Comments for Pimp my PC! Portrait of a LAN Party

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Produced by Aaron Henkin

Other pieces by Aaron Henkin

Summary: This story answers the burning question "What's it like to hang out with a bunch of guys at a fourteen-hour video game marathon?"
 

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Review of Pimp my PC! Portrait of a LAN Party

I think Aaron's best trait as a producer is to find unique yet not all that funny situations and to flesh them out, in a patient fashion, to a compelling finish. His timing is great, and he has a good sense of how to edit his work down. Here he takes a slice of dweeb culture and allows the story to run with itself. This is an example of the new flexible public radio that would sound at home in variety of programs.

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Review of Pimp my PC! Portrait of a LAN Party

Lan parties! Man, I am getting old! This sounds so foreign to me. BYOC means bring your own computer, so that you can hook up to a computer network and play an interconnected video game with thirty co-horts. Aaron Henkin does a great job of capturing the sense of the what these gamers are seeing, hearing, and doing.

It's an odd conflagration of gleeful kill-or-be-killed game playing and my-computer-is-faster-than-yours computer geekdom.

This is a terrific longer-form news feature. Henkin acts as our tour guide, stepping into this alien,sci-fi, world bravely talking "some serious smack" with this new breed of video gamer afficianado. As an uniformed onlooker, I loved this piece. It did that thing that Public Radio is supposed to do. It educated me on something I would otherwise have no reason or prediliction to learn about. Do your listeners a favor and find a nine minute block to slip this into. If you don't, may they find talk some serious smack about you! Cheers Aaron, great job.

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Review of Pimp my PC! Portrait of a LAN Party

Aaron Henkin is out the gate with a Joe Frank deadpan intro, finds a tone somewhere between Weekend Edition's Scott Simon and Weekend Update's Dan Aykroyd, and never gives up his fresh, upbeat journalism in this look at Nerds Gone Wild.

Gaming organizer Bob Keller comes across with perfect interviewee candor -- as if he were standing on the other end of a beer pitcher, pouring, not on the other end of a microphone, talking. And in sum, Henkin's crisp selection of "talent" -- the voices he lets advance the story -- insures the human and humorous impact of "Pimp my PC! Portrait of a LAN Party". Precise FX support but never steamroller Henkin's storyline, and he engages reportorially on-mic precisely when the listener is itching with a question.

Smart, fun writing and spotless production make "Pimp" an exemplary long-segment feature story. Aaron Henkin serves a vignette that vibrates beyond the video game environment of his protagonists. Fun!

PDs, if you don't see "Pimp my PC!" in the DACS rundown of a network magazine soon, grab it yourself and lay it in over any ATC segment (you'll have to plaster on a music bed to fit it in B or D) on rollover that dogged first time through. Your listeners will fill your PC with appreciative TKUs.

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Review of Pimp my PC! Portrait of a LAN Party

Wonder where some of the hot-rodders have gone? The answer is the LAN party -- where humans prove yet again that the technological tricks designed to keep us in our cubes can be repurposed to par-tee!

PDs: A good story for a weekend program. The kind of thing they used to do at the network motherships a long time ago before their clocks turned to stone. This is a terrific "who knew?" piece. Worth dropping in to any program that explores the human quest for community.

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Review of Pimp my PC! Portrait of a LAN Party

Very well produced, and provides a quick (and accurate - a rarity) overview of the net-gaming culture. Unlike other coverage, this provides a good insight on the individuals and their machines.

Gamer coverage tends to be either doomsaying ("Oh no, the kids are obsessed with that durned machine!") or trite ("Their machines are tastefully decorated with shiny blue lights and stylish see-through side panels). Well-avoided by this piece - I'd really enjoy hearing more of this on the air.