Showing posts with label Review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Review. Show all posts

Thursday, November 25, 2010

The Google Shadow – Honest Review

The Google Shadow – Honest Review

Steal this 0,000 Google secret…. I can promise you this will prove to be the most important review you read this year.

I’ve just had an important call from Chris X, multi-millionaire Affiliate Marketer, and author of the Day Job Killer, the fastest selling ebook in the history of Clickbank, and one of the best-selling guides on the Internet. Chris is widely known in the Internet Marketing Community as one of the most successful affiliates out there. He’s sold over 50,000 copies of his guides online, pulled in over million per year, and trained over 35,000 affiliates to use his money-making methods.

Many of these students have gone on to create their own Internet fortunes, and quit their miserable day jobs forever. Okay, so what the heck has all this got to do with you?

Well, on February 10th Chris is revealing a brand new Google code which could make you rich… very, very rich. Now, have I got your attention…?

Thought so.

You see, after years of training thousands of affiliates to use his methods, Chris realized that what people really want is an insanely ‘simple’ system to make money… A system so simple, even a ‘brain-dead’ monkey could follow it.

So, Chris embarked on a long search for the ultimate simple Google cash pulling system. A system so simple that all the user had to do was write a few Google ads, spend a few dollars on testing,… and ride the wave to profit.

Well, a chance meeting with a guy known as “The Shadow” in a Chicago seminar last October gave Chris the answer he was looking for. This guy, real name Tim Houston, had stumbled upon a powerful but little-known system of making serious cash from Google, without having his own website, and without having a single product of his own to sell.

Yep, you read that right…WITHOUT a single website…

Now, if you know anything about Google Adwords, you’ll immediately see that it is practically next to impossible to make ANY money from Adwords these days without having your own website or review web page. Even more incredible the guy does *no* “keyword research” and focuses on the affiliate promotions that 99% of wealth-seekers avoid.

In other words, this guy Tim is doing the online equivalent of walking on water! But not only is he making easy money from Google with this unbelievably simple system…he’s making well over 0,000 a month…a MONTH!

Who said the “Google Cash” direct linking system was dead? Well, think again.

So it’s easy to see why Chris was determined to twist Tim’s arm to expose the secret code to his Google Shadow system and share it with the hordes of hungry affiliates out there struggling to make a simple living online.

Well, after an intense grilling session of Tim “the Shadow,” he finally agreed to reveal his groundbreaking system to Chris… He revealed chapter and verse, exactly how he makes his 6-figure a month income, so that anyone could easily copy and replicate his success.

And you’d be shocked if you knew just how simple, but incredibly powerful this whole thing is: Tim doesn’t simply break the secret code of the Google Shadow system… He goes one step further and *automates* it for you. It doesn’t get any easier than this,…

Specifically, Tim’s Google Shadow system addresses the top problems affiliates have in 2009:

1. If you’re feeling locked out of the Adwords game because you don’t have masses of cash to drop on campaigns, you’re in luck.

The shadow launches every campaign with a handful of “hidden” low-traffic keywords (3 keywords in fact). He shuns pretty much every keyword taught by the mainstream marketers. He tests with cents, and makes dollars.

2. Feeling overwhelmed? You’re not alone. Truly, it’s not your fault… there are probably 100 different ways to succeed as an affiliate, and working out the best method for you, and then profiting with it, can be tough.

Which is why the Shadow really just does one thing to make his 0k monthly pay check: he writes little Google ads.

No websites, no technical crap, no fancy jargon or no decision making. Just little Google ads.

But listen, you DON’T have to take my word for it, go now and check it out for yourself…then make up your own mind about what the Google Shadow system can really do for you.

Okay, by now I’m sure you must be wondering…

How exactly can you get your eager little hands on this life-changing package…? Well, you need to move pretty fast…there is simply no guarantee that it will even stay on sale for long…

Especially since I know for a fact that this system will totally revolutionize the way you make money online forever. And if you pass on this, I don’t need to tell you that you’ll remain at a severe disadvantage compared to those armed with it’s awesome power, naturally you’ll continue to struggle online.

This thing is easier, faster and far more powerful at generating cash online, than any ebook or software you will ever find out there… This is completely different to anything you may have ever seen online in your life.

Go To The Google Shadow Here

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Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Scott Mendelson: DVD Review: Secret Origin: the Story of DC Comics (2010)

Secret Origin: The Story of DC Comics
2010
90 minutes
Not Rated

Available on DVD from Warner Home Video on November 9th

by Scott Mendelson

Secret Origin is, at best, a cliff-notes version of the 75-year history of DC Comics. Running just 90 minutes, the film barely scratches the surface of the illustrious publishing house that literary changed the country. Narrated by Ryan Reynolds, the film is a primer of sorts for the casual superhero fan, perhaps younger audiences who have just discovered the four-color legends. But considering that anyone who would purchase this $20 barebones disc (there's not even a scene index) is likely already a knowledgeable fan of the DC universe, it is disappointing that this entertaining piece of history doesn't dig a little deeper, or linger a little longer in the less-reported annals of comic book history. It is swiftly paced and never boring, but it feels truncated. It is less a genuine documentary than a piece of marketing that probably should have been included as a supplemental feature on a future DC Comics film or cartoon.

The film surely covers the basics. It goes into how Siegel and Shuster's experiences as poor Jewish immigrants shaped their creation of Superman, how Superman's popularity spawned an entirely new genre: the costumed superhero comic book, how Superman went from a staunch FDR-ish crusader for social justice in the 1940s to a domesticated representative of 1950s conformity. In fact, Superman dominates much of the feature, which makes sense until you remember that the Man of Steel had an entire 110 minute documentary all about him in 2006 (the vastly superior Look, Up in the Sky!: The Amazing Story of Superman). It details the various travails of Wonder Woman, who started out as the creation of a bondage-obsessed feminist scholar and basically became an ongoing symbol of what kind of femininity America was comfortable with at any given time. Humorous apologies are extended for the powered-down, costume-less 1970s variation.

The piece is actually pretty light on Batman, which is both refreshing and frustrating. It is nice to have a DC project that isn't dominated by the Dark Knight, but omitting the 1970s Dennis O'Neil/Neal Adams Dark Knight Detective revival shapes the narrative so that once again Frank Miller's The Dark Knight Returns gets sole credit for revitalizing the character after forty-years of post World War II camp. Contrary to Miller's famous quote, Batman got his balls back seventeen years before Frank Miller wrote his otherwise groundbreaking 'Elseworld'. On the plus side, Bill Finger is specifically referenced as a co-creator of Batman alongside Bob Kane (anyone else ever notice how much a young Bob Kane resembles The Joker?). The documentary also deserves credit for acknowledging that the 1960s TV show literary saved the Batman comic book from cancellation, something I've discussed before. But it loses points for barely even mentioning Batman: The Animated Series and the eighteen years (and counting) worth of storytelling that it gave way to.

As far as discussing any characters outside the 'holy trinity', pretty much everyone else is given the short shrift. The 1970s counter-culture liberal vs. conservative Green Arrow/Green Lantern arc is given a solid highlight. Ironically, mention is made of Speedy becoming hooked on drugs, which they claim destroyed the Comics Code, while no mention is made of Harry Osborn's concurrent drug addiction over in Spider-Man, issues which went out without a Comics Code seal at all. Julie Schwartz comes off as a major hero, as he is justifiably credited with single-handedly reviving the B-list characters from the 1940s (Green Lantern, The Flash, etc). And late mentions are made of the work of Alan Moore (Watchmen, Swamp Thing, etc) and Neil Gaiman's Sandman. Oddly enough, despite being released in 2010, the documentary comes to a dead stop just after the 9/11 attacks in late 2001. No mention is made of anything that happened in on the printed page over the last nine years.

As this is an 'authorized' story of DC Comics, there are no mentions whatsoever of the darker times in the companies history. The disgraceful treatment of Superman creators Siegel and Shuster goes unmentioned, as does Alan Moore's falling out with DC and/or the entire industry nearly collapsing in the mid-1990s due to the temporary speculative boom. Heck, even inconvenient facts about the stories themselves are left out. A token reference is made to superheroes becoming darker in the late 80s and early 90s, but no specific examples are given, not even Green Lantern (specifically Hal Jordan, whom narrator Ryan Reynolds will be portraying next summer), who went crazy and slaughtered most of the Green Lantern Corp in 1994. There is a quick pan to the Death and the Family #3 cover, without any reference to the hysteria-inducing call-in contest that had comic readers deciding whether or not Jason Todd (the second Robin) should perish in an explosion. Even for an authorized glance behind the scenes, this is a shockingly sanitized look at DC Comics.
Despite the token entertainment value and the nostalgia that's sure to come from seeing all of your favorite heroes being given a token mention, Secret Origins: the Story of DC Comics is shockingly uninformative. While there is some pleasure is the archival footage and interviews that pepper the first third of the documentary (Bill Finger is indeed credited as a Batman co-creator, but Jerry Robinson's name never comes up), this is more of a feature-length commercial than a stand-alone document. Heck, the entire 90 minute feature has far less trivia and insight than even the DC Comics Wikipedia page.

Grade: C

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Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Marshall Fine: HuffPost Review: Inspector Bellamy

The latest film by Claude Chabrol career before his death in September, Inspector Bellamy 80 is an exercise intriguing diversion, built around the great figure of Gérard Depardieu.

Depardieu plays character, Paul Bellamy, who is on vacation with his wife, Fran?oise, Marie Bunel) at their home in N?mes country.Bellamy apparently is one of most famous cops in Paris, even if we are ever given anything to support this notion, beyond having other characters to mention the famous how he est.Apparemment, he is known for its deductive skills - as opposed to some famous rogue killer COP instead of the infamous - but again, it is something that we have said, not shown.

Background on TV as he is working on a crossword and a cup of tea purr is a framework for insurance who has committed a kind of fraud, then fake his own death. But Bellamy, that he and his wife keep reminding people, is on holiday.

However, it is a pole of attraction for intruders.First is a foreigner, which hangs in the garden of his house, appears in the door and, finally, calls it to a nuit.Appeler himself Noel Gentil (Jacques Gamblin), eventually lures Bellamy to his hotel room where he admits that he committed a murder.

Second is half-brother of Bellamy, Jacques (Clovis Cornillac), a not ' er-do-well that is temporarily poured out, apparently not an uncommon situation with him. He moves in with Bellamys, sponge on them for money, power and the use of their car, even if it shears to and bickers with Paul.

Bellamy vacation turns into a busman holiday, that it uses his encounter with the murderer admitted to unravel a mystery involving the Executive insurance missing, the identity of the body used to false death and extra-marital entanglements that propelled his misadventures. Bellamy also finds himself uncomfortably reconnect with his half-brother, which introduces the suspicion again in the life of Bellamy on its own character and marriage.

Chabrol, however, is something different from that of a simple whodunit with classical resolution.Entire history of the impostor missing insurance is rather apparently a red herring, an excuse to tell a story about Bellamy and his compulsive work ethic destruction off-given to the people in his life and his apparent cluelessness about himself.

Who better to play a delicate Bull as Depardieu?In the middle age, approaching end of life circumference Brando or Welles.Yet it has lost none of its nose vitalité.Avec strangely presence (the only players with anywhere near as distinctive nose are Owen Wilson and Adrien Brody) and a smile that can pass malevolence, casually amusement there always obtained provides a touching vulnerability to this not-so-gentle giant moving sensitivity.

Bunel, as his long-suffering wife carries an air of mystery about his feelings for her dominant husband: is resignation? disease? contempt? tolerance? who maintains performance of fading background Institute maintains the public - and Bellamy - balance.

Off-balance sheet, in fact, was a State in which you want Chabrol keep its auditoire.Il succeeded one last time with the Inspector Bellamy, disturbing film reveals never quite in the way that wish audience.


Click here: learn more reviews, interviews and comments on my Web site.

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