The news is out there, so there’s no reason not to comment on it: yesterday, I survived a rather drastic round of layoffs at work.
Three years ago, CourtTV was split into In Session (daytime court coverage) and truTV (nighttime reality/documentary shows). Now the Turner mothership has decided to run In Session directly, meaning some positions will be eliminated as of November while others will vanish from New York and re-appear in Atlanta. According to this, either “up to 65″ or “around 100″ jobs will be cut from the NY location, out of a workforce of 300+.
Yesterday afternoon, the major department heads called mandatory, all-employee meetings on short notice, a little over an hour in advance. They explained what was going on and told us that by the time we returned to our desks, we would have emails saying whether we were laid off or not.
My job has almost nothing to do with In Session, so I’m still here. However, the press release includes this bit:
A second change involves a restructuring and new identity for truTV’s marketing efforts. The newly formed Brand Strategy & Marketing umbrella will include the Digital Content & Multi-Platform Development group, formerly the online group. truTV’s affiliate marketing activities will move to Atlanta, which is the base for the overall affiliate marketing team for truTV’s sister networks, TNT, TBS and Turner Classic Movies.
I’m in the Web Services group, not Online, technically, but we’ll still have to see whether this affects us in the future.
I’ve fallen behind on keeping track of the latest MST3K DVD releases, but I’m pretty sure Shout Factory’s cover design strategy can best be described as “Screw It, We Give Up:”
To be fair, I’ll buy ‘em anyway, won’t I? Besides, the extras are a lot better on these volumes than on the Rhino releases.
By now, everyone’s seen the big E3 presentations about Project Natal and Milo (Crown Price of the Uncanny Valley, who will someday become sentient and wipe out the human race) and the like. But here are the real items of interest for me:
1) The game generating the biggest buzz from game critics isn’t a big expensive high-tech shooter, but Scribblenauts for the DS. You solve puzzles by writing words using the stylus, which the game then conjures into the gameworld — and if you can think of it, the designers have probably included it and made it interact with everything else. Scribble “Cthulhu?” It’s in the game. “Keyboard Cat?” In the game. Want to see God fight a Kraken? It’s in the game. It looks amazing, and I can’t wait for its October release. Official trailer is here.
2) Telltale Games is singlehandedly bringing back the adventure gaming pleasures of my misspent youth. In addition to Sam & Max and Wallace & Gromit, they just announced new monthly episodes of Tales of Monkey Island starting in July, bringing back most of the voice cast from Curse. The downside? It’s only available for Wii and PC, meaning I’d have to either buy a Wii or a new PC to replace my 3.5 year old laptop to play it. (Or Sam & Max Season 2. Or Strongbad. You’re killing me here, Telltale…)
On top of that, LucasArts is re-releasing Secret of Monkey Island: Special Edition this summer as well — to XBLA, so I can play it. Finally, a Lucas special edition I can get behind. I’ll happily re-live that part of my high school years in widescreen hi-def. (But only that part, mind you.)