Friday, March 6, 2015

Why these women stayed in the games industry after the worst year ever


Game developer Brenda Romero

At this week's Game Developers Conference in San Francisco, a panel of distinguished game developers and critics gathered for a very popular panel, the third annual #1ReasonToBe -- as in, "the number one reason to be" a woman who works in games and technology.
The goal of #1ReasonToBe is to focus on their accomplishments and amazing experiences. 
Last year, the panel reduced the audience to tears before concluding in a standing ovation, and became the talk of the event.  
This year, people lined up before the doors opened, and the crowd filled the large auditorium. 
"I hope to do more to just live, I hope to thrive," says Elizabeth LaPensee on her experiences as a Native American woman in video games. 
It's a common sentiment, lately. The rise of harassment campaigns like the infamous GamerGate scandal makes women scared to make games or work in technology at all, and we hear more and more about women quitting technical jobs over it. Those who stay find themselves unwilling or unable to speak up for fear of losing their jobs, or worse.
"There are many people silenced this year," said panel moderator and game developer Brenda Romero. 
#1ReasonToBe at GDC 2015Matt WeinbergerGame developers, designers, and critics discuss their reasons for staying in the industry at GDC 2015.
In a powerful segment called the "Empty Chair," Romero displayed anonymous comments made by people too afraid to speak up publicly, while the room stood completely silent. For example:
  • "Games were supposed to be a fun career choice. Now I'm afraid I'll get murdered."
  • "I used to check twitter for fun. Now it's fear." 
  • "There isn't a woman alive who doesn't have to worry about this."
  • "I don't draw attention to my femininity in order to survive as a developer. I disguise it with tomboyish behavior and silliness. I am neither." 
Audience members and panelists alike could be heard crying. 
Professor Constance Steinkuehler of the University of Madison Wisconsin talked about how she managed to sneak a toy gun from the massively popular game, "Portal" into the White House during her time as a policy advisor for President Barack Obama – as well as helping shape the Obama Administration's policy on video games and gun violence.
"You can play the games that you want to play, and I can play the games I want to play, and that's called free speech," Steinkuehler said. "I can make the games I want to make, and you can't stop me."
Wargaming at GDCMatt WeinbergerProspective game developers line up to meet with Wargaming recruiters at GDC 2015.
That's the reason to be in video games, for Professor Steinkuehler: It's free speech, pure and simple. 
The next panelist, EA Creative Director Amy Hennig, discussed her love affair with old-school arcades and the Atari 2600, which eventually faded. She went to film school instead, and her dream was to become a cinematographer. But she was told that it was for men only and to find another career. 
She never gave up, and eventually took a job at Atari making a game for its Atari 7200 game console to help pay for her tuition. And while the game wasn't great, it made her consider a real career, working her way up in the industry, and doing a little bit of design work for EA on classics like Desert Storm and not-so-classics like Super Nintendo's "Michael Jordan: Chaos In The Windy City."
Her career continues to take off, with stints at major studios like Crystal Dynamics and Naughty Dog. Most recently, she led creative direction for the "Uncharted" series, and now she's back at EA working on a Star Wars game. 
game developers conferenceMatt Weinberger
For Hennig, her main reason to be in the games industry is that it's presented continued opportunities and rewards for her, thanks to her tenacity. 
"These things are not the game industry," Hennig says on the GamerGate controversy and the harassment that centers around it. It's not a man's world, she says, and it's important to fight that perception. 
Sela Davis, a software engineer with Microsoft, spoke on her experiences as a child who made games on her ZZT computer who then went to the Rochester Insitute of Technology for Information Technology, only to take a break and go into creative writing, metalsmithing, and eventally a stint at SAP before going back to finish her degree. 
"I wasn't happy in art, and I wasn't happy in tech," Davis says on what led her to go back to RIT and learn to really make games. 
Her career in games started to take off. Soon, she ran up against impostor syndrome, made much worse by the fact that she was often the only woman in the room. Not feeling like you fit in with everybody else in the room can eat at your confidence. 
Davis' one reason to be in the games industry is that it needs more people who can feed each other's energy. 
Adriel Wallick, the independent game developer better known as 'MsMinotaur,' also touched on her own experiences with playing games. Video games were her escape when she was lonely, and she used it to bond with friends. 
"They let us do lots of things," Wallick says. 
Eventually, her interest turned to programming, and she built a rudimentary text adventure. Later in her life, she discovered the independent video game scene, and started building small projects in between punching the clock at her day job. Soon, she connected with Boston-based game studio, Harmonix. Along the way, she found she got a lot of respect and support and mentorship from the games community. 
"It's allowed me to be a part of all these communities who have made me feel like family," Wallick says of her number one reason to love the games industry.
Finally, Katherine Cross, a Ph.D candidate with the City University of New York, where she studies online harassment. 
"Boy, have I ever been given a case study," Cross said, referring to GamerGate, to laughs. 
Cross took an academic approach to her presentation: On paper, women are in the industry, working as critics and coders; engineers and economists. The gap in understanding why harassment is a big deal, Cross says, comes from not understanding that the Internet is real life, where people do business and present the work that matters to them. That's why harassment matters, because it interferes with and scares people away from a space that really matters. 
When faced with the wrath of GamerGate herself for discussing the subject publicly, Cross said there was only one thing to do: write about games more. Cue a standing ovation. 
And so Cross' reason to be in games is to be part of a community building new, interesting forms of criticism that tackle issues of sex and race in the gaming world. To create a world where people understand why the Internet and video games matter, and so aren't threatened by women in the field. Change is being made, bit by bit, by people writing on the frontier. 
"I study games because they matter. Because gamers matter," Cross says. 
The overall message is that women are here, playing video games, writing about video games, and making video games, they care about video games as much as any other gaming enthusiast, and they're not going away just because of a hashtag. In fact, games critic Leigh Alexander announced she's launching a new website called Offworld just for criticism and interviews from and with women and minorities in games.
"I am here to stay, and there's nowhere else I would rather be," Cross says.
Once again, the #1ReasonToBe panelists each recieved a standing ovation.

child confronts the terrorist who killed his father


Pictured here according to @Iraqilana is the moment an Iraqi child confronted the terrorist who was arrested for murdering his father.

Science says that charisma can be learned — here are 9 proven strategies

It's not something you're born with.
"Charisma is simply the result of learned behaviors," says Olivia Fox Cobane, author of "The Charisma Myth.

Use words that people can relate to.

Use words that people can relate to.
Getty
In his book "Why Presidents Succeed," University of California at Davis psychologist Dean Keith Simonton argues that the most effective communicators use concrete — rather than abstract — language.
"'I feel your pain' has association," he tells the APA Monitor, "but 'I can relate to your viewpoint' doesn't. The most charismatic presidents reached an emotional connection with people talking not to their brains but to their gut."

Express your feelings.

Express your feelings.
Matt Cardy / Getty
"Charismatic individuals express their feelings spontaneously and genuinely," Claremont McKenna College psychologist Ronald E. Riggio says. "This allows them to affect the moods and emotions of others."
It's called emotional contagionor "the tendency to automatically mimic and synchronize expressions."
So if you're really excited about something, other people with "catch" that excitement, too.

Talk about your potential — it's more impressive than talking about your accomplishments.

Talk about your potential — it's more impressive than talking about your accomplishments.
Kevin Winter / Getty
A Stanford-Harvard study recently cited on Marginal Revolution suggests that accomplishments aren't what capture people's attention — rather, it's a person's perceived potential. 
"This uncertainty [that comes with potential] appears to be more cognitively engaging than reflecting on what is already known to be true," the authors write

Mirror the person you're speaking to.

Psychologists have found that when two people are getting along, they start to mirror each other's bodies as a sign of trust and safety. Your date crosses their legs, so do you; you take a sip of water, so does your date. 
If you want to do better in a negotiation, the research says to mimic your opponent's behavior.

Walk the same rate as other people — they'll think you're friendly.

In a Durham University study, students were shown video clips of 26 other students walking — some with looser gaits, some tighter. 
Just a few steps were needed to give a sense of personality. Students equated looser gaits with extroversion and adventurousness, while the more clipped walkers were seen as neurotic.
A University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign study on walking speeds showed that guys match women's walking paces if they're attracted to them.

Keep your hands and torso open to signal that you're welcoming.

Keep your hands and torso open to signal that you're welcoming.
Charles Roffey / flickr
Body language experts agree that posture speaks louder than words. 
Keeping your hands stuffed in your pockets and your shoulders turned inward sends the signal that you're not interested. But talking with your hands and standing in an open stance shows that you're available. 

Bring a dog with you, since it makes you look nurturing.

Bring a dog with you, since it makes you look nurturing.
Roel Wijnants / Getty
In a University of Michigan experiment, women read vignettes about men. Whenever the story featured a person who owned a dog, women rated them with higher long-term attractiveness.
The researchers concluded that owning a pet signaled that you're nurturing and capable of making long-term commitments. It also makes you appear more relaxed, approachable, and happy. 

Smile more.

Smile more.
Larry Busacca / Getty
In two experiments, researchers in Switzerland examined the relationship between attractiveness and smiling.
They found that the stronger the smile, the more attractive a face looked. 
In fact, a happy facial expression compensated for relative unattractiveness.

Get people to talk about themselves.

Get people to talk about themselves.
Jeff J Mitchell / Getty
According to Harvard research, talking about yourself stimulates the same brain regions as sex or a good meal. 
"Activation of this system when discussing the self suggests that self-disclosure ... may be inherently pleasurable," Scientific American reports
And when people talk about their experiences, they become more vulnerable to one another, and when they become more vulnerable to one another, they form social bonds and coinvest in one another's welfare

Actor Harrison Ford plane survives plane crash in LA


He's not just a hero in his action films, he's one in real life. Actor Harrison Ford, 72, saved his life and that of others yesterday. He was flying a small vintage plane in Venice, California on Thursday afternoon when the engine failed. He managed to fly to plane to Penmar golf course and made a crash landing there to avoid human casualty. He was the only person in the plane at the time of the crash.

The experienced pilot, who has been flying since the 60s, sustained head wounds and bled profusely. He was transported to the UCLA trauma centre where he's currently receiving treatment for injuries he sustained from the crash. His son, Ben Ford later tweeted to fans to assure them that his dad is ok
"At the hospital. Dad is ok. Battered, but ok! He is every bit the man you would think he is. He is an incredibly strong man.'
The fact that he escaped the crash with just a few injuries is not surprising to those who have flown with him. They say he's a great pilot. See photos from the crash after the cut..


 
Harrison flying same plane that crashed yesterday, last month.

Tuesday, February 24, 2015

Quotables: Unngh, Despicable Chris


0223_fish_chris
"Whatever decision my man wants to make, I’m gonna rock with him. I’m not gonna fight any of his battles. But what decision you make…We see eye to eye on a lot of things. I just tell him, Hey, man, if you was dating some regular chick you wouldn’t be talked about." 


--Chris Brown speaking out on Tyga's "alleged" relationship with Kylie Jenner, which just gets more and more awful as more folks talk about it.

Honestly, we're not surprised that somebody as heinous as Chris Brown is totally OK with a 25-year-old man dating a 17-year-old girl who's probably confused as hell about life (because what 17-year-old knows it all, let alone someone with an accelerated upbringing ... like a Jenner). It makes sense, though, because Chris Brown and his actions are questionable at best.

And speaking of Rihanna, he said this about his most famous ex, too, which really leads you to be concerned about his state of being:
"We just cordial. I respect her space. She respects mine. It’s not too much talking, [because then] it gets to, 'Hey, we gonna hang out?' It’s just complicated."
"Complicated," right. Let's lay it down for you, Chris -- you don't harangue women into hanging out with you after you've punched out their lights, and you don't date and corrupt underage kids. How about that? Is that simple enough for you, brah? 

Giuliana Rancic Looks ... Better


0223_fish_split_giuliana

That's Giuliana Rancic on the left at this year's Grammys, and also, Giuliana Rancic on the right at last night's Academy Awards. Both photos showcase a really, really thin Giuliana, but the getup -- and pose -- on the right seems to be a little less concerning and a bit more flattering.

You heard earlier in the morning that even stars like Naomi Watts "starve" themselves before awards shows, and while we're not insinuating that Giuliana is guilty of that particular practice, we are saying that we sure hope she isn't ... because there isn't all that much to lose there.

Awards season is nearly over ... everybody can just relax now, right?


Read more: http://www.fishwrapper.com/#ixzz3Se7B7GNf
Follow us: @fishwrapped on Twitter

DAMON WAYANS GROUNDED BY DIABETES ... Tour Dates Cancelled




Damon Wayans Cancels Tour
Damon Wayans is postponing multiple tour stops after suffering a medical emergency related to his diabetes ... TMZ has learned.
The comedian was supposed to perform Saturday in Missouri, but sources close to Wayans tell us he's unable to fly right now because of his ongoing battle with Type 2 diabetes. He was diagnosed back in 2013. 
The Kansas City Improv Theater says it got word Tuesday Damon wouldn't be able to perform -- and our sources say there are going to be more cancellations down the road. He's already dropped a six-show engagement in Buffalo next month.  
We're told Damon will attempt to do shows if they're close enough for him to drive from L.A. -- but until his health improves all out-of-state gigs are on hold.

DONATE