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Film A Remake of ‘The Godfather’ w/ Nintendo Characters; Han Solo Gets Angry at Chewbacca, and A New Avengers Trailer

July 29, 2011 - 10:55 pm

There’s 2 little gems in a big coal mine full of sh*t this week, movie-wise. 1. Here’s a great little game site/comedy troupe called The Game Station, who wonders: what would a Godfather sequel be like if Super Mario played the seminal Marlon Brando role, complete with drooping lower lip and nasally wheeze? Along with Nintendo mainstays Mega Man/Solid Snake/Halo Master Chief Guy among the heads of the families, trying to construct a truce? Here ya go:

Mario has apparently put aside his differences and vendettas to focus on a common enemy: the threat of Angry Birds and other unworthy iPhone games. As the patriarchs of a once-proud lineage, these classic game characters now face the threat of an unremarkable-yet-deadly enemy.

2. If you didn’t see it, Harrison Ford/ Han Solo rejected a particularly whiny Wookie on The Jimmy Kimmel Show. Read on for the clip:

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Music Pretty Okay For A Weirdo: Buck 65

July 29, 2011 - 10:08 am

Buck 65

By the time they reach high school, most aspiring rappers are slinging mixtapes and, if they’re lucky, getting scouted by major label A&R reps. But for Richard Terfry, high school was a time for furtively laying down tracks in his bedroom and getting scouted… by the New York Yankees.

“His name was Stan Sanders,” Terfry says, remembering the major league scout who drove all the way out to rural Nova Scotia, all those years ago, to tell a young pitcher he had “superstar” potential. “His claim to fame is that he scouted Mike Schmidt, who’s one of the greatest players ever.”

But Rich Terfry was not to be baseball’s next great hurler. Shortly after he was scouted, Terfry blew out his shoulder—and eventually, worked up the nerve to start rhyming in venues beyond his bedroom, first under the name Stinkin’ Rich, then as Buck 65. Fast-forward to today, and Buck has been rapping successfully for, as his latest album title proudly declares, 20 Odd Years. And he’s been doing it on his terms—constantly reinventing himself, first as a darling of the backpacker underground, then as a blues-hop experimentalist, most recently as a crafter of Gorillaz-like pop/rock/rap pastiche. If he really was a big-league pitcher, he’d be Tim Wakefield, a wily knuckleballer whose stuff dances over the plate, always keeping you off-balance.

Before his latest U.S. tour (dates below), ChinaShop sat down with Buck for a rambling conversation about baseball, Twitter, experimental cinema and how he’s been developing stage chemistry with his tourmate, singer Marnie Herald.

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Bars/Clubs The Player : Members Only

July 29, 2011 - 9:50 am

The Player Bar

Last year one of my favorite bars in London, The East Room, tragically burned down. (Luckily, I was able to have one last awesome night there two days before the fire; was one of the best nights I’ve ever had in this wonderful, wonderful city.) The East Room is part of a group of members only bars which include: Milk & Honey (London and New York), The Player (London) and The Clubhouse (Chamonix, French Alps); I’ve been to Milk & Honey a bunch but had yet to give The Player a try (or The Clubhouse… which I doubt I’ll be hitting up anytime soon unless I randomly get a surprise trip the the French Alps, which I would most definitely not be opposed to).

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Music Red Bull Emsee Seattle Tonight

July 28, 2011 - 5:42 pm

Hosted by rapper Bun B with special performances by judges Too $hort, Casual and Crooked I, Red Bull EmSee is an invitation-only battle series designed to find the best freestyle rappers in the country and give them a national platform to show their skills and earn acclaim. This year’s nine-city tour continues on to its second stop in Seattle on July 28 at The Crocodile with The Trill OG: Bun B playing master of ceremonies. West Coast rap legends Too $hort, Casual (Hieroglyphics) and Crooked I (Slaughterhouse) will be doing double duty as judges and performers while DJ B-Mello of KUBE spins labels on the turntables throughout the night. The winner of the Seattle qualifier will advance to the finals in Atlanta this fall where he’ll vie for the national championship and an opportunity to record with a headlining producer of his choice.

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Film Gallery The Electric Daisy Festival Film Sparks a Hollywood Riot (Sort of)

July 28, 2011 - 3:37 pm

The Electric Daisy Festival is quickly turning out to be the newest Coachella— a massive music extravaganza that has tapped the mainstream pulse of a nation’s youth, drawing in fans by more and more thousands each year.

But did you know it’s also likely to incite mass chaos and rioting in the streets – especially if those punk-ass raver kids ain’t happy?

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Contest Featured Music Win Tickets To See John Digweed at the Mayan in LA

July 28, 2011 - 1:36 pm

John Digweed 01THIS CONTEST IS NOW CLOSED. CONGRATULATIONS TO MICHAEL S. WOLFF WHO WON THE 2 TICKETS!

If you’re a Los Angeles dance music aficionado, you know that John Digweed at the Mayan is about as close as you can get to an institutional event. Since the good folks at Liquified brought the iconic DJ into the equally iconic downtown venue over a decade ago, Digweed’s midweek all-nighter has consistently brought out LA’s best dance crowds, and the music is always top notch.

So let’s get you in, shall we?

Diggers was nice enough to kick us down with an interview (read it after the jump) and two tickets to his show at the Mayan on Wednesday, August 3rd. All you have to do is find ChinaShop on Facebook, Like us, then comment underneath the Digweed post about why you and your friend should be the ones going into work late on Thursday with a fuzzy head. Have your comment up by Monday, August 1 at midnight PST because we’ll be choosing the winner on Tuesday. It’s that easy.

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Featured Geek In A ChinaShop Geek Drinking in Brooklyn Borough

July 28, 2011 - 10:56 am

Way Station 4

Visiting New York and getting your geek on? Wondering where to go for a post-outing nightcap? Brooklyn is the NYC borough to beat when it comes to geektastic drinking establishments, boasting two locales that appeal to lovers of genre fiction, gaming, and good beer.

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Art Featured Gallery All Creatures Great and Small: Jennifer Angus

July 28, 2011 - 10:51 am

While on my way to check out an exhibit that had been on my radar for some time, I walked past a room with blue walls, a file cabinet, and various displays. I almost passed by but did a double take when it was brought to my attention that everything inside was created with insects. My unexpected detour had led me into Jennifer Angus’s “All Creatures Great and Small,” an outlandish exhibit that employs the use of multi-colored insects, beeswax figurines, vintage dollhouses, tribal patterns, and Dia de los Muertos skulls.

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Featured Gallery Music Hollywood Becomes 3l3ctric at the Disaro Records Resurrection

July 27, 2011 - 11:25 am

On Wednesday, Hollywood’s Dragonfly nightclub welcomed LA darksiders for Become3l3ctric –the www.disarorecords.com Disaro Records’ resurrection celebration. As one of the founding masterminds behind the Witch House movement, Robert Disaro has been casting aural spells since the launch of his label back in 2007, and helped propel careers of acts like SALEM and White Ring. Now, partnering up with German R. Verdilak of Krakis Distrubution, Disaro Records is back after a hiatus that began in late 2010.

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Art Gallery Love And Other Audacities: Ann Weber

July 27, 2011 - 11:00 am

It’s pretty amazing what some artists use as their canvas; Ann Weber is no exception. The San Francisco-based sculptor takes cardboard and transforms it into a realm of love and relationships. Using only cardboard, staples, and shellac, she creates her own characters, each with a very unique identity.

Weber’s work can currently be seen at the Los Angeles Craft and Folk Art Museum in an exhibit titled, “Love and Other Audacities.” Walking into the exhibit, you are greeted with colossal cardboard sculptures, which are both architecturally dynamic and sensuous. Weber takes you into the land of her cardboard forms, each with their own crucial role within the exhibition.

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