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Episode 4 – Oh shi-… - There we go! Episode 4 posted for all you to listen to! Yes it was a little late, but all i can say is, I blame dragons. Click below to listen to the podcast Much news in this episode, and many fun comments that are because of it. L
There we go! Episode 4 posted for all you to listen to!
Yes it was a little late, but all i can say is, I blame dragons.
Click below to listen to the podcast
Click below to listen:
episodes/UnFurled_-_Episode_4.mp3Click to download | Open Player in New Window
Much news in this episode, and many fun comments that are because of it. Let us all know what ya think eh?
Comment below or email us at us@unfurled.net Episode 4 – Oh shi-… - There we go! Episode 4 posted for all you to listen to! Yes it was a little late, but all i can say is, I blame dragons. Click below to listen to the podcast Much news in this episode, and many fun comments that are because of it. Let us all know [...]
Fauna Urbana launches blogs and podcasts hosting
For the first time in 10 years, all the Brazilian furry fandom will earn a fresh and high quality place to host their furry related blogs and podcasts, totally in portuguese.
Fauna Urbana announced yesterday a new service that plans to gather all the Brazilian furry material now spread throughout the web, such podcasts, comics, chronicles and blogs. Everybody could have more then one collaborator, making this idea more social and fun!
With the same login, all users could comment on their friend’s blogs and on Fauna Urbana’s articles. Eventually, Fauna Urbana will pick interesting posts to put on the spotlight on their home page.
The service will start this Sunday, 25th with two blogs (and two more coming). All creations will be on the same domain “faunaurbana.com.br”:
“Why split? Let’s join our fandom community together with us: On faunaurbana.com.br. In some months I believe that our fandom will relax and apply more for their blogs, everybody have something to say.” - Said Tanuki Gokuhi, the current administrator of Fauna Urbana.
In six months, Fauna Urbana got more then 5,000 visits (2,000 uniques) and still growing 11% per week.
Episode 93 - Let Us Google That For You
Unsheathed #37 - We talk about editing versus writing, how we decided on our species, and the origin story of how we met!
Caldeirão do Huck finally announces the furry show date
After Fauna Urbana announced a TV Show using furries for a prank, everyone think the show would be aired on the last Saturday 17th April, but it wasn’t.
An anniversary was aired instead, celebrating the 10 years of “Caldeirão do Huck” (the TV Show that is going to use furries on the segment called “Lata Velha”).
However, the official website Globo.com (the broadcaster) released date and time for this specific program where furries will appear.
April 24th, 2010 at 4:15pm (GMT-3). With this official announce (and not rumors) we can finally seat on our sofas and check it out.
Fauna Urbana will cover this moment and when the first video recording of the program is released, we will put it here.
Check the official announcement (translated by Google): Dani Suzuki will be complicit in our debut of Lata Velha 2010 Archive.
FursonaPod Ep23 - Suiting in Public Places
Episode 92 - Why the Heck Are We Still Doing This
Unsheathed #36 - Back in our discreet locations, we talk about writing process and where to stick your butt.
Furaffinity tries to catch more audience
Less then a hour ago, the public twitter profile of FurAffinity announced an alternative version for its website with clean artwork. Safe For Work, the URL http://sfw.furaffinity.net/ will attempt to keep they audience browsing even during the work.
It’s a good choice for who don’t want to see Yiff all the time, mainly during the work. But considering that the community have to rate their content between General and Adult artwork, it’s not a hundred percent guarantee that we are going to see only clean images.
So even during the SFW browsing, be careful :)
Episode 3 – Accidentaly - Episode 3 is ready for you all to listen to! Sorry it’s a little long this time. We got focused this time around. A little under 1 hour 20 minutes. We will be better timed next time.! We have changed up our format a little bit he
Episode 3 is ready for you all to listen to! Sorry it’s a little long this time. We got focused this time around. A little under 1 hour 20 minutes. We will be better timed next time.!
Click below to listen:
http://www.unfurled.net/episodes/UnFurled_-_Episode_3.mp3Click to download | Open Player in New Window
We have changed up our format a little bit here. Alot of news! Let us know what ya think.
Lord Vox has request from ya all! Vox is going to do some old game reviews because he loves gaming. So send him requests for what to do! He will be recording himself for about half an hour ish playing them and then post them. During the next episode he will have his 5 minute review of the game. Ask for any game that is not on a CD, and he will do his BEST to play it :>
Please email us at us@unfurled.net or comment above.
Episode 3 – Accidentaly - Episode 3 is ready for you all to listen to! Sorry it’s a little long this time. We got focused this time around. A little under 1 hour 20 minutes. We will be better timed next time.! We have changed up our format a little bit here. Alot of news! [...]FaunaCast 3: Filmes com furry de 2009 - Furry pode estar em todo lugar, e esteve muito presente nos filmes de 2009! Faça uma viagem por 2009 sobre os principais filmes com furries.
Episode 91 - Dear 90's Self
Unsheathed #35 - Live at WonderCon! In a celebration of popular culture, we talk about Furry's place in it. And about Star Trek actors and actresses. With the first costume appearance on an Unsheathed!
Save the Day Review
Save the Day Review
Back Text: Jay Carson loves his boyfriend Ted Rodriguez. They’ve been together through the difficult times and the great times, and they’ve grown closer together through it all. They finally have a home together. So why does it seem that Ted is keeping secrets from him? Why does the house always feel so empty?
In a world of superheroes and supervillains, where the incredible can happen every day, the triumphs and tragedies of life can be epic. For Jay and Ted, friendship, love, and home are the most important things in the world, but they must find a way to balance them against the truth of Ted’s life. In the end, will they be able to Save the Day?
Review:
First of all, this is a gay story. Not only is it a gay story, but one about coming to terms with the opinions of those around you, and the repercussions of coming out of the closet. However, it is not a run-of-the-mill “coming out” story. Ted and Jay are already in a long-term, domestic relationship. However, Ted's a bit of a closet case, due to demons in his past and his paranoia about the opinions of his coworkers. Even in a world where superheroes, villains, and mad science is common, prejudice still runs rampant.
This world of superheroes reads like an open love letter/marriage proposal to the Golden and Silver Age of DC Comics. Super-strong heroes, insane, over-the-top villains abound, and every now and then someone beats up a Nazi. Analogs to Superman, Wonder Woman, and the Flash are all present, but done in just the right way to stick on the right side of the barrier between homage and ripoff. The powers of the main and secondary characters remain fresh, breathing new life into the genre. This is not a “Watchmen” world, where everyone with the exception of Dr. Manhattan is just a supercop. This is the Extraordinaries, and they can freeze, blind, or confuse you into submission.
Emotions remain consistently high, strong, and believable throughout the story. Ted and Jay's relationship feels organic, and their bickering or arguments do not feel forced. There is remarkably little melodrama for the subject matter, with most of the angst coming from Ted's internal fears. As for the secondary characters, almost all are quite believable characters (with the exception of a certain straight friend, who may be the most understanding straight man ever).
D.J. Fahl, most of all, understands that there is a certain level of ridiculousness present in superhero fiction. Along with neo-Nazis and villains that make you relive your most painful memories (two of the most powerful scenes, by the way), there are the downright goofy villains that prance around in fluorescent capes with death rays and lightning gloves, spouting monologues and then cackle with unrestrained glee. Jokes about tights and buns of steel appear throughout, giving it a light tone between crises.
However, the novel is not without its flaws. Since the story is written in first person, when the perspective switches between chapters or sections it can be jarring. Some of the stream-of-consciousness sections read somewhat clunky. English mistakes pepper the project; for example, D.J. Fahl reverses “than” and “then”, which makes the English-teacher part of my brain scream in agony, but the mistake is at least consistent. There are never enough mistakes to take away from the story, however.
Bottom Line: “Save the Day” is one of the best pieces of gay fiction I've read, and one of the best books in the furry fandom, despite its flaws. Pick it up at http://furplanet.com/shop/item.aspx?itemid=437
AnimaTFd - Chocobo TF by SwichWitch
Wark!swichwitch.deviantart.com AnimaTFd - Chocobo TF by SwichWitch
Episode 90 - IDK LOL
Episode 2 – What have we started? - Episode 2 is up and ready for your listening! Today we have some Listener Mail, Con Crud and more delightful News for all of you to listen to. Also you get to hear some bloopers at the start of this episode. Thats right
Episode 2 is up and ready for your listening!
Click below to listen:
episodes/UnFurled_-_Episode_2.mp3Click to download | Open Player in New Window
Today we have some Listener Mail, Con Crud and more delightful News for all of you to listen to. Also you get to hear some bloopers at the start of this episode. Thats right, we aren’t perfect (keep that a secret). Comment on the podcase here or email us at us@unfurled.net
Episode 2 – What have we started? - Episode 2 is up and ready for your listening! Today we have some Listener Mail, Con Crud and more delightful News for all of you to listen to. Also you get to hear some bloopers at the start of this episode. Thats right, we aren’t perfect (keep [...]"Clan Ground" by Clare Bell
"Clan Ground" is the second in the "Named" series about a tribe of intelligent jungle cats (fully feline, not anthropomorphic in any way other than speech and thought). Ratha, having brought fire back to her tribe and, by her mastery of it, assumed leadership of the tribe, is now faced with the problem of how to integrate this new power into the life of her clan. Certain clan-members are designated Fire-Keepers, set to tend the fire and guard the perimeter of the clan ground. Others are herders, keeping the tribe's domesticated food supply in line. This division seems to be working pretty well until an outsider comes into the tribe, seeking shelter. The clan takes him in, and soon he is working with the Fire-Keepers, seeming to have a good feel for how to work with fire.
Meanwhile, Thakur, one of the herders Ratha is close to has taken to exploring, and has befriended a small tree-climber, which seems to be a lemur-type critter. He brings it back to the clan and discovers that its hands are very useful for tending fire. The idea of letting a tree-creature near the fire is uncomfortable for many, so he trains it in secret.
Things heat up--ha ha--as the new clan member begins to be more aggressive. The division between the Fire-Keepers and the herders becomes more pronounced. And Ratha needs to take the next step, from simply leading her clan to becoming a true leader.
The book is told alternately between Ratha's viewpoint and Thakur's, a narrative style I've become fond of recently. It serves in this case to highlight the changes the clan is going through, from the incorporation of fire to the acceptance of this outsider to the introduction of the tree-creatures. You get a very good sense from the story of a clan in turmoil, set loose from many of their traditions, and the struggle many of the cats go through in trying to deal with it. When you have no learning to guide you, you have to make your own path, and that is what Ratha turns out to be good at. (Though it wouldn't be as exciting a novel if she didn't make a few mistakes along the way.)
Bell builds personal stories into these philosophical ones as well: Ratha's uncertainty about her leadership, Thakur's search for companionship, the difficulty the clan has in maintaining the line between the Named and the outsiders, who have no intelligent thought. The main characters are all well-defined, and even the side characters are rendered well. I found myself quite engaged in the story, and even a couple weeks after finishing, I can remember the uncertain young Fire-Keeper Bira, the headstrong Fessran, the lonely and quick-witted Thakur.
The thing I found most admirable about the book, though, is the way Bell avoids the trap of absolute rights and wrongs. The outsider, Orange-Eyes, is neither good nor evil. Ratha herself makes mistakes. The book allows the characters to grow and learn, and the difference in the end is who can make the best decisions for the whole clan. That makes the whole thing feel more real, and like the best furry stories, it's a relevant, human story, even though the protagonists are jungle cats.
It was some fifteen years between reading the first and second books of the "Named" series. It won't be that long between the second and third, I can promise that.
"Clan Ground" by Clare Bell
"Clan Ground" is the second in the "Named" series about a tribe of intelligent jungle cats (fully feline, not anthropomorphic in any way other than speech and thought). Ratha, having brought fire back to her tribe and, by her mastery of it, assumed leadership of the tribe, is now faced with the problem of how to integrate this new power into the life of her clan. Certain clan-members are designated Fire-Keepers, set to tend the fire and guard the perimeter of the clan ground. Others are herders, keeping the tribe's domesticated food supply in line. This division seems to be working pretty well until an outsider comes into the tribe, seeking shelter. The clan takes him in, and soon he is working with the Fire-Keepers, seeming to have a good feel for how to work with fire.
Meanwhile, Thakur, one of the herders Ratha is close to has taken to exploring, and has befriended a small tree-climber, which seems to be a lemur-type critter. He brings it back to the clan and discovers that its hands are very useful for tending fire. The idea of letting a tree-creature near the fire is uncomfortable for many, so he trains it in secret.
Things heat up--ha ha--as the new clan member begins to be more aggressive. The division between the Fire-Keepers and the herders becomes more pronounced. And Ratha needs to take the next step, from simply leading her clan to becoming a true leader.
The book is told alternately between Ratha's viewpoint and Thakur's, a narrative style I've become fond of recently. It serves in this case to highlight the changes the clan is going through, from the incorporation of fire to the acceptance of this outsider to the introduction of the tree-creatures. You get a very good sense from the story of a clan in turmoil, set loose from many of their traditions, and the struggle many of the cats go through in trying to deal with it. When you have no learning to guide you, you have to make your own path, and that is what Ratha turns out to be good at. (Though it wouldn't be as exciting a novel if she didn't make a few mistakes along the way.)
Bell builds personal stories into these philosophical ones as well: Ratha's uncertainty about her leadership, Thakur's search for companionship, the difficulty the clan has in maintaining the line between the Named and the outsiders, who have no intelligent thought. The main characters are all well-defined, and even the side characters are rendered well. I found myself quite engaged in the story, and even a couple weeks after finishing, I can remember the uncertain young Fire-Keeper Bira, the headstrong Fessran, the lonely and quick-witted Thakur.
The thing I found most admirable about the book, though, is the way Bell avoids the trap of absolute rights and wrongs. The outsider, Orange-Eyes, is neither good nor evil. Ratha herself makes mistakes. The book allows the characters to grow and learn, and the difference in the end is who can make the best decisions for the whole clan. That makes the whole thing feel more real, and like the best furry stories, it's a relevant, human story, even though the protagonists are jungle cats.
It was some fifteen years between reading the first and second books of the "Named" series. It won't be that long between the second and third, I can promise that.