Thursday, April 28, 2011
Desert Punk
After an implied global nuclear catastrophe Japan has been reduced to a desert and the surviving humans seek out a meager living in the hot sands. Desert Punk focuses on the adventures of a wandering mercenary named Kanta Mizuno, nicknamed Desert Punk (Sunabōzu), due to his seemingly incredible feats of skill and daring while on the job. Throughout the series, he acquires an apprentice and makes a few friends as well as enemies.
I seen Desert Punk maybe one time an it was a funny show that was both filled with action an filled with comedy making Desert Punk a show much like Trigun; but Trigun is better.
Wednesday, April 27, 2011
Sengoku Basara
The sengoku Basara game follows the story of the anime. The thing that makes the game fun is all the characters and the moves they can use. The game play is much like that of DW Strike Force. The plot of the game and the anime is for one warlord to unit the land. I like the game because the graphics are great and the battles are nice ,but what I like most is that every time you play the game you can choose a new path and each chjaracter and lvl up to level 100. The game has a horse on every level but the catch is you have to find them.
kaleido Star
Sora Naegino, a young Japanese girl with a great talent for acrobatics, comes to the United States in hopes of auditioning for the Kaleido Stage, a world famous circus which has mesmerized her since childhood. However, she runs into difficulties as soon as she arrives. She gets lost on her way to the Stage, is leered at by a mysterious stranger, and has her bag stolen by a nimble thief. Employing her acrobatic skills, Sora chases down the criminal.
A kind police officer gives her a ride to Kaleido Stage, but she discovers that she has missed her audition. Her idol, lead performer Layla Hamilton, advises her to return to Japan but a performer's unexpected injury provides Sora with a window of opportunity. She's given the rare chance to perform by the Stage's owner, Kalos (who turns out to be a mysterious man who had eyed her legs earlier). After a faltering effort, Sora is dismissed from Kaleido Stage and prepares to return to Japan, but then Kalos reconsiders, and lets Layla know that someday Sora's performance will be the main draw at the circus.
Sora spends the beginning of the season as an outcast, as the other performers believe that she had relations with the director to gain her position. Layla, in particular, disapproves of Sora. With the help of her friends (stage manager Ken Robbins, the performers Mia Guillem and Anna Heart, and young Marion Begnini) as well as a lot of hard work and determination, Sora begins to earn the respect of those around her. Her personality causes her to gain the trust of the performers as well as several increasingly major roles in the productions. She also befriends Layla over time.
However, Layla's father pressures her to leave and insiders plan to take over and shut down Kaleido Stage. Sora relies on her winning personality, hard work and close friendships to keep the stage afloat.
Sengoku Basara
In the bloody Sengoku Period, or Warring States Period, of feudal Japan, many generals fought in an endless struggle for power, but one man proved to be too big of a threat: the dark lord, Oda Nobunaga. Sanada Yukimura and Date Masamune, two young warlords from different regions who become heated rivals, begin to form an unlikely alliance with the rest of the generals to take down the Devil King.
The first season follows the emergence of the various protagonists, particularly Date Masamune and Sanada Yukimura, and their struggle against Nobunaga, who seeks to unite the land under him and is willing to crush anyone, even his own allies, to do it. It ends with his defeat at Masamune and Yukimura's hands.
The second season witnesses the emergence of Toyotomi Hideyoshi as the next potential unifier of the land, though unlike in actual history he has no connection to Nobunaga, whose retainers were almost entirely wiped out along with him by the end of the first season.
A movie version is being developed, and hint it will depict the Battle of Sekigahara, which will determines the next Shogun of Japan. A trailer revealing both Sanada Yukimura and Date Masamune will return as the protagonists with Ieyasu Tokugawa and Ishida Mitsunari, along with the release date.[6]
The first season follows the emergence of the various protagonists, particularly Date Masamune and Sanada Yukimura, and their struggle against Nobunaga, who seeks to unite the land under him and is willing to crush anyone, even his own allies, to do it. It ends with his defeat at Masamune and Yukimura's hands.
The second season witnesses the emergence of Toyotomi Hideyoshi as the next potential unifier of the land, though unlike in actual history he has no connection to Nobunaga, whose retainers were almost entirely wiped out along with him by the end of the first season.
A movie version is being developed, and hint it will depict the Battle of Sekigahara, which will determines the next Shogun of Japan. A trailer revealing both Sanada Yukimura and Date Masamune will return as the protagonists with Ieyasu Tokugawa and Ishida Mitsunari, along with the release date.[6]
Tuesday, April 12, 2011
Family Guy
Family Guy generally uses the filmmaking method of cutaways, which occur in the majority of Family Guy episodes.[97] Emphasis is often placed on gags which make reference to current events and/or modern cultural icons.
Early episodes based much of their comedy on Stewie's "super villain" antics, such as his constant plans for total world domination, his evil experiments, plans and inventions to get rid of things he dislikes; and his constant attempts at matricide. As the series progressed, the writers and MacFarlane, agreeing that his personality and the jokes were starting to feel dated, began writing him with a different personality.[98] Family Guy also often includes self-referential humor. The most common form is jokes about Fox Broadcasting or the situations and occasions where the characters break the fourth wall by addressing the audience. For example in "North by North Quahog", the first episode that aired after the show's revival, included Peter telling the family that they had been canceled because Fox had to make room in their schedule for shows like, Dark Angel, Titus, Undeclared, Action, That '80s Show, Wonderfalls, Fastlane, Andy Richter Controls the Universe, Skin, Girls Club, Cracking Up, The Pitts, Firefly, Get Real, Freakylinks, Wanda at Large, Costello, The Lone Gunmen, A Minute with Stan Hooper, Normal, Ohio, Pasadena, Harsh Realm, Keen Eddie, The $treet, The American Embassy, Cedric the Entertainer Presents, The Tick, Luis and Greg the Bunny. Lois asks whether there is any hope, to which Peter replies that if all these shows are canceled they might have a chance; the shows were indeed canceled during Family Guy's hiatus.[99][100][101]
The show uses catchphrases, and most of the primary and secondary characters have them. Notable expressions include Glenn Quagmire's "Giggity giggity goo", Peter's "Freakin' sweet" and Joe Swanson's "Bring it on!".[98] The use of many of these catchphrases declined in later seasons. The episode "Big Man on Hippocampus" mocks catchphrase-based humor: as Peter, who has forgotten everything about his life, is introduced to Meg, he exclaims, "D'oh!", to which Lois replies, "No, Peter, that's not your catchphrase."[102]
Amircan Dad
American Dad! centers on the domestic life of its nominal title character, Stan Smith, a staunchly conservative Republican CIA agent, and self-proclaimed patriot. He is married to Francine Smith, a housewife who is trying to make up for a wild youth. Their two children are Hayley, a passionately liberal college-aged activist, and Steve, a nerdy, wimpy high schooler who constantly attempts to live up to Stan's expectations. The Smith family is also in possession of two bizarre nonhumans — Roger, an escaped alien from Area 51 whom Stan is covertly housing in defiance of his employer, and Klaus, an anthropomorphic goldfish whom the CIA implanted with the brain of an East German Olympic ski jumper.
The Smith Family resides on 43 Cherry Street in the fictional community of Langley Falls, Virginia in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area. The town name is a composite of Langley and Great Falls, two unincorporated communities located in Fairfax County. Langley Falls is a sister city of Haifa, Israel.
Plots generally center on the misadventures of various family members in their respective realms. Recurring themes include Stan's desire to see Steve mature properly, Roger's desires to establish a life outside of the house, Francine's desire of breaking out of an overly structured lifestyle, Hayley's desire to rebel against her father's politics and Steve's desire to finally become one of the cool kids. Stan's Conservatism is treated as buffoonish and self-abnegating on its face.
Monday, April 4, 2011
Monster and how it makes me crazy
Well to day i drank a can of monster and you wont be leave how hyped up I am. I feel like i can fly. im bouncing off all kinds of walls Chris Brown's wall to wall and got nothin on the energy i have right no, Yay monster goo go go go o go go go go go go go go go go go go gogo go go g go go go go go go go go go gogo go go go go go go go go go go go go go go go og go go og go go go go . Thats what i ben doing since i drank the monster this morning.
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