• Down the rabbit hole: Disney previews new Alice in Wonderland on Facebook (Examiner)
• Get your geek on, it’s Comic-Con time! (L.A. Times)
• Why today’s online youth needs critical thinking skills (CNet News)
• A look at branded social networks (CNet News)
• How does Nintendo make great games and money? (Seattle Times)
• US back-to-school shoppers look to cut costs (Bloomberg)
• DVD sales take a dive (Entertainment Weekly)
• HIT Entertainment cuts one in five jobs (Times Online)
• What are the most engaged brands on the web? (TechCrunch)
• Microsoft’s Kodu lets users build vidgames with no programming experience (Wired/GeekDad)
• Ubisoft taps into the growing social gaming trend (Venture Beat)
• Comcast spearheads new web-TV trial for paying cable subscribers (Wall Street Journal)
• How internet collaborators and Facebook created the opening short for Planet 51 (New York Times)
• Will Crocs take its final step? (Washington Post)
• US$825 in funding for DreamWorks? (Reuters)
• Thousands ‘pore’ out to celebrate SpongeBob’s birthday at the CN Tower (The Canadian Press)
• Microsoft confirms retail store openings this fall (CNet News)
• The iconic Happy Meal from McDonald’s rings in its 30th anniversary (ABC News)
• Check out the high tech toys at Tokyo’s Toy Show (PC World)
• Excitement, not protest, surrounds India’s first Walmart (Washington Post)
• It’s Harry Potter vs. Twilight in the fight for the teen audience (Wall Street Journal)
• Success of Disney/Pixar’s Up renews investor confidence (New York Times)
• MGA switches lawyer again as it preps appeal in Bratz battle (Law.com)
• On the success – and failures – of celebrity clothing lines (Pittsburg Live)
• Check out Zubbles, the world’s first stainless colored bubbles (Gizmodo)
• It’s Christmas in July at Sears (Chicago Tribune)
• Retailers wary about back-to-school season thanks to disappointing June sales (Wall Street Journal)
• New parents turn to secondhand shops and hand-me-downs for baby (New York Times)
• Nintendo prez and COO talks success, strategy and the new Vitality Sensor (Fast Company)