Hukilau Brings Slate App to iPad Dan Koelsch, April 20, 2010 You may remember the website Hukilau that we first reported on in January. The service helps provide low budget projects, like independent films and alternate reality games (ARGs), funding through a concept known as “crowdsourcing.” Now the company has a made a movie slate for your Apple iPad. Check it out after the jump. The free iPad app simulates a film slate, also known as a clapperboard, which is a device used in films to mark the beginning of a scene being filmed. The iconic movie prop lists information on what’s being shot, like scene information, production title, and director name. The Hukilau app has all these fields as well, which can be changed just as easily. When you shake your iPad, it makes the classic clapping sound. Whether this will truly be useful to amateur filmmakers remains to be scene (get it?), and this could be just another example of technology trying to replace standard operating practices. The app can be downloaded from iTunes here. Viral Marketing clapperboardHukilauiPadslate
Webisodes for NBC’s Community To Premiere This Week April 21, 2010The Office can’t have all the web fun. Tomorrow, NBC’s Community will premiere their own web series, titled “The Spanish Video Assignment”. Take a look at the trailer for the webisodes after the break, and head over to the show’s NBC homepage on Thursday to see the whole thing. Read More
Watch Celebrity Theories On How The “Man of Steel” Shaves May 28, 2013May 28, 2013Gillette has teamed up with Warner Bros. to ask a very important question: “How Does The Man of Steel Shave?” On HowDoesHeShave.com, you can watch and vote on theories from Bill Nye, Kevin Smith, Mayim Bialik, and the Mythbusters. Check out all the videos after break, and let us know… Read More
Cloverfield Actor in Super Bowl Commercial February 8, 2010Cloverfield was an international phenomenon, but it didn’t exactly propel any of its lead actors into instant stardom. You may have seen them in guest spots on TV or in some bad movies (see: Odette Yustman in The Unborn, or rather, don’t see), but otherwise, they have yet to truly… Read More