Mattel Developing Live-Action Film About The View-Master Toy

A live-action movie about the popular View-Master stereoscope is in the works from Sony Pictures, Escape Artists and Mattel.
While no specific details about the film’s plot or its cast were revealed, Mattel shared in a press release that the movie will be a “four-quadrant family adventure,” adding that the View-Master, which was first introduced in 1939, has “taken its fans all over the world with its 3-D image reels, creating worlds of imagination and storytelling for every adventure seeker at heart.” Kevin McKeon, Arturo Thur de Koós, Todd Black, Jason Blumenthal, Steve Tisch and Tony Shaw are set to produce.
“View-Master has inspired generations to embark on boundless adventures, offering a treasure trove of storytelling possibilities for this film,” said Robbie Brenner, president of Mattel Films. “We’re thrilled to work with Sony Pictures Entertainment and Escape Artists’ Todd Black to bring this Mattel franchise to life. Their creative and filmmaking expertise sets the stage to introduce a modern take on this beloved toy to audiences everywhere.”
“View-Master has long been a window to the wonders of the world, sparking imagination in kids and adults alike,” added Black of Escape Artists. “Teaming up with Robbie Brenner and Mattel Films gives us the chance to honor that legacy while creating an entirely new adventure for today’s audience. We can’t wait to bring this treasured toy’s sense of exploration to the big screen.”
Stay tuned for an official trailer and release date.

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Creating a bright future: Fedai goes from homelessness to new business owner

Watch more of our videos on ShotsTV.com and on Freeview 262 or Freely 565Visit Shots! nowDetermination, hard work and a drive to create a better life has seen a Gateshead man go from being homeless with nowhere to stay, to successfully getting back on his feet and running his own small business.Tyne Housing resident, Fedai (Feddo), has become a shining example of how a person can, with the right support, turn their life around, build new opportunities for themselves, and continue to create and realise personal achievements.His story and turnaround are admirable (and nothing short of remarkable) as Fedai (50) is now the owner of a local small business selling various Mediterranean and natural produce items including bath bombs, salts and soaps. He currently operates from a retail stall at Manor Walks Shopping Centre in Cramlington, Northumberland, and is gearing up for a busy period ahead selling individual hand-made products, traditional gift boxes and hamper sets that are the perfect present for special occasions as well as the festive season.Tyne Housing resident and small business owner, Fedai, who from being homeless, is now a small business owner successfully selling natural products at Manor Walks Shopping Centre in Cramlington.However, rewind five years and it was a very different situation for Fedai, a former graduate of the University of Istanbul and once owner of his own studio business overseas; he was made to flee his Turkish homeland due to political persecution, leaving his family behind and coming to the UK out of fear and necessity. Due to such harrowing circumstances, he soon found himself relying on other people and community support services to provide ‘a bed for the night’ in temporary accommodation, and this created a huge sense of instability, insecurity and anxiety within.After multiple moves and daily challenges, the husband and father of one was put in touch with North East housing provider, Tyne Housing, who along with his own determination to better his situation, provided dedicated advice and support services to help Fedai create a more stable foundation. This included arranging permanent, rented accommodation in Tyne & Wear, as well as social and employability advice to help him find his feet, fully integrate into the community and create a better life as a North East resident and small business owner.Fedai commented: “I am grateful to Tyne Housing who firstly gave me a clean room to live in before offering me tenancy for a single person flat sometime later. I had been sleeping on the floor of a friends’ restaurant before this so I feel very supported, especially by my support worker, Lesley, who has given good advice and has a very friendly manner. Thanks to Tyne Housing, I have regained my self-confidence, and this has enabled me to set goals and work hard to achieve them.”Tyne Housing resident and small business owner, Fedai, who from being homeless, is now a small business owner successfully selling natural products at Manor Walks Shopping Centre in Cramlington.National charity, Crisis, estimates that more than 300,000 people are homeless on any given night in the UK, with ‘homelessness; being classed as more than ‘rooflessness’ or lack of a physical shelter, but also the lack of a home.[1]Tyne Housing is a North East housing provider that offers accommodation, support and healthcare to vulnerable adults across Tyne & Wear and Northumberland. Many residents like Fedai often have backgrounds that are in total contrast to their current circumstances, and therefore support staff work hard to assist and get people to a place of living well, good health and wellbeing, and where possible, independence and self-sufficiency.Lesley Stanners, Support Housing Officer from Tyne Housing, explained: “Our work goes far beyond finding accommodation for our service users, and can include providing social, lifestyle or skills guidance, and working with associate partner organisations to find employability. In Fedai’s case, this was also working with Ellis Stafford, Tyne’s employability coach, who through the BOOST programme, coordinated support from other organisations including Business Gateshead. They helped him to create a business plan and attend start-up workshops which as a result, saw him register and launch his new venture earlier this year.“Many of our residents have the drive to become the best they can be but often their situation creates challenges. Fedai is an amazing person and a great example of someone who wanted to work hard to build opportunities for himself, using his flair and creativity to prosper and get back on track. “Through effort and determination, he has embraced all the support we have offered and gained vital skills, for example, using an online app to learn English. He has continued with this for some time and is now mastering the language, and it has been the launchpad for a very positive future. He can now improve this further as a small business owner dealing with his customers so it’s brilliant and we’re thrilled for him.”Tyne Housing is a charitable housing association focused on providing accommodation and support services to vulnerable and isolated adults in the North East.Continue Reading

Iconic horror film ‘Texas Chain Saw Massacre’ gets Waco screening with local connection

Carl Hoover

Rev up the chain saw: The iconic movie that put power tools on the horror movie map comes to Waco Thursday night in a 50th anniversary screening sponsored by the Waco Movie Club.“The Texas Chain Saw Massacre,” the 1974 Texas-made independent horror film that made stars of director Tobe Hooper and Gunnar “Leatherface” Hansen, will be shown at 7:30 p.m. at the Performing Arts Community Center, 924 Austin Ave. Admission is $12 and doors open at 7 p.m.The Waco Movie Club, a collaboration between Waco public radio station KWBU-FM and the Waco Independent Film Festival, adds a local connection to the film in the person of Ross Burns, host of KWBU’s “I Hear America Singing,” who will talk about his brother Bob (Robert A.) Burns and his pivotal contributions to the movie’s look.Bob served as “Chain Saw’s” art director and helped Hooper, then a University of Texas film student, in casting some of the roles, including Hansen as Leatherface, the mask-wearing, chain saw-wielding killer who terrorizes a bunch of college kids who stumble across what seems like an abandoned rural homestead.

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Bob juggled work in commercial art and studies as a UT theater major and brought an exacting eye — and opinion — to the work, Ross explained. “Bob was insistent on making the setting as realistic as possible,” he said. That covered everything from the house and barn that the college students encounter to the furniture made from bones to the three Leatherface masks that he made.While sometimes credited as one of the first “bucket of blood” horror movies, “Chain Saw” actually was somewhat restrained in its gore. That was partially due, Ross said, to Bob’s fondness for Alfred Hitchcock movies, known for the director’s mastery of suggestion rather explicit detail.
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The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974)  – Original Trailer (4K) // via The Texas Chain Saw Massacre on YouTube

The movie was shot in Central Texas — the Austin-centric Central Texas, that is — in the summer of 1973 and it proved a stressful experience for Bob, not because of content, but the frequent clashes with the equally headstrong Hooper, Ross said.Hooper initially intended “Chain Saw” for the drive-in movie circuit in the spring of 1974, but a writers’ strike left studios hungry for films in brick-and-mortar theaters and “Chain Saw” became a mainstream release with a surprising audience response. “It was the third top-grossing film that week in more ways than one,” Ross quipped.Bob had to sue to get the pay owed him, compounded by the loss of advertising work he missed due to the film, but his eye for realism opened a new career door when director Wes Craven came calling to ask him to work on his “The Hills Have Eyes.”Other directors soon came calling when they were looking for art directors and Bob’s name, and work, appeared in such 1980s movies as “The Howling,” “Re-Animator,” “The Shining” and about a dozen more.Bob returned to Austin after a decade in Hollywood and became a fixture in the film scene, eventually relocating and retiring to Seguin before his death in 2004.Ross, six years his younger, followed a different career path, which included about 11 years at Sul Ross State University, where his extensive record collection led to the start of his “I Hear America Singing” for a Marfa public radio station in 2006. Ross continued his folk/Americana music program after he and his wife retired to Waco in 2014, hosting it on Waco’s KWBU.Louis Hunter, a founder and director of the Waco film festival, said the 82-minute “Chain Saw” proved a landmark film despite, or perhaps because of, its low budget and DIY vibe. “It’s such a foundational film in the horror genre and in independent filmmaking,” he said.It’s the third film up for discussion by the Waco Movie Club, which meets monthly to talk about specific films. Earlier films were “Dead Poets Society” and “Pan’s Labyrinth,” with “Saving Private Ryan” up for November.Those attending “Chain Saw” can buy related merchandise as well as beverages and food, which includes barbecue and “chainslaw.”

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Readers deserve better from popular science books

Adrià Voltà
Non-fiction publishing is failing its readers. It is pumping out books with supposedly game-changing ideas, without bothering to ensure basic accuracy. These tomes have the appearance of academic work, but none of the rigour.
My frustration about this has been building for years and finally exploded when I reviewed Yuval Noah Harari’s new book Nexus, which is full of ill-supported nonsense, including a hopelessly incoherent definition of the concept of information.
Consider Johann Hari: formerly a journalist at The Independent, he was caught plagiarising and resigned. He has since produced a string of unreliable books about medical controversies. Lost Connections…

Louisiana Tech announces 2025 softball schedule

RUSTON – Louisiana Tech Softball head coach Josh Taylor announced Wednesday the full 2025 schedule, a slate that includes 21 home games at Dr. Billy Bundrick Field.
It will be a very challenging schedule for the Bulldogs who will face 12 opponents that played in NCAA Regionals last season with seven of those finishing the year ranked in the top 25.
The tough competition starts right out of the gates with LA Tech traveling to Puerto Vallarta, Mexico Feb. 6-8 for two games against Northern Colorado, two versus Florida State, and one against Oklahoma State who made the College World Series.
After the first of 12 midweeks contests (at Southeastern on Feb. 12), the Bulldogs will host the LA Tech Classic on Feb. 14-16 with two matchups against ULM and one apiece versus Arkansas and Southern Miss.
Sandwiched between home midweeks versus Northwestern State and Central Arkansas is the Rocket City Showcase in Madison, Alabama Feb. 20-22 when the ‘Dogs will face East Tennessee State, Ole Miss, Auburn, and Mississippi State.
The final non-conference tournament will be Feb. 1-March 2 at the Southern Miss Tournament in Hattiesburg, Mississippi against teams to be determined.
March will also include four midweeks (March 4 versus Stephen F. Austin, March 11 versus McNeese, March 18 at Texas A&M, and March 25 at Northwestern State) as well as the start of Conference USA play.
The first CUSA series will be at Dr. Billy Bundrick Field March 7-9 when LA Tech hosts New Mexico State. The Bulldogs will also host three-game league series against Middle Tennessee, Jacksonville State, and Liberty. The road conference series will include UTEP, WKU, FIU, Kennesaw State, and Sam Houston.
April will also see five more midweeks including a home-and-home against UL-Lafayette and road contests at LSU, Stephen F. Austin, and McNeese.
The 2025 CUSA Softball Championship will be played May 7-10 in Bowling Green, Kentucky, hosted by the WKU Hilltoppers.
SEASON TICKET RENEWALSSeason ticket renewals for Bulldog Softball are now available for the 2025 season. Chairback seats are $125, bleacher seating is $100, and berm seating is $50.
Fans can pay their renewal invoice online by logging into their account at LATechSports.com/Tickets or by calling the LA Tech Ticket Office at (318) 257-3631. A flexible payment plan option is available this year. To take advantage of the payment plan option, select the “Flex Spring” option online or call the ticket office.
SOCIAL MEDIAFor all the latest in Bulldog Softball, follow us on X (@LATechSB), Instagram (@LATechSB), and Facebook (LouisianaTechSoftball).

Antigua and Barbuda Takes Center Stage at TTG Travel Experience!

Antigua and Barbuda made a big splash at the TTG Travel Experience in Rimini, Italy!This premier tourism event was the perfect platform for our dynamic Tourism Authority officials to showcase the islands’ best and build exciting connections in the Italian market.
The powerhouse delegation included Colin C. James, CEO of the Antigua and Barbuda Tourism Authority, and Cherrie Osborne, Director of Tourism UK & Europe.
Colin C. James shared his enthusiasm: “The TTG Travel Experience was a fantastic opportunity to unveil our latest developments that will strengthen ties with Italy. With Antigua and Barbuda being one of only three Caribbean destinations present, we definitely made a memorable impact at Italy’s largest business-to-business travel show!”
And there’s more thrilling news! Starting November 5, 2024, Condor Airlines will be resuming its direct weekly flights between Frankfurt and Antigua!
This fantastic route brings incredible convenience to European travelers, including those from Italy, allowing same-day connections from several northern Italian cities, making your dream getaway to our beautiful islands even easier.
Colin also highlighted the promising travel trends: “The great news for the Italian market is that a significant number of passengers on these flights are connecting directly from Italy!”
The excitement doesn’t stop there. From January to August 2024, Antigua and Barbuda saw a dazzling 16.74% increase in visitor arrivals compared to last year, welcoming a total of 229,275 guests—including a remarkable 2,039 Italian tourists, representing an impressive 18.48% growth!
During the event, the team engaged in more than 33 exhilarating meetings with top-tier Italian travel agencies and tour operators and greeted over 350 enthusiastic visitors at their stand.
This remarkable turnout showcases the growing allure of our islands to Italian travelers!
The delegation was also joined by key stakeholders from Antigua: Stephanie Mack from Caribbean Beach Cottages, representing renowned properties like Cocos Hotel and Hawksbill Resort; Giusy Magni, who brought the luxury of Hermitage Bay Resort; Tiziano Rosignoli from Passion Village Antigua; and Francesca Coletti of Treasure Island Magazine.
They were all in sync with Consul General and Non-Resident Ambassador to Italy, H.E. Jeff Hadeed, offering unwavering support to Team Tourism as they championed our stunning destination!