Archive for March, 2010

Legal Online Gambling – Online Slot Machines Guide: Skeet Shooter Bonus Slot

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

Slot machines are the most popular form of casino entertainment, both at land-based and online casinos. Types of online slot machines include classic 3-reel slots, 5-reel video slots, 5-reel interactive i-Slots, progressive jackpots, and bonus feature games. Bonus slots have some sort of bonus feature, such as free spins or a special bonus round. This article reviews Skeet Shooter, one of Net Entertainment software’s bonus feature slot machines.

Skeet Shooter is a 5-reel, 9 pay-line video slot about sports. It only accepts a 10¢ coin, the maximum number of coins that you can bet per spin is 90 ($9.00). Skeet Shooter comes with a bonus game, 23 winning combinations, and a top jackpot of 10,000 coins. To activate the bonus round, you need to hit three or more Shotgun symbols on the reels. There are no wilds, scatters, or free spins.

Symbols on the reels include Sevens, Cherries, Single Bar, Target, and Shooter.

Not all online casinos accept players from the USA. However, all of these Real Time Gaming online casinos welcome USA players: Rushmore, Slots Oasis, Cherry Red, Slots Plus, Club USA, One Club, Sun Palace, Aladdin’s Palace, and All Star Slots.

In addition, all of these Vegas Tech online casinos welcome players from the USA: Go Casino, VIP Slots, Millionaire, English Harbour, Online Vegas, Crazy Slots, and Super Slots.

So there you have it, a review of Skeet Shooter, one of Net Entertainment software’s bonus feature slot machines. Whether you play slot machines in Las Vegas or at your favorite online casino, decide beforehand how much you want to spend during your Legal online gambling session and don’t exceed the spending limit should you lose.

Download The Bigs 2 PSP and PSP GO Game – download full movies

Monday, March 29th, 2010

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/f/ff/TheBigs2.jpg/250px-TheBigs2.jpg

Download The Bigs 2 For Free!

Do you want to download The Bigs 2 for your PSP or PSP Go? Do you want to know how and where you can download The Bigs 2 for free?  In this article I will show you how to download The Bigs 2 form a top PSP & PSP Go downloading website called PSP Go Download Center.

PSP Go Download Center contains over 200,000 Downloads making it the Biggest Database for the PSP and PSP GO! PSP Go Download Center is complete database where you can find the newest and your favorite Games, download full movies, Music, Software and much more totally for free! You can join now and get all the benefits from PSP Go Download Center and start enjoying your PSP Go & PSP as never before!

PSP Go Download Center is a legitimate program that has obtained the license agreement from Sony Corp in providing copyrighted materials under PSP trademark for download. So you wouldn’t need to worry about copyrighted materials. The Bigs 2 is also available in the database for download. You can download The Bigs 2 onto your PSP & PSP Go in just few minutes!

Unlike other PSP downloading site, PSP Go Download Center is a one time fee while The PlayStation Store is a pay-per-download basis, if you want to get more than one game, it can get quit expensive when added up. The over-price of PSP UMD disc causes PSP gamers to look for alternative way to get their favorite game. PSP GO Download Center members and amount of games, download full movies and music in the database is growing due to the low cost.

As a member of PSP Go Download Center, you have the opportunity to access unlimited downloads and keep your membership account for life time. So you can proceed to download The Bigs 2 and play on your PSP & PSP Go instantly. There are full tools and supports available so you wouldn’t have to worry about technical issue.

PSP Download Center – Download PSP & PSP Go Game For Free!

Last Days of Disco: Overview

Monday, March 29th, 2010

Watching “The Last Days of Disco” I’m reminded of some of the early works of Woody Allen, for sure, but it is there that many of the movie comparisons can end. “Disco” is written and acted like a play, with a cast of young up-and-coming actors giving their all and reading Whit Stillman’s verbose and heady dialogue which is created on an easel with a painter’s eye touch and an appropriate wink. The movie should be applauded for its unique perspective of Studio 54 and the end of the disco era through the eyes of a group of white, upper-class yuppies, and not the usual weirdoes and misfits films about this era often focus on.

The story of “Disco” largely revolves around Alice and Charlotte, two women born to upper-class families but eking out a life for themselves in Manhattan as strong, empowered females. Most weekend nights they can be found at the unnamed Manhattan disco which is supposed to be largely based on Stillman’s experiences at Studio 54. Both women fall in and out of love and make bad relationship choices. The side plot of the story is about the unnamed disco club and its rise and fall from along with the rise and fall of the disco genre. The film does a good job of providing a small, but somewhat unrealistic view of the disco scene but doesn’t dig deep into the drugs, sex and debauchery of the era. I don’t hold that against Stillman or the film because I don’t think that is what he was going for. Many download full movies have already done that but Stillman’s style is more low-key, more poetic, focusing on relationships and dialogue over realism and scenery.

My biggest complaint is the sets. The scenes in the unnamed club come off as barely more organized than a high school musical. There isn’t a real sense of how massive and important a club like Studio 54 was, but instead you just see a large backdrop of typical club characters used as fake scenery for the dialogue and movements of the main actors and actresses. This is largely what I mean when I say the film resembles a play—more time and energy is given to the character interactions and their dialogue together. About that dialogue: some may find it a bit stilted at times, but that is often the complaint of great dialogue. Stillman knows his way around a scene and “Disco” is largely made up of great scene after great scene.

Sometimes “Disco” can come off as a bit too interested in preserving the legacy of the era, afraid to really dig into the ugliness of it, but I believe Stillman’s main goal was to largely use the era as scenery for a story that could be told at any time—a story about shifting relationships, betrayal and true love.