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18 Years and counting...Got SL News? Get it Published! Contact Lanai Jarrico at lanaijarrico@gmail.com

Saturday, January 10, 2015

NEWS FLASH: Take TIME MACHINE to Grand Opening of the Ancient Byzantine City Of ANTIOCHIA – This Sunday, January 11, 2015, from 10 am slt to 10 pm slt.




We are very happy to invite you to the opening festivities of the Antiochia sim – home of the Antiochia Community of Citizens (or, in its Greek form, "Agora Polis Antiochia").

Antiochia is the virtual platform for a number of organisations and individuals whose main aim is to extend the boundaries of information, communication, and education across both virtual and real words. It aims to become a Knowledge Community spanning Real and SecondLife, by focusing on the key values of Education, Citizenship, Creativity, and Diversity.

Antiochia’s main sponsor is the Antiochia Scholarships Trust, a Canadian non-profit organization helping students from the Greater Middle East to realize their dream of pursuing their university studies in Canada. For more information on AST, please visit its website at: http://home.antiochiatrust.org .  Antiochia’s Chief Architect is SecondLife’s Alexia Carnell, owner of the Time Machine Design Studio and Store and its Landscaper is SL’s Butterfli Summers. The Terraforming and some of the buildings were done by Bagheera Kristan.

The sim itself is creatively modeled after the ancient city of Antiochia on the Orontes (today in Southern Turkey), a multicultural, tolerant and creative city with Phoenician roots, Greek origins, then Roman and Byzantine high points. We have tried to reflect this cultural diversity in our buildings, attractions, and the 44 Information Points you will find throughout the sim. A good starting point is Antiochia’s Info Center, located in the Nymphaeum Plaza, with the following slurl:


The Opening Festivities will last the entire day of Sunday, January 11, 2015, from 10 am slt to 10 pm slt, so people from all time zones can attend one or more events at times convenient for them. You will find a detailed list of all events and their venues' Landmarks below.

We have planned for you a variety of informative, educational, and entertaining events. One of AST’s Middle East students will briefly talk about his dream of studying in Canada; a European expert in leading-edge network science will give the Inaugural AST Lecture; and we will have a panel discussion with questions and answers from the public on Ten Years of Virtual Governance in SecondLife.

The musical events will cover everything from rock, pop, folk, blues, and country to Spanish guitar and even a much-anticipated classical piano concert that will open our entire day, at 10 am slt.


Please feel free to visit the sim and to join our group, Agora Polis Antiochia, so as to stay informed of our future activities and events. You can contact Antiochia’s Project Manager, Alex Olteanu, either in-world by IM-ing his avatar, AlexOlteanu Unplugged, or by e-mail, at alex@antiochiatrust.org;  or the Project Administrator, by IM-ing his SL avatar, Brent Ivory.

We hope that you are just as excited as we are by the events we have planned for you and that you will be able to attend with your friends sometime during this day.
We look forward to seeing you and your friends on Sunday, January 11, 2015, for Antiochia's Opening Festivities.

The Antiochia Team



Antiochia’s Opening Festivities Schedule & Venues
Sunday, January 11, 10  am slt to 10 pm slt


Morning: Nymphaeum Plaza & Info Center

10 - 11 am: Sandia Beaumont, Classical piano
11 - 11:30 am: An AST Student's Story: Georges Kabalan
11:30 am  - 12 pm: Inaugural Remarks: Quaestor Hax & Team
12 - 1 pm: Maximillion Kleene, Folk / pop

Afternoon: AST Square in Acropolis Fortress

1 -2 pm: Inaugural AST Lecture: David Orban: Infrastructures and Superstructures: The interactive components of our lives
2 - 3 pm: Joaquin Gustav, Spanish guitar
3 -5 pm: Discussion panel: A decade of real governance in a virtual space. Speakers: Gwyneth Llewelyn, Stephen Xootfly

Evening: Forum Valentis

5 - 7 pm: DJ Wally: Country Mix
7 - 8 pm: Komuso Tokugawa: Rock
8 - 9 pm: Gweeb: Blues

9 -10 pm: Joaquin Gustav: Latin dances

Friday, January 9, 2015

Spotlight on Kandie Doll House: A Gentlemen's Club with Heart and Soul- Becca Drascol Reporting…




Kandie Doll House was quite simple for me to find.  I was looking for somewhere to work and did a search for places hiring.  And yet as easy as this gentlemen’s club was to find, as great as the staff are, you would never guess from looking at it that it hasn’t been open very long.  Nor would you guess that the traffic is low.  Why is that?  Simply put, Second Life has so many clubs and other venues spread across the grid that many do not get the attention they very much so deserve.

The atmosphere of Kandie Doll House is fun, lighthearted and welcoming.  A place you feel at home at while watching beautiful dancers on stage. Not to mention a club that makes its staff feel important.  You may ask yourself,  what makes this club unique?

 Kandie Doll House is one of the very few that will hire literally based on the person behind the avatar.  Simply put, this is one club with heart and soul right there in the open for any guest to see.



When asked the history behind Kandie Doll House the owner Kandis Parkes had this to say:
“I always loved dolls and dressing them up for everyone to see. Pink is my favorite color and I adore Vintage. I thought if I put it all together it would be someone that was original and not about all being sexy it would be more about being beautiful. In my mind everyone loves beautiful things weather it is art or avis and the people behind the avis. Showing off beautiful avis with beautiful people behind them to me is priceless.”



Interview with Kandis Parkes



Becca Drascol: Tell me Kandis, why you decided to open KDH?

Kandis Parkes: I have worked for several of other Gentlemen's clubs here in SL and I never really had fun it was always about how much I could bring in. I wanted a nice club where EVERYONE feels welcome no matter how much they make or how much they can tip. It’s about family period.

Becca Drascol: What do you envision for KDH’s future?

Kandis Parkes: I would love to see it grow and I am hoping one day in the near future to also open a Ladies Club with male dancers and escorts. Most of all I just want everyone who chooses to work here to just enjoy what they do and feel important. Without the ladies and our guests there would be no Kandie Doll House.

Becca Drascol: Kandis, you said it’s all about family for you, describe one way your SL family has made being a club owner easier.

Kandis Parkes: That’s easy because they have supported me 100%.

Becca Drascol: Would you support other SL venues and if so, in what way?

Kandis Parkes:  Yes of course, I would support anyone who was trying to do something they believe in.  I would use their product for an event, advertise for them.   Anything I could.

Visit Kandie Doll House


EVENTS
Event Date(s): Every evening
Event time(s): 7pm SLT - 11 pm SLT



Thursday, January 8, 2015

An Educational and Historical Experience in Second Life- Introducing Agora Polis Antiochia and the Antiochia Scholarships Trust- Lanai Jarrico Reporting…


Travel back in time to 600 AD when Antiochia was a Roman province of Syria and take a historical journey through the 3rd largest Roman city in antiquity.


It is not a role play sim. Curator AlexOlteanu Unplugged is the founder and chair of the Antiochia Scholarships Trust in the real world and a knowledgeable leader in this virtual world project. Agora Polis Antiochia is a virtual world educational facility in Second Life with a historical environment designed to help students from the greater Middle East belonging to minorities or otherwise in need to continue their education abroad. The goal of this project is to help these students improve their English skills, guide them in managing projects, build leadership skills, work with other students and prepare them to study at universities in Canada, with the assistance of the Antiochia Scholarships Trust.  Founded in November 2013, AST’s vision is the make a difference one student at a time. Derived from an Arab proverb, AST ‘s motto is “A Tree Starts with a Seed”. The Antiochia Scholarship Trust strives to secure tuition-free scholarships and living expenses costs from private corporations, individual donors and partner universities in Canada.



In Second Life, students are encouraged to develop virtual world skills at Agora Polis Antiochia to help prepare them for the transition to education in Canada. There are over 44 information points throughout the sim, each describing a virtually constructed replica of structures, statues, monuments and landscaping of the time. Chief Architect Alexia Carnell is a real world architect who takes pride in her work in both worlds. She successfully recreated every detail in her builds through her research of ancient transcripts and descriptions. She is best known for her Time Machine Studio and Shop, with builds that can be seen throughout Second Life. The beautiful waterfalls, pathways, flowers, trees and landscaping were skillfully recreated by visual artist Butterfli Summers, who helped put the finishing touches on this project.



Upon landing at Agora Polis Antiochia (APA) you will walk through the Porta Aurea (Golden Gate) and enter the Cardo. This is the main North-South street leading to the Nymphaeum Plaza and APA Info Center, where you can find information about the people, projects and activities available on the sim. Other features include various cultural layers such as Greek and Roman architectural influences in the bridges, ports, arches, temples, lighthouse, ancient underground sewer system and waterways navigable by boat. One can also visit Phoenician ruins, a Byzantine cathedral and fortress, the long lost tomb of Alexander the Great and Daphne’s Gardens. The Oval Forum and the Magnaura building offer places for students and visitors to participate in lectures and entertainment events.



About the Antiochia build

Alexia Carnel shares, “Building Antiochia has been a very positive experience for me. I had a perfect "entente" with the sim owners: we shared concepts and ideas, and they would let me free to interpret them and bring them to life. Eclecticism in style, some historical quotations, a huge number of points of interest and a gifted landscaper - Butterfli Summers - made this sim so beautiful”.

Alexia went on to say, “Bagheera started terraforming ten weeks ago; the land concept was based on the Golden Gate of Constantinople, with its Citadel - which is much more exciting than a flat landscape. Then we started building the Citadel, based on early Byzantine themes such as the Cathedral, the Senate.... and added some Hellenistic and classical Roman style touches with the Forum, the Harbor, the Termae and the Tyche Temple. There are some very realistic touches such as the underground Cistern (which still exists in RL in Istanbul), and all the Cathedral mosaic textures - which was a huge task. We couldn't miss paying homage to the spirit of Alexander the Great, so we built a stunning Mausoleum based on historical sources under the landing point, with a fun secret entrance devised by Bagheera.” 

Alexia’s love of building is apparent as she shares her vision of building in Second Life.

“I started building in SL in 2007; my main aim has been to re-create atmospheres lost in the long-gone past. Walking in a reconstructed arena or in a Roman villa or in a Greek temple has always been a strong emotion for me and I wanted to share it with people who are fond of history in general, and the history of architecture in particular, And yes, my main focus has always been on concepts and ideas, not technology by itself. Many people in SL believe technology is almost a religion, and mesh its last god. Mesh is just a tool, not a goal. In my creations I use mesh components, sculpties, good old prims and many textures I personally prepare on photoshop.  I love to use all technologies for the best they have to offer and build in world rather than on a 3d program, because when you start building you HAVE to relate and adapt.”

The visual perspectives and atmosphere in the virtual world is an important part of creating an environment where people from around the world can come together, explore and contribute something great in Second Life. The Antiochia team has accomplished that goal. AlexOlteanu explained, “This is a platform in the virtual world that supplements and complements what we do in the real world.  We come together and learn together to get students from the Middle East ready to study in Canada”.


Interview with Alex Olteanu (AlexOlteanu Unplugged)

Lanai: Hi Alex, thank you for the tour of Agora Polis Antiochia. I was impressed by the time and detail you and your team put into this project for Antiochia Scholarships Trust.  What inspired you to found the Antiochia Scholarships Trust?

Alex: My students in Erbil, Kurdistan. I was fortunate to have the opportunity to spend one year in northern Iraq, in the capital of the Kurdish Region, and teach Business Management and English to a variety of local students – Kurdish and Arab, Christian and Muslim, from all parts of Iraq and the Middle East. All were very excited to learn and improve their English skills. Many, especially those belonging to local minorities, such as the Assyrian Christians, or those who had come to Kurdistan from southern Iraq or Syria to find safety and security, had few opportunities to continue their university studies. When I returned to Canada, they told me how much they wished to continue their university studies abroad. They asked me: “Please, don’t let our dream die!”. This is what motivated me initially to set up AST when I returned to Vancouver, in the Summer of 2013. Since then, we all know that the Greater Middle East is now in greater turmoil than ever. Young people throughout the region – but especially those belonging to minorities, live in unsafe environments, with limited educational opportunities at the post-secondary level. It is only by living in a multicultural environment abroad, obtaining undergraduate and graduate degrees and some work experience, then returning to their homes and contributing to the social, economic, and political development of their countries, that these young people from various ethnic, religious and social backgrounds will be able to work together to bring about meaningful long-term change for themselves, their families, and their communities. AST aims to make a small contribution towards this objective.



Lanai:  How can donors and volunteers get involved both in the real world and in Second Life?

The AST Website (http://home.antiochiatrust.org) provides a lot of information on how anyone interested in our project can help. Donors can, of course, make contributions to AST. We are a registered Canadian non-profit organization and bank with Vancity - the biggest Canadian financial services co-operative, owned by its 500,000 members and democratically controlled on the basis of one member, one vote. Volunteers can help in the real world by assisting with publicity and fund-raising, but also by helping newly-arrived students integrate quickly in their new Canadian environment, assisting them to improve their English skills, and being part of their support network. In SecondLife, there are also many opportunities to help: new students joining SecondLife will need assistance to overcome the steep SecondLife initial learning curve and get their bearings in this unique virtual environment; once here, they will need English-speaking tutors to help them improve their English and leadership skills, and to develop their own SecondLife projects. My partner Bromo Ivory and I would be happy to talk to anyone interested to contribute to AST, in both the real and virtual worlds.

Lanai: The virtual world can be used in so many ways. What are the benefits you see in bringing AST and your scholarship candidates into Second Life?

Alex: The visual intensity of social interaction and availability of a multitude of communication tools to individuals spread out around the world. No other medium can offer the ability to re-create a physical place in the space and time of one’s choice and transform it into a place designed, managed and owned by its members, who end up developing affective and emotional ties towards it similar to those they have towards their real home environments. This ability to engage in stimulating social interaction in a rich multi-media 3D environment motivates all participants to invest extra time and effort into the project and to return again and again to what has become their “virtual home”. Participants become not simply students, but content creators and educators in their own right, and improve their communication and social skills in a very diverse, multicultural environment. This provides them with excellent preparation for their arrival in Canada, and helps cement a spirit of community and solidarity and sharing of ideas between individuals before they even meet in real life. On other levels, SL provides AST with the opportunity to interact with and develop synergies with other educational and cultural projects, and of course to engage in fund-raising activities in support of its students.



Lanai: There is such a layering of cultures entwined at Agora Polis Antiochia, it literally is a virtual look back in time. Can you tell our readers a little bit about Antiochia’s history and some of historical elements that can be found on the sim?

Alex: it would be my pleasure.

The first great civilization to settle at the mouth of this waterway was the Phoenicians, around 2500 BC. They expanded the harbor and used the nearby mountains as burial grounds. Phoenician ruins of the city of Meroe can still be found in the forests and mountains in the northern part of the sim; they mark the sources of the life-giving water theme that traverses the entire physical space and temporal eras of the sim, from the waterfalls in mountains in the north, through the great river Orontes flowing though it, and down to the port and sea, to the south.



The reason why almost all Phoenician vestiges have disappeared can be summed up in a name: Alexander the Great. In 332 the great Greek conqueror took the city and razed it all to the ground. But Alexander died, in 323 BC, and two of his generals, Antigonus and Seleucus, fought over Syria, the province surrounding what had been once a great Phoenician city.  The long-lost tomb of Alexander can actually be found hidden deep below the Main Gate of Antiochia.



When Seleucus I  Nicator finally defeated his rival Antigonus and consolidated his rule over most of Alexander's empire by founding his own, Seleucid Empire, he re-founded the city and named it after his son, Antiochus. Antiochia on the Orontes soon became the Seleucid capital. The entire lower town of Antiochia, from the lighthouse in the harbour, to the port, docks, marketplace, and ring road around Mount Sylpius, all the way to the Fishermen’s pier and the small temple of Tyche, located outside the city walls on the western side of the hill, date from these Hellenic times. Tyche, the Goddess of Fortune, remains the Pagan Goddess of the City, in front of whose statue burns an eternal flame. A circular Temple of Poseidon situated at the extreme south-western point of the land, also dates from these times.



The original city of Seleucus was laid out in imitation of the grid plan of Alexandria by the architect Xenarius. The citadel was on Mt. Sylpius and the city lay mainly on the low ground to the north, fringing the river. A great Colonnaded Street dating from the times of the Romans, who conquered Antiochia during the time of Pompeius the Great, in about 60 BC, connects the Oval Forum to the central Nymphaeum Plaza, where a beautiful Nymphaeum Fountain can be admired, and the elegant Bridge across the Orontes (a replica of the Roman bridge in Alcantara, Spain), with a Triumphal Arch at its entrance - all which date from the times of the Late Roman Republic and Early Empire. A Sanctuary of Orpheus was constructed underground by Diocletian, and is situated under the Nymphauem Plaza, at the start of the underground sewer canal.  Beyond the northern suburb of Heraclea lies the Paradise of Daphne, a park of woods and waters, in the midst of which can still be found the beautiful Phoenician ruins of the temple of Anat.



Antiochia experienced a “third foundation” under Constantine the Great, who also built the great city bearing his name - Constantinople, on the foundations of the old Greek colony, Byzantium. The entire Acropolis dominating the city to this day, together with its fortified walls, impressive aqueduct crossing the city and connecting Mount Sylpius with the northern mountains, as well as the city gate – Porta Aurea -  date from his period, although an original aqueduct has already been build a century earlier, by emperor Valens, which is why it is still known today as Valens’s Aqueduct. Antiochia became the capital of the Asian part of the Roman Empire, and one of its four major cities, with Rome, Alexandria, and Constantinople.


Diana’s Baths and the neighboring remains of Bucoleon Palace, today renamed AST Square, were also constructed during Constantine’s time. Influences of the local, Arabic culture can be found in both the exquisite mosaics of the Baths, as well as in the delicate water fountain and mosaics still standing in the ruins of Bucoleon Palace.

The final layer of the city was built by Justinian the Great in the middle of the 6th Century AD, as the transition from Rome to Byzantium was well underway. The great Redemption Cathedral, modeled on the Hagia Sophia of Constantinople, with its unique coupla and splendid mosaics and frescae, as well as its hidden underground cistern, date from this time, as does the neighboring Magnaura, which remains the seat of Government of Antiochia.


Antiochia had by then become a chief center of early Christianity. The city had a large population of Jewish origin in a quarter called the Kerateion, and so attracted the earliest missionaries. Evangelized, among others, by Peter himself. Its converts were the first to be called Christians.

The story ends here, in the early 7th Century AD, during the time of Heraclius the Great, who introduced Greek as the Eastern Roman Empire's official language, which explains the name of the Community - Agora Polis Antiochia. Heraclius himself took the title of Basileus of the Roman Empire, re-conquered many of the territories lost to the Sassanids, whom he finally defeated in 627 AD, at the battle of Niniveh.



Lanai:  Two of the most important features at Agora Polis Antiochia are the Oval Forum and the Info Center. The Info Center has information that provides great educational value and the Oval Forum is a spacious outdoor lecture facility surrounded by great columns and beautiful views. I can almost imagine ancient scholars standing in the center offering words of wisdom or reporting news to the people. What types of lectures and events do you offer at Agora Polis Antiochia?

Alex:
The sim’s opening festivities will take place on Sunday, January 15, 2015, so everything is still in the planning stages. We will start with the inaugural instalment of the AST Lecture Series, to be given by European Professor David Orban, specialist in Network Governance, entitled: “Infrastructures and Superstructures: The Interactive Components of Our Lives”. We will also host a discussion panel on the topic: “A decade of real governance in a virtual space”, with real life academics and SL specialists Stephen Xootfly and Gwyneth Llewlyn. One of our students from the Middle East, currently living in Beirut, who has been accepted to study for a Masters’ in Global Management at a Canadian university and hopes to be here soon, will also share his experiences. In terms of entertainment, we are proud to present, as the opening event of our festivities, the virtuoso piano player from France, Sandia Beaumont, who will be followed by SL’s most accomplished Guitar and Latin music player, Joaquin Gustav, as well as well-known SL performers such as Maximillion Kleene (folk/pop), Komuso Tokugawa (rock) and Gweeb (blues). We plan to continue with such academic and entertainment events on a regular basis and transform Antiochia into one of SL’s most popular and most visited knowledge and cultural hubs.



Lanai:  Is there anything else you would like to share about Antiochia Scholarships Trust or Agora Polis Antiochia?

Alex: As beautiful and attractive as Antiochia’s virtual environment is, the core of our project is made up of the many people who devote their time, energies, and skills in making it come to life – both in Second Life and, especially, in real life, where we aim to help real young people pursue their actual dream to further their education and bring peace, prosperity, and participative governance back to their homes and communities. We hope to connect and develop synergies with other educational and cultural organizations who share our vision and aims, and expand Antiochia in SecondLife to a multiple-sim “micro-nation”, drawing on the various cultural and educational layers already in place now in Antiochia. I hope that such organizations, as well as individuals who wish to contribute in some way, or just enjoy the sim and the events and experiences it has to offer, will join us by contacting me or my project partner, Bromo Ivory, or joining our SL group, Agora Polis Antiochia, to stay informed of our events and activities. Building a real, vibrant community in both the real and virtual worlds will be an ongoing, daily task of communication, persuasion, and cooperation that is just beginning for us and that will become our main focus after this Sunday’s Opening Festivities in Antiochia.


Teleport to Agora Polis Antiochia


Group: Agora Polis Antiochia – Free to Join

Additional Information:



Preferred Contact AlexOlteanu Unplugged in SecondLife; alex@antiochiatrust.org by e-mail. 

Wednesday, January 7, 2015

CANCELLED-!Clowes Couture Fashion Show & Charity Auction- January 19th at 1pm SLT


*This event has been cancelled until February

!Clowes Couture is pleased to announce a great and important Fashion Show on January 19th at 1 pm SLT. It will take place at the beautiful Angel Manor. The entire collection  will go to CHARITY AUCTION at the end of the show. Join the crowd

Here is your Limo to the show
http://maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Angel%20Manor/235/235/29

Tuesday, January 6, 2015

Artizana Closes In-World after 7 Years on January 9, 2015



Thank you to everyone for your amazing support the past 7 years. 2014 has been a great year for Artizana, and it is all thanks to your continued patronage.

Real life has gotten much busier for me, and I have not had much time to dedicate to Artizana. To add to that, I have received some new opportunities in RL, and I really need time to focus and prepare for some major changes coming up for me in 2015.

That being said, Artizana will be closing all in-world locations. The last location will close on January 9, 2015.

All items in-world will be 40% off from now until that time.

You will still be able to find Artizana on SL Marketplace @ https://marketplace.secondlife.com/stores/5852.

In-World Locations:
􀀀http://maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Pleione/242/145/27
http://maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/The%20Renaissance%20Galleria/72/136/22
􀀁

-------------------------------
STORE CREDITS & GIFT CARDS
-------------------------------
Artizana may re-open in-world in the future, but this is undecided. To ensure you get all your savings, please use your store credits and gift cards before our last in-world location closes on January 9, 2015.

In-world store credits and gift cards can go toward purchases made on SL Marketplace, but only after January 9, 2015. These credits will be issued manually, and will only be done by request. Please IM Dainie Fraina with your credit request within 48 hours of your SL Marketplace purchase.

Refunds will not be issued for outstanding store credits or gift cards without a valid purchase.

The group joining fee for Artizana has been lifted for now. Previous group joining fees will not be refunded.

Thank you all for understanding.

Happy Holidays! ♥

Dainie Fraina

Looking for Land? Make the Right Move with ZAPZAK


How settled you are in Second Life? Find your perfect place among our land's offers. There are many options available to achieve the home of your dream or the lot where you plan to build the house you've always wanted.

ZapZak offers you economical solutions that you should consider for 2015. Check out these places. They may help you decide! Once the search is over and you have decided what you want contact to Tammy Nowotny and she will make your parcel hunt easy.

Changmi: roadside land with custom building
Sale: L$25,000; L$5,000 rent
http://maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Changmi/174/105/111/
·         Denholme Field 169/234 & 152/239: green hillside Adult land with platforms
Each 512sqm: each $L1,999 sale, L$600/month rent
·         Deva Loka 126/139: green hillside M land
9584sqm: L$35,000 sale; L$7,000/month rent
·         Smelton Hollow 121/151: underwater M land with dock
512 sqm; L$3,333 sale, L$750 rent
More information:

·         IM Tammy Nowotny or email TammyNowotny@icloud.com

Monday, January 5, 2015

Center Ground Group Presents "Late Night Center Ground with DJ Scorpio Aeon”- Sunday, January 11, 2015 8:30-10:30pm SLT





Happy New Year from the Center Ground Group. DJ Scorpio Aeon steps into the Late Night Center Ground spotlight for January. Join him, and Host QT Serenity, Sunday nights 8:30-10:30 PM SLT, for great music to cap off your weekend. Grown, Sexy, and Jazzy.
Dress to Impress:
Bring a friend or two.
And "Don't forget those Dancing Shoes"


 Late Night Center Ground is underwritten by the Center Ground Business District. Visit our collection of stores and galleries.  Rental spaces available  


About Center Ground Group: Originally started by 4 environmentally focused leaders to discuss and promote true sustainable modeling, and preserve their ideas and dreams in the SL metaverse, now expanded to include arts and cultural interest

                                                                        # # #


If you would like more information on this topic IM Luchenpur Darwin inwolrd or e-mail Purnell_L@MartinPurnell.com


SL Contact
 Luchenpur Darwin

SL Group
Center Ground

An Inside Look Into The Life of a Gamer- Garin Turner Reporting...



 The life of a gamer has taken on many different roles as well as stereotypes over the years. It seems that society tends to label gamers as fat, lazy, unemployed and living in their parents basement just to name a few words to describe gamers. For a lot of gamers, that couldn’t be any further from the truth. Gaming to a lot of people is more than just that. It’s a hobby, to some it’s even life. Here I take a look at just how gaming has affected the life of a gamer as well as a tell all look at myself.

Angie is a 33 year old gamer. She’s been gaming since she was eight and her first console was Atari. Her fondest memory was staying up late playing video games with her dad. “Whether it was Mario or Sonic we had fun trying to beat them,” Angie said. Angie hasn’t just limited herself to consoles, she also plays games on the PC. “My favorite games are World of Warcraft (WOW), The Sims Online and Second Life,” Angie said. Angie has been playing SL for 10 years now as Justice Mirabeu.



As far as what gaming has done to have a positive impact on her life, she gave a lot of thought before she gave her answer. “I don’t see gaming really having a positive impact like it did anything super good. Granted I spend time with my mother on SL as we don’t seem to have a lot to say in first life but we have good mother and daughter time in game,” Angie said. Family wasn’t the only people Angie mentioned however, like most people who game, friends were made over the years playing games. “I’ve met some people who became good friends from gaming on WOW and SL, some of which I’ve met in real life,” Angie said. Angie is engaged in first life and she lives three and a half hours away from her fiancé. She spoke of the advantages of gaming. “Gaming gives us a chance to be close and spend quality time together being that far away. It’s tough being in a long distance relationship but gaming makes it a little be easier, plus I get to teach him how to play SL,” Angie said.

Switching gears Angie then told me about the negative aspects that gaming has had in her life and there seemed to be more cons than pros. “Even though my gaming was mostly done during the night or on the weekends, it made a lot of people think all I did was sit on my butt all day every day and play SL and WOW.” She paused for a couple of minutes and then continued. “It beats going to the club all the time and drinking and smoking which is a lot of what people wanted to do. Gaming kept me out of trouble,” Angie said. After that she opened up more about her fiancé and the negative part of being a gamer. “As nice as it is to game especially with my fiancé, sometimes things get out of hand.

 I still game don’t get me wrong but I’m not into it like I was and I play more SL than I do games on the console,” Angie said. When asked her to elaborate why that was, again she paused and had this to say. “Sometimes I get bombarded with wanting to play. Don’t get me wrong it’s not just him. A lot of people think just because I got a new console or a new game, or I’m on SL that means they’re going to get to play all the time or that I’m going to let them borrow it or use my computer. A lot of the time I don’t feel like my stuff is really mine and I just want to sell it or put it away for good!” She added, “it’s also a struggle just to have any time to myself with or without being on my PC. If I even go to get a drink, somebody gets on my computer and I basically have to fight just to get it back.” Gaming gets taken more seriously than it should in my life!

Which brings it to me. I’m 33 and have been gaming since I was seven. My first console was Nintendo.I’ve been in SL for two years now. I don’t get on daily so I’m still learning new things all the time.

My fondest memories come from both childhood as well as being an adult. As a child I remember my parents both yanking the controller, sometimes out of the Nintendo because they thought it would help you jump. If you think about it, that might have been the foundation of motion controls. I also remember my dad thinking he was playing the original Mario Bros. game but he didn’t press start. He never touched a controller ever again. I also remember my mom playing The Bugs Bunny Crazy Castle game for the Nintendo. We rented it for a few days and I may have got to play it 5 times. My mom ended up having dreams about it. As an adult, my fondest memory is playing LEGO Star Wars and New Super Mario Bros. Wii with my kids. We had so much fun and I wouldn’t trade that for the world.

I suffer from depression, panic attacks and bipolar disorder. I go to the doctor when I’m supposed to and I take my pills when I can afford them. There’s plenty of times where none of that works. I only get to talk to my counselor once every other month. In addition to all of that, suicide runs in my family and yes I’ve attempted it a handful of times. I can honestly say that the PS3 and PS4 and PC gaming has saved my life numerous of times. I turn it on and start playing and I get lost into the game. I forget whatever it is that’s bothering me and by the time I’m done, I’m better. If I’m mad at the world or at certain people, a first person shooter or Watch Dogs usually does the trick. If I get into an intense battle in Madden or NBA 2K14 then that’s even better. Some people cope by drinking, others by smoking, my coping mechanism, my addiction so to speak is video games! It’s not just life, it saved my life. That’s how it has affected me in a positive way.


Now I’d be a liar if I didn’t say that it hasn’t caused negativity in my life as well. As much as it’s saved my life in the past, in a lot of ways it’s destroyed my life. It’s a big reason why I’m divorced and only get to see my kids maybe three times a year if I’m lucky. When I was younger, 19, 20 and so on, whenever that game I just “had” to have came out or I wanted to play a game on the computer, I would go out and buy it, whether we had the money or not, whether my daughters needed diapers or not, I went out and bought games. Then I’d try to hide the game and the fact that I bought the game. It was always a lie. Oh I found it, somebody let me borrow it. It was always something. Many of times I had a job and I quit because I wanted to stay at home and play video games.

 It got so bad that I’d park the car in the garage, wouldn’t answer the door or the phone and I’d play until my ex-wife came home. You might be asking where the kids were. I’d drop them off at her mom’s house or at a babysitter’s house.  When it was time for my ex-wife to come home, I’d put everything away get in the car and drive around in the country and come home like I just put in a full days of work. That’s just if I pretended to work the same shift. If I had a second shift job or flat out lie about having one in the first place. I’d drive around in the country seeing how far the road goes for however long my “shift” was. All so I could come home and play games. Sometimes I’d say I had the day off and would keep my kids. I’d be so wrapped up in the game that they would destroy the house, clothes everywhere, coloring and writing on the walls, and sometimes barely fed. I ignored my own kids and my ex-wife for years. It got to the point that be it video games or the computer, we only communicated through Myspace or Facebook.

 I had a real problem. I was a bad parent and husband because of it, and that’s just ONE aspect to my end of why we’re divorced. We had an unfortunate house fire back in 2005. The ex and I got into a fight because I bought something I shouldn’t have. She took the kids to her mom’s house. Well the furnace was old and the wires were frayed and the house caught on fire. I almost didn’t make it. I was accused by a handful of people of starting the fire on purpose. The detective I understood but others that’s just crazy. 

A former relative said to me that they knew I didn’t do it and they can prove it. I would’ve gotten all the stuff I deemed important (games, wrestling stuff, childhood stuff) out of the house, I would’ve hid it somewhere and then little by little as time went by, things would magically appear. To this day, and it’s sad to admit this, that person is right because that’s exactly what I would’ve done. Surprisingly the PS2 and all of the games survived the fire but it was “decided” that the PS2 should be thrown out. So as you see, gaming for better or worse has played a huge part in my life. Admittedly more than it ever should for me or anybody.

 
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