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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

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Game On: Do video games ever release on time anymore?

Like most adult gamers, I’m a patient one with a significant backlog of video games waiting for me. I’ve got bills to pay and can’t afford to buy the latest AAA releases, especially with many of them asking for $70 now. I prefer to wait for discounts, because even most good games drop in price and have sales – with the notable exception of certain first-party Nintendo games.
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As She-Hulk, Tatiana Maslany Is Beautiful When She’s Angry

She-Hulk was born in 1980, in a comic titled “The Savage She-Hulk.” Endowed with superstrength and a sensational blowout, she stood 6-foot-7 in her bare, green feet and taller in heels. She had biceps like cantaloupes, skin like a cocktail olive, the waist-to-hip ratio of a lingerie model. Could she smash? Could she ever.As the latest Marvel character to bound from page to screen, she makes her television debut in “She-Hulk: Attorney at Law,” a loopy half-hour comedy that arrives on Disney+ on Thursday. The series stars Tatiana Maslany, the Emmy-winning actress best known for the critics’ darling clone thriller “Orphan Black,” who has also starred in demanding stage roles and a handful of indie films. Maslany described the character She-Hulk — giant, verdant — as “weirdly, the closest thing to my own experience I’ve done ever.”This was on a recent, sultry Wednesday morning, when New York City felt like the inside of a steamer basket. Maslany, 36, who had recently flown in from Los Angeles, where she lives with her husband, actor Brendan Hines, had suggested walking across the Brooklyn Bridge. She commuted this way just about every day, usually by bike, when she appeared on Broadway in Ivo van Hove’s version of “Network.” The trip calmed her, giving her a channel for her restlessness and intensity, and helped her find her way into a role on the way there and back out on the way home.(BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM.)“The energy that it requires to be open in front of people just is really hard for me to modulate,” she said as she sidestepped some sun-melted chocolate. “At the same time, it’s quite an alive place to be.”Maslany pulses with that aliveness in person, which manifests in playfulness, attention, intensity. Without the benefit of computer-generated imagery, she stands 15 inches shorter than She-Hulk. She’s a flick knife of a woman — small, sharp. She showed me a tattoo on her arm, a random drawing of an infant that her husband had done.“It’s a little tough baby,” she said approvingly.(END OPTIONAL TRIM.)That morning, she had dressed in yellow cycling shorts and a T-shirt with a picture of a dirt bike on it, and her curly half-blond hair was arranged half-up, half-down. Kid-sister chic. No one seemed to recognize her on the bridge — a tribute, maybe, to her ability to disappear into character. In “Orphan Black,” she played a dozen clones who were differentiated by hair and makeup but also by Maslany’s extraordinary plasticity of affect and expression. And while Hollywood sets certain expectations for how actresses should look and behave, she has rarely bowed to them, on screen or off.“I’ve never played the bombshell,” she said.But She-Hulk is a bombshell. She is also the alter ego of Jennifer Walters, a meek public interest attorney with a listless dating life and a passion for workplace separates. When Jen receives an accidental transfusion from her cousin Bruce Banner (Marvel’s original Hulk, played by Mark Ruffalo), she suddenly becomes She-Hulk. While Bruce’s Hulk is a cinder block of a man — or as Maslany put it, “a roided-out gym maniac, to such a cartoonish degree” — Jen’s transformation, triggered by anger, looks different. Only some muscles bulge. Her breasts — not muscles! — bulge, too. Her waist whittles. Her hair straightens.“She fulfills the stereotypical feminine ideal body, while still being, like, too tall and green,” Maslany said. (This was not lost on viewers of the “She-Hulk” trailer, who criticized the character’s voluptuous proportions.)(BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM.)Despite sometimes playing four clones in a single scene, Maslany has never transformed in quite this way. And if she knows she looks good in green, it’s because she once dressed up as a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle at a comic-con. But she gets what it’s like to have the world suddenly see you differently. And if she doesn’t understand her talent as a superpower, her colleagues do.“She has so many superpowers,” said Jessica Gao, who wrote “She-Hulk.”(END OPTIONAL TRIM.)Raised in a medium-size town in Saskatchewan, Maslany was never that interested in fame. “There was, like, absolute flying in the opposite direction, doing everything to not end up there,” she said. She loved acting. She was less enthusiastic about the accouterments of celebrity. At one point, I referred to a fashion shoot she had done.“I’m getting better at it,” she said, making a face.But she did become reasonably famous. So Jen’s resistance to becoming She-Hulk — “The idea of being a superhero is not appealing to me,” Jen said — resonated with her. Maslany didn’t have to imagine how she would feel if she became a public figure practically overnight, if she were scrutinized for her appearance and affect.“It’s a very easy jump for me,” she said.(BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM.)On the red carpet and in media appearances, she plays a role to make it through. “It has to be another character, or else it costs me too much,” she said.This helps to explain why an actress who would have sworn that she would never do something as mainstream as a superhero show signed on. “I didn’t want to do anything of that scale ever,” she said. “But there was something about the script that felt really weird and funny in a way that was like, ‘Oh, I don’t know why, but it’s undeniable to me.’” (Actually, she did deny it, in at least one interview, but she explained that as a contractual matter: She couldn’t announce it until Disney announced it first.)The move surprised Helen Shaver, a director who worked with Maslany on “Orphan Black.” But it didn’t surprise her for long. “I was like, ‘OK, that’s a wild choice,” Shaver said on a recent call. “But I also know she has this playful, wacky element to her as well. She is willing to abandon herself to madcap humor.”(END OPTIONAL TRIM.)The shoot began in the spring of 2021, in Atlanta. As Jen, Maslany played a version of herself, although she noted that she has never worn more makeup to play a supposedly mousy character. (“I’m truly wearing full lashes,” she said. “I’m contoured to hell. The story around Jen being undesirable is absurd.”) And because Jen retains her consciousness even in superhero form, She-Hulk is a version of her, too — although one achieved almost entirely by digital effects.When She-Hulk appears at her sexiest, Maslany is slinking around the set in a silver motion-capture suit and a helmet. “I feel like a little kid in pajamas,” she said.Yet Ginger Gonzaga, who plays Nikki, Jen’s spirited paralegal, could always tell whom she was acting opposite. “When she’s She-Hulk, she has this physicality that instantly changes, and it happens very fast,” Gonzaga said. “It’s a proud stance and a statuesque stance.”Maslany described She-Hulk’s bearing as heavier, less fidgety, more centered in the pelvis. “The weight of She-Hulk brings her down into her loins in a different way,” she said. This might be the way a woman moved if she felt safe in the world, if she knew that no one could hurt her.But “She-Hulk” suggests a further fantasy, one that has nothing to do with irradiated blood and is arguably even more incredible that the sci-fi imaginings of “Orphan Black.” This new show suggests that a woman could be angry and that the world would really like it.I asked Maslany about the last time she felt angry. “It’s never not there,” she said. But she rarely allows herself to express it in her personal life. And it never looks as good on her — “I would love to be able to be angry but not, like, shaking and crying,” she said — as it does on She-Hulk.“She transforms into a hyperbeautiful, hyperfeminine version that might be more palatable in that anger,” Maslany said as she stepped off the bridge and into the muddle of Manhattan. “It’s wild. It’s super wild.”This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
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Study shows disability representation onscreen is increasing but still falls short

“CODA,” a film about the hearing child of deaf parents, won this year’s Academy Award for best picture, and one of its stars, Troy Kotsur, became the first deaf man to win an acting Oscar when he took home the award for best supporting actor. Lauren Ridloff became the Marvel Cinematic Universe’s first deaf superhero in “Eternals.” The Hulu mystery-comedy series “Only Murders in the Building” won acclaim for an almost entirely silent episode that highlighted the perspective of a deaf character (played by James Caverly).Even with these prominent examples of disability representation onscreen, relative to the approximately 26% of adults in the United States who have a physical or psychological disability, representation continued to lag behind, a new study released Tuesday by Nielsen found. The report, whose release was timed to the 32nd anniversary of the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act, analyzed the representation of disabled characters in film and on TV shows released from 1918 to 2022.The titles came from a Nielsen database that included about 164,000 films and TV shows that premiered over the past century. Of those, about 4.2%, or 6,895 titles, were tagged as having significant disability themes or content.Disability inclusion was highest, the study found, in 2019, when 518 productions with disability themes were released.Across the board in this year’s report, films fared better than television. Of the 6,895 titles that featured significant disability themes or content, about 59% (4,066) were feature films, and 18% (1,209) were regular series. (The remaining depictions were in other categories like short films, limited series, TV movies or specials.)Those numbers represent a slight shift toward television from last year, when a Nielsen report showed that 64% of depictions of disabled characters were in feature films, and 16% were in regular television series.A survey of more than 2,000 smartphone users on disability representation in media conducted in the first quarter of 2022 also found that people with disabilities were much more likely to take issue with portrayals of disabled characters. Viewers with disabilities were 34% more likely to say there was not enough representation of their identity group in media, and they were 52% more likely than those who did not identify as having a disability to characterize a TV portrayal of their identity group as inaccurate.Lauren Appelbaum, a vice president at RespectAbility, a nonprofit organization that participated in the Nielsen study last year, told The New York Times then that though the number of disabled characters continued to increase, approximately 95% of those roles were still portrayed by actors who did not have disabilities.But there have also been positive representations, as on the HBO series “The Sex Lives of College Girls,” which features a character who uses a wheelchair (played by Lauren Spencer, known as Lolo), a confident student who attends the show’s iconic nude party. Alaqua Cox also won acclaim for her performance as Maya Lopez/Echo, a deaf Cheyenne woman who has the ability to imitate other people’s movements, in the Disney+ series “Hawkeye.”This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
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Game On: Remembering David Warner and the importance of good voice acting

Veteran actor David Warner passed away on Monday at the age of 80 – BBC reported that he died of a “cancer-related illness.” Beginning in 1962, his acting career spanned 56 years. His roles are too numerous to list, but standouts include Spicer Lovejoy in “Titanic,” Keith Jennings in “The Omen,” and Ed Dillinger, Sark and Master Control Program in “Tron.” He also played a plethora of characters in “Star Trek” from 1989-2000.
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How ‘Old Country’ went from a Reddit story to a novel and Netflix deal

Matt Query is rarely spooked by the natural world. In fact, the environmental lawyer feels at peace in eerie solitude, whether on his ranch in rural Oregon or on remote solo backpacking trips. But spooking others comes naturally to him. On Reddit's r/NoSleep - a place where internet writers share original, first-person horror stories - his thriller "My Wife and I Bought a Ranch" was so engrossing, it led to a book deal and Netflix adaptation. "Old Country," the novel, comes out July 26, and early reviews are comparing Query's writing, alongside his brother and co-writer, Harrison Query, to horror masters Stephen King and Paul Tremblay.Unexpected viral fame arrived for Matt Query after he had been casually posting on r/NoSleep for a few years. In February 2020, Query anonymously posted the first of his six-part thriller based loosely on his experiences of moving to rural Oregon. The story follows a former Marine and his wife settling into their newly purchased ranch in Idaho. Everything seems quaint and peaceful until their neighbors warn them about an ominous shapeshifting land spirit that becomes increasingly more terrifying as the seasons change. Even with this threat, the duo insists on staying and learning to temper the angry spirit.Query is just the most recent success story to come out of r/NoSleep. This little corner of the internet has launched numerous amateur writers into professional gigs. Founded in March 2010, the subreddit has been Ground Zero for writers testing their ideas before an audience of 16 million. Clearly some of those people have connections. In 2019, Steven Spielberg's Amblin Partners acquired the film rights for Tony Lunedi's 10-part story "The Spire in the Woods" shortly after Ryan Reynolds announced he'd be producing an adaptation of "The Patient Who Nearly Drove Me Out of Medicine," by Jasper DeWitt.NoSleep isn't a typical forum for workshopping stories, specifically because comments that are either congratulatory or critical are taken down. Instead, comments are meant to preserve a story's plausibility. Scroll beyond the story and you'll find everything from faux advice ("I think you should stop taunting whatever this is. Also, I love your dog!") to questions from frightened readers ("Bruh.... I live in Rural Idaho..... near Jackson.... should I never go to a ranch?").Initially the vast number of comments was enough to motivate Query's casual writing hobby since he never expected his thrillers to blow up. But after users demanded more details about the husband and wife and speculated about the plot, he happily obliged.Once Query's spine-tingling post gained thousands of likes, and readers flooded his inbox with requests for more, he realized he might have a hit and enlisted his screenwriting brother, Harrison Query, to help turn his stories into a novel and screenplay, then land them in the right hands.Scott Glassgold, the founder of the production company Ground Control, is a longtime collaborator of Harrison Query, but he had his doubts when Query approached him with a screenplay."Ninety-nine-point-nine-percent of the time when a client's like, 'My brother has something that he wrote, will you read it?' Your eyes sort of roll and you begrudgingly say, 'Sure, I'll read it,' " he said. "But in this instance, it was the .01 percent where I read it and it just was staggeringly good."Glassgold had never heard of r/NoSleep before helping the brothers cement their seven-figure Netflix deal (the same month they landed their book deal). But since then, he's mined the subreddit for diamonds in the rough and has occasionally struck gold. He has sold the novella "We Used to Live Here," by Marcus Kliewer, to Netflix, and the short story "I Think My Mother-In-Law Is Trying to Kill Me," by Nick Moorefox, to Sony's 3000 Pictures."It's this wonderful confluence of technology empowering an artist to get their work out there without having to know somebody, get permission from somebody," Glassgold says. "Writing something good gets lost in the shuffle. But if you do something great, you can get noticed. And that's the beautiful thing about YouTube, TikTok or r/NoSleep."For Matt Query, the experience has shown him the power of strangers rallying around a good story and making room for undiscovered talent."They branded themselves as the front page of the internet," Query says of Reddit. "I've used Reddit to fix my dishwasher and learn how to fix parts of my car. And now it's helped me workshop a cool story."
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Game On: Now free-to-play, Fall Guys is still a knockout game

Some might remember that I wrote about “Fall Guys” once before, when the game was first released near the onset of the pandemic and amassed huge popularity in a short time-frame. It was the perfect game at the perfect moment – bright and cheerful to lift people’s spirits, fun to watch on streaming services and extremely replayable.
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International Spy Museum marks 20 years of revealing tricks of the trade

It's no secret: Lucy Stirn loves working at the International Spy Museum in Washington, D.C. And not just because she gets to tell kids about spies hiding things in fake tiger poop - a highlight of any museum tour."You're never going to have a kid come in and say 'Oh, that's boring,' " said Stirn, director of youth education at the museum, which celebrates its 20th birthday this month.There's something for everyone among the museum's 10,000 artifacts. Part of the appeal for kids is "it's a little naughty and a little sneaky," said Stirn, a former teacher who has worked at the museum for 10 years. "They come in looking for the cool gadgets," she said. "They don't know about the historical aspects, so we [reveal] that, too."Visitors are surprised when an object that appears to be one thing turns out to be something very different, said Andrew Hammond, the museum's artifacts curator and historian.What looked like tiger poop was actually a device used to detect enemy troop movements in jungles during the Vietnam War (1955-1975). No one ever thought to pick it up and examine it."All is not what it seems," Stirn reminds young visitors. Another example: An ordinary-looking dead rat in an alley might have been gutted to hide money or messages in it. Spies used these rats during the Cold War with the Soviet Union (1945 to 1991). When stray cats began picking up the rats, agents sprinkled them with hot sauce. Problem solved.The Soviets turned the tables on U.S. intelligence in 1945 when some students visiting the American ambassador in Moscow gave him a hand-carved Great Seal of the United States. The attractive gift stayed in his office for seven years, until technicians discovered a bug hidden inside. It took them two months to figure out how it worked.Many museum exhibits have clever origins. Hammond likes the "amazing" story of pigeons fitted with tiny cameras and released over World War I battlefields to photograph enemy positions.Other artifacts popular with kids include a dragonfly drone, a camouflage suit that makes an agent seem invisible by blending into the background, and a microdot camera that can reduce film images to the size of the period at the end of this sentence. A special historical artifact is a 1777 letter in which George Washington seeks to start a spy network during the American Revolution.There are stories and items from many countries and several "try it" challenges such as defusing a bomb (not a real one, of course) and walking like a ninja. Visitors are given agent names and assignments.The spy museum moved to its current, larger facility in Southwest Washington in 2019. The added space allowed for new displays that go to "the dark side" of espionage, one museum official said. Controversial topics such as interrogation techniques, leaks of classified information and intelligence failures are now included. Workshops with older students may feature discussions of ethical (right versus wrong) issues and current news events.The museum also offers special programs for people with autism or memory loss. And last year it added a robot, so hospitalized kids can tour the building remotely by controlling where the robot goes and what its camera sees. It's just one more supercool thing at the International Spy Museum.- - -Word wiseDo you know the language of "spookspeak"? (Spook is another word for a spy.) Some popular terms include:Agent: person working for an intelligence serviceBlown: when an agent's identity or a mission is no longer a secretCover: the made-up identity an agent usesCryptology: scientific study of secret writingDead drop: secret location where materials are left for another personHandler: case officer in charge of agents during operationsMole: spy inside one agency who gives secrets to a rival agencyParoles: passwords spies use to identify one another- - -If you goWhat: The International Spy Museum is holding a free outdoor birthday party from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. July 19. There will be music, glitter tattoos, decoding and other activities, and free ice cream (while supplies last).Where: 700 L'Enfant Plaza in Southwest Washington.When: Open Monday-Thursday and Saturday, 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.; Friday and Sunday, 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. During the busy summer months, it's best to purchase timed-entry tickets online.How much: ages 7 to 12, $16.95; ages 13 and older, $23.95-$26.95, ages 6 and younger, free (ticket required).For more information: Call 202-393-7798 or visit spymuseum.org.- - -Read, see and do moreThe museum has lists of at-home activities and kids' books and movies about spies and spying. Find them at:spymuseum.org/education-programs/kids-families/activitiesspy-museum.s3.amazonaws.com/files/resources/best-kids-spy-books.pdfspy-museum.s3.amazonaws.com/files/resources/kidspy-movie-list.gif
A&E >  Entertainment

Game On: Whatever happened to BioShock?

The first BioShock came out of nowhere in 2007 and miraculously made waves despite its stiff competition – Halo 3, Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare, Metroid Prime 3: Corruption, Team Fortress 2 and Half-Life 2: Episode Two were all excellent first-person shooters that launched the same year to already-dedicated followings. How’d they manage to compete?