Picture
The following questions were posed to Free Rein Media CEO Dr. Thomas Keister as part of his Shorty Award nomination in the Humor category. To vote, head over to http://shortyawards.com/drthomaskeister

Shorty Awards: What's your best tweet?
Dr. Thomas Keister: The one I have yet to write.

SA: What are six things you could never do without?
DTK: Family, friends, internet access, free will, heavy metal, and pot.

SA: What's your favorite Twitter app?
DTK: Depends. Does the hashmark count as an app?

SA: Twitter or Facebook?
DTK: Coke.

SA: What feature should Twitter add?
DTK: An all you can eat sushi bar. I feel like having a California roll.

SA: Who do you wish had a Twitter feed but doesn't?
DTK: Elvis' ghost. Love to hear his thoughts on reality TV, if I could hear them over him shooting out his TV, that is.

SA: What are some words or phrases you refuse to shorten for brevity?
DTK: All of them. I respect the vowel, people, and I intend to use them.

SA: Is there someone you want to follow you who doesn't already? If so, who?
DTK: Ric Flair.

SA: Have you ever unfollowed someone? Who and why?
DTK: Yes. I can't be sure, but I think it was whoever came up with this question.

SA: Why should we vote for you?
DTK: You probably wasted a vote on Obama. Waste one on me. At least I can't spend $14 trillion of your money if I win this.

SA: Terms you wish would start trending on Twitter right now?
DTK: SarahPalinQuitsFOXNews

SA: What's the most interesting connection you've made through Twitter?
DTK: That I'm just as funny in short form as when I write 750 words.

SA: How do you make your tweets unique?
DTK: That's not sour cream and onion you taste. It's the care I put into typing my thoughts at SMS length.

SA: What inspires you to tweet?
DTK: Politics, news, weird news, stupid news, being under the influence of one or more intoxicants...

SA: Ever get called out for tweeting too much?
DTK: If I may use some bad grammar...ahem...Ain't no one call ME out!

SA: 140 characters of advice for a new user?
DTK: Never wind up in a dark room with Paris Hilton and a video camera. The sales may be great, but the rash lasts forever...

SA: What question are we not asking here that we should?
DTK: Did you save your ticket stub from the donkey show?

SA: Who do you admire most for his or her use of Twitter?
DTK: Can you really admire someone for tweeting? Go cure a freakin' disease or something.

SA: Why'd you start tweeting?
DTK: Everyone was doing it, and it didn't involve jumping from a bridge.

SA: What do you wish people would do more of on Twitter?
DTK: Pantomime. Lets see you walk against the wind in 140 characters.

SA: How will the world change in 2010?
DTK: Not for the better, I am afraid.

SA: What are some big Twitter faux pas?
DTK: As long as you don't Godwin your point, is there really such a thing?

SA: What will the world be like 10 years from now?
DTK: Hotter, poorer, and still waiting for change from Obama.

 
 
by Thomas Keister

Amazing how little it seems like there is to bitch about once a new year kicks off. All the crap we had forced down our gullets 365 days last year can't help but seem a little dated now, and that's just what you think when you realize you have just written '09 on all the checks for the bills, and for the second time in a row.

Sure, there are a few issues that will survive the arrival of Baby New Year, like two wars, one crap economy, a health care boondoggle even Dr. House couldn't cure, and no real hero on the horizon, just a bunch of people talkin' about change like we haven't heard that mess every four years since day one. But at least all those things are tangible, they can and will continue to nip at our asses as we run up and down stairs, in and out of offices, or on and off the morning train.

Thank God people still find time to bitch about the funny pages.

No, I did not just date myself (I'm 34, for the record), but I still have the lingering memories of having the comics called just that - the funny pages. Supposed to be just that - funny, a little distraction from the tragic comedies continued throughout the rest of the paper. If only that were true.

Having just read some half-assed opinion piece about the perceived value of the comics, and what happens when some whippersnapper tries to mess with it, I decided to write my own half-assed piece on the state of comics, using my local paper of choice, the Louisville Courier-Journal.

Why, on a daily basis, I am assailed by fifty-year-old punchlines (Peanuts, B.C., Dennis the Menace), insipid greeting card humor (Family Circus), and worse yet, soap operas doled out 2-4 panels at a time (Apartment 3-G or the insufferable Rex Morgan, M.D.), I will never know. I mean, Peanuts? I literally do not know anyone alive that finds humor from Peanuts.

Cathy? I'm sure if she wasn't so busy trying to find a pair of boots that didnt make her look like a fat chick in a pair of boots, then maybe she could have been Tiger's #15 (or whatever the hell the number is to by now).

B.C.? Reminds me of the two Vaudeville performers from Family Guy, only there is no infant packing an automatic to take care of comic genius such as this. Speaking of which, where are all the gun-toting infants these days? You would have thought the NRA would be working overtime on that.

Garfield and Marmaduke? The only guy to secure as much money and fame with as little material as the creators of these two strips is Larry the Cable Guy, and that is actually a complement to Larry the Cable Guy. I have heard the only thing worse than neglecting an animal is not putting one down when it is more than apparent it is time. Are you listening, Jim Davis?

Don't even get me started on Ziggy. I have made the joke on occasion that I would consider selling my left testicle to Satan for fame, but Tom Wilson, I hope hell for him is watching the director's cut of Gilmore Girls, all the seasons, on a loop for all of eternity. And I hope Elizabeth Hasselbeck and Amy Winehouse share the couch with him...

You want a laugh, go online. You want comedy in your newspaper, stick to the political news. At least there, the punchlines are always new in the end.
 
 
by Free Rein Media,

Click the picture for the story.
Picture
Saying the year "2010" out loud is bizarre, especially since we still don’t ride around in flying cars. But where science has failed us, video games have not. The past decade has been gaming's greatest: ten solid years filled with spectacular technological feats, record-setting sales and, of course, awesome, awesome games. Some, however, are more awesome than others. Taking quality, influence, sales and general greatness into account, here are our picks for the top ten titles released between 2000 and 2009.