Super7 is relying on crowdfunding to make sure that the next supersized ThunderCats Ultimates playset gets made. Between now and September 17th, ThunderCats fans will have the opportunity to fund a 36.7″ tall Cats’ Lair playset.
The Cats’ Lair retains a few of the same elements from the ’80s LJN playset while adding loads of new details and features. Thrill features like … chairs! Oh, the eyes and ThunderCats symbol light up, too.
OK, this thing is made more for displayin’ than playin’. It’s all good, though, because there’s no way I’d let a child play with this $650 collectible.
As of right now, the campaign features two stretch goals and one “early funding bonus” item. If you back the Cats’ Lair right now and the initial funding goal is met, you’ll receive a replica of the Key To Thundera.
The number of backers at the time of writing this sits at 848, with 3,000 needed to start production. The stretch goals will be met once 4K and 5K people have pledged their money.
The two tiers include an Astral Project Lion-O Ultimates figure and a laboratory set. Not exactly exciting stuff.
Photo Credit: Super7
Photo Credit: Super7
Photo Credit: Super7
Photo Credit: Super7
Photo Credit: Super7
Photo Credit: Super7
Photo Credit: Super7
Photo Credit: Super7
Photo Credit: Super7
Photo Credit: Super7
Photo Credit: Super7
“Bring Third Earth into your home with this epic crowdfund! In collaboration with our friends the Berbils, our crack design team has created a monumental ThunderCats™ ULTIMATES! Cats’ Lair playset! At over 36″ tall, 33.5″ deep when open, and 53″ wide when open, this mighty fortress is sized to accommodate your 7″ scale ULTIMATES! Figures. It’s chock-full of hidden defense weapons, has special lighting effects, and unfolds to reveal a command center, removable control pods, the ThunderTank maintenance hangar, a hidden weapons room, and so much more! You’d have to travel to Third Earth to find anything close to rivaling this mighty ThunderCats fortress- save the time and expense of interstellar travel by funding this playset and all the extras, and bring the ThunderCats home!”
The Cats’ Lair will come with the following:
2x Paw turrets
2x Control pods
3x Control pod screens (double-sided)
5x ThunderTank maintenance tools
1x Council table
7x Council chairs
1x Computer chair
5x Computer screens
As I speculated in our previous ThunderCats Ultimate story, there was nowhere else for the series to go since most of the characters had been produced.
The following is an exclusive and in-depth interview with Josh Tyler, the founder of popular entertainment news sites CinemaBlend and Giant Freakin Robot, the latter of which he iscurrently CEO. The interview was done over email correspondence, with only light edits for clarity and grammar.
Josh, it’s an honor to have this opportunity to talk to you. As a fellow entertainment reporter, I’ve been a long-time fan of your work. You’re a fixture in the independent news space, but for our readers who are unfamiliar, can you please tell us your origin story? How did you get into the entertainment news business, and what led you to create CinemaBlend and Giant Freakin Robot?
“I grew up below the poverty line in small-town Texas, and when I scraped together enough money for community college, I figured I’d better get a practical degree to make sure I didn’t end up on food stamps like my parents. So, I worked my way through night school to get an engineering degree, even though all I’d ever wanted to do was be a writer.
I’d been an electrical engineer for about six months when I began to realize that not only did I hate it, but I wasn’t any good at it. Determined to do something more fulfilling, in 2000, I taught myself HTML and started a website which became cinemablend.com, spending every spare minute writing for it.
I started out in the midst of the worst part of the dot-com bust, and ad rates had fallen 90% overnight. The big players surviving in the space in spite of that, outside of IGN, were all independently owned.”
So you have been involved since the early days of modern online entertainment journalism then.What was it like to meet and work with some of your heroes?
“I was a huge admirer of the work of those early movie and game blogger pioneers until I interacted with them. I soon discovered that with a few notable exceptions, they were corrupt creeps, lunatics, and narcissists who traveled in packs like hordes of hungry lemmings. They were not serious about business or journalism. All they cared about was their ego. That discovery was incredibly disappointing. I put my head down, stayed away from that group, and built my own thing anyway. Staying as far away from that crowd proved a good decision.
Many of them ended up being caught up and canceled in the #MeToo movement. A couple even went to jail. Those that remained either went out of business and ended up working at Starbucks or sold out and are still working in the industry at high levels for other entities where their corruption and egomaniacal behavior continue to drive the industry.
Now the world of entertainment journalism is, outside of GFR and a couple of other very small players, largely devoid of independent outlets. That doesn’t mean the players have changed; they’re just no longer working for themselves. Given the people involved, it should be no surprise that the entertainment journalism world is a mess. It was always a mess. Now it’s a mess funded by wealthy investment firms and run by big corporations, but nothing has changed.
CB grew until after 5 years of working two jobs full time; I was able to quit engineering and focus on only one. Then because I now had even more time to devote to it, CB grew even faster. Around 2008, I founded GFR as a spin-off to focus more on genre entertainment. It was a small endeavor, and I never had enough time to devote to it. Cut to 2015 and after years and years of working 80 – 100 hours a week CB was insanely successful but I was also totally burned out.”
That is around the time that you originally sold off your companies, right? What made you go through the cycle of founding, retiring, and unexpectedly returning as the Owner/CEO of Giant Freakin Robot?
“In 2015, I sold both GFR and CB to different companies. At the time CB had a staff of 30 and received around 20 million readers a month. It ranked as one of the top 4000 most popular websites in the world.
I stayed with the company that bought CB (Gateway Media) for six months to help with the transition and then worked in their acquisitions department briefly before happily departing into early retirement. I haven’t had any connection to CinemaBlend since 2016.
And then I got bored. In 2019 [sic], bought GFR back from the company I’d sold it to for a fraction of what they’d acquired it for. They’d done NOTHING with it; hadn’t even published any content, and the site had been totally destroyed. No traffic, no web presence, nothing. It was dead. I was starting over from scratch.
This time I had experience. In less than two years GFR grew to exceed CB at its peak, and it’s still going strong in an increasingly difficult market. I currently serve as GFR’s sole owner and CEO.”
You’ve had quite a journey in your career. Now to be fair, I’ve only been working in entertainment journalism for around 4 years now, so you can tell me if I’m wrong. The state of entertainment journalism is probably the weakest it’s been since the internet crash, with, for example, ad rates currently a fraction of what they were a year ago for some sites, including ClownFishTV.
In general, entertainment journalism as an industry is suffering, whether that’s the death of organizations like Vice, the mass layoffs in games journalism, or Gamur-owned websites now resorting to AI-generated news content. What do you think is driving this massive chaotic change and why?
“To clarify, ad rates are really only down around 30-40% industry-wide. That’s still bad, but not what the hyperbole out there suggests. Not nearly as bad as the rate decline back in 2000 after the dot-com bust, back when I was first getting started. From an ad rate perspective, the level of decrease now is more akin to what happened after the 2008 crash. It should also be noted that even though ad rates are down 40% from last year, they are still way up compared to what they were at any time before 2015. The ad industry has come a long way.
Ad rates are not the problem. No one wants to admit it, but traffic is the problem. It’s also not AI, though there’s a lot of hype and fear about it. That’s an excuse.
The real reason companies like Vice and Buzzfeed are going out of business (and expect a lot more very soon) is that they no longer have any readers. And they no longer have any readers because web traffic is now entirely controlled by a small handful of tech companies. Around September 2022, those tech companies decided to stop sending traffic to news publishers.
Facebook is the biggest one. They’ve all but cut off publishers entirely. Many publishers got as much as 40 – 50% of their traffic from Facebook. That ended in late 2022. No one and I mean no one; at least not if they are honest, gets Facebook traffic any more. Meta has tweaked their algo [sic] to make sure users never leave the Facebook app.” The other 60% of traffic for nearly every publisher came from Google. And now that is gone too. Look at any Google search result. A year or two ago, 80% of a Google results page would have contained links to publishers. Now it’s often not even 20%.”
Wow, that’s a bold statement, but I can’t help but agree with you. It’s alarming how much the landscape has shifted in such a short span of time. Many of my freelance friends have told me how hard it is to find work these days. I’ve experienced it myself; outlets and editors that I worked with suddenly dropped me without any reason or explanation. You raise a good point that the real issues affecting publishers, and consequently the rest of us, are not the ones that get discussed. There is a difference between the polite answer and the real one.
Yet to push back a little, from my observations, it seems that nerd news sites companies like G/O Media which owns Kotaku and Gizmodo did do themselves some self-inflicted damage by relying on bad faith tactics like clickbait and trolling readers.
“There’s no denying that things are a mess and only getting worse. I still remember when I first began noticing the shift.
It was late in my tenure as CinemaBlend’s CEO, and we’d sent a writer to cover a press junket with Clint Eastwood. The reporter came back excited, claiming that in the middle of the junket, Clint Eastwood went on a crazy racist rant.
The reporter wrote up their story, in which they talked in detail about what a racist Clint Eastwood was and how he’d said horribly racist things in a hate-filled tirade.
I reviewed the article with my Editor-in-Chief before we published it since this was a big and intense accusation at that time. We both noticed something strange: the article had no direct quotes from Clint Eastwood in it.
We reached out to the reporter and asked to listen to their audio recording of what Clint Eastwood said.
We listened to it twice; we couldn’t find the racist tirade.
We went back to the reporter; they gave us a time code, and so we listened again.
Here’s what Clint Eastwood said: “I have a lot of black friends.” That’s it. It was in the context of how much he’d enjoyed working on the movie, and he sort of said it as an offhand comment.”
That’s awful, but knowing my peers, I cannot say I’m entirely surprised. What did you decide to do?
“We went back to the reporter and asked if that was it. The reporter confirmed that it was. We had a 1000-word story written about Clint Eastwood’s racist tirade, and all we had to back up that claim was Clint Eastwood saying he’s friends with people of color. We killed the story. However, there were dozens of other journalists at that junket. They all wrote the racist tirade story, and their outlets published it. All of them. Not one of those stories published by our competitors contained an actual quote.
However, if you’re asking why the industry is in decline, none of this is relevant to that particular question. Only a small fraction of loud readers pay any attention at all to things like that. The internet runs on casual readers who have no idea what’s going on and wouldn’t care if they did. The real question that needs to be answered is: why do Google, Facebook, and other tech companies no longer want to work with publishers? It’s not because of those bad-faith tactics because those companies use them too.
I think it’s because they simply don’t need them anymore. Google and other tech companies have realized that people will look at whatever they show them, regardless of how good it is or isn’t. In that environment, it makes the most financial sense to keep all the readers to themselves without sending them off to other entities.
The internet has become a monopoly controlled by a handful of gatekeepers like Google, and now that they’re in total control, those gatekeepers are closing the gates.”
So you are saying that this is more about the numbers for what is convenient for Google or Facebook and less about what is or isn’t being said in the media. That’s a frightening thought, to be honest
“Given the corruption and rot of the online publishing industry, it’s probably too early to say if that’s an entirely bad thing for consumers. But corruption and rot have always been there, and it’s not the reason Google is shutting the gates now. Unlike their competition, both CinemaBlend and Giant Freakin Robot are successful websites that drive solid traffic and regularly break important news. What sets these sites apart from others?
I no longer have any connection with CinemaBlend, so I can’t speak to what they’re doing over there now. I think the foundation of what I built there remains, however. Most of the people currently in charge are people I hired and trained and have a lot of respect for. I built GFR the same way with a focus solely on the things that truly matter. We avoid the bloat that plagues other companies. We stay lean, mean, and stripped down.
My philosophy is content first. And content first means being writers first. My focus is on finding and hiring the right editors, the right writers, and then giving them the tools and freedom they need to do their jobs and say whatever they want about the topic they’re assigned. If I can’t find the right person, I’ll work longer hours to do the job myself rather than hiring the wrong person.
We keep our staff simple and focused on writers, editors, and the content they produce. We don’t waste time and money on support positions or perks or office space. We don’t have complicated marketing departments or social media managers, even if we can afford them. They just get in the way of doing what we’re actually here to do: create great content for our readers. The type of content we produce follows a similar philosophy. We focus on writing about what people are actually interested in and don’t waste time on anything else. Often that’s difficult because sometimes we’re excited about something we know that no one else will care about. But our job isn’t to make ourselves happy; it’s to make our readers happy.”
Well, you can’t argue with the results, right? GFR has a reputation for its reliable scoops, while other sites will often resort to dubious and poorly sourced scoops and leaks. For instance, Inside the Magic and Fandom Wire will publish stories claiming that Kathleen Kennedy is about to be fired from Lucasfilm any day now; and when you dig deeper, it’s likely some YouTuber with no evidence, perhaps wearing a mask and costume. How does your team avoid making those types of mistakes, and why do you think other sites are running with lower standards?
“The flattery is appreciated, but we take as much heat as those sites do. And none of us deserve any of that heat. GFR puts a ridiculous amount of time into researching every exclusive report we publish. And our success rate is extremely high. If you look at our confirmations page, there are hundreds of confirmed stories there. For every one story we get wrong, we get twenty right.
But trolls only point out the one we get wrong as if that invalidates everything else.
What people don’t seem to realize is that every outlet gets one wrong now and then, and they always have. The accuracy rate of the default trades like Variety is no higher. Actually, it’s probably lower.’”
True.
“A lot of the time, the “accurate” stories the trades run are stolen from us without any credit, and the rest of them aren’t original reporting, just reworded press releases they get from studio representatives. We have no interest in re-wording and re-stating the stories already broken by the trades or in publishing studio press releases. We feel the job of real reporters is to be out there reporting, and for us, that means doing original reporting. Original reporting is dangerous. It means that no matter how hard you try, sometimes you’ll make mistakes. We’d rather try and make mistakes than sit back and let other people at other sites do our job.
Most of the big sites don’t do any original reporting outside of showing up at a junket and asking the pre-approved questions they’re allowed to ask. Those sites have made it clear to us they resent our decision to do something different. We’ve been threatened by their staff and slandered by their teams. They make fake Twitter accounts to spread misinformation about what we’re doing. We ignore it.
Early on, when GFR started breaking really big stories, the Editor-in-Chief of one of our biggest competitors contacted me and demanded that I tell him who our source was and give him that source’s contact information. Journalism 101 is, of course, don’t reveal your source. So I declined. It was then insinuated to me that if I did not comply, he and his friends in the industry would do everything they could to humiliate and discredit GFR publicly. I continued to decline, and for the most part, that person and his friends have done their best to follow through on that threat.
I assume similar tactics are being used against Inside The Magic and some of the other very few journalists out there actually doing their job by working on original reporting.
CinemaBlend’s official response on Twitter to criticism of its Turning Red review.
Okay, you have me there. I’ve reported on leaks and researched scoops of my own for stories like G4TV or Resident Evil 4, etc., so I’m keenly aware of the risk and frustrations involved in trying to report the truth inside entertainment journalism. I can’t count how many times I’ve approached outlets with verified stories, and they turned me down, even though the veracity was solid and the value of the scoop was self-evident. I don’t think most readers appreciate how hard and relatively thankless it is to be doing newsgathering in our industry.
You haven’t been involved with CinemaBlend since 2016, but I’d like to hear your perspective. Last year a review for the Disney film Turning Red was retracted after accusations of racism and sexism made by Pixar itself. How do you balance healthy film criticism today with all this corporate or social pressure? In your opinion, was retracting the review the right call?
“That review was written by Sean O’Connell, who I hired and promoted back when I still owned CinemaBlend. Sean is one of the kindest, most caring, most dedicated, most serious film journalism professionals I have ever known. He’s one of the gold standards for what people in this business should be.
I don’t know what was happening at CinemaBlend during that time or what they were thinking. I no longer have any involvement with the site. So it’s possible I don’t know some key detail. What I will say is this: I’ve been in this business for 23 years. No publication of mine has ever retracted or changed or modified anything due to pressure. And over the course of 23 years, there has been a lot of pressure.
I wouldn’t have cared what anyone said; I wouldn’t have cared what the review said. Whether the review was offensive or not wouldn’t have mattered to me and wouldn’t have been a factor in the decision. I wouldn’t have pulled the review. My reviewers can say whatever they want. People can like it or not, often even I don’t like it, but I’m not going to stop our writers from saying it as long as it is accurate and genuinely their opinion.”
With everything we’ve discussed, what does the future of entertainment journalism look like? Is it going to just be influencers and YouTube and TikTok, or will written online and print content continue to still have a place? And what would you tell people like me already in the industry or those who want to enter? Knowing our present trajectory, would you encourage your own family to go into journalism or to stay far away?
“I would expect most of the big corporate-owned sites to be out of business by mid-2024. A lot will be gone before the end of this year. Barring some radical course reversal by Google, there is no path for them. Most of the smaller independent sites will be gone too; they were already barely holding on, and now they’re being totally removed from the internet.
I’ve talked privately to the CEOs of a lot of those companies (big and small), and they’re all shuffling the deck chairs on the Titanic. They are going under; they all know it, and they don’t see any way out of it. A few, the more proactive ones, are making plans to pivot their companies to entirely different businesses. No one sees any future in online publishing.
The only sites which don’t seem to be floundering are the ones owned by Valnet, CBR, Screen Rant, etc. Valnet is sucking up the internet traffic being taken away from other sites like a vacuum and getting bigger and bigger as everyone else shrinks. I’m not sure what their secret sauce is, but they seem to be the only ones who have it, and it’s working for them. Outside of Valnet, anyone else who wants a future will have to get lean. Publishers must find ways to run their businesses without corporate bloat. Most of them do not have the ability to do that, so most will go under. It’s not a question of will they; it’s only a question of when.”
That’s grim, but I agree with you.
The future of entertainment journalism is smaller outlets with a smaller staff and a more clear focus. Sites that can survive long enough to pick up whatever smaller amount of traffic is left after those big sites go out of business will find enough left to keep going.
Our aim is to be the last site standing, and I think there’s a pretty good chance we will be. Entertainment journalism will continue to exist on a much smaller scale.
If you want to get into this business, I hope you’re good on camera. That’s the clearest path. What was once a business of introverted nerds writing about the movies they love in their basement has morphed into a business ruled by extroverts glad-handing for likes and jumping in front of cameras.
That’s not necessarily a bad thing, but when it all started, the internet was a haven for introverts struggling to make it in an extrovert-run real world. I’m not sure where my fellow introverts will go now.
That said, I have four children, and my high schooler has started working with me on GFR. I’ve been training her on basic editing and proofreading. It won’t be a career -she wants to be a welder, which is awesome- but it’s a useful skill, and with the future so uncertain, the bigger and more diverse your talent stack is, the better your chances are at making it.
On the other hand, my middle-school-aged son has started a YouTube Channel where he makes a lot of silly nonsense. Unlike his father, he’s a wild extrovert and well-suited for the new extrovert-controlled internet. It won’t be a career, I hope, but he’s having fun doing it and learning new skills in the process. He doesn’t realize it yet, but he’s also building his talent stack and preparing himself for a wide-open and completely unpredictable future.
Click here to check out other entries in our Interview Series.
The Japanese animation studios Yokohama Animation Laboratory and Cloud Heart premiered an anime adaption of the slice-of-life isekai fantasy ‘The Great Cleric’ in July 2023. Based on the light novels by Broccoli Lion, the series was first published on the web-based platform ‘Suiyōbi no Sirius.’ The anime is now making its way to the United States on the Crunchyroll streaming service which also announced that they would produce an English version.
Luciel voiced by Justin Briner (Deku in My Hero Academia)
Lumina voiced by Julie Cleburn (Feng Jun in Mobile Suit Gundam: The Witch From Mercury)
Kururu voiced by Sarah Roach (Meryl in TRIGUN STAMPEDE)
Monika voiced by Kiane King (Keiko in Kageki Shojo!!)
Basura voiced by Christopher Guerrero
Bazan voiced by Ryan Negron
Master Monster Luck voiced by Anthony Bowling
Sekiroth voiced by Clifford Chapin
Jason Lord has been tapped as the ADR Director with Zach Bolton taking the role of Producer.
You can watch the trailer below:
The anime is directed by Masato Tamagawa, written by Keiichirō Ōchi, and character designs are handled by Guonian Wang. The music is composed by Toshihiko Sahashi.
“After his untimely death, this salaryman gets another shot at life! When Luciel is reborn into a magical new land, he becomes a healer in hopes of leading a peaceful life. However, he quickly learns that being a healer is much more challenging than he expected. With strict and strenuous training in store, this new life is turning out to be anything but peaceful.”
The light novel series is drawn by the artist known as Sime and has been published by Micro Magazine since 2016. J-Novel Club releases it in the United States. The Tokyo-based organization Kodansha publishes a manga version that is released in the United States by Vertical.
Amazon Studios has dropped promotional images for their upcoming UK thriller ‘Wilderness.’ The television is created by showrunner Marnie Dickens, directed by So Yong Kim, and based on the novel by B.E. Jones. The screenplay was written by Marnie Dickens. The series follows a couple who are on a tour of the National Parks in the United States.
According to a statement by Amazon, the series “revolves around British couple Liv (Jenna Coleman) and Will (Oliver Jackson-Cohen), who seem to have it all. A rock-solid marriage. A glamorous new life in New York. A golden future stretching ahead of them. Until Liv learns about the affair. Heartbreak is swiftly followed by another emotion: fury. Enter the American road trip Liv’s fantasized about since she was little, from Monument Valley to the Grand Canyon, on through Yosemite, ending up with a hedonistic weekend in Las Vegas to blow off the dust and sweat. For Will, it’s a chance to make amends, for Liv, it’s a very different prospect—a landscape where accidents happen all the time. The perfect place to get revenge.”
You can take a look at the promotional images on Prime Video’s Twitter feed:
They add, “Whilst in the epic American National Parks, the couple bump into Will’s colleague Cara (Ashley Benson), a young American woman with a glittering career and an adoring boyfriend, Garth (Eric Balfour). Liv’s best-laid plans are wrecked and, as the foursome go hiking together, Cara and Garth soon find themselves enmeshed in Will and Liv’s lives in a way that will change the course of all their future’s forever.”
The show is produced by Firebird Pictures and Amazon Studios. There has been no confirmed release date as of the writing of this article.
The novel was first released by the publishing house Constable on April 4, 2019.
‘Sweet Reincarnation’ is a fantasy isekai light novel series written by Nozomu Koryu, illustrated by Yasuyuki Shuri, and released by the Tokyo-based publisher TO Books since 2015. The Japanese animation studios SynergySP and Studio Comet picked it up for an anime adaption with Crunchyroll acquiring the license to stream it in the United States. They also announced that they would be producing an English dub of the show.
Crunchyroll revealed the cast list on their website:
Pas voiced by Trina Nishimura (Cain in The Aristocrats Otherworldly Adventure)
Marc voiced by Molly Zhang (Akane in My Clueless First Friend)
Lumi voiced by Reshel Mae (Muriel in Masamune-kun’s Revenge R)
Casserole voiced by David Matranga (Rei in Buddy Daddies)
Feuille voiced by Charles Nguyen
Agnes voiced by Cassie Ewulu
Josephine voiced by Thi Le
Priest voiced by Randy Pearlman
God voiced by Sarah Natochenny
Patissier voiced by Shawn Gann
Shawn Gann has been tapped as the ADR director.
You can watch the trailer below:
TO Books releases a manga version written by Midori Tomizawa and illustrated by Seriko Iida for their ‘Comic Corona’ magazine.
“A boy named Pastry is set to become the next lord of the destitute dominion of Morteln. He’s known for having a remarkable talent for his age… and it just so happens he was a genius pastry chef with a promising future in his previous life! He still retains his determination to make sweets that will make everyone smile, even after reincarnating as Pastry. But many challenges stand before him, including bandits attacking his domain, malicious and eccentric nobles, an unfortunate financial situation, and land so barren that even water is scarce. The only weapons he has to fight them with are his own ingenuity and love for making sweets. Can Pastry succeed in bringing happiness to the land?!”
‘Sweet Reincarnation’ was originally released as a web novel by the online publisher Shōsetsuka ni Narō.
Two years ago, Robosen and Hasbro announced an auto-transforming Optimus Prime. A lot has happened since then, including technological advancements and increasing prices. If you felt like the $750 Autobot Leader was too expensive, wait until you get a load of following toy’s price tag!
This week Hasbro Pulse opened up pre-orders for the next auto-converting transformer: Grimlock, the King of the Dinobots—the ferocious and primitive Autobot large, in charge, and $1,499.
Phew… That’s an expensive toy. However, he looks like he may have more functionality than the previously released Optimus Prime figure.
Grimlock features over 150 new voice lines recorded by the original G1 voice actor Gregg Berger! I hope he snuck a few Cornfed Pig lines in there (keep the Duckman dream alive!).
Like Prime, Grimlock features several programmable features powered by the Robosen app.
Grimlock is arriving pretty soon, too. The expected ship date is November 1st, 2023.
Photo Credit: Hasbro Pulse
Photo Credit: Hasbro Pulse
Photo Credit: Hasbro Pulse
Photo Credit: Hasbro Pulse
Photo Credit: Hasbro Pulse
Photo Credit: Hasbro Pulse
Photo Credit: Hasbro Pulse
Grimlock will have the following programmable features:
We offer four programming modes, making it easy to program new actions for Grimlock. We also provide cloud sharing functionality, allowing Robosen users from around the world to freely create, share, and download other custom actions, enabling Grimlock to do so much more!
Where you can drag modules to set the angles and speeds of the robot’s movements, and create a segment of robot movements to reproduce classic scenes from the movies.
Intelligent manual manipulation, where you can directly adjust the joints to suitable angles and positions to quickly create robot movements.
Say “start programming” to the robot, and then say multiple command words in the order you want, and then say “execute” after completion, and you can easily create a robot performance according to the order of the voice commands.
When you want to unleash the full potential of Grimlock robot, we recommend using computer-based 3D programming software.
What do you think of the expensive, high-tech Dinobot? Let us know below!
Threads may have been a flash in the pan after all. Meta’s answer to Twitter, as we covered previously, experienced a significant surge during its first week. Today, traffic to the new social media platform appears to have all but died.
PC Mag reported that web traffic to the Threads Android app dropped by more than 50%. However, we’re unsure how accurate the numbers are from SimilarWeb, a tool that charts web traffic.
Based on the SimilarWeb numbers, the Android user base shrank from 49 million to just under 24 million over a week. Here are the blog’s “key takeaways” from the data:
On its best day, July 7, Threads had more than 49 million daily active users on Android, worldwide, according to Similarweb estimates. That’s about 45% of the usage of Twitter, which had more than 109 million active Android users that day.
By Friday, July 14, Threads was down to 23.6 million active users, or about 22% of Twitter’s audience.
Usage in the US, which saw the most activity, peaked at about 21 minutes of engagement with the app on July 7. By July 14, that was down to a little over 6 minutes.
In the first two full days that Threads was generally available, Thursday and Friday, web traffic to twitter.com was down 5% compared with the same days of the previous week. Although traffic bounced back, for the most recent 7 days of data it’s still down 11% year-over-year.
On the days of peak interest in Threads, Twitter’s Daily active users on Android, worldwide were virtually unchanged, but time spent was down 4.3% – perhaps because some users were off trying Threads. Even with that drop, however, the average total time spent on Twitter was about 25 minutes.
The tracker does not provide info from users on Apple’s iOS. So, it’s hard to tell how the numbers are doing across the board.
Regardless, seeing such a drop from one of the two most used smartphones on the market is worrisome. Although, it’s not surprising.
As a social media platform, Threads isn’t exactly breaking new ground. Meta isn’t exactly known for keeping your information private, so starting a new account or linking an existing Instagram to Threads has potential issues.
Also, the experience is almost too similar to Twitter, but without the robust userbase, features, and readily available analytics.
Three throwback DC Comic characters are making their way to stores this year. McFarlane Toys is bringing us Alan Scott, Catman, and the classic version of The Riddler.
The original Green Lantern is getting a new Collector’s Edition action figurefrom McFarlane Toys. The first Green Lantern is decked out in his classic costume and features a translucent lantern and green flame effect. He’ll be priced at $29.99 and can be pre-ordered directly from McFarlane Toys.
Photo Credit: McFarlane Toys
Alan Scott comes with the following:
Designed with Ultra Articulation with up to 22 moving parts for full range of posing and play
Green Lantern Alan Scott includes a lantern, attachable flame accessory, exclusive card stand and base
Included collectible art card with character art on the front, and character biography on the back
Remember when The Riddler wasn’t a weird hipster incel edge lord? I ‘member. McFarlane Toys is bringing the classic leotard version of Edward Nigma to stores. Nothing flashy, just question marks, his golden cane, and a variety of hands. That’s all you really need.
It is evident, though, that most of The Riddler comprises parts from other figures. Oh well. At least he is only $19.99.
Photo Credit: McFarlane Toys
The Riddler comes with the following:
Designed with Ultra Articulation with up to 22 moving parts for full range of posing and play
The Riddler includes 6 alternate hands, question mark cane and base
The Riddler is featured in his classic comic look
Included collectible art card with character art on the front, and character biography on the back
Out of the three, Catman might be the standout. Although it’s easy to forget about this villain who debuted in 1963, the action figure looks great. The Secret Six member could easily be recolored to be a vintage-looking Batman. Or, with some retooling, we could get Cat-Man, who showed up briefly in Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight during ’93.
Photo Credit: McFarlane Toys
The Gold Label Collection Catman comes with the following:
Designed with Ultra Articulation with up to 22 moving parts for full range of posing and play
Catman includes two knives, claw hands and base
Catman is featured with a fabric cape
Included collectible art card with character art on the front, and character biography on the back
McFarlane Toys’ other classic figures include the newly announced Batman 1966 Batgirl.
It’s the greatest fear of every parent to hear that their child was kidnapped. There’s possibly no greater thing that would scare a parent more than something bringing harm to their kid, no matter the scenario. This is why every story about a child that is found after having gone missing is always a good thing to hear. In one case recently, a child that had been missing in August 2022 was found by the FBI through the most unusual means. A Nintendo Switch console was used to help locate and find them.
An unidentified teenage girl in Virginia went missing back in August after meeting a stranger, a man named Ethan Roberts. After the two chatted online for a bit, where Ethan took advantage of the girl by sending inappropriate images and advances. Eventually, Ethan traveled to the girl’s hometown and abducted her after coercing the two of them to meet up. After news broke out of the girl missing, people who lived in her town began to post fliers and share information in hopes of finding her.
For a long time, nobody could get information on her location, until something was able to give law enforcement a lead. The girl logged onto her Nintendo Switch online account to download a game and view YouTube videos, which a friend of the girl noticed and informed law enforcement. This allowed both the FBI and Nintendo to cooperate in getting the location through the Nintendo Switch IP address. Authorities were able to move to the location to arrest Ethan and rescue the girl.
Speaking with Kotaku in an email, an FBI representative gave thoughts on the case and why it’s important to use whatever resources are available to help those in trouble. “Thanks to the local police department’s quick response and FBI Norfolk’s ingenuity, we were able to locate the missing victim through her gaming account and reunite her with her family… As the world evolves, so does the FBI and how we solve cases. This is just one example of that. And while criminals might think crossing state lines will help them get away, this case also serves as a reminder that because of the FBI’s wide reach and partnership with local law enforcement. These predators will be caught, and they will pay the consequences.”
After being apprehended by law enforcement, Ethan was indicted on multiple counts. This included online enticement of a minor, receipt of child pornography, and transportation of a minor. He was sentenced to 30 years in federal prison after taking a plea deal. In another report on ABC15, retired Arizona DPS director Frank Milstead gave thoughts on how law enforcement can use digital devices to find people who have gone missing and suspects in a case. “It’s probably nothing anybody even had thought of at this point… The fact that somebody else down the road, another child, was bright enough to go, ‘Hey, look, my friend is online, and she’s been missing, and I need to tell somebody.’ Everything’s connected to Wi-Fi… A cell phone, an iPad, a watch, whatever it is… you can use those things to locate people. The bad guys need to know that the police are watching and that you’re leaving a digital footprint everywhere you go. We will find you.”
What do you think about this story of a child missing and found using a Nintendo Switch? Is the news a scary thing to think about? Let us know your thoughts about everything down below in the comment section!
Nerds and weebs are going to get some crossover with the announcement that DC Comics is bringing over manga based on some of their iconic characters from Kodansha. Superman, Batman, and even the Joker are featured in titles by Japanese authors and artists.
“Earlier this year, DC announced its collaboration with Japanese publisher Kodansha to release English-language, manga-style (right-to-left-reading) collected editions of three popular manga titles featuring DC Super Heroes and Super-Villains: Joker: One Operation Joker, Superman vs. Meshi, and Batman: Justice Buster. These titles were also announced as available for all paid subscribers to the DC Universe Infinite (DCUI) digital subscription platform, in the form of weekly chapters; each DCUI chapter will be an excerpt from the corresponding print chapter for each title,” DC Comics said on their website.
‘One Operation Joker’ is written by Satoshi Miyagawa and illustrated by Keisuke Gotou. It follows the Joker finding Batman as a baby after the Dark Knight falls into a de-aging chemical. The villain decides to adopt and raise his old nemesis as his own. ‘Batman Justice Buster’ is authored by Eiichi Shimizu and drawn by Tomohiro Shimoguchi who tells the story of how crime in Gotham has gotten so out of control that Batman must step up his arsenal of fabulous toys. Miyagawa also pens ‘Superman Vs. Meshi’ with the artwork handled by Kai Kitago. The plot follows Clark Kent as he visits Japan as Superman, traveling the country in pursuit of the culinary treat known as Meshi.
DC adds that the release date will be, “Tuesday, September 5, at participating comic book shops, bookstores, and mass-market retailers/e-tailers.
All three volumes of ‘Batman: The Jiro Kuwata Batmanga,’ ‘Batman and the Justice League,’ and the complete ‘Batman: Death Mask’ will also be added to the DC Universe Infinite to bolster their online library.