Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Jeff Gerstmann (born August 1, 1975) [1] is an American video game journalist. Former editorial director of the gaming website GameSpot and the co-founder of the gaming website Giant Bomb , Gerstmann began working at GameSpot in the fall of 1996, around the launch of VideoGameSpot when GameSpot split PC and console games into separate areas.
Jeff Gerstmann was terminated from his position as the editorial director of GameSpot on November 28, 2007. [2] After his termination, rumors began to circulate around the Internet that his dismissal was a result of external pressure from Eidos Interactive, the publisher behind the video game Kane & Lynch: Dead Men.
Jeff Gerstmann, editorial director of the site, was fired on November 28, 2007 as a result of pressure from Eidos Interactive, a major advertiser; Eidos objected to the 6/10 review that Gerstmann had given Kane & Lynch: Dead Men, a game they were heavily advertising on GameSpot at the time.
MacDonald goes on to admit that he took down Gerstmann's video review of Kane and Lynch, not because of pressure from advertisers but because "the quality was not what [they] do."Even as they ...
Gerstmann is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Jeff Gerstmann (born 1975), American video game journalist and musician; Josef Gerstmann (1887–1969), Austrian neurologist; Louis Gerstman (1930–1992), American neuropsychologist
The Game Awards partnered with Spotify to produce a four-episode podcast titled Inside the Game Awards, hosted by Keighley and featuring IGN 's Tina Amini, Giant Bomb 's Jeff Gerstmann, and The Guardian 's Keza MacDonald; [6] it was released weekly from November 22, 2021, with episodes focusing on the history of the show and musical ...
Great British Bake Off contestant, Jeff, who quit the newest season of the show after just two episodes, has opened up on his experience on the baking contest, while also mocking his early exit.
Toxic Grind is an extreme sports game developed by Blue Shift Inc. and released by THQ for the Xbox in 2002. Described as the "only BMX game with a storyline" by the developers, [3] Toxic Grind is a narrative BMX-based game in which players complete a series of missions within a futuristic game show over eleven levels.