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Entertainment: Best of 2010

So this is Christmas, and what have we done?

Well, quite a lot actually and as the year draws to a close it’s time to reflect on what the hell happened. Like a great big pixelated sucker punch to the nose, 2010 came in with a BANG! but will soon disappear in a haze of Christmas cheer and budget-priced vino.

So, lest we forget, here’s some of my best of 2010 entertainment highlights.

Best 2010 Kids’ TV Programme
Ok, so my first choice is not exactly rock n’ roll for an Entertainment Editor but I do have a young family so you soon become a connoisseur of Cbeebies content. The Octonauts is a fantastic underwater world inspired by the Meomi books. The whole cartoon looks amazing and the theme tune is a recent addition to my Zune player. Octonauts, to your stations!

 

Best band of 2010
So back to the rock n’ roll. Or maybe not. 2010 was the year of Mumford & Sons, gaining some great exposure earlier in the year on radio followed by a raft of major festival slots. Problem is, I can’t stand them. I just don’t dig Marcus Mumford even though he might be a very nice man. The pesky press are calling this band part of a modern revival of folk music, but I just call it lame.

Instead I’ve chosen Hurts. Ever since I discovered them through a cleverly targeted PPC ad campaign I’ve never looked back, such is my love of all things digital. If they hook up with the right remixers I can see 2011 really working for them. A slot at Sonaar music festival perhaps? Tina Hart, our MSN Music blogger also loves ‘em.

 

Best missed song opportunity of 2010
Again, I don’t think I’m going to be popular with this one but when Florence and the Machine appeared with ‘You Got The Love’ my heart sort of cracked. I’m not saying the original was much better, but I couldn’t think of an act less suited to this track especially when Dizzee Rascal joined her for that shambolic Brit Awards performance. The cover was a novel idea that just didn’t work, although I know there will be thousands out there that disagree. She was, after all, one of the best live acts to see in 2010.

Best gig of 2010
She came, she saw, she conquered. No, not Florence Welch but Fever Ray who blew us all away when she visited the UK earlier this year. Ok, so Karin Elisabeth Dreijer Andersson doesn’t exactly crack jokes on stage but the Fever Ray gig at Brixton Academy was amazing. All she needs to do now is some new material but I have a feeling she’ll be working to her own agenda on this one.

Don’t worry if you can’t see her in the video clip below. I was about 20 metres away from the stage at the Academy and couldn’t see her either.

 


Worst gig of 2010
Without doubt, Kings of Leon. WHAAAAAAAAAAAT?!! I hear you cry.

I know, along with the Foo Fighters, the Kings of Leon are one of the biggest international rock acts around at the moment. But that doesn’t mean they can release second rate albums and put on substandard shows.  They need to get back to their roots and stop all this ballad rubbish.

There, spoken like a true Dad. And a smile on stage now and again wouldn’t go amiss.
Sort it out Kings. 

Best dance album of 2010
Two dance albums stand out for me in 2010. The heavily subscribed Deadmaus5 4×4=12 and the underrated Underworld album Barking. With the former you just have to *High Five* anyone who’s got the guts to wear a giant mouse mask on his head for hours on end. And who else out of today’s dance fraternity could sell out the O2 Arena so quickly?  He’s brought back a bit of fun and puts on a great show. After all, it’s not all about checking your email when you’re DJing with a laptop is it?

 

Underworld slipped under the radar this year but they still soldier on, producing great sounding tracks that still have an edge. I’m a relatively recent convert but I’ve had the good fortune to interview them once or twice and they are great guys. Their spoken word stream-of-conscious thang still gets me. Good to see them back again.
Best Radio DJ of 2010
image thumb1 Entertainment: Best of 2010Hands down, Zane Lowe. Great music selection and look at that smile – how could you ever refuse a car from this used salesman? A true champion of rock who’s been able to arrange some great interviews over the year.

I love the way that most of his shows are on-location. He’s equally comfortable interviewing at rehearsal studios as he is responding to a thousand tweets on his live show. I think bands really respond well to his warmth and well-researched approach. Fantastic podcasts too. Nice work.  

P.S: I’m going to miss Annie Nightingale!

Best film of 2010
I’m not a fan of Leonardo DiCaprio but Shutter Island blew me away. As soon as it was released on DVD I spent the weekend re-watching every scene. Ok so, it’s not a 100% masterpiece but I think Scorsese did the right thing aiming for the mainstream. Imagine what David Lynch would have done with it. MSN Movies Editor Ed Holden said it was brilliant for the first hour and then tailed off. I have to agree but with this proviso – it’s still bloody brilliant.

Worst film of 2010
Clash of the Titans. Titanic lameness more like.

‘Wish I had seen’ films of 2010
The Social Network and Monsters. No excuses I know. 

Best movie trailer of 2010
Like big bag of greasy McNuggets, film trailers are there to excite you and leave you wanting more. Quite often though they are better than the actual film so I hope I’m not disappointed when I get to see Tron next week. Meanwhile, I thought the Daft Punk soundtrack was absolutely amazing and the video to Derezzed off the wall. A big slapping of this please with extra fries.

 

Best TV Comedy
The Trip shouldn’t have worked. It’s just two comedians (Steve Cogan and Rob Brydon) who’ve thought ‘How can we get paid by the Beeb and get to eat at some fantastic restaurants?’ Throw in plenty of ad-libing, garnish with a few stale impressions and, et voila, bloody hilarious. Best comedy I’ve seen all year. Even better than The Inbetweeners.

 


Best TV Moment of 2010
A performance of such epic proportion that it would give even Kenneth Branagh a run for his money. Gillian Mckeith’s fainting on live television. Before seeing this I thought Get Me Out Of Here I’m A Celebrity was a fantastic concept that could only get better. Bring on The Running Man with loads of Z-list celebrities fighting for their lives. But as the show unfolded it began to leave left me with a nasty taste in my mouth – and it wasn’t Kangaroo penis.

No doubt it was a terrible ordeal – but it did make amazing live television.

 

 

Best Game of 2010
Limbo wasn’t supposed to be as addictive as it was.  I wasn’t supposed to waste hours of my life trying to work out what it was I was actually looking at and avoiding all types of nasties. But I did and I enjoyed every minute of it.

So, that’s a look of some of my best entertainment picks of 2010.  What a year. Bring on 2011!

MSN launches new MSN Games channel

MSN today launches a new MSN Games channel www.msn.co.uk/games that will provide a real focus on a wide a range of gaming content, encompassing lifestyle and family titles, as well as releases for the more hardcore gamers. Gaming editorial on MSN is currently supported by the Tech & Gadgets channel but as part of the refresh, all existing content will be taken out of MSN Tech & Gadgets and merged into the new channel.

While continuing to cover hardcore gaming titles like “Grand Theft Auto”, “Forza” and “Halo”, MSN Games will also focus on casual gamers and more family-orientated games, such as Guitar Hero, Mario Kart, Animal Crossing and Sims, as well as the best in free online games, including Bejewelled and Mah Jong Tiles.

Celebrity gamer and comedian, Iain Lee, will continue to provide his expert opinion in his hugely successful, monthly podcast, GameCast. MSN Games will also include weekly updates of the UK games chart, the latest gaming news, reviews, previews of forthcoming releases, as well as regular polls, user challenges and exciting ‘best of’ features.

Steven Wilson-Beales, MSN Games Content Manager, said: “MSN is delighted to be able to offer users a channel that is dedicated to the gaming industry. The gaming industry has evolved. It was once a place only for hardcore gaming, but now it’s for them and all the family. Research shows there are a huge number of gamers who own consoles and regularly play games, but do not consider themselves hardcore gamers. We wanted to create a channel that reflects the needs and interests of both these categories and have paid particular attention to the console market, to provide current content that is engaging, relevant and most importantly, enjoyable for the user.”

MSN Games has been created with casual and hardcore gamers in mind, following the success of the Gamer hub, which attracted 975,000 unique users monthly in the UK(1). For view the new channel, go to www.msn.co.uk/games.

image1 MSN launches new MSN Games channel

Computer games rule ok, go to 10, run

So, every Christmas I dust off the Xbox 360, connect to the plasma screen and start playing the latest BIG game of the moment. Right from beginning  I get completely hooked, reminding me of happier times when all I had to care about was getting the next pizza in and who was going to pay for the beer. That’s right. Student life was tough.

This time round the game was Assassin’s Creed 2. After about two weeks I completed it and basked in the glory of tremendous self satisfaction. Well, sort of. Although I’d reached the end of the game and seen the final credits, I had in fact only completed 90%  – as the game insisted on reminding me. I now have to ‘waste’ another two weeks of my life because there’s still people to meet and puzzles to crack. I’ve calculated that to achieve ultimate nirvana with my extra 10% I need to spend another two weeks pursuing these pixels. It’s sad, I know, but I just might end up doing it.

You see, for me, it’s not the game at all that gets me hooked. I only need some vague rumour of a plot, some rough pixelated outline of a character or dull plod of a soundtrack and I’m in there raving with the best of them.

Why? Because I remember the days of Commodore 64 cassette tapes. I remember struggling for thirty minutes trying to get the bloody thing to load. I remember staring at the cassette cover wishing that the artwork displayed would match the pathetic pixels I eventually saw on the screen. What you saw was always something different, but the games never really disappointed. You still played for two, four or six hours a day. Because, gaming was new and exciting. And it’s still new and exciting.

I love it. Computer/console games rule ok.

gauntlet ingame 300x227 Computer games rule ok, go to 10, run

Gauntlet: I used to spend hours playing this game.

assassins creed 300x168 Computer games rule ok, go to 10, run

Assassin’s Creed 2: I used to spend hours playing this game. I may spend more.

Copyright © Steven Wilson-Beales
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