Wired may refer to:

See also [link]


https://wn.com/Wired

Wired (book)

Wired: The Short Life and Fast Times of John Belushi, is a 1984 non-fiction book by American journalist Bob Woodward about the American actor and comedian John Belushi. The hardcover edition includes sixteen pages of black-and-white photos, front and back.

Details

Many friends and relatives of Belushi, including his widow Judith Belushi Pisano, Dan Aykroyd and James Belushi, agreed to be interviewed at length for the book, but later felt the final product was exploitative and not representative of the John Belushi they knew. Pisano wrote her own book, Samurai Widow (1990) to counter the image of Belushi portrayed in Wired. In 2013 Tanner Colby, who had co-authored the 2005 book Belushi: A Biography with Pisano, wrote about how Wired exposes Woodward's strengths and weaknesses as a journalist. While in the process of researching the anecdotes related in the book, he found that while many of them were true, Woodward missed, or didn't seek out, their meaning or context.

For example, in Woodward's telling, a "lazy and undisciplined" Belushi is guided through the scene on the cafeteria line in Animal House by director John Landis, yet other actors present for that scene recall how much of it was improvised by the actor in one single take. Blair Brown told Colby she was still angry about how Woodward "tricked" her in describing her and Belushi preparing for a love scene in Continental Divide. Colby notes that Woodward devotes a single paragraph to Belushi's grandmother's funeral, where he hit a low point and resolved to get clean for that film, while diligently documenting every instance of drug abuse he turned up. "It's like someone wrote a biography of Michael Jordan in which all the stats and scores are correct, but you come away with the impression that Michael Jordan wasn't very good at playing basketball," he concluded.

Wired (website)

The Wired website, formerly known as Wired News or HotWired, is an online technology news website launched in 1992 that split off from Wired magazine when the magazine was purchased by Condé Nast Publishing in the 1990s. Wired News was owned by Lycos not long after the split, until Condé Nast purchased Wired News on July 11, 2006. Competition from sites like the Drudge Report and The Political Simpleton slightly decreased after the 2006 purchase, due to the increase in advertising revenue.

Website

Wired.com hosts several technology blogs on topics in transportation, security, business, new products, video games, the "GeekDad" blog on toys, creating websites, cameras, culture and science.

It also publishes the Vaporware Awards.

Wired Top 10 Scientific Breakthroughs of the Year

  • 2007:
    • Transistors Get Way Smaller
    • Scientists Clone Rhesus Monkey to Produce Stem Cells
    • Planet Discovered That Could Harbor Life
    • Engineers Create Transparent Material as Strong as Steel
    • Soft Tissue from T. Rex Leg Bone Analyzed
    • Laboratory Mice Cured of Rett Syndrome
    • Enzymes Convert Any Blood Type to O
    • Mummified Dinosaur Excavated and Scanned
    • Chimpanzees Make Spears for Hunting
    • Researchers Turn Skin Cells to Stem Cells
  • Pogo

    Pogo or POGO may refer to:

    Toys

  • Pogo stick, a toy used for jumping up and down with the aid of a spring
    • Extreme Pogo, an action sport which involves riding and performing tricks on specially designed "extreme" pogo sticks
  • Extreme Pogo, an action sport which involves riding and performing tricks on specially designed "extreme" pogo sticks
  • Pogo ball, a toy similar to a pogo stick, based on a rubber ball
  • Pogo, a skateboarding trick
  • Entertainment

  • Pogo (dance), a dance style
  • Pogo Joe, a video game
  • Pogo.com, a website featuring free online games
  • Pogo (comic strip)
  • Pogo Plane, a fictional airplane from the Fantastic Four comic
  • Pogo TV, an Indian cable television channel
  • Music

  • DJ Pogo, DJ and producer known for his involvement in the British hip-hop scene
  • Pogo (electronic musician), musician who uses samples recorded from movies and reality
  • Moshing
  • "Pogo," a song by Digitalism
  • Organizations

  • Partnership for Observation of the Global Oceans, an oceanography organization
  • Project on Government Oversight, a non-profit organization which investigates corruption and other misconduct
  • Pogoń

    Pogoń or Pahonia (Belarusian: Пагоня) is a word used to described the Lithuanian coat of arms. The term was possibly first applied by Marcin Bielski in the 16th century. The arms represent a Knight-in-pursuit, known as Vytis, and meaning the chase. It has been used by several noble families, like the Sokolski (Pogoń Ruska coat of arms) and the Czartoryski families.

    More recently the Pogoń has been used as a state symbol:

  • Vytis, the coat of arms of modern Lithuania
  • Pahonia, the former coat of arms of Belarus
  • See also

  • Pogoń Lwów
  • Pogoń Siedlce
  • Pogoń Szczecin
  • Pogoń 1922 Żory
  • Pahonia
  • References

    Pogo (comic strip)

    Pogo is the title and central character of a long-running daily American comic strip, created by cartoonist Walt Kelly (1913–1973) and distributed by the Post-Hall Syndicate. Set in the Okefenokee Swamp of the southeastern United States, the strip often engaged in social and political satire through the adventures of its anthropomorphic funny animal characters.

    Pogo combined both sophisticated wit and slapstick physical comedy in a heady mix of allegory, Irish poetry, literary whimsy, puns and wordplay, lushly detailed artwork and broad burlesque humor. The same series of strips can be enjoyed on different levels by both young children and savvy adults. The strip earned Kelly a Reuben Award in 1951.

    History

    Walter Crawford Kelly, Jr. was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on August 25, 1913. His family moved to Bridgeport, Connecticut when he was only two. He went to California at age 22 to work on Donald Duck cartoons at Walt Disney Studios in 1935. He stayed until the animators' strike in 1941 as an animator on The Nifty Nineties, The Little Whirlwind, Pinocchio, Fantasia, Dumbo and The Reluctant Dragon. Kelly then worked for Dell Comics, a division of Western Publishing of Racine, Wisconsin.

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