
Spain advanced to their first FIFA World Cup Final, Carles Puyol's 74th-minute header securing a deserved 1-0 victory over Germany in Durban.
The two remaining teams left in the 2010 FIFA World Cup, Spain and Netherlands, will go head-to-head this Sunday at 11:30 a.m. (PDT) for the final game. After weeks of watching 32 teams play at the oddest times of the day (try waking up at 4:30 a.m.), what could be more exciting?! How about combining the two biggest trends in Seattle right now, that’s right: soccer and 3D entertainment.
Seattle’s Sport Restaurant and Bar is offering a chance to see the game in 3D. With beer and 3D glasses, you can’t possibly get more action than this (unless you are literally playing on the field). This sounds like great fun, but I’m wondering has this 3D trend gone a little too far? Soccer and 3D seem like a good fit, but I can’t help roll my eyes at some of the other 3D entertainment choices out there. Just because Avatar and, I got to admit, Toy Story 3 have been successful in 3D, does that mean everything has to be as “real” as possible? The issue is, it seems like movie, and now TV producers are scrambling to implement the 3D feature as an afterthought, not as part of the development phase, which impacts the overall effect. But why not when people are shelling out cash to experience it? The economy has got to spike upwards somehow. I fear this is the beginning towards living in a Matrix-life world, where humans view reality through a lens without actually experiencing anything at all. It started with video games, e-commerce, then 3D movies, can you imagine the next immobile trend corporate dogs will sink their teeth into? Don’t get me wrong, I’m pro-technological advances, but taking a long walk on a summer day (yes, it is SUNNY in Seattle right now) and experiencing real life with real people is ultimately the best. After all, everything else is just imitation. A Beatles cover band will never outdo the original songs.
Not a World Cup player? Do the next best thing and watch it in 3D: Fisher Plaza, 140 4th Avenue North, 206-404-7767, sportrestaurant.com.










