DVD

Tyler Perry's film goes on a couples retreat Tyler Perry's "Why Did I Get Married Too?" (Lionsgate, $30-$40) covers pretty much the same histrionic territory as the filmmaker's 2007 picture "Why Did I Get Married?" The film picks up our core group of attractive, dysfunctional African-American couples three years after we last left them in snowy Colorado. This time they gather for relaxation and renewal in the Bahamas. As in the prequel, most of the comedy comes from the most volatile of the four pairs: the lunkheaded Marcus (Michael Jai White) and the wife you can hear coming from 99 miles away, Angela (Tasha Smith). For the first hour or so, it plays like an empty but diverting beach read. Then everyone leaves the Bahamas, and the film shifts in tone. Perry throws in melodramatic plot twist after melodramatic plot twist in the last 10 minutes, and a surprise, movie-closing cameo appearance that drew gasps and giggles from the audience.

WASHINGTON POST

Out Tuesday: "Brothers & Sisters" (Season 4), "Flash Forward" (full series), "Harry Brown," "House, MD" (Season 6), "iCarly: iSpace Out ," "Marmaduke," "The Middle" (Season 1), "NCIS: Los Angeles" (Season 1), "9th Company," "Once an Eagle," "Parenthood" (Season 1), "Red Riding Trilogy," "Sons of Anarchy" (Season 2), "Thriller" (full series), "The Vampire Diaries" (Season 1), and Blu-rays of "Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy," "The Evil Dead," "The Score."

GAME

Best Buy expands its used-game program Electronics retailer Best Buy is offering store credit in exchange for used video games at nearly 600 of its stores, expanding an online trade-in program that has been in place about a year. The move follows last week's announcement by Target that it will launch an electronics trade-in program at 850 of its stores this year. Besides video games, Target also will offer store credit to customers who turn in their mobile phones and iPods. Best Buy plans to roll out the trade-in program to the rest of its 1,089 stores by October. The company also said it will start selling used video games in its stores soon. The current trade-in program involves customers mailing in games after filling out forms online. GameStop has long offered such trade-ins. Selling used games is a big part of its business, and it has helped the retailer appeal to budget-conscious gamers in the recession. Wal-Mart and Amazon also offer video game trade-ins.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

WEB

Online gaming bigger than ever, study says Sorry, Facebook fans. It looks like "FarmVille" isn't going away anytime soon. A new study out by leading market research company NPD Group reports that more than 56.8 million Americans have played a game on a social network in the past three months. That's 20 percent of the U.S. population older than 6. And there's big money to be made here for game companies and social networks. Ten percent of those social gamers said they had spent real money on their games. It was reported this month that search giant Google has invested more than $100 million into Zynga, the creator of social games such as "FarmVille" and "Mafia Wars," as it prepares a gaming portal called Google Games.

DETROIT FREE PRESS

GADGET

Kindle 3 is Amazon's biggest e-reader yet The Kindle 3 is Amazon's fastest-selling e-reader to date, the e-commerce giant said, with more ordered in the first four weeks of launch than any of the previous Kindle models The first shipments of Amazon's much-anticipated third-generation device also started shipping to customers Wednesday, two days earlier than expected. The new Kindle features a smaller build and a screen that Amazon says has 50 percent better contrast than previous models. A WiFi-only model sells for $139 and a 3G model sells for $189. It's not clear how many of the Kindle purchases were new customers or upgrades to older models.

DETROIT FREE PRESS