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Virtual Thanksgiving: 4 Games To Play Over Zoom After Dinner
Like almost everything so far in 2020, the Thanksgiving holiday looks a lot different this year. Amidst what seems like an out of control spread of COVID-19, many public health officials and government leaders are begging people to not travel or gather with people outside their household for Turkey Day. If we have any hope of getting this virus under control, people are going to have to forgo their traditional 20 seat table with all the grandparents and aunts and uncles, and embrace an intimate Thanksgiving with only their own household.
Just because you shouldn’t gather with family and friends in person doesn’t mean you shouldn’t gather virtually, though! I know, we’ve all been on a lot of Zoom calls this year, and they can get a little crazy with more than 5 people on at once. So I’m here to suggest you add some fun to your pre or post-Thanksgiving call with the fam and try something that my friends and I have been doing together since the beginning of the pandemic: play games together over voice / video chat! It may not be quite as nostalgic as a touch football game with grandpa, but it’s still a way to connect and keep everyone as safe as possible, and that’s what we gotta do this year.
So here are a few online games that I’ve found to be a blast to play over video calls: two free, and two that cost a few bucks. Zoom has even lifted the 40-minute call limit for their free plan on Thanksgiving, so you can go all night if you want! Pour some drinks and laugh with your friends, and it will be almost like there isn’t a pandemic going on.

1. Skribbl.io – Free / Web based
Skribbl.io is a game of horrible drawing and hilarious guesses. Everyone joins a communal room with a PC or mobile device, and you take turns choosing 1 of 3 words to draw with your mouse while everyone else watches you draw live and tries to guess what you are drawing—essentially virtual Pictionary. It doesn’t take a lot of brain power, is fun to play for basically all ages, has multiple difficulty levels, and you can even add in your own words to the pool if you want to throw in some inside jokes. Scoring happens based on who guesses the word first, and the drawer gets points based on how many of the others guess successfully. Drawing with a pointer is not the easiest thing in the world, however, so it can get pretty hilarious watching someone try to draw a lobster with their laptop trackpad.

2. Allbad.cards – Free / Web based
You’ve probably played Cards Against Humanity before, the “party game for horrible people.” If you haven’t, it’s essentially a fill in the blank game where one player picks a prompt card and everyone else tries to fill in the blanks on the card with their own card, while being as funny as possible. Allbad.cards takes the game online, but the gameplay is exactly the same. Like Skribbl, you join the room with a PC or mobile device and all the card picking and voting happens by clicking around on your screen. The “card czar,” aka the person who is running each round, can read back each answer over the call and then vote on which one is their favorite. The nice thing about the online version is that all of the various first and third-party card expansion packs that have been created for the game are there, so it’s very unlikely you will run out of cards or get bored of seeing the same prompts over and over. Fair warning though, it gets pretty raunchy, so maybe wait until younger kids are in bed before busting this one out 😉

3. Jackbox Games – Steam / $10 – $20
From the creators of old-school trivia classic You Don’t Know Jack comes the Jackbox Games collections, which number up to 7 now. Each one is a collection of various interactive game show-like rounds that range from pop culture trivia, to guessing your friends’ secrets, or to debating the merits of whether or not Jim and Pam getting together ruined The Office. Only one person in your party actually has to buy a copy of the game itself, and they then share their screen while everyone else joins via phone to contribute their answers and play. These games provide endless hours of fun and have a lot of variety, some of my favorites include the pictured Quiplash (Jackbox 2, 3, and 7), where whoever can come up with the best pun usually wins, and Trivia Murder Party (Jackbox 3 and 6), where one wrong answer has you fighting for your life playing a deadly mini-game.

4. Among Us – Mobile (Free w/ ads) / Steam ($5)
Among Us was released to little fanfare in 2018 but has recently gained a ton of popularity via YouTube and Twitch streamers since everyone is looking for virtual hang-out opportunities in the time of COVID. Probably the most involved & hardest to just “pick up and play” game on this list, it is still a ton of fun with the right crowd. The premise is simple: you are split into two groups, crewmates and imposters, and it’s the job of the crewmates to figure out who the imposters are before the imposters kill everyone. As players complete given tasks around the to repair the ship or base and get the crew back home, the impostor attempts to kill others while concealing their identity. When a dead body is found, everyone discusses who they think the imposter is, and then votes on it, so there are lots of chances for lying and deception. Did the person who reported the body actually commit the murder themselves? Or did the killer sneakily hop into the vent afterwards to pin the murder on someone else? It’s your job to figure that out, and it can be harder than you think.
I hope everyone stays safe this upcoming holiday season. Stay home, stay healthy, and we will hopefully be able to return to in-person festivities next year ❤️
Funky Music Friday – September 25 2020
I’ve let this blog get stale for a little too long — gonna try to get into the habit of posting on a regular basis! I will start by kicking off what I hope will be a regular post going forward, Funky Music Friday. It’s what it sounds like: a place for me to share some of my favorite new releases from artists big and small and hopefully introduce you to some dope new stuff! Going to try to keep the tunes I pick in the generally “funky” realm, hence the title of the series 🙂 Here’s some tunes and albums that I’ve been digging lately:
GRiZ – Chasing The Golden Hour Pt. 3
GRiZ has been on a short list of my favorite producers for a long time, and my favorite music of his has always been the tunes that forego his typical dancefloor-focused bass drop stuff for a more chilled-out vibe. The Chasing The Golden Hour series has always delivered on that, and the newly released third part is no exception. GRiZ himself has described the Golden Hour series as such:
I wanted to recreate the carefree good vibes you feel when it’s just about sunset on the perfect summer evening and everything is the most beautiful shimmering tint of gold. Chasing The Golden Hour is that magical moment, it is the cool breeze against your back, it is sweet summer swagger in music form. Enjoy the chilled out vibes 🙂
CTGH Pt. 3 fits that vibe perfectly with chilled out bass riffs, soulful vocal samples and a healthy dose of GRiZ’s trademark sax. Check it out:
Tony H – Big Whopper
Next up we have a big new release from a local Seattle producer Tony H, “Big Whopper.” This came out earlier this month but I wanted to make sure to give him a shout out because it’s a great album and has been tearing up the charts on Beatport, hitting #1 in multiple categories including Dubstep, House, and Breaks! As you can see based on that list of genres, stylistically “Big Whopper” is a bit all over the place, hitting on lots of different styles of dance music, but still feeling like a cohesive piece. That’s not an easy thing to pull off! I’m super proud of Tony and his collaborators Pressha and Spiro Catalano for the amazing success this album has had, and I’m sure you’ll be hearing these tunes in lots of upcoming sets. If you like this album, you should also check out Tony’s Twitch channel, where he does some pretty regular DJ streaming.
Tchami – Faith (feat. Marlena Shaw)
Legendary house producer Tchami is about to drop his first full length album and if the lead single is any indication, we aren’t ready. Tchami effortlessly blends that classic vocal house sound with his own brand of huge bass and crispy clean drums. The vocal work by Marlena Shaw on this one really knocks it out of the park, too:
Promises (Oxymoron’s Sunset Cover) – Calvin Harris ft. Sam Smith
We’ve also got a new release this week from another local Seattle producer and my good friend Oxymoron! He created this cover of the classic “Promises” by Calvin Harris and Sam Smith with vocalist Jack Hawitt, a former contestant on “The Voice.” Though the original track has a pretty chilled-out vibe, Oxymoron’s take on the track is dancefloor ready and kicks it up a notch with some bangin’ piano work and a bassline that’s just begging to be turned up:
Sofi Tukker – Emergency
Sofi Tukker have been making the most out of quarantine, steadily releasing new music and also on a streak of almost 200 days straight of live streaming—the duo has been doing live DJ sets on Twitch every single day at 12:30ET for a whopping 185 days in a row. Over these last 6 months they have built up a huge following of what they call their “freak fam” who tune in every day to see them play. Their latest song is a peak time club banger with some tinges of acid house synths along with their trademark vocal stylings and bouncy basslines. Check out the track below and also catch one of their daily live sets on their Twitch channel!
Check back on future Fridays for more funky new music!
Welcome to GrooveCue!
What’s GrooveCue?
I’d like to think of GrooveCue as a combination blog and record label – the blog part allowing me to shine a light on music that I dig that might be getting lost in the social media shuffle, the record label part allowing me to release music by myself and my peers without being a slave to other labels’ release schedules. Here’s a little more about my vision:
lost control of music promotion
In 2020, despite the technology to make music being as accessible as it’s ever been, the control over who is able to get real reach and placement for their music is basically entirely in the hands of the streaming services and social media. Between Facebook’s constant algorithm changes and extortion on page accounts to Spotify playlists that charge for placement, it feels like the artist-centric model we had going so well during the earlier years of the internet could use a bit of a reprise. I miss the days of artists posting random SoundCloud bootlegs just because they felt like it, not worried about copyright clearance or if they had the right “assets” for the release. Of blogs with pages and pages of posts that you could spend an entire evening digging through for some unheard gold. Musical freedom, not slave to a playlist. This is my contribution to trying to bring that culture back.
As far as the kind of music that we will feature, the tagline up in the top left will give you a good idea: “The Funkier Side Of Dance Music.” If you’ve ever listened to my music or seen me DJ, the one common thread amidst all my genre hopping and different vibes is that if it isn’t somewhat funky sounding, I’m probably not gonna dig it that much. At GrooveCue I want to embrace the more human side of electronic music, to blur the line between what’s analog and what’s electronic. Traditional funk combined influences from R&B, Soul, and Jazz and packaged it up with a fun, dancy beat into some of the greatest tunes of all time. The popular dance music these days has been trending towards dark, minimal, and aggressive, so I want to provide a space for a little bit more funky energy — just because the music is emotional doesn’t mean it has to be dark or aggressive–Personally, I’d rather dance out my feelings than headbang.
I am also proud that GrooveCue is the first music related blog on the LexBlog Network! Hosting this site through LexBlog (who kindly gives it to me for free as an employee) allows me to do so unencumbered by worrying about money — there will never be ads or sponsored posts, only awesome music!
What kind of content can we expect?
Ramblings from me about the state of the music industry, round-ups of my favorite new music, awesome original music releases, and compilation albums, production / DJing tips, and thoughts about life. I hope this can be a place where awesome music is shared in a way where we can actually remember it later on, rather than having to scroll endlessly and hope we find it again somewhere in the social media void. I hope you will join me!
Quarantined Beats
I’m writing this blog post at the end of week 3 of the quarantine. It’s week 1 of the official Washington State stay-at-home order, but as far as I’m concerned I’ve been on lockdown for 3 full weeks now. It’s been a little tough, but with the public health at risk, I’m just happy I am able to work from home and ride out this storm in relative safety.
One of the projects I have been keeping myself busy with during all this time at home is a compilation album I am calling “Quarantined Beats.” Music producers are lucky in the sense that their work is mostly solitary, and the hours just fly by when you are doing it, the perfect activity to pursue while you are being forced to stay at home all the time! I put out a call to all PNW producers to make an awesome track during this time and submit to me, and I plan on packing them all up into a release that will come out when this is (hopefully ) all over!
My goal for this project is two-fold: One, to give myself and other local producers a goal to work towards to help keep themselves entertained and occupied during this crisis, and also, to use the album release to gather donations to help support all the parts of the dance music scene that are having their income taken away because of coronavirus: Bartenders, promoters, full-time DJs, bouncers, and the like. It’s been increasingly hard for me to see all my friends in these positions being laid off during this time and I really want to be able to give back to them in some way.
The deadline for the compilation is 4/7, and it will be released on 4/20. So excited to share this with everyone!