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    Gamer Nirvana

    New Frisco museum damn sure will turn everyone into a videogame junkie

    Alex Bentley
    Nov 23, 2015 | 1:21 pm

    Whether you haven't picked up a controller since you last played "Space Invaders" on Atari, or you're a hardcore gamer who stays on top of every innovation, you'll want to see what's inside a new museum opening in late December in Frisco. The National Videogame Museum promises to showcase almost every imaginable videogame innovation to come out of the United States.

    Located inside the Frisco Discovery Center, which also houses the Sci-Tech Discovery Center and Frisco Art Gallery, the National Videogame Museum will be home to more than 100,000 videogame consoles, games, and artifacts from the past and present. The interactive museum aims to bring to life science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) values by appealing to those who love to play and create videogames.

    The museum is co-founded by three videogame enthusiasts — Joe Santulli, John Hardie, and Sean Kelly — who have made it their mission to collect and archive videogames since the early 1980s. Their collections are about much more than just playing the games.

    "Each of us, before we even met, always found there was a lot more to discover about the history of the game," Hardie says. "A lot of that added to the excitement and the total package to figure out who programmed certain games, then tracking them down and talking to them about what it was like developing those games."

    Their pre-Internet searches for the people behind the videogames included a level of commitment that took them way beyond the moniker of "collector."

    "It was at a time where we would literally go to a city and steal a phonebook out of a hotel so that we could cold call hundreds of people," Kelly says. "This was way more hardcore than any collector now, so I try not to use the word 'collector' much because it just seems so amateurish to us compared to what we've done."

    That attention to detail will be evident at the museum, which will feature a 1980s-inspired arcade of timeless classics, a giant version of "Pong," and gaming stations with more than 12,000 games. Gamers can also explore a collection of rare artifacts like the only Sega Neptune prototype and one of only two Atari Mindlink controllers in the world.

    For many years, a traveling version of the museum was seen at gaming conventions like the Electronic Entertainment Expo. After encouragement from conventiongoers, the group decided to find a more permanent home for the collection.

    Initial searches for a location in traditional videogame locales like Silicon Valley yielded little progress. Randy Pitchford, who moved Gearbox's headquarters to Frisco in 2014, suggested the Dallas suburb as a possibility. Visitors can score a behind-the-scenes look at Pitchford's office at the new museum.

    "I think the city of Frisco was very forward-thinking," Hardie says. "They wanted to develop a cultural center of museums; they have a railroad museum now, and the Sci-Tech Discovery Center is already here. So I think that was part of their master plan, to get various cultural activities involved here, museum-wise, and we fit in."

    The biggest driving force for the trio is to share the love of videogames with the public at large. In fact, finding out what people love is what Kelly is most excited about when the museum opens.

    "The real reward is seeing the reaction of people to the items we have," Kelly says. "I'm looking forward to interacting with the people who come in and seeing their faces and telling them about things they didn't know about or maybe things that I didn't know about from them."

    Oh, and in case you're wondering why the museum spells "videogame" as one word instead of two, it's by design.

    "For a long time we’ve felt that videogames are their own thing and not just a type of game," says Santulli. "So we’ve kind of been on this crusade for years to make it its own word. It's been around long enough now that it should be considered its own art form, it should have its own definition, and it's not a sub-class of some other word."

    A display of various Nintendo Game Boys at the National Videogame Museum.

    Display case at National Videogame Museum
    Photo courtesy of National Videogame Museum
    A display of various Nintendo Game Boys at the National Videogame Museum.
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    Movie Review

    Rose Byrne plays one stressed-out mom in If I Had Legs I'd Kick You

    Alex Bentley
    Oct 24, 2025 | 4:24 pm
    Conan O'Brien and Rose Byrne in If I Had Legs I'd Kick You
    Photo courtesy of A24
    Conan O'Brien and Rose Byrne in If I Had Legs I'd Kick You

    Movie history is littered with depictions of stressed-out mothers who have breakdowns due to the pressure put on them by their children, spouses, or society in general. Recent examples include Hereditary, Tully, and Nightbitch, with each of them finding different ways to depict their main character’s struggles. Yet another put-upon mother goes through the wringer in the oddly-named If I Had Legs I’d Kick You.

    When we meet Linda (Rose Byrne), she’s already in the middle of a huge ball of stress. Her daughter (Delaney Quinn) suffers from an unnamed illness that requires around-the-clock care and frequent doctor visitors. Her husband, Charles (Christian Slater), is a boat captain whose job keeps him away from home for long periods of time. And her job as a therapist requires her to hear other people’s problems, necessitating her seeing a fellow therapist (Conan O’Brien) on a daily basis.

    Nearly everyone else she encounters in the movie adds to her anxiety, including Caroline (Danielle Macdonald), a new mother who’s constantly worried about her baby; Dr. Spring (Mary Bronstein), who constantly harps on Linda to get her daughter to eat; an officious parking attendant at the hospital; and a sneering desk clerk at the motel she and her daughter are forced to stay at after a plumbing disaster at home. Consequently, she dismisses James (A$AP Rocky), another motel worker, the one person who treats her with a modicum of kindness.

    Written and directed by Bronstein, the film is a harrowing experience that somehow also manages to be darkly funny at times. Linda is dealing with way too much for one person to adequately handle, something that is compounded by the fact that nobody really listens to her, not even the therapist she’s paying to do so. Scenes bounce back and forth between Linda demonstrating righteous anger at what the world is throwing at her and crushing guilt over supposedly not doing enough for her child.

    Bronstein depicts Linda’s journey in a number of interesting ways, some straightforward and others not so much. Bronstein makes liberal use of close-ups on Linda’s face, heightening the feeling that the world is closing in on her. The plumbing problem at her home results in a huge hole in the ceiling, which becomes the source of some unexplained phenomena, a choice that might have been unnecessary.

    What’s most striking about the film is how hardly anyone is on Linda’s side. Since the film joins the story as it’s already in progress, the audience is left to guess as to how Linda has behaved in the past to garner such negative interactions from people who should be helping her. While she’s not a perfect person, she also doesn’t appear to be such a jerk that she should be treated with disdain everywhere she goes.

    Byrne, who’s gravitated toward lighter roles in recent years, is an absolute marvel in this part. The more stress Linda feels, the more she becomes disheveled, and Byrne makes you feel every ounce of the character’s pain. O’Brien, who’s rarely had to play anyone but “Conan O’Brien” before, is surprisingly good, tamping down his comic sensibility to complement Byrne well. A$AP Rocky also makes a nice impression, elevating a character that’s a little underwritten.

    The role of a mom is never an easy one, and that’s in the best of circumstances. If I Had Legs I’d Kick You - a title that is never explained yet still somehow fits - earns its stripes by demonstrating how the often thankless job of motherhood can become even more distressing when the mom in question is given little to no support.

    ---

    If I Had Legs I'd Kick You is now playing in select theaters.

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