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September 12, 2009

BBC NEWS | Entertainment | Nirvana 'dismayed' at Cobain game

Nirvana 'dismayed' at Cobain game

Kurt Cobain
Kurt Cobain died in 1994 of a self-inflicted gun shot wound

Former Nirvana members Krist Novoselic and Dave Grohl have said they are "dismayed and very disappointed" at how Kurt Cobain is used in a video game.

They do not agree that the band's late frontman can be used to play songs by other artists in the new Guitar Hero.

In a joint statement, they said they "didn't know" Cobain's character in the game could be used to play any kind of song the player wants.

Game makers Activision said permission had been granted by Cobain's estate.

Legal action

The company said Cobain's widow, Courtney Love, had provided a written agreement which allowed the singer's likeness as a fully playable character in the fifth game of the series.

Along with the two Nirvana hits, Smells Like Teen Spirit and Lithium, Cobain's character can also be selected to play 85 tracks by other artists.

"While we were aware of Kurt's image being used with two Nirvana songs, we didn't know players have the ability to unlock the character," said Novoselic and Grohl.

"This feature allows the character to be used with any kind of song the player wants. We urge Activision to do the right thing in 're-locking' Kurt's character so that this won't continue in the future."

Love has also criticised the game on Twitter and has threatened to sue Activision.

The star said she "never signed" off the game and claimed, "there's been four breaches of a very strict contract".

She added: "This trust are my employees, but whatthey [sic] are tryong [sic] to do is sickening, and they need to be fired, and repairations [sic] need made."


BBC NEWS | Entertainment | Nirvana 'dismayed' at Cobain game

M*A*S*H writer Gelbart dies at 81



M*A*S*H writer Gelbart dies at 81

Jerry Lee Lewis Mickey Gilley Nashville 1980

http://www.youtube.com/?v=YN4NWHyTSSc

Jerry Lee Lewis Mickey Gilley Nashville 1980

Untitled



Racquetball: A Cautionary Tale of a Sports Boom | Get Memphis Moving | Memphis Flyer

Racquetball: A Cautionary Tale of a Sports Boom

hoganbrum.jpg

In the mid-1970s, racquetball was one of the hottest sports on the
planet, and Memphis was its epicenter. Today it's one of those sports,
like jumping rope and baseball, that lots of us used to play and few of
us still play. It didn't quite go the way of tube socks and afros, but
it was definitely headed that way. How and why does a sport with such
appeal to both men and women bloom, fade and perhaps bloom again in
popularity?

In 1976, Elvis Presley had a basement court at Graceland, where he
played Dr. George Nichopoulos and other members of his Memphis Mafia.
Memphis had a half dozen racquetball professionals and a young phenom
named Andy Roberts who would later win a world championship. One of the
city's most prominent businessmen, William B. Tanner, was a racquetball
fanatic and promoter who built a court on top of his office building on
Union Avenue Extended. Memphis State University, as it was then called,
and Coach Larry Lyles started a club team that dominated college
racquetball for two decades. Baseball legend Don Kessinger took up the
sport and built a court complex. In all, there were more than 150
courts in the city.




Today,
racquetball isn't dead, by any means. Memphis still hosts the U.S.
Nationals and pro tournament at The Racquet Club of Memphis in October,
and there are probably 100 courts scattered throughout the city and
suburbs at schools, churches, fitness clubs, and U of M. But they don't
get as much play as they used to, and nobody is building new centers
dedicated first and foremost to racquetball.


What happened to the hottest sport of the Seventies? Memphian Randy
Stafford, owner of The Court Company and a former professional, has
played the sport at a high level for 40 years and is also the sport's
unofficial historian. The game, he says, was invented in 1954 and first
flourished in Louisville alongside handball. The first generation of
Memphis players included Giles "Bull" Coors, DeWitt Shy, Jack Doyle,
and Ronnie Leon.


The game was slower than the modern version but easier to play than
tennis because the racquet was shorter, the court smaller, and the ball
bouncier. You banged it off the front wall, side walls, or ceiling and
it came back to you. It quickly replaced handball because it was easier
on the hands and women could learn it quickly. The sport exploded in
the early 1970s as hundreds of colleges built multiple courts and made
it a physical education elective. The game appealed to businessmen like
Tanner as a way to get an intense indoor workout in an hour or less. In
a Match for the Ages, a champion handball player, Paul Haber, played a
champion racquetball player using a racquet but playing with a
handball. Haber won the match. But racquetball won the war. At its
peak, the sport claimed 14 million players, half of them women, and set
an architectural standard for the modern fitness club.


Today, Stafford says there are about 5.5 million players, only 20
percent of whom are women. Aerobics, cycling, jogging, and
weightlifting all took a piece of the pie.


"Pure racquetball didn't work so clubs had to add other things," said Stafford.


Racquets got bigger and balls faster. Stafford calls today's game "bullet ball."


"I don't know that the speed of the game hurt its popularity," he
said. "Young people like the speed. It's older players that complain."


Stafford's own career reflects the sport's changes. He started
playing when he was 14 years old and a freshman at White Station High
School. His parents moved to Alberta, Canada and he began dividing his
time between racquetball and hunting. At a national tournament, he
caught the eye of the sport's grand master, Bud Meuhleisen of San
Diego, who invited him to come to California for the summer to train.
Stafford took him up on it. Almost broke, he paid him in bear meat and
moose meat.


With a long, graceful stride and rangy body, Stafford was a natural
for the slow-paced game of the early Seventies, but the game outgrew
him as it got faster. He was a second-tier pro, wrote books about the
game, and began building courts all over the world. Until last year he
still competed nationally at the highest level in his age group.


His nemesis is Ruben Gonzalez, one of the hardest hitters on the
tour when he was in his prime. Stafford is 55, which is usually the
best ago to play a new division. Unfortunately, Gonzales is older, so
Stafford has caught up with him, not left him behind.

Racquetball: A Cautionary Tale of a Sports Boom | Get Memphis Moving | Memphis Flyer

Courtney, Dave, Krist, Activision Fight Over Guitar Hero's Controversial Kurt Cartoon

Courtney, Dave, Krist, Activision Fight Over Guitar Hero's Controversial Kurt Cartoon

thubmnail icon: Courtney, Dave, Krist, Activision Fight Over Guitar Hero's Controversial Kurt Cartoon

Who to believe, who to believe. As you know, Guitar Hero 5 features a playable Kurt Cobain avatar which you can unlock to have the Nirvana icon cover Bush, stunt like Flavor Flav, and roll over in his grave. Everybody's coming down on Courtney Love for licensing this atrocity, so Courtney Love very calmly took to Twitter to call out Activision and threaten filing suit. In her words:

"FOR THE RECORD I DID NOT APPROVE KURTS AVATAR FOR GUYITARHERO5. i think Kurt would despise this game alone let alone this avatar," and "WE are going to sue the shit out of ACtivision we being the Trust the Estate the LLC the various LLCs Cobain Enterprises" (via P4K, because there is no way I was swimming through her twittershitter to find the relevant tweets)(oh and, a big sic on all of that).

So according to Courtney, Courtney is not so bad after all! According to Activision, though, she might need a new story. The company just sent a press release stating: "Guitar Hero secured the necessary licensing rights from the Cobain estate in a written agreement signed by Courtney Love to use Kurt Cobain's likeness as a fully playable character in Guitar Hero® 5."

Courtney's response, posted just minutes ago: "activision is fulllof shit they have a a contcrct called a deal memo that said upon approvale they could use an avatar i approved i .," adding "and i never inteneded to aPPROVE this shit, they are doing a recall you can be sure o fthat. waita ew hours maybe tomorrow press and etc."

So either Activision will be recalling the game, or Courtney doesn't understand the terms of the deal memo she signed. Tough call. More soon I'm sure.

UPDATE: Krist Novoselic and Dave Grohl release a statement:

This is a statement regarding Nirvana, Guitar Hero and the likeness of the late Kurt Cobain.

We want people to know that we are dismayed and very disappointed in the way a facsimile of Kurt is used in the Guitar Hero game. The name and likeness of Kurt Cobain are the sole property of his estate - we have no control whatsoever in that area.

While we were aware of Kurt's image being used with two Nirvana songs, we didn't know players have the ability to unlock the character. This feature allows the character to be used with any kind of song the player wants. We urge Activision to do the right thing in "re-locking" Kurt's character so that this won't continue in the future.

It's hard to watch an image of Kurt pantomiming other artists' music alongside cartoon characters. Kurt Cobain wrote songs that hold a lot of meaning to people all over the world. We feel he deserves better.

Krist Novoselic and Dave Grohl


RT @courtneylover79 - http://j.mp/hZMfe - "Guitar Hero® 5 Kurt Cobain - Courtney Love Gives Kurt Bad Name - Impossible Mash" - #youtube #video via @mrjyn - *My little Greatest Hits vid is causing a stir in Cobain Enterprises LLC-land. - "30-second Guitar Hero 5 vid, 'Courtney Love Gives Kurt Bad Name' video on YouTube is a 30-second 'fan?' compilation of all the most improbable, 'unlocked' performances given by Kurt Cobain from the new Guitar Hero 5 Activision release, including: Flava Flav, Bon Jovi, Stevie Wonder and David Bowie. Really! HERE's the URL - http://j.mp/hZMfe -AND- HERE's an article about it - http://bit.ly/s3Yph - " zergwatch (gamer zine)

Guitar Hero 5 - Kurt Cobain Vignette trailer