Saturday, 23 November 2013

Daniel Radcliffe: 'There's no master plan to distance myself from Harry Potter'

Daniel Radcliffe says he has just been called a national treasure, and it has left him discombobulated. He has a point: most people his age have barely started out. But here he is, at 24, more than half his life spent in the business, 16 movies behind him, eight of them Harry Potterblockbusters. It feels as if he's been with us for ever.
  1. Kill Your Darlings
  2. Production year: 2013
  3. Country: USA
  4. Runtime: 104 mins
  5. Directors: John Krokidas
  6. Cast: Ben Foster, Dane DeHaan, Daniel Radcliffe, Elizabeth Olsen, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Michael C Hall
  7. More on this film
The funny thing is, apart from the fags and the facial hair, he doesn't really look any different from the speccy schoolboy wizard who made his screen debut in 2001. Yet over the past half-dozen years, he has done everything he possibly could to distinguish himself from Harry: riding a horse naked and aroused on stage inPeter Shaffer's Equus, limping around stage as Billy Claven in The Cripple Of Inishmaan, haunted by ghosts in the horror movie The Woman In Black. Now he's at it again, with another part from which Harry Potter would run a mile: in Kill Your Darlings, he plays gay beat poet Allen Ginsberg, sexually infatuated with the dangerous Lucien Carr.
Radcliffe says he was doing a Q&A recently and somebody in the audience asked why he played such weird parts. He looks pleased when he tells the story. "I can't put it down to anything more than that I've got weird taste. There have been plenty of weird roles so far, and more to come, I hope. I pick films based on scripts and directors and parts. I think I've got good taste, but it's slightly left of centre. I'm not interested in making films I've seen before. There's nothing more exciting to me when I read a script than originality. That's all it's governed by; there's no master plan to distance myself from Potter with every role."
But it's telling that he uses just the surname, which has exactly that distancing effect. Oi, show some respect, I say – it's Harry Potter. He grins. Has an actor ever had such an ambivalent relationship with the character who made him famous? For many people Radcliffe is Potter, and Potter is Radcliffe. Potter made him unbelievably wealthy, and he also made his every social outing meat and drink for the tabloids.
We first meet at the West End offices of his agent, just before an evening performance of The Cripple Of Inishmaan. He has a hacking cough that can't be helped by his frequent trips to the window for "a bit of fresh air", or what the rest of us call a cig. He's wearing tight jeans, no glasses, and is a super ball of energy. He is fiendishly polite, slight, well turned out. If you'd never seen him before, you might assume he was a children's television presenter.
Radcliffe says he doesn't want to sound ungrateful. "I know that Potter is going to be with me for the rest of my life, so to try to set a goal where nobody talks about that any more is stupid. It would be like… Paul McCartney might have gone on to do a lot of other things, but people are always going to want to talk about the Beatles. It's just a fact of your life, so you can't get annoyed by it or resent it. You have to embrace the fact that you were involved in this incredibly cool thing that did wonders for the British film industry and though you might not always be happy with the work you did on it, the opportunity it has given you to forge a career for yourself is amazing."
Radcliffe takes his acting seriously. It's ironic that, having grown up as Potter, a leading man being paid leading man's wages (and then some), he is now establishing himself as a fine character actor, the type who plays the second or third lead, or the quirky cameo, not quite handsome enough to be a romantic lead. In short, the type who can make a decent living but would never command the salary Radcliffe did as a teenager.
The two performances I watch in quick succession could not be more different. In Kill Your Darlings he is the nerdy, needy young Ginsberg, desperate to hold on to his gorgeous, enigmatic boyfriend. As Cripple Billy, he is rural Irish, physically twisted, carrying a useless leg and hopelessly in love with a local girl who mocks him.
For once, he even looks different in Kill Your Darlings – curly hair, lips made up to appear fuller, very Jewish. You make a very convincing Jew, I say. He laughs. "Well, I am Jewish. My mum's Jewish. I'm Jewish by blood, but an atheist. There was a great Peter Ustinov quote where he said the Jews have had the luxury of giving the world two of the most influential people, in Jesus Christ and Karl Marx, and following neither of them." Radcliffe is full of quotes. He didn't go to university, but says he discovered the joy of learning for learning's sake when he was tutored on the Harry Potter sets.
Daniel Radcliffe in Harry Porter And The Deathly Hallows: Part 1Radcliffe in Harry Porter And The Deathly Hallows: 'There aren't many great parts out there for teenage boys, certainly not as good as Harry Potter.' Photograph: AP
As an only child, he spent most of his time talking to adults and has always felt older than his years. His father Alan was a literary agent, his mother Marcia, who was born in South Africa, a casting agent. Both acted when they were children, too, and are now his managers. Radcliffe had already made his screen debut by the time he was cast as Harry, in the movie The Tailor Of Panama, and on television as young David in the BBC adaptation of David Copperfield. He says he was unconfident and largely unhappy at school. He went to posh schools, where you were considered a loser if you were no good at sport. He still remembers a teacher at Sussex House, the independent day school for boys that proudly cites him as a star alumnus, telling him he was stupid when he was eight years old, and how devastating he found that. "At the time I just believed him." His voice rises to a hurt squeak. "I thought, I probably am stupid, but when you grow up, you think that's outrageous for a teacher to say that to a small child… I was probably just talking to somebody or asking for something. I was a very disorganised, talkative boy. And there are some people who just don't do well at school. I am not somebody who will learn best when you tell me to sit down and be quiet and sit still. I learn by talking back and engaging in conversation and walking around."
Is he hyper? "Yes, I think I am quite hyper. I think if I'd been born a few years later, I might have been diagnosed with ADHD, but I missed the boat for all those diagnoses." If you shut your eyes, you could be listening to a sweet old man looking back on a distant past. "I always feel sorry for people when they say school's the best days of your life. It really isn't. If it was, you must have a terrible life." He coughs like a consumptive. "I never understand that. That was one of the things I loved about Potter initially, it got me out of school."
Was he aware how much Harry would change his life when he was offered the part? "No, I knew I was signing on for the first two, that four books had come out. Warner genuinely didn't know at that stage if they were going to make more than one film. If it flopped, then they certainly weren't going to put up all that money again." Did he ever consider exercising his opt-out clause? "By the third film, I thought, if there's a time to get out, it's now; there's still enough time for another actor to come in and establish himself. For a while, I thought, if I do all of them, will I be able to move on to other stuff or should I start doing other stuff now? But in the end I decided I was having way too much fun. And actually there aren't many great parts out there for teenage boys, certainly not as good as Harry Potter."
By the time he'd made the fourth film, and was past the halfway mark, he decided it would be foolish to stop. By then he felt he was mastering his craft. Actually, he says, it wasn't growing up in public that he found so difficult as learning how to act in public. What does he look back at with embarrassment? "God! Loads of stuff. My acting lessons are there for all to see. That's essentially what the films are, us learning to act."
Of the three leads – himself, Emma Watson and Rupert Grint – who does he think was the best actor? "I think we were all good at different things. Rupert was the most outgoing of the three of us; he had this confidence when it came to comedy, and he still does. My tendency is to underplay stuff and sometimes I look at the films and I know I thought I was being subtle at the time, but actually I'm just doing bugger all. That's a learning curve. You can't dwell on the things you're not happy with, though; you've got to move forward and get better."
He's right. At times Harry was so understated, he verged on the torpid. In his most recent work, minimal gestures are used for maximum effect. He nods. "I still don't want to be a big over-the-top actor. That's never going to be the way I work. But I think I've got better at striking a balance where I'm being real but still being expressive."
He tells a funny story about Harry Potter and puberty. "In the second film, there was a shot where I had to hitch my trouser legs up to show I'm not wearing socks, and at 12 my legs were way too hairy, and they said, 'Nobody's going to believe any 12-year-old would have that much hair', so they had to shave two inches up from my ankle."
Radcliffe might play down the impact of growing up in front of the cameras (both movie and paparazzi), but talk to him long enough and you realise it has had a considerable impact on him. After all, armies of reporters were assigned to chronicle every drink, scrap, falling out, romance, rumour in the lives of Radcliffe, Watson and Grint. There were stories of him being drunk, stoned, depressed, going off the rails. In the past, he has said that at 18 he lost it, was drunk on set and blacked out through alcohol. He stopped drinking in 2010. Today you couldn't imagine a more functional, scrubbed-up 24-year-old.
I tell him I've read loads of pieces where interviewers ask him about drink and he goes all surly. "It's because I won't talk about it any more." Were the stories exaggerated in the first place? "No. Nobody but me knows what happened. The time I talked about all that initially was a huge mistake. I thought the narrower the gap between people's perception of me and the reality of my life, the better, but actually, the more information you put out there, the more people have to speculate on. And I don't like being talked about, I don't put myself out there to be judged. I made the mistake of doing that the first time."
There are enough stories about Radcliffe without adding to them himself, he says. Just recently, there was a picture in the Daily Mail of him leaving the theatre looking dishevelled, accompanied by video footage of him "playing the bongos during a wild night out". He laughs. "I was walking from the theatre to my car, and it was 'Daniel Radcliffe looks exhausted and frustrated' and it's like, yeah, cos I had your ugly pap in my face. There's stuff like that that gets annoying even now, but it's more than worth it because I have a great job, and dealing with the tabloids actually comprises a very small part of my life."
Daniel Radcliffe in The Woman In BlackWhile making The Woman In Black, Radcliffe developed the Fassbender test: 'If you're ever being asked to do anything, you just ask yourself: Would Michael Fassbender do it?'
Was there a point when he thought, get me out of here, I've had enough? "Not of filming. There are certainly times when the fame aspect gets on top of me, and gets overwhelming." It was at its worst when he was 17 and 18, and his friends were beginning to enjoy life as young adults. He says he didn't have the same freedom to experiment and make mistakes. "I was very frustrated about the fact that I couldn't just go out with my friends and have an easy time." What would happen if he did go out? He looks embarrassed. "Well, you know, I'd get mobbed, then people start taking photos, then they go on the internet, then everyone knows about it, then more people arrive because they've seen it on the internet."
Did he get verbal abuse? "Yeah, absolutely. And there are a few guys who come up to me and they've taken their brave pills, so they think they're going to be really witty and tell a Harry Potter joke, and I just stare at them now, like, are you really doing this? I've heard every single one, you will not make me laugh." He tells me a typical joke. He's outside having a fag, it's pouring down, and some wag will ask if he's got a spell to banish the rain. "People always look at me as if I'm expected to laugh at their brilliant joke." Then occasionally strangers would want to beat him up, just for being Harry Potter. "You'd get a few people, or drunks, who'd want to pick a fight with me, but again I didn't want to give them the satisfaction. On the whole I'm very lucky because I'm part of a franchise which is really well liked. I'm not a fighter. I believe I'm articulate enough to talk myself out of most things."
Part of the problem, he says, was that he felt so self-conscious: even if people weren't staring at him, he felt they were. "It was at the stage where all my friends were going to clubs and under-18 nights. I couldn't because there's a level of anxiety I get when I go out. Even if the people aren't remotely interested in you, it's in your head, and if you start dancing, you think everyone's going to say, look at Harry Potter, dancing like a twat."
Was he scrutinised more than Watson or Grint because he was Harry? "Not at all. Because of Rupert's red hair, it's hard for him to go out without being recognised. I watched him when we were at Reading festival one year and he walked across the VIP area and everybody turned around because he sticks out. And Emma gets attention because of the rabid male fan-base she has."
Last year Watson burst into tears during an interview when the journalist quoted bits of an unauthorised biography at her. "The book is total fiction," she said. Radcliffe says he didn't see the interview, but he knows how she felt. "There was an unofficial biography of JK Rowling, and the writer referred to my dad, who was an actor when he was young, as an 'unremarkable actor' and I'm like, you've never seen him act, dickhead, you're basing that on nothing."
And, of course, there is the perennial fascination with the private lives of the Potter three. Radcliffe says he doesn't discuss relationships with the media. There have been rumours about his sexuality, not least because of the roles he has taken on. I ask him if he's gay or straight. "I'm straight, yeah. But I've been called gay since I started working with the Trevor Project [an American suicide helpline for gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender youth]. Everybody just came out and said, oh well, he's gay. The best comment I read about myself online was 'He's got a gay face' which was all the confirmation they needed."
He couldn't care less what people think of his sexuality, and as for intrusions of privacy, Radcliffe is the first to admit he's got off relatively lightly. Not only does he have a career he adores, he is worth an estimated £60m, according to the Sunday Times Rich List (more than double either Watson or Grint), making him the 10th wealthiest person under 30 in the UK.
The pluses so obviously outweigh the minuses, it's not even worth asking whether he'd do it all again, given the chance. There is something I'm curious about, though: does he ever watch himself in the Harry Potter movies? He looks appalled. "No! Never!" he splutters.
The reason I ask, I say, is it must be confusing at times: if, say, you watched a movie you made at 16, would you say there's me at 16 or Harry at 16?
"I'd look at it and say there's me at 16," he says instantly. "I know I would because my memory of those 10 years is very vivid, and I remember things from every day that we shot."
A few weeks later, we meet at a photographic studio in east London: the sun is shining, Radcliffe's cough has gone, and he looks more sprightly than ever. We try to dress him against type for the shoot – unshaven, vest, smoking. And the harder we try, the more difficult we realise it is to escape Harry Potter. Occasionally, Radcliffe does something to remind you how young he is: while everybody else eats chicken and rice, a massive pepperoni pizza is ordered in for him. He has brought in his own playlist for the shoot (Black KeysJon Spencer Blues ExplosionM Ward,PixiesHold SteadyElliott SmithBall Park Music) and is chatty and relaxed. He tells me of a test he has devised to assess whether a role is worth taking. "I developed it with James Watkins who directed The Woman In Black, and we call it the Fassbender test. If you're ever being asked to do anything, you just ask yourself a question: 'Would Michael Fassbender do it?' This referred to a moment when I was being asked to do something a bit more corporate than I'd ever done before, and it came down to the Fassbender test, and we thought he wouldn't do it. It's a pretty good test for a lot of young actors."
Daniel Radcliffe and Dane Dehaan in Kill Your DarlingsRadcliffe as gay beat poet Allen Ginsberg and Dane DeHaan as Lucien Carr in Kill Your Darlings
One thing he prefers about making smaller films these days is that it's over and done with so much quicker. He talks about the final scene in Harry Potter which took four months to shoot. "It's almost impossible to film a scene for four months. It's a great scene, but it does make it harder to keep energy up for that time. We filmed Kill Your Darlings in 25 days; nine pages a day, which is faster than some TV shows. And that's exciting, you've got no time to slow it down. I loved it. I wish all my films could be done at that pace."
Since last seeing Radcliffe, one thought has dominated: how strange it must be to be so rich at that age. True, he has homes in west London and New York, but he doesn't look like a man who spends money on clothes or cars or anything flash. Most of us wouldn't mind a million or two, but perhaps being so wealthy is a bit of a curse.
Did he realise he was going to be incredibly wealthy if he made the Harry Potter films? As soon as I mention money, he blushes. "No, absolutely not. No, I didn't find out how much money I'd make till I was 19." I tell him I'm trying to find a suitable description for his financial situation, and the only expression I can think of is filthy… He finishes off the sentence for me: "…stinking rich, yes, that's the one. It doesn't matter what you do, no matter what line of work you're in, you can never really deserve that amount of money. It just so happens I'm in an industry where those sums of money are dealt with." He's reddening by the word. "And I'm very lucky to be in a position where I don't have to do a job just for the money."
What's the most extravagant thing you've bought? "Art. I suppose that's an extravagance; you don't need a painting." How much did you spend? "I won't say, but it was a Damien Hirst butterfly painting. But other than that I'm just so dull with my money." He's been sensible with his earnings, he says, invested in property.
I bet when you go out to eat, you get the biggest prawns, I say. He laughs. "Yes, gambas gambas prawns! Actually I only got an HD TV a couple of months ago
"Money is a wonderful thing because it gives you room to manoeuvre and breathing space to choose whatever you like professionally, but, yeah… I'm very lucky… yeah. It's embarrassing to talk about." Now he really is struggling for words. "It's embarrassing that it would have some impact on the way people see me. That is not something I enjoy." Does he ever wish he had less money? "Only because it would come up less. Most people in life would agree money is a topic that is not appropriate to bring up. You'd never ask anybody else how much they make, but because I am in a position where you are 'filthy rich' from a young age, it becomes a curiosity. I'd hate for someone to make assumptions on me based on what my bank balance is. I'm sure some people do."

I wonder if he has trust issues. Does he ever wonder (to paraphrase the classic Mrs Merton question) why someone might be attracted to the multimillionaire Daniel Radcliffe? I feel cruel even asking the question. He giggles, and says people are going to be sadly disappointed if they befriend him for his lavish spending. "Anyone who is my friend knows that I don't spend money. So they can hang around with me as much as they like and they still ain't going to get anything. Haha! They barely even get a birthday gift – if they're lucky." But, he says, he has never had a problem with working out who to trust. "I'm a fairly good judge of character, and I have a small but very close circle of friends. I'm not looking to recruit new friends. I've got enough, they're fine, I love the people in my life. I'm actually very open with people. I had a similar conversation with myself when I was about 17, the first time somebody had really betrayed that trust, and I said to myself you have two options: you either become totally insular and shut down and not let anybody into your life ever, or you can continue to be open and amiable when you meet people, and trusting, and occasionally get screwed over. And I do think that is the best way."
Anyway, he says, there are amazing things you can do with money. He talks about the charities he works with – as well as the Trevor Project, there's the Demelza hospice and the Get Connected helpline for young people. "So the most valuable thing I do with my money is that. The only thing of real import."
Could he imagine a day arriving when he quits acting to become a full-time do-gooder? Now he looks as shocked as when I suggested he sits at home watching old Harry Potter movies. "No, acting's too much fun. I love it too much to stop. And it's what I do, what I've grown up doing." He's working on a number of movies, including Frankenstein (as the hunchbacked lab assistant Igor) and Gold, a film about the rivalry between Sebastian Coe (whom he plays) and Steve Ovett. "There's an assumption that people make where if you've grown up on a set, surely you must be tired of that or want to go somewhere else. But actually I've never known anything but being on film sets and I love them. They are places of immense comfort and familiarity. I hope I get to die on one. Honestly." He smiles. "Later rather than sooner.

Top five: Europe's perfect January signings

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5. Barcelona - Mats Hummels

With Carles Puyol in the twilight of his career, he'll need replacing and Mats Hummels has been linked with the role.

A €35m bid has been touted but nothing has been agreed.

With Bayern Munich throwing the gauntlet down last year in the Champions League, Barcelona need to strengthen to challenge in Europe's premier competition.

Hummels is the perfect place to start.


4. Arsenal - Diego Costa

Arsenal are still looking for a replacement for Robin van Persie who famously left for Manchester United in the summer of 2012.

Olivier Giroud is doing a fine job but he can't play every game for the Gunners and Nicklas Bendtner is in no shape to lead the line.

Arsenal have been linked with a mega money move for Costa and South American star will plug a gaping hole in Arsene Wenger's side.


3. Manchester City - Eliaquim Mangala

With Vincent Kompany again struggling for fitness, Javi Garcia has been asked to fill in at the back, but he is no replacement for the City skipper.

A commanding centre-back is required to fill in the gap when Kompany is absent and Eliaquim Mangala can be that man.

With a £42m release clause, the young Frenchman is unlikely to come cheap but the 22-year-old would represent a long term investment and may even succeed Kompany as captain in the future.

If City want their title charge to succeed, they need a defender.


2.Chelsea - Robert Lewandowski

the Bundesliga outfit are reportedly willing to accept a £7m fee from a Premier League club in January in order to make sure he doesn't sign for rivals Bayern Munich.

With three faltering strikers in Fernando Torres, Demba Ba and Samuel Eto'o, Jose Mourinho needs to sign a top class forward to compliment a top-class midfield.

Lewandowski will take some convincing to join Chelsea, but if any one can The Special One can.

The Polish international would represent a significant swoop and may give Chelsea the edge in the title race.


1. Manchester United - Marco Reus

Manchester United are crying out for a young, creative midfielder and David Moyes desperately needs a marquee signing to prove he can cut it at Old Trafford.

Not only would Reus prove to be an excellent acquisition, it would take the pressure of Moyes and Ed Woodward, who suffered several set-backs in a poorly executed summer transfer window.

Intel credits Apple with big gains in battery life

MacBook Air: Intel says Apple pushed it to double battery life.
MacBook Air: Intel says Apple pushed it to double battery life.
(Credit: Apple)
At Intel's investor day meeting Thursday, an executive cited Apple as the primary force behind the chipmaker's push for big improvements in battery life.
"We're extremely excited about the MacBook Air," said Kirk Skaugen, senior vice president of Intel's PC Client Group.
"Essentially, cooperating with Apple doubled the battery life from generation to generation -- from 6 to 12.5 hours on the MacBook Air," he said.

"The previous-generation 13-inch Air ran for 7 hours and 27 minutes in our video playback battery drain test. The 2013 version blows that out of the water, with an astonishing 14 hours and 25 minutes on the same test," CNET Reviews said.CNET Reviews said that the battery life on the 2013 MacBook Air with Intel's Haswell processor is "astonishing."
And Skaugen also saw Apple's move to Intel's graphics silicon in its latest MacBooks and iMacs as a huge win.
"We were extremely pleased that Apple has moved a significant portion of their iMac andMacBook Pro line to Intel Iris Pro graphics," he said.

Intel CEO taking big steps to overhaul chipmaker

Intel CEO Brian Krzanich is serious about shaking things up.
Intel CEO Brian Krzanich is serious about shaking things up.
Intel's CEO is putting the world's largest chipmaker on a fast track to change. That become clear Thursday at the company's investor meeting, happening in the shadow of a declining PC market.
Intel will open its factories to "any company" that wants to tap its leading-edge manufacturing capabilities, CEO Brian Krzanich said today.
To date, Intel has taken a very cautious, small-scale approach to making chips on a contract-manufacturing basis.

That chip will have integrated global 3G and HSPA+ and the communications component will be based on an ARM design.Separately, in one of the biggest revelations, Intel will develop a phone chip called "SoFIA" that will be built at a factory outside the company for 2014. If investors are looking for a sign of changes at Intel, this is probably the biggest.
"SoFIA...is pragmatic targeting the entry-level market," said RBC Capital Markets analyst Doug Freedman in a research note.
And Intel is pursuing the tablet market with a vengeance. The company is aiming to quadruple tablets shipped with its chips to 40 million tablets in 2014.
Another sign is Intel's newfound focus on modem chips. For example, a future multimode modem will integrate the latest broadband tech, including TD-LTE and TD-SCDMA.
"The company is shipping its 7160 LTE product (7260 LTE-A to be out next year) as they believe products are world-class. Focus on smartphones is now focused on big players developing targeted solutions," wrote Freedman.

Hi again: Apple's 'lost' iWork features find their way back

Apple CEO Tim Cook showing off Keynote.
Apple CEO Tim Cook showing off Keynote.
(Credit: Josh Lowensohn/CNET)
Apple's iWork is slowly but surely getting back to its old form.
The company on Thursday updated its iWork suite with several features it took out of the latest launch. The biggest update is the addition of customized toolbars -- a feature power users enjoyed in previous versions but were sad to see go in the latest option.

The latest updates are by no means breathtaking -- new Keynote transitions and Windows size and placement fixes can only go so far, after all -- but they're a step in the right direction for those who have been complaining of lost features.Apple was hit with user complaints recentlyafter the company updated iWork without some of the features its long-time users had liked using. The company earlier this month posted a notice, saying that while some of the features in iWork '09 were taken out of its latest launch, it planned on bringing many of them back. Apple also suggested new features would be coming.
Apple's updates are available now in the Mac App Store.

Here's how Walmart will fight off Amazon on Black Friday

The retailing giant is pulling out all stops, from free shipping to price match guarantees. And for Walmart, Cyber Monday starts on Saturday.
Walmart is shooting for a huge Black Friday weekend.
(Credit: Walmart)
Walmart is going all out to ensure it is the destination for this year's holiday shopping season -- whether that may be its physical or virtual store.
Late Thursday, it unveiled a dizzying array of promotions, from a lower minimum purchase to qualify for free shipping to select Black Friday doorbuster promotions -- available online ahead Thanksgiving morning. Cyber Monday -- which Walmart will naturally be starting on Saturday -- is extended to an entire week.
Its emphasis to bolster both its online and in-store promotions comes as the retailing industry deals with the impact of online giant Amazon, which has largely eaten the lunch of the traditional brick-and-mortar players. Once staid stores such as Borders and Circuit City have already shuttered, while Walmart and others have reported falling sales and profits.
Walmart, for its part, said the decisions it has made are based on its customers. In fact, Joel Anderson, CEO of Walmart.com US, spent more than 30 minutes talking about the promotions without once mentioning Amazon, even if there were hints of the online retailer in his comments.
"We follow our own playbook, which is unique," Anderson said on a conference call with reporters.
Retailers have traditionally eyed the critical Black Friday period -- which now stretches from Thanksgiving to well beyond the following Cyber Monday -- as a major source of their sales of the year. But the online component is expected to be even more vital this year, especially as traditional retailers try to go toe-to-toe with Amazon online.
In a survey held by Nielsen, 46 percent of consumers said they would shop online on Cyber Monday, up from 30 percent a year ago. In comparison, only 13 percent of respondents said they would shop at physical stores on Black Friday, down from 17 percent in 2012.
Anderson said last year's Cyber Monday was the highest grossing day online in the company's history.
Starting Friday, Walmart online customers only need to order $35 worth of goods on nearly any item to qualify for free shipping. That's the same minimum level at Amazon, which the online retailer raised by $10 in October.
Anderson denied there was any link between its new offer and Amazon's policy.
"Customers have told us shipping cost is very important in their decision," he said.
Shoppers can also upgrade to three-to-five-day shipping for $2.97, Anderson said, adding the point that no subscription fee is required -- which could be interpreted as a veiled reference to Amazon's subscription-based Prime program.
Walmart will also match the prices of competitors such as Target and Best Buy, but the company didn't mentioned Amazon.
Several Black Friday deals slated to be found in stores on Thanksgiving evening will be available on Walmart.com that morning, although Anderson warned there would be limited quantities. The decision to add the online component was to create "anytime, anywhere access" to Walmart, and dismissed concerns that the online deals would draw people away from the physical stores.
(Credit: Walmart)
Walmart.com, meanwhile, is making its big online push starting Saturday, attempting to rebrand Cyber Monday into Cyber Week, which stretches to the following Friday.
Anderson said he opted to kick off Cyber Monday on Saturday because he saw consumer traffic to the Web site spiked that day. To better take advantage of the interest, he opted to kick things off two days in advance.
He promised a large assortment of online deals -- including one-time offers and specials -- as Cyber Week rolls along. Consumers will also be able to order online and pick it up at a nearby store.
Consumers are expected to fork over some big bucks this year. Nearly a third of consumers from all income ranges surveyed by Nielsen say the will spend between $250 and $500 this season, with 20 percent spending $500 to $1,000.
Walmart is hoping a larger share of those dollars end up heading in its direction.

Waving goodbye to Winamp, paying respects to Nullsoft

Tron Winamp skin
A "Tron" Winamp skin. Fans often often created skins for their favorite movies, TV shows, or bands.
(Credit: d4fmac/Deviant Art)
If you downloaded a song in the late 1990s and early 2000s, you most likely did it with Winamp. This week, the world said goodbye to the legendary media player with plenty of nostalgia, but for me, Winamp's death means the end of a very personal era. Here are some of my memories of working at Nullsoft, the company that created it.
When I first started there in 2001, I wasn't sure what I was getting into. America Online had just bought the company, and Nullsoft employees weren't thrilled with the prospect of being told what to do by a large company with a lot of rules. Many of us were young and full of "piss off" energy.
Nullsoft's story started way before I arrived. In 1996, Winamp -- short for "Windows Amplifier" -- was created and released by computer programmer Justin Frankel. He went on to start his company Nullsoft (a parody of Microsoft's name) a year later.
Nullsoft's snarky attitude was obvious from the start with its mascot -- a llama named Mike who came with his own tagline: "Winamp, it really whips the llama's ass!" (a line inspired by the schizophrenic singer-songwriter Wesley Willis). The motto rang true, considering it kicked the asses of any other media play on the market.
Mariachi bands interrupted meetings. Staff wore inflatable Sumo wresting outfits for the hell of it. The ultimate video game area sat in the middle of the room. 
Fifteen million people downloaded Winamp in a little over a year after its release. It allowed users to not only easily play music on their computers complete with playlists, an equalizer, and Pink Floyd light-show-worthy visualizations, it also inspired fans to make their own player skins to share with others.
In 1999, AOL bought Nullsoft and everything changed. While working under AOL, Frankel (along with fellow computer programmer and Nullsoft co-founder Tom Pepper) released Gnutella, an open-source peer-to-peer file-sharing network that competed with Napster in both popularity and controversy, due to a very miffed AOL.
According to an archived Rolling Stone interview from 2004 with Frankel aptly entitled "The World's Most Dangerous Geek":
AOL ordered him to take the program down immediately, and the company put out a statement calling Gnutella an 'unauthorized freelance project.' But Gnutella, unlike Napster, couldn't be stopped. More than 10,000 people had downloaded the beta software that first day, and intrepid hackers had gone to work to reverse-engineer it and throw it into the hands of the open-source community, laying the foundation for BearShare, Morpheus, LimeWire, and other file-trading wares.
Gnutella was now impossible to shut down, and so was Frankel, though AOL tried to keep him on a short leash by forcing Frankel to get his blog posts preapproved. That backfired too. He uploaded an MP3 search engine for the masses, and AOL took it down within hours. Frankel uploaded a program called AIMazing, which replaced AOL's Instant Messenger banner ads with a musical heartbeat. AOL was not amused. Even The Wall Street Journal published a story in 2000 called "AOL's loose cannon: Justin Frankel."
Fan-made Winamp skins were as stlyish and sleek as the subjects they paid tribute to.
(Credit: AOL Music)
So when I was hired at Nullsoft in 2001, tensions were high between the Nullsoft staff and AOL upper management. I was hired to be the editor of Winamp.com to most likely make sure nothing went "wrong" with the site. The Nullsoft team -- who called themselves "legitimate nihilistic media terrorists as history will no doubt canonize us" -- were under a microscope. But Nullsoft didn't need a babysitter, it needed a cheerleader.
The group I worked with understood the concept of working hard and playing hard. Mariachi bands interrupted meetings. Staff wore inflatable Sumo wresting outfits for the hell of it. The ultimate video game area sat in the middle of the room. Everyone there was dedicated to creating the best version of Winamp possible.
Fans flocked to Winamp.com over the years not only to download the latest player and find their favorite fan-made player skins (often created to honor favorite TV shows such as "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" or stylized to reflect love for bands like Nine Inch Nails) but also to connect with the Nullsoft creators themselves. Our forums thrived. The site featured news and personalities of our employees with themed months celebrating everything from ninjas to prom. We all wrote public blogs linked to the site. We had a voice. We had fun.
"I got hired to explain 'wasabi' to the world; that 'plugin' architectures needed to change into 'component' architectures; that 'skinning' meant something far more amazing than simply 'replacing bitmaps' on things; and a wonderful skins and development community 'flourished,'" former Nullsoft employee and self-proclaimed "Hot Green Mustard Evangelist" Mig Gerard wrote in his Nullsoft job description on LinkedIn.

Nullsoft's founders, past employees, and fans gathered on Reddit to pay their respects to the company and the player it created.Then came the announcement this week thatAOL was finally pulling the plug on Winamp.Winamp's Web site posted this statement: "Winamp.com and associated web services will no longer be available past December 20, 2013. Additionally, Winamp Media players will no longer be available for download. Please download the latest version before that date. See release notes for latest improvements to this last release. Thanks for supporting the Winamp community for over 15 years."
"Just wanted to thank everyone for all the support over the years," Nullsoft co-founder Tom Pepper posted on Reddit. "While we haven't been involved with Nullsoft since the early 2000s it was incredible what you all did both for us, and for music. Our only goal was ever to make the tool we wanted to use, and it seemed to resonate with you all very clearly!"
And what is to become of the loyal Nullsoft mascot, Mike the Llama? Frankel reassured fans on Twitter this week that Mike always has a home.
RIP Winamp. You will be missed by many, including me. Long live the llama's ass.
Behold the Nullsoft mascot Mike the Llama.
Behold the Nullsoft mascot Mike the Llama.
(Credit: Credit: Justin Frankel)