翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Spilosoma hercules
・ Spilosoma heterogenea
・ Spilosoma holoxantha
・ Spilosoma ignivagans
・ Spilosoma immaculata
・ Spill containment
・ Spill Festival
・ Spill metric
・ Spill pallet
・ Spill plane
・ Spill the Beans
・ Spill the Wine
・ Spill vase
・ Spill-forward feature
・ Spill. En damroman
Spill.com
・ Spillage
・ Spillage of classified information
・ Spillane
・ Spillane (album)
・ Spillane Fjord
・ Spillars Cove
・ Spillcam
・ Spille
・ Spilled Perfume
・ Spilled Water
・ Spillepengen
・ Spiller
・ Spiller (surname)
・ Spiller Channel


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Spill.com : ウィキペディア英語版
Spill.com was a movie and video game review, discussion and news website. It was the continuation of the 9 year old Austin, Texas based public-access television cable TV show called ''The Reel Deal''. There were four main film critic contributors to the website, collectively known as the Spill Crew, including Korey Coleman, Chris Cox, Martin Thomas, C. Robert Cargill, and Tony Guerrero. Under aliases, with the exception of Coleman, they reviewed movies as animated versions of themselves or in uncut audio reviews, maintaining their personas in weekly podcasts. The website was owned by Hollywood.com, under R&S Investments. Stylistically, the site strived to maintain a "down-to-earth vibe." As of July 2013, Spill.com had over 50,000 registered members. On December 6, 2013, it was announced that the site will be shutting down. As of December 20, 2013, The URL for the website now redirects to the Hollywood.com website. Their final review was for the 2013 Disney film ''Saving Mr. Banks''. Founder Korey Coleman posted on his Facebook page that he cannot share details regarding the shutdown but that he has mostly made peace with "past events" and "everything is fine". He also received funds via a successful Kickstarter to start a new website that will be a spiritual successor to ''Spill.com'' titled ''Double Toasted'' alongside Martin Thomas. Chris Cox, better known as Cyrus, since, started his own website titled One of US.== History ==The ''Reel Deal'' was the precursor to Spill.com. The show began in Austin as a live, call-in format cable access television program, from the same local channel where Alex Jones of ''Infowars'' and Matt Dillahunty of ''The Atheist Experience'' also emerged, developing a strong fan base locally. The show featured a cast of rotating members discussing and reviewing movies, along with other topics. Spliced in between these discussions were skits that parodied popular movies and current topics. The show ended after Korey decided that,"As much fun as it was, I didn't want to spend another 10 years doing an access show."Coleman tried experimenting with short animated versions of movie reviews, which were uploaded onto YouTube. It was then discovered by Dave McCarthy, an executive at MIVA Inc., a marketing corporation. McCarthy and MIVA offered to finance Korey, aiding him in starting the website in 2007. MIVA owned the website, handling the marketing, design and logistics of the site, leaving Korey and the other members of Spill.com in charge of creating content. While the creative team has grown and expanded over the years, Coleman was involved in the animation process. The site was bought by Hollywood.com, owned by R&S Investments,(hollywood.com corporate profile ) in 2009. In 2009 and 2012, Spill received the People's Choice Podcast Award for Best Film/Movie Podcast.(People's Choice Podcast Awards official website ). List of winners, 2012. Retrieved 2013-01-08.

Spill.com was a movie and video game review, discussion and news website. It was the continuation of the 9 year old Austin, Texas based public-access television cable TV show called ''The Reel Deal''. There were four main film critic contributors to the website, collectively known as the Spill Crew, including Korey Coleman, Chris Cox, Martin Thomas, C. Robert Cargill, and Tony Guerrero. Under aliases, with the exception of Coleman, they reviewed movies as animated versions of themselves or in uncut audio reviews, maintaining their personas in weekly podcasts. The website was owned by Hollywood.com, under R&S Investments. Stylistically, the site strived to maintain a "down-to-earth vibe." As of July 2013, Spill.com had over 50,000 registered members. On December 6, 2013, it was announced that the site will be shutting down. As of December 20, 2013, The URL for the website now redirects to the Hollywood.com website. Their final review was for the 2013 Disney film ''Saving Mr. Banks''. Founder Korey Coleman posted on his Facebook page that he cannot share details regarding the shutdown but that he has mostly made peace with "past events" and "everything is fine". He also received funds via a successful Kickstarter to start a new website that will be a spiritual successor to ''Spill.com'' titled ''Double Toasted'' alongside Martin Thomas. Chris Cox, better known as Cyrus, since, started his own website titled One of US.
== History ==
The ''Reel Deal'' was the precursor to Spill.com. The show began in Austin as a live, call-in format cable access television program, from the same local channel where Alex Jones of ''Infowars'' and Matt Dillahunty of ''The Atheist Experience'' also emerged, developing a strong fan base locally. The show featured a cast of rotating members discussing and reviewing movies, along with other topics. Spliced in between these discussions were skits that parodied popular movies and current topics. The show ended after Korey decided that,"As much fun as it was, I didn't want to spend another 10 years doing an access show."
Coleman tried experimenting with short animated versions of movie reviews, which were uploaded onto YouTube. It was then discovered by Dave McCarthy, an executive at MIVA Inc., a marketing corporation. McCarthy and MIVA offered to finance Korey, aiding him in starting the website in 2007. MIVA owned the website, handling the marketing, design and logistics of the site, leaving Korey and the other members of Spill.com in charge of creating content. While the creative team has grown and expanded over the years, Coleman was involved in the animation process.〔〔 The site was bought by Hollywood.com,〔 owned by R&S Investments,〔(hollywood.com corporate profile )〕 in 2009. In 2009 and 2012, Spill received the People's Choice Podcast Award for Best Film/Movie Podcast.〔(People's Choice Podcast Awards official website ). List of winners, 2012. Retrieved 2013-01-08.〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアでSpill.com was a movie and video game review, discussion and news website. It was the continuation of the 9 year old Austin, Texas based public-access television cable TV show called ''The Reel Deal''. There were four main film critic contributors to the website, collectively known as the Spill Crew, including Korey Coleman, Chris Cox, Martin Thomas, C. Robert Cargill, and Tony Guerrero. Under aliases, with the exception of Coleman, they reviewed movies as animated versions of themselves or in uncut audio reviews, maintaining their personas in weekly podcasts. The website was owned by Hollywood.com, under R&S Investments. Stylistically, the site strived to maintain a "down-to-earth vibe." As of July 2013, Spill.com had over 50,000 registered members. On December 6, 2013, it was announced that the site will be shutting down. As of December 20, 2013, The URL for the website now redirects to the Hollywood.com website. Their final review was for the 2013 Disney film ''Saving Mr. Banks''. Founder Korey Coleman posted on his Facebook page that he cannot share details regarding the shutdown but that he has mostly made peace with "past events" and "everything is fine". He also received funds via a successful Kickstarter to start a new website that will be a spiritual successor to ''Spill.com'' titled ''Double Toasted'' alongside Martin Thomas. Chris Cox, better known as Cyrus, since, started his own website titled One of US.== History ==The ''Reel Deal'' was the precursor to Spill.com. The show began in Austin as a live, call-in format cable access television program, from the same local channel where Alex Jones of ''Infowars'' and Matt Dillahunty of ''The Atheist Experience'' also emerged, developing a strong fan base locally. The show featured a cast of rotating members discussing and reviewing movies, along with other topics. Spliced in between these discussions were skits that parodied popular movies and current topics. The show ended after Korey decided that,"As much fun as it was, I didn't want to spend another 10 years doing an access show."Coleman tried experimenting with short animated versions of movie reviews, which were uploaded onto YouTube. It was then discovered by Dave McCarthy, an executive at MIVA Inc., a marketing corporation. McCarthy and MIVA offered to finance Korey, aiding him in starting the website in 2007. MIVA owned the website, handling the marketing, design and logistics of the site, leaving Korey and the other members of Spill.com in charge of creating content. While the creative team has grown and expanded over the years, Coleman was involved in the animation process. The site was bought by Hollywood.com, owned by R&S Investments,(hollywood.com corporate profile ) in 2009. In 2009 and 2012, Spill received the People's Choice Podcast Award for Best Film/Movie Podcast.(People's Choice Podcast Awards official website ). List of winners, 2012. Retrieved 2013-01-08.」の詳細全文を読む



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