Blueberry Girl

Blueberry Girl

Every little girl should be issued a copy of Blueberry Girl on the day that she’s born. A lyrical poem that’s an enchanted wish for a life full of blessings, “what every new parent or parent-to-be dreams of for her child, what every girl dreams of for herself”, Neil Gaiman’s latest children’s picture book echoes the hopefulness of Sleeping Beauty and the gifts granted by the fairy godmothers who attended the newborn princess’ christening. (Unlike that classic fairy tale, though, no wicked fairy intrudes on Blueberry Girl with a curse.)

The book’s elegant watercolour illustrations are by master fantasy artist Charles Vess, whose traditional style of fairy tale art casts as much of a spell as the words they illuminate. Each spread is ripe with images of blueberries, idealized scenes of nature, and magical symbols, with the “blueberry girl” morphing in age and appearance from page to page, allowing girls of all types to identify with her. Smaller children will likely get more out of the pictures than the words, which employ more adult-level language and concepts, but will still thoroughly enjoy the large, flowing blue font and lullaby-like cadence of the poetry as it’s read aloud.

In “A Note From Neil”, Gaiman best describes the delightful Blueberry Girl, and how it was written for his goddaughter-to-be, Tash, as a favor for her mother, musician Tori Amos, a longtime friend of Gaiman’s who nicknamed her expected baby “the blueberry”:

Hello.

You’re probably wondering what kind of book this is.

This is the kind of book that comes about when a friend phones you and says, “I’ll be having a baby in a month. Would you write her a poem? A sort of prayer, maybe? We call her the Blueberry…” And you think, Yes, actually. I would.

I wrote the poem. When the baby was born, they stopped calling her the Blueberry and started calling her Natashya, but they pinned up the handwritten Blueberry girl poem beside her bed.

I kept a copy at my house, taped to a filing cabinet. And when friends read it, they said things like “Please, can I have a copy for my friend who is going to be giving birth to a daughter?” and I wound up copying it out for people, over and over.

I wasn’t going to let it be published, not ever. It was private, and written for one person, even if I did seem to be spending more and more of my time handwriting or printing out nice copies for mothers-to-be and for babies.

Then artist Charles Vess (whom I had collaborated with on Stardust) read it.

And somehow, it all became simple. I made a few phone calls. We decided to make some donations to some charities. And Charles began to draw, and then to paint, taking the poem as a starting point and then making something universal and beautiful.

On his blog he said, “Taking Neil’s lovely poetic meditation on the inherent joys of a mother-daughter relationship and developing a compelling narrative impulse without robbing the poem of its highly symbolic nature was an interesting conceptual journey.” Which I think is Charles for “It wasn’t easy to make that poem into a picture book.” He did an astonishing job, but I still worried. I stopped worrying the day the assistant editor at HarperChildrens, who was herself pregnant, called me to let me know that she’d got the artwork in, and read it, and then started crying in the office.

It’s a book for mothers and for mothers-to-be. It’s a book for anyone who has, or is, a daughter. It’s a prayer and a poem, and now it’s a beautiful book.

I hope you enjoy it. I’m really proud of it. And I hope this means I don’t have to copy it out any longer…

Neil

Part of the proceeds from the book will be donated to RAINN, Gaiman noted in his blog, “because I originally wrote Blueberry Girl for Tori and her as-yet-unborn-daughter, and that seemed like the right thing to do.” RAINN is an anti-sexual assault organization that Tori Amos is a founding member of and has been one of the main spokeswomen for, so your purchase will not only make the future brighter for little girls, it will help heal those that weren’t as lucky as the carefree everygirl represented in Blueberry Girl.

Publishers Weekly enthuses, “Fans of Gaiman and Vess will pounce on this creation; so too will readers who seek for their daughters affirmation that sidesteps traditional spiritual conventions.” Blueberry Girl is truly a must-have book for girls at any stage of life, and a sweet treat for readers.

Recommended Reading Level: All Ages.

Order now at Amazon.com:
Blueberry Girl (Canada)
Blueberry Girl (US)

Online bonus:
Blueberry Girl — Listen to Gaiman read the entire picture book online, in the book’s animated trailer. The audio is from one of the readings the author did during his Graveyard Book reading tour.

Blueberry Girl is distributed by HarperCollins Children’s Books, a division of HarperCollinsCanada and HarperCollins Publishers. For more information on the book and its author, visit the Neil Gaiman website and its related website for young readers, Mouse Circus. Neil Gaiman may also be followed on Twitter.

The Guild Wins at the Streamy Awards

from The Guild:

We are extremely excited to announce that we had such an awards-filled night (and possibly mojitos). The Guild won three wonderful awards. You can view all the winners here.

Best Comedy Web Series
Best Ensemble Cast in a Web Series
Best Female Actor in a Comedy Web Series — Felicia Day

We could not have done this without your support. We would like to again thank our Season 1 donors, for showing faith in our project enough to donate and keep us going, also to our very dedicated crew and volunteers. Without them, Felicia would be stuck doing EVERYTHING, not that she couldn’t, also a special thank you goes out to Kim Evey because she is as much a part of these wins for all the work she’s put in (and was very much missed at the awards). Thank you Streamys for putting on a show and making it a great night, thank you to the academy for voting for us, and everyone nominated in the categories, thank you for making these wins mean something for you are all held in high esteem. Lastly, we would like to thank all our viewers for showing us time and time again that our entertainment is being enjoyed by one and all throughout the world.

As the week rolls by, you will see more videos and pictures from the awards. Here are a few videos and pictures we’ve gathered.

Pictures
The Official Streamy Awards Pictures
worldofhiglet at Flickr
wmmarc at Flickr

Videos
How to Make a Streamy Nominated Web Series
Streamy Awards 09 — Felicia Day
Best Female Actor in a Comedy Web Series on 12seconds.tv
Best Comedy Web Series on 12seconds.tv
Best Ensemble Cast on 12seconds.tv
This Girl Does It All — The Fabulous Felicia Day from Mary Rambin on Vimeo.

How to Make a Streamy Nominated Web Series

The Fine Brothers

We wrote & directed this video which played live at the first annual Streamy Awards on March 28, 2009 at the Wadsworth theater.

Created by Benny & Rafi Fine

The Streamy Awards is co-hosted by a consortium of leading new media companies — Tilzy.TV, Tubefilter.tv, and NewTeeVee.com — to recognize outstanding achievement for shows produced originally for broadband distribution.

Big thanks to all the wonderful talent who are in the video, subscribe to them all!

They are, in the order they appear: Michael Buckley, Taryn Southern, Sandeep Parikh & Tony Janning, Kim Evey, Amber Lee Ettinger AKA Obama Girl, Ask a Ninja, Jessica Rose, Felicia Day, and the one and only Dennis Haskins.

Special thanks to Will Hyler for making the “This is Sparta” effect.

Go to Streamys.org for more information, and see you next year!

Winners of the 2009 Streamy Awards

from The Streamy Awards:

We proudly present the official winners of the 1st Annual Streamy Awards, honoring the best in web television in 2008, announced live at the Wadsworth Theatre on March 28, 2009. Over 125 shows and individuals were nominated in twenty-five award categories. On behalf of the International Academy of Web Television, congratulations to all of the winners!

Overall Series

Best Comedy Web Series
The Guild

Best Dramatic Web Series
Battlestar Galactica: The Face of the Enemy

Best Hosted Web Series
EPIC FU

Best Reality or Documentary Web Series
The Shatner Project

Best News or Politics Web Series
Alive in Baghdad

Audience Choice Award for Best Web Series
Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog

Directing

Best Directing for a Comedy Web Series
Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog (Joss Whedon)

Best Directing for a Dramatic Web Series
Pink (Blake Calhoun)

Writing

Best Writing for a Comedy Web Series
Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog (Maurissa Tancharoen, Jed Whedon, Joss Whedon, Zack Whedon)

Best Writing for a Dramatic Web Series
Battlestar Galactica: The Face of the Enemy (Jane Espenson, Seamus Kevin Fahey, Ronald D. Moore)

Acting

Best Male Actor in a Comedy Web Series
Neil Patrick Harris (Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog)

Best Female Actor in a Comedy Web Series
Felicia Day (The Guild)

Best Male Actor in a Dramatic Web Series
Alessandro Juliani (Battlestar Galactica: The Face of the Enemy)

Best Female Actor in a Dramatic Web Series
Rosario Dawson (Gemini Division)

Best Ensemble Cast in a Web Series
The Guild

Best Guest Star in a Web Series
Paul Rudd (Wainy Days)

Best Web Series Host
Alex Albrecht (Project Lore)

Craft Awards

Best Editing
Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog (Lisa Lassek)

Best Cinematography
Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog (Ryan Green)

Best Art Direction
Tiki Bar TV (Kim Bailey)

Best Visual Effects
Backyard FX (Erik Beck)

Best Animation in a Web Series
The Meth Minute (Dan Meth)

Best Original Music
Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog (Jed Whedon)

Best Ad Integration in a Web Series
Back on Topps (Skype)

Best Artistic Concept in a Web Series
You Suck at Photoshop

Streaming Live on the Streamys

from The Legend of Neil:

A special thank you to all our fans who voted for us for the Audience Choice awards. The voting is now closed. You can see the results of the award and the others we’re nominated for live streaming on the interweb at 7:30pm PST at the official streamy website. Don’t miss it!

The Legend of Neil and The Guild are nominated up and down this thing and we want to share our victories and defeats with you, our fans who’ve made these honors possible. I mean, I (as in Sandeep) am nominated along side Rob Corddry, Neil Patrick Harris, Nathan Fillion, and Joss Whedon. WTF indeed. I don’t know what kind of alternate reality I’ve dropped into, but I know it’s due to all of YOU that have supported web television like Neil and The Guild. So thank you thank you thank you! Also I’m presenting an award with Felicia Day and there’s a good chance I’ll be so nervous that I’ll vomit on her lovely dress, and then I’ll play it off as improv vomit, so you won’t want to miss that…

ETA at 11:33: Whoops, I was mis-informed (by my competition no less!) apparently you can still vote one last time for the Audience Choice awards. Get out there and hit it Neil fans! http://vote.streamys.org/

Streamy Awards Live Cast Tonight

from The Guild:

Thank you for all your votes in the Streamy Awards, we appreciate all the time you’ve taken out to support our independent show! Audience Award voting is now over!

The Awards ceremony is tonight, and the great thing is that you can attend it with us online! They are streaming starting at 7:30 pacific time on the official Streamys Website, so please come by and enjoy this evening with us to celebrate web video.
If we win anything it will only have been because of you, our audience. 🙂

After Judgment: Three Days until the Streamy Awards

from After Judgment:

Greetings fantastic fans of After Judgment,

It is because of all of you that the world has taken notice of our little (but awesome!) sci fi webseries!

We want to sincerely thank all of you for spreading the word and for your support!

Please take a second to VOTE for us today, tomorrow and Saturday as a Finalist for the Audience Choice Award.

http://vote.streamys.org/

And please take a minute to spread the news to your Facebook friends — just share the link or even send a message!

VOTE VOTE VOTE! We’re up against heavyweights like Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog, The Guild, The William Shatner Project and Tikibar TV!!

We’d like to say that we’re just honored to be recognized amongst such an illustrious group but we’d really like to win — wouldn’t you???

Spread the word and VOTE… to prevent the end

After Judgment

Giants

Giants

In Giants, you play a chief competing for tribal prestige on Easter Island by building the biggest and most numerous statues your civilization has ever seen.

The monumental statues of Easter Island, known as moaïs, are one of the most fascinating exploits attributed to mankind. How did a handful of sculptors, tucked away on a miniscule island, ever manage such a feat? Isolated from the rest of the world, they built more than 800 statues, each weighing several tons with certain measuring nearly 10 meters tall. Cooperation between the tribes, innovative use of wood and their earnest hard work are certainly part of the explanation for their incredible feat. These stone giants are one of the rare vestiges of a highly refined civilization, the Rapanui, who prospered for more than a millennium in peace and tranquility. Now it’s your turn to relive their inspiring adventure as builders of the moaïs!

The game is set during the golden age of the Rapanui, the native inhabitants of Easter Island. As chief of your people, you must use your leadership skills to elevate your village to top status. While this mostly involves successful construction of complete moaïs (each statue has a headdress to cap it), you can enlist the help of opposing but like-minded tribes, either through peaceful teamwork or scheming tactics like seizing possession of materials that are still en route from quarries to their building platforms, and hoarding the logs used to transport the statue pieces. Tribe markers, which represent your level of influence on the island, are used to reserve the best ahus (stone building platforms) and moaïs for future use. In addition, you have a sorcerer who can put a magical whammy on rivals who interfere with your plans of island dominance, though, as chief, you also have the privilege of invoking the power of the sorcerer’s magical Rongo tablets. Be careful, as sneaky acts may grant your opponents some of the precious prestige points you need to ultimately win. If you lead well and use your resources wisely, your workers will thrive and “your masterpieces will stand tall for centuries.”

Game Contents
• 1 game board
• 5 tribe chief figurines
• 5 sorcerer figurines
• 30 sculptor figurines
• 30 Rongo half-tablets
• 14 headdress miniatures
• 17 small sized moaïs
• 12 medium sized moaïs
• 6 giant sized moaïs
• 30 tribe markers
• 5 screens
• 5 banners
• 1 first player pawn
• 2 quarries tiles
• 7 forest tiles
• 5 score counters
• 35 bases
• 5 special dice
• 27 wooden logs
• 1 pawn receptacle
• One rulebook

The gameboard for Giants is a huge, beautifully stylized map of Easter Island, with a representation of a stone mural on the reverse side that depicts a team of workers building a moaï. (The glyphs in the mural are decorative gibberish, as the Rongo tablet markings they’re modelled after have never been deciphered.) A great deal of thought has gone into the aesthetics of the entire game, from the box’s lush artwork and the insert tray with one section shaped like the profile of a moaï, to the visual diversity of the gamepieces. Each of the five players has a screen that not only handily lists a cheat sheet of the game rules, but is illustrated with a tranquil scene of island life done in one of the themed colours assigned to each tribe. The tribes also have individually designed figurines and symbol-emblazoned playing pieces in their colour, with different appearances for each tribe’s chief,  sorcerer, and workers, a touch that gives the players’ little plastic avatars a bit of personality. The realistically sculpted moaï figurines, in three shades of grey plastic speckled to resemble stone, are similarly well-crafted, as are the double-sided playing pieces made of durably thick cardboard.

Giants takes a while to set up the first time out of the box, as there are many gamepieces to prepare and familiarize yourself with, but once you’ve read through through the rules the turn-based action is fairly straightforward. The rulebook provides illustrated example scenarios that clearly explain some of the more complex moves, as well as an entire page on the story of Easter Island. This latter inclusion elevates Giants from a fun adventure game to a potential teaching tool, as most people recognize the giant stone heads of Easter Island without knowing the history behind them, namely how the construction of the moaïs decimated the island’s forests and nearly destroyed its entire ecosystem as a result. There are a maximum of five players in Giants, but more can be included by turning tribes into teams of students, making this educational game perfect for the classroom setting. Hopefully, in playing Giants, you’ll be able to change the fate of the Rapanui clans for the better.

Giants supports 3-5 players, ages 10 and up. Game length: about 60 minutes.

Order now at Amazon.com:
Giants

Or order directly through the Asmodee Editions website.

Giants is distributed by Asmodee Editions (US), a subsidiary of Asmodee Editions (France), in partnership with Les Éditions du Matagot. For more information on Giants, visit the official game website at Giants: The Board Game (in English, German, and French).

The Legend of Neil: Vote Baby Vote!

from The Legend of Neil:

Only one week left people. Get out there and vote everyday for Neil for the Streamys Audience Choice Award. We would trade all the other nominations in for this win. These other shows have the numbers so we’ve got to have the craZy and vote everday from now until the 28th! But I’m sure you’re asking yourself “How will I remember to vote?”

Here are some devices that might help you trigger the memory to vote everyday:

1) Make http://vote.streamys.org/ your homepage for your next week.

2) Everytime you brush think about how in Zelda Link never once brushes his teeth and how gnarly his mouth must be by the time he meets up with the princess. Then go vote for Neil.

3) Correct anyone that refers to their father as their “Old Man” by saying you mean “Oooold Man” and then go vote for Neil.

4) Tattoo “Vote for Neil” on your belly. Use your belly button to replace the “o” in “for.” If it’s an outie, then just hang a picture of Tony Janning on it.

5) Allow your spouse to yell out “Neil” during intercourse for the following week. If you’re single yell out Neil while masturbating.

6) Make your dying wish that Neil wins the Audience Choice Award and then end your life (not recommended).

7) Everytime you see another human being think about how there’s a skeleton inside of him/her. Now think about that skeleton having a German accent and being gay for deals, then go vote for Neil.

No Gorgeous Tiny DVD in Foreseeable Future

from Gorgeous Tiny Chicken Machine Show:

There have been lots of people asking if we might possibly make a GTCMS DVD for Season 2. Unfortunately, Sony still owns the rights to all of the Season 1 and Season 2 episodes. Apparently, giant corporations do not manufacture DVDs unless they can make hundreds of thousands of them and sell them at Wal-Mart. Because I think it would be neat-o to be able to offer such a thing, I am going to ask the powers that be if I might take on an independent pressing myself and see what they say. I am guessing that the answer will be a resounding silence, as it always is, but I’ll ask. Never hurts to ask. Unless your jaw is broken. Then it prolly hurts a lot.

Star Trek Screening for the Town of Vulcan

from Paramount Pictures:

“Paramount and Vulcan Tourism are thrilled to bring an exclusive pre-release screening of Star Trek to Vulcan residents. Knowing how special the series has been to the town of Vulcan, Paramount and Vulcan Tourism have been collaborating for months to plan just the right event. The private screening will be held for 300 lottery-winning Vulcan residents at a state-of-the-art movie theater in Calgary. The special event includes transportation, refreshments and Star Trek memorabilia. Everyone who worked on Star Trek is excited about bringing the highly anticipated film to fans everywhere and especially to the residents of Vulcan.”

Leonard Nimoy says, “I have been informed of the logical plan that Paramount Pictures and the town of Vulcan have been working on to host an advanced screening of Star Trek. The people of Vulcan have been heard and, although it is atypical for Vulcans, they are, in fact, excited. To all, live long and prosper.”

Related Links:
Nimoy: Vulcan Needs to Get “Emotional” About Star Trek Premiere
“Spock” makes pitch for Star Trek premiere in Alberta
Spock questions logic of not allowing Alberta town to show Star Trek premiere