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Dr. Demento ends 55-year run as radio's weirdest DJ

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The doctor was in for the last time. After 55 years of weirding out radio listeners and influencing the likes of “Weird Al” Yankovic, Dr. Demento honked his horn for one final broadcast yesterday, hosting the final episode of The Dr. Demento Show. To mark the occasion, Demento treated dementors and dementoids to the longest nationally broadcast Dr. Demento Show ever, a three-and-a-half-hour-long extravaganza, counting down Demento’s “top 40 most demanded demented discs and tapes” from across his career.

Minneapolis native Barret Hansen first introduced radio listeners to his demented alter ego in 1970. Originating on KPPC in Pasadena, California, Demento has been bringing his vast collection of obscure novelty and comedy records to the ears of delighted listeners ever since. Perhaps best known for giving “Weird Al” his start, Demento is the type of cultural figure that’s too rare, someone who takes seriously the unserious ephemera that makes our world tolerable without overhyping, overintellectualizing, or acting above it. Where else on the radio is someone going to hear the dolcet burps of “It’s A Gas” by MAD magazine mascot Alfred E. Neuman? Sirius? Don’t be ridiculous.

Demento released his final traditional episode on May 31. The following day, he announced his retirement and spent his remaining months on air hosting retrospective episodes, counting down his favorite records decade by decade. At 84, Dr. Demento has undoubtedly earned his retirement. Curating popular culture’s most disposable art form is hard and thankless work. Considering how fractured the media landscape is now, it’s unlikely we’ll see someone like Demento again. However, we welcome people to try! If there’s one thing a society can always use, it’s a top hat-wearing DJ who specializes in comedy records.

Check out the final episode and the entire Dr. Demento archive at DrDemento.com. Enjoy retirement and, most importantly, stay demented, Dr. Demento!



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InShaneee
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'I Tracked Amazon's Prime Day Prices. We've Been Played'

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"Next time Amazon hypes its Prime Days savings, remember this: The prices during the sale aren't always better," writes a Washington Post technology columnist. "I've got the receipts to prove it." I would have saved, on average, almost nothing during Amazon's recent fall "Prime Big Deal Days" — and for some big-ticket purchases, I would have actually paid amore. For the sale that took place Oct. 7 and 8, my family went in prepared. We had a shopping list with prices we'd been tracking... A TV stand he'd been watching jumped 38 percent to $379, from $275 on Oct. 2. Same story for a few other big-ticket items on his list — another console went up from $219.99 to $299. Those products weren't listed as "big deals" on the site, but we certainly didn't expect their prices to spike during Prime Days. And in other cases, Amazon marketed discounts that turned out to be the exact price it had charged in recent weeks. One example: an Oral-B electric toothbrush was listed as 39 percent off, but actually the same price as in August... Other consumer advocates have warned one common trick is for Amazon to feature artificially inflated "before" prices to make discounts appear larger than they are. Ahead of Amazon's 2017 Prime Day, the nonprofit Consumer Watchdog reported that 61 percent of reference prices on Amazon were higher than any price the company had charged for those items in the prior 90 days... I found products listed as Prime Day discounts that cost the same as I'd paid less than a month earlier. For example, a pack of coronavirus tests I bought on Sept. 12 was the same price on Oct. 8, but listed as "39 percent off." Amazon said I'd gotten a particularly good deal in September, and the Prime Big Deal Days price offers "meaningful savings compared to the typical price customers have paid on Amazon over the last 90 days...." To actually get a good deal on Amazon, go in with a plan. I use a free website called CamelCamelCamel, which tracks Amazon's historical prices. You can see what's really a discount — and set alerts when prices drop to your target. The reporter checked every non-grocery purchase they'd made on Amazon for six months. Purchasing the same products on Amazon's "Big Deal Days" would have brought savings of just 0.6%. "And that doesn't include the $139 annual fee to be a member of Amazon Prime."

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InShaneee
2 days ago
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Ecco: The Tides of Time

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Ecco managed to save the world at the end of the first game, but he can’t rest for long. He quickly finds that his superpowers granted by the Asterite are gone, and eventually learns that the Vortex Queen has launched another assault on Earth. And so, he begins another adventure to travel through time and save the world. While the previous game sent you time traveling to the past, this entry also features several stages that take place in the future, where you meet the future evolution of dolphins who have sprouted wings.

At first glance, it doesn’t seem like much has changed in this sequel – while Ecco’s sprite looks slightly different, most of the rest of the game looks and plays almost identically. The music in the cartridge version is similar, but benefits from stronger sound quality, particularly the percussion. But as the title implies, there’s a lot more time travel in this game; while the first entry sent Ecco to the past, this sequel sends him off to the future. In the good future, dolphins have evolved wings and connected the oceans with water tunnels that reach into the sky, which you need to navigate by making mid-air leaps. The line-scrolling background effects and the intense music here are particularly impressive. Unfortunately, there’s also a bad future, once where the Vortex aliens have conquered the Earth, filling it with enormous fortresses. You’ll have to make your way through one of these stages, which have whole large sections outside of water pools where you flop around while avoiding defenses.

The stages have some new gimmicks. Among these are 3D sections, where the viewpoint shifts behind Ecco as he travels through large parts of the ocean while dodging enemies. Swimming through hoops temporarily increases your speed, but you’ll need to restart the stage if you miss too many. Hoops are scattered both in the water and above the surface, so you’ll regularly need to jump in the air to make sure you’re not missing any. These sections look impressive at first, but they’re a little simple and grow quite tedious as the adventure goes on.

The game’s mid-section features several levels where you must find and reconstruct the scattered globes of the Asterite. One stage has you rescuing some orca while children, another is shrouded in darkness that requires you use your sonar to light up the screen. You’ll face some new enemies too, like enormous jellyfish and some new alien creatures. Certain stages require the use of the new Metasphere ability, which transforms you into different creatures depending on the level, which include a seagull, a jellyfish, a shark, and an alien drone. The other new ability is the Pulsar, an optional item which grants the ability to use the sonar waves as a weapon (as Ecco could in the final levels of the first game) and lasts until the end of the stage.

Once you complete the game, there’s a playable epilogue where the Asterite commands you to return to the time machine from the original game and destroy it. However, instead Ecco uses it himself and travels off to some unknown time period. The game then gives you a password that was meant to be used in a sequel…but such a game was never released, as Sega switched gears to the kid-friendly Ecco Jr. instead of a proper “Ecco the Dolphin III”.

This time around, the developers tried to address the criticisms that Ecco the Dolphin was too difficult. Now, each level has an easy variation and a hard variation, with the more difficult version having extra enemies or requiring additional tasks. There’s also a normal mode which selects the stage variation based on your current performance, giving you a break if you’re struggling or giving you an extra challenge if you’re judged worthy. However, this still doesn’t mean that Ecco: The Tides of Time is easy, but it is quite a bit less demanding than the first game.

Like its predecessor, Ecco: The Tides of Time received a Sega CD version which replaces the FM synth music with newly composed CD audio music. Also new are several CG cutscenes that retell the story of the first game, displayed in chunks when visiting certain crystals throughout the game. (These were also included in the Windows version of the first Ecco the Dolphin.) The Sega CD had built-in scaling capabilities, and one might think they’d be used for the 3D stages, but no; they’re exactly how they are in the cartridge version. There aren’t any additional levels or difficult adjustments, as there was in the CD version of the first game, so this version isn’t quite as essential, so it’s completely up to which soundtrack you prefer.

The Game Gear (and Brazil-only Master System) port is similar to the 8-bit conversion of the first game, but with even more stuff stripped out, leaving a weaker counterpart to its 16-bit older brother. Some graphics are identical to the first SMS/GG game, so they look alright, others are so badly converted it looks like the screen is glitched out. Much of the story is stripped out, and there are only a few music tracks.

FMV Cutscenes

 

Screenshot Comparisons

Genesis

Master System

 

 


Ecco: The Tides of Time was first posted on October 10, 2025 at 10:52 am.
©2017 "Hardcore Gaming 101". Use of this feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this article in your feed reader, then the site is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact me at kurt@hardcoregaming101.net
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InShaneee
2 days ago
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Illinois rideshare drivers organize for labor rights

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Lori Simmons started driving for Uber and Lyft in 2014, two years after the rideshare apps launched in Chicago. Simmons had been fired from her human resources job, and a friend approached her with wide eyes. “Listen, this is paying and you should try it,” she recalls her friend saying. “I think you’ll be much […]

The post Illinois rideshare drivers organize for labor rights appeared first on Chicago Reader.

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UK Universities Offered To Monitor Students' Social Media For Arms Firms, Emails Show

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An anonymous reader shares a report: Universities in the UK reassured arms companies they would monitor students' chat groups and social media accounts after firms raised concerns about campus protests, according to internal emails. One university said it would conduct "active monitoring of social media" for any evidence of plans to demonstrate against Rolls-Royce at a careers fair. A second appeared to agree to a request from Raytheon UK, the British wing of a major US defence contractor, to "monitor university chat groups" before a campus visit. Another university responded to a defence company's "security questionnaire" seeking information about social media posts suggestive of imminent protests over the firm's alleged role in fuelling war, including in Gaza. The universities' apparent compliance with the sensitivities of arms companies before careers fairs has emerged in emails obtained by the Guardian and Liberty Investigates after freedom of information (FoI) requests.

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InShaneee
5 days ago
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TiVo Exiting Legacy DVR Business

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TiVo, the digital video recording pioneer, has moved on from its legacy DVR technology, focusing instead on its branded operating system software promoting third-party content searches, recommendation, including free ad-supported streaming options and more for smart televisions. From a report: "As of Oct. 1, 2025, TiVo has stopped selling Edge DVR hardware products," the company said in an AI-based message. The recording said that the company and its associates no longer manufacture DVR hardware, "and our remaining inventory is now depleted." TiVo said it remains "committed to providing support for our DVR customers and will continue to provide support for the foreseeable future." TiVo in 1999 created the first set-top device enabling users to record and skip ads within television programming.

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