One of the drawbacks to virtual reality is that, no matter how cool the experience appears on the inside, the user is bound to look like a goof to bystanders.
Christopher Lawrence
Christopher Lawrence escaped his native Kentucky without an accent thanks to the thousands of hours he spent in front of a television as a child. That’s also why he never learned how to ride a bicycle. He’s been writing about TV and movies since his days at Murray State University, when the school’s basketball coach had him reassigned at the student newspaper after just one story about the team. He’s been a professional TV critic since 2000, the Review-Journal’s TV critic since 2005 and its movie critic since 2012.
Golden Knights fans are used to dropping some serious money, so what’s another $3,480 for a virtual reality hockey training system — plus $300 for the accompanying hockey stick with haptic feedback and a $199 monthly license fee — to practice your shot in your rec room? infogram
If you missed “Free Solo” on the big screen last fall, you can see it on the really big screen starting Friday.
Tap it on a color, and the small Bluetooth-enabled ring from Sphero Specdrums will translate that color into a musical note or sound that you can hear when paired with an app on your smartphone.
There was a time when CES was a safe haven for nerds, geeks and all manner of the uncoordinated.
It isn’t exactly the robo-boxers of “Real Steel.” Or the Schwarzenegger-related terrors unleashed by Skynet.
There’s relaxing. Then there’s relaxing in a Lamborghini massage chair.
Review-Journal reporter Christopher Lawrence looks back on the tarnished history of the Golden Globes.
If it seems like there aren’t enough hours in the day to keep up with all the TV shows out there, well, you’re right. There aren’t.
True to Vegas form, Golden Knights games were an entertainment spectacle, even before the first puck drop.
For the photo illustrations that accompany Sunday’s stories looking back at the Vegas Golden Knights’ historic playoff run, Lee Orchard got a real workout. Wearing a 45 pound suit of armor, The Golden Knight sweated while RJ artists and editors directed.
It’s still very early, but 2019 at the movies is shaping up to look a lot like the past several years with one fairly large exception: Unlike 2018, there’s a “Star Wars” movie people might actually go see.
When Lady Gaga kicks off her “Enigma” residency Friday at Park Theater, she’ll do so as a Golden Globe nominee, Screen Actors Guild nominee and multiple Grammy nominee, all for her work in “A Star Is Born.”
We round up the best holiday episodes from classic shows you can stream right now on Netflix and Hulu.
The fourth time was the charm for Cleen Rock One. The Las Vegan took home $100,000 as the winning coach and mentor on the 11th season of Paramount Network’s “Ink Master.”