the company felt there would be continued demand for the movie in glossier high-definition iteration.
Are HD breasts better breasts?
"A lot of people are, like, you sure you want to see porn in HD?" said Ramos at this year's Adult Entertainment Expo. "We happen to feel that they do. We didn't negate ... we still haven't negated Blu-ray, but it was much more cost effective to go with HD DVD."
As Ramos puts it, Wicked chose HD DVD primarily because of Blu-ray's prohibitive expense and lack of market share, as well as the fact that it is generally cheaper and easier to produce using the format.
"Right now, [HD DVD and Blu-ray] are so new that people are confused. They don't know which format they want. Our primary goal was to bring some sort of high-definition product to the consumer. There's something to be said about planting a flag and being first, and we wanted to stay ahead of the curve as much as we can in terms of technology."
In addition to being first, the plan for now, according to Ramos, is for Wicked to continue presenting its most popular titles on HD DVD and eventually move to a day-and-date DVD and HD DVD release scheme.
Again, he stressed that the company was not ruling out Blu-ray.
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