indigo-cyclops
Member
This has been running all day during football.
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This Walmart spot is the equivalent of what put this discussion in motion.
Ahh yes, the gamer stereotype. Shameful.
This has been running all day during football.
![]()
This Walmart spot is the equivalent of what put this discussion in motion.
This has been running all day during football.
![]()
This Walmart spot is the equivalent of what put this discussion in motion.
I only let 3 students take me to dinner last year but my friend in England let a different one take him out every week. Man, I am so much better than him.
Just kidding. We both are transparent about it so really it's totally cool regardless.
As far as I can remember I've never eaten on any game company's tab (other than taking food at press events), so that's never been relevant to me.
He shouldn't have too. And if you're the type of person who needs that type of reassurance, then it really doesn't matter anyway, as you've likely already made your mind up about that particular outlet.
At this point I think everyone who visits gaming sites has their group of writers that they trust. These people do not need to disclose their meetings over dinner, if they did/did not pay for a meal, or if they were apart of a trip to cover a game, because they've already proven themselves to be credible.
As the readers and consumers of these products, it's up to us to make the decision for ourselves whether or not we continue to give these outlets on the bubble clicks.
As the readers and consumers of these products, it's up to us to make the decision for ourselves whether or not we continue to give these outlets on the bubble clicks.
right, and to that I say how am I to make a decision without full disclosure? and where do you draw the line? if you have a relationship which extends beyond the strictly professional with someone who stands to gain from buttering you up then I have every right to know about it whether they pay the check or not.
Personally, I have no problem with sites taking trips, accepting free meals or drinks, or even whores as long as I know/trust that those things are not going to influence their opinions.
Personally, I have no problem with sites taking trips, accepting free meals or drinks, or even whores as long as I know/trust that those things are not going to influence their opinions.
Needs to be edited to have Doritos Pope at the end.This has been running all day during football.
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This Walmart spot is the equivalent of what put this discussion in motion.
Personally, I have no problem with sites taking trips, accepting free meals or drinks, or even whores as long as I know/trust that those things are not going to influence their opinions.
This is pretty much the battleground that will keep this subject going for the rest of time. Writers will swear that no amount of promotional tat will influence their response to a game. The game-buying public will say 'it's a subconscious level of influence, bro'. It's unquantifiable.
But disclosing that information would make them look bad. It would also make them less likely to participate in unscrupulous behavior if writers had to disclose things like "During the review process, we were only allowed to talk about certain elements of the game. We were flown to Hawaii for free and only had 12 hours to play the game at an event that was catered free of charge by the publisher we are covering."hence disclosure so that we can make informed decisions, this is neither rocket surgery nor brain science
This is pretty much the battleground that will keep this subject going for the rest of time. Writers will swear that no amount of promotional tat will influence their response to a game. The game-buying public will say 'it's a subconscious level of influence, bro'. It's unquantifiable.
But disclosing that information would make them look bad. It would also make them less likely to participate in unscrupulous behavior if writers had to disclose things like "During the review process, we were only allowed to talk about certain elements of the game. We were flown to Hawaii for free and only had 12 hours to play the game at an event that was catered free of charge by the publisher we are covering."
How do you disclose this and expect people to not look at your review or preview with extreme skepticism?
But on that same note, at times their site is covered in Best Buy ads for products that they're previewing un-boxing videos for.
Have you guys seen this?
http://doubledouble.posterous.com/perhaps-i-am-being-rude-about-hiphopgamer
hiphopgamer ‏@hiphopgamer
@renegade_lemur @TheKevinDent it's not a battle I'm a destroy this guy in a debate. he's disgusted by the fact that i'm black and successful
That was quick.
Another article from Friday...
The Florence Effect: Fanning the Flames of Change in Games Journalism
http://www.incgamers.com/2012/11/th...ing-the-flames-of-change-in-games-journalism/
So please, please lets keep on talking and writing about this. Lets keep this story alive. Keep the issue of transparency and public perception at the forefront of games coverage. Stop yucking it up with nervous PR buddies on twitter, stop childishly dismissing this very real problem as GRAND CONSPIRACY, stop ignoring the elephant in the room while blogging about pizza promotions; because if we dont, if we dont stop that, if we acquiesce to a culture of silence, then when our readership has deserted contemporary games sites for YouTube personalities and word-of-mouth forum reviews, dont be surprised if silence is all we have left to offer.
Playing the race card already? lol
When the first shot someone fires is the race card you know they have no other cards to play.
Looking over the article Wario64 posted, a lot of what the author posted seemed to be suspicions and not hard proof and easily countered by hiphopgamer. Instead his first retort is the race card? Doesn't bode well for what lies ahead for him.
This is pretty much the battleground that will keep this subject going for the rest of time. Writers will swear that no amount of promotional tat will influence their response to a game. The game-buying public will say 'it's a subconscious level of influence, bro'. It's unquantifiable.
Another article from Friday...
The Florence Effect: Fanning the Flames of Change in Games Journalism
http://www.incgamers.com/2012/11/th...ing-the-flames-of-change-in-games-journalism/
hiphopgamer ‏@hiphopgamer
@renegade_lemur @TheKevinDent it's not a battle I'm a destroy this guy in a debate. he's disgusted by the fact that i'm black and successful
That was quick.
He shouldn't have too. And if you're the type of person who needs that type of reassurance, then it really doesn't matter anyway, as you've likely already made your mind up about that particular outlet.
At this point I think everyone who visits gaming sites has their group of writers that they trust. These people do not need to disclose their meetings over dinner, if they did/did not pay for a meal, or if they were apart of a trip to cover a game, because they've already proven themselves to be credible.
As the readers and consumers of these products, it's up to us to make the decision for ourselves whether or not we continue to give these outlets on the bubble clicks.
It's hard to take that guy seriously. Off in a tangent, but "hiphopgamer" was one of the tools who grabbed a grip of expensive gift bags (intended to be one for each invite) from Michael Pachters E3 2012 party, which peeved off the party organizer.
There's a hilarious twitter conversation (screen grabs) at the bottom:
http://yuki-pedia.com/writer/its-my-party-and-ill-sling-mud-if-i-want-to
It's hard to take that guy seriously. Off in a tangent, but "hiphopgamer" was one of the tools who grabbed a grip of expensive gift bags (intended to be one for each invite) from Michael Pachters E3 2012 party, which peeved off the party organizer.
There's a hilarious twitter conversation (screen grabs) at the bottom:
http://yuki-pedia.com/writer/its-my-party-and-ill-sling-mud-if-i-want-to
It's hard to take that guy seriously. Off in a tangent, but "hiphopgamer" was one of the tools who grabbed a grip of expensive gift bags (intended to be one for each invite) from Michael Pachters E3 2012 party, which peeved off the party organizer.
There's a hilarious twitter conversation (screen grabs) at the bottom:
http://yuki-pedia.com/writer/its-my-party-and-ill-sling-mud-if-i-want-to
You really should have done an exposé on Microsoft asspads at E3 2007.Reflects rather poorly on everyone involved, eh?
Twitter arguments are the height of idiocy.
So still no word from Lauren? She's got to have some opinion on all of this.
I agree, just being silent doesn't really help her situation. I don't think there's anything she could say that would lower peoples' opinion of her anyway.Pfft. She's probably distancing herself from this whole scenario. She probably knows she's wrong, but won't admit it because she knows she looks foolish. Maybe it's just me, but she's seems to be acting really childish.
Wait, she posted in this thread earlier, right? Just in case you're reading this, Lauren, maybe you should say something on the matter instead of looking like a horrible person.
Busy crafting a pseudonym--Clara Wincropft.So still no word from Lauren? She's got to have some opinion on all of this.
So still no word from Lauren? She's got to have some opinion on all of this.
Pfft. She's probably distancing herself from this whole scenario. She probably knows she's wrong, but won't admit it because she knows she looks foolish. Maybe it's just me, but she's seems to be acting really childish.
Wait, she posted in this thread earlier, right? Just in case you're reading this, Lauren, maybe you should say something on the matter instead of looking like a horrible person.
I don't think we can say if anything is untouchable anymore. Indie studios are becoming just as ruthless on the PR scene, and while Giant Bomb was formed I the aftermath of Gerstmann-gate, money doesn't have to change hands for there to be an impropriety.My lessons from all of this:
1) Give more of a shit about whose work I read. Be more discerning with my time.
2) I'm done with the hourly updates from the big blog sites. The majority of what they "report" is PR BS.
3) I have newfound respect for the Giant Bomb crew and how they do what they do. They've made a convert of a former skeptic.
4) Save day-one/week-one purchases for the truly exceptional releases.
5) Support more indie and small studio games. Again, be more discerning with my time.
6) As long as the majority of game journalists continue to be suckers, I refuse to be one.
She didn't.She DID??? What'd she say?
She DID??? What'd she say?
Bullshit- it's quantifiable. Shawn Elliot and others have posted plenty about research showing that the subconsious influence you're talking about is real.
The two camps are not 'PR has no effect' and 'Nuh-uh, subconscious influence bro!' The two camps are 'stick your head in the sand and ignore scientific research that shows influence' or 'I acknowledge said research rather than ignorantly ignoring it.'
Saying both sides (influence vs. no influence) both might be right and are equally valid is the same type of false equivalency used by creationists in the 'debate' regarding the teaching of evolution in public schools.