Thursday, January 31, 2013

The bravest warriors from the creator of adventure time


Bravest Warriors is the second American animated series created by Pendleton Ward, written and directed by Breehn Burns, and produced by Warden's the Difference Films alongside Frederator Studios for their Cartoon Hangover YouTube channel. Executive producers include Frederator's Fred Seibert, Burns, and Will McRobb and Chris Viscardi.
Set in the far future, the series follows four teenaged heroes-for-hire as they warp through the universe to save adorable aliens and their worlds using the power of their emotions. The animated series began streaming on Frederator's Cartoon Hangover channel on YouTube from November 8, 2012.[5] The series is based on a short produced for Frederator's Nicktoons Network animation incubator series Random! Cartoons that aired on January 10, 2009. A comic book adaptation published by Boom! Studios launched on October 24, 2012.

my 1st request

"'My Little Pony Friendship is Magic' follows the studious young unicorn Twilight Sparkle and her five pony friends as they teach one another about the most powerful magic of all, the magic of friendship! In the special coronation episode 'Magical Mystery Cure,' Twilight Sparkle accidentally casts a spell that switches the Cutie Marks and destinies of all her friends, and the only way she can reverse the spell is by writing her own magic. Little does she know that by achieving this great accomplishment, she will fulfill her destiny and emerge a princess."

 

hey every one

hey i haven really  asked you guys for requst so if u have any movies,books,vedio games, music,or carecters u whant me to review just leave a comment below thank u:)

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Romered to be the scarest movie of all time so far


This is the remake of the movie the evil dead and the trailer is amazing and terrable and im siked ti go and see it the trailer shows the cabain that looks simaler to the origanal
it gose on to show the collage student haveing fun and descovering an old blood stain on the floor next to a hatch in the floor and they go and investagate and find a book in the basment which is the book of the dead
and it has a warning on the front that reads leave this book alone  he'll suck ur soul dry and it shows one of the students reding the book which unleashes a demon that has been hybornaing in the woods and it shows a girl possed locked in the celler
 and one of the girls cuting her cheek out and turning to the camra also at the end it shows another one of the girls at the end licking a knife spliting her tounge in half then the trailer flashes to the title and u hear a scream it will be releasing in april im super excited to see my favorit movie being remade

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Brave

If you havent seen it yet it a really good movie and probly one of the better disney pixar movies it was really inter taining funny and ties in really good with scottish urban ledgins and is good family movie for evrey one to injoy

Friday, January 11, 2013


Control your Earth-based TV with this timey wimey device



The Sonic Screwdriver Programmable TV Remote lets you feel like a time lord while lounging on your couch eating fish fingers and custard. This Mark VII Sonic Screwdriver is specially created for Earth use. It's been simplified so as not to cause danger to human operators, while still being an extremely powerful tool in the wrangling of entertainment electronics.
This advanced, gesture-based, infrared remote can learn the control codes from almost any regular remote control. Using simple and intuitive movements you will be able to use the Sonic Screwdriver to control your devices just like The Doctor. Rotate clockwise or counterclockwise to adjust the volume on your iPod dock; flick the Sonic Screwdriver up and down to change TV channels or navigate the program guide; and even open your DVD tray by pulling back on the Sonic Screwdriver.
With 13 gestures and 3 memory banks, you can store up to 39 remote control codes on the Sonic Screwdriver: plenty to control all of your Earth-based entertainment equipment. In Control Mode, each gesture triggers a classic Sonic Screwdriver sound effect and the tip illuminates with a bright green light. (There's also a Quiet Mode if you're stealthy.) And because The Doctor doesn't let just anyone use his stuff, there's a Lock Code that allows you to ensure that it's yours... ALL YOURS.
Product Specifications
  • Control your Earth-based electronics with this timey wimey device
  • Fully functioning programmable infrared remote control
  • Gesture-based remote uses IR to control entertainment systems (but not RF systems like PS3 or Xbox)
  • Store up to 39 programmable gestures over 3 memory banks--that means you can program gestures from just one remote (39 gestures total) or from up to 39 separate remotes (with 1 gesture each)
  • Guided setup teaches you how to use the sonic with spoken prompts
  • Four modes:
    • Practice mode: Learn your gestures
    • Control mode: Control your electronics
    • Quiet Control mode: Control your electronics, quietly
    • FX Mode: 13 authentic special FX sounds from the Doctor Who universe
  • Bright illuminating tip lights up and pulses when in standby
  • Personal lock code lets you keep the power all to yourself
  • Materials: hand-polished die cast metal, ABS plastic, soft-touch plastic, copper plating
  • Compatibility: Virtually all home entertainment systems
  • In the box, you'll find:
    • Sonic Screwdriver Universal Remote Control
    • High quality presentation display stand with clear cover
    • Full color, illustrated instruction manual
  • Batteries: 2x AAA (not included)
  • Display case dimensions: approx. 10.8" x 3" x 2.2"
  • Sonic screwdriver dimensions: 2.33 x 10-17 light years long
  • Weight: 14.8 ounces (0.9 lbs)

Thursday, January 10, 2013

Adventure time jakes puppys

Adventuretime pup charlie.png
Like her father, Charlie has the body and face of an orange/yellow English Bulldog with large, characteristic eyes. She has patches of pastel colors on her stomach and the lower part of her body. She also has a light blonde tail and mane with a single white, sharply pointed horn. Charlie has fairly light orange freckles on her cheeks.

Abilities

Charlie has the ability to fly and teleport from one place to another. She can also transform into a super pup with her brothers and sisters.

Adventuretime pup jakejr2.png
Jake Jr. is thought to be 'faceless', but at some parts you can see deformed eyes and a mouth. Her blonde hair is put into a large up-do ponytail. She has pastel colors (blue, pink, yellow and teal) running vertically around her whole body. Her horn is located on her rear, where the tail should be.

Abilities

  • Like her siblings, Jake Jr. has the ability to teleport from one place to another.
  • She can also shape-shift using her hair, similar to her father.
  • She can also transform into super pup along with her sisters and brothers, becoming the head of the super pup.

    Adventuretime pup tv.png
    T.V. has the body of an English Bulldog much like his father, Jake, but T.V. is much rounder and does not have his father's jowls. T.V.'s nose is also bright purple instead of black. He is a pastel blue color with horizontal colored stripes on the lower half of his body like his mother, Lady Rainicorn. He also has a single, small, sharply-pointed, white horn on the top of his head.

    Abilities

    • T.V. has the ability to teleport from one place to another.
    • He can also change colors with his horn, like his mom.
    • Unlike his mother and three of his other siblings he seems to lack the ability to fly and is seen constantly being carried by Charlie. He is the only quintuplet who doesn't appear to have the ability to fly besides Jake Jr..
      Adventuretime pup viola.png
      Viola has a unicorn-like body like her mother, albeit much shorter. She has a short, curly blonde mane (with a purple bow) and a single sharply-pointed white horn. Viola is a pastel orange-peach color with various circular pastel colors on her stomach.

    • Viola has the ability to teleport from one place to another.
    • She can also change colors using her horn, like her mother.
    • She has the ability to fly using her tail like a propeller
    • Adventuretime pup kimkilwhan.png
      Kil Whan has a very long, reddish-orange body, similar to Hot Dog Princess, but with physical traits inherited from his parents. Kil Whan has a relatively long body like Lady Rainicorn, a face that perfectly resembles Jake's, and a short white horn. At the end of the episode "Jake the Dad", it is stated by Jake that Kil Whan has grown a beard due to his early aging.
      • Kil Whan can fly, similar to his mother.
      • He can also teleport like his siblings.
      • He also seems to possess his mother's ability to colorize objects.
      • He also has the ability to stretch his body shown when he formed the super pup, becoming the arms and most of the torso
SPOILERS: Watch the 2013 “Doctor Who” Christmas Special, “The Snowmen” before reading this. You have been warned.
The Doctor returned to our screens at last yesterday for the annual Christmas Day Special, but don’t expect the raggedy man to be all sunshine smiles and bow-ties. The Doctor has become a grim figure, living as a recluse in — really above — late Victorian London.
I was fortunate enough to be at a screening of the episode a few weeks ago with show runner Stephan Moffat and stars Matt Smith and Jenna-Louise Coleman, so I’ve had a bit of time to think about the episode.

“He stands above this world” — Lady Vastra

After the catastrophic events of “The Angels Take Manhattan” leave him without companionship, The Doctor “…never helps anymore” according to Lady Vastra. Wearing his crumpled stovepipe hat, The Doctor is now the man in the high castle, living in the TARDIS (with a new control room) high above the smog of London in 1892. As far as he is concerned, the Universe can just go and save itself for a change.
However, rather than another of the endless retellings of the Scrooge myth, this episode is playing with the idea of the isolated victorian that Scrooge embodies, both in the figure of the Doctor and in the form of the menacing Doctor Simeon (monkey boy?). Simeon runs an organization called Great Intelligence (G.I. for short) that is a front for a malevolent ice creature that happens to go by the same name. Simeon is an equally cold hearted man, standing as a representative of the emotionlessness often thought of as uniquely Victorian.

“What’s wrong with Victorian values?” — Doctor Simeon

Those are not the only Victorian tropes at play in this episode, though. The uptight attitude to sexuality is also in play, but still in a family friendly format. The Lady Vestra — the “Veiled Detective” — and Jenny — her “suspiciously intimate companion — are stated to be the inspiration for Sherlock Holmes. What is also clearly stated in this episode is that Jenny and Vastra are lovers, something coyly hinted at in “A Good Man Goes To War” but still left to the imagination.
It is interesting to note that, although male homosexuality was illegal in Victorian England, female homosexuality was not. The story goes that Queen Victoria would not sign the law making lesbianism illegal, because she could not believe that sort of thing ever happened. As for lizard/human sexuality, well, I feel certain that that was certainly out of the queen’s range of understanding.

“I suggest we melt his brain using acid, then interrogate him” — Strax

The standout character in this episode is Strax, the potato-headed Sontarin, bringing some welcome comedic relief to a show that seems to be increasingly humorless, as the Doctor has been sinking into darkness. His interactions with the Doctor are some of the most interesting — and certainly the most hilarious — moments, not only in the episode, but in the entire new Doctor Who series. The “Who’s on first”-ish style memory draining slug bit had everybody at the screening howling.
Unfortunately, when I asked Moffat after the premiere whether Strax and company would be seeing their own show, he casually tossed off that “They have one, it’s called Doctor Who.” Hopefully this means we will be seeing more of them in the show, and get an explanation as to how Drax came back to life. And Im not the only one  thinking that the BBC is missing a prime opportunity not giving this cast of characters their own show. This could possibly be a great replacement to the greatly-missed The Sarah Jane Adventures.

“Good evening, I am a lizard woman from the dawn of time, and this is my wife.” — Lady Vastra

There are weaknesses in the plot, or at least overly convenient plot contrivances. The one part that especially smacks of “plot convenience theatre” is why Clara is taking a few days to work in a pub as a cockney, forgoing her responsibilities as a governess. She explains it in a few scenes, but it seems like a stretch just to get the character into London in order to meet the Doctor.
And, although I really liked the one word game is a wonderful scene, but Clara’s ability to pluck the word “pond” as to why the Doctor should help seems again too coincidental and contrived.

“Takes one to snow one.” — The Doctor

The Doctor suddenly turning his mood and playing the part of Sherlock Holmes seems heavy-handed. He’s suddenly engaged again with the chase, cracking bad puns — “Takes one to snow one.” Really? — and generally, well, acting like the Doctor. This sudden change just at the mention of the word “pond” is abrupt, almost as abrupt as his quick change back to Scrooge-Doctor in the next scene.
I came away from this episode with a major question: Is Moffat setting us up for a new Doctor romance? Or is there more to Clara than meets the eye? The flirting between her and the Doctor reminds me a lot of the flirtatious relationship he has with River Song, and I wouldn’t put it past Moffat to be playing us. Given that Clara has a remarkable gift for not dying, could she be regenerating somehow? But then why is this the first time “Clara” has seen the TARDIS in this episode. Then again, we’ve never seen the first time that River saw the TARDIS. In “Let’s Kill Hitler”, she knew the Doctor had a time machine and didn’t have the standard “It’s bigger on the inside argument.”

“Run, you clever boy… And remember.” — Clara Oswin Oswald

Despite a few short-comings, this years Christmas outing is a good deal stronger than last years rather disappointing “The Doctor, The Widow, and the Wardrobe.” That was an episode with a lot of promise but a story that never seemed to gel. “The Snowman” had a story that, despite a sentimental ending with a families tears defeating the frozen menace, still held together.
I’m really looking forward to 2013 and the 50th anniversary of Doctor Who. How about you?