Contact Me
|
Wednesday, June 23, 2004
COMEDY CONTESTS PLUS TIME = FUNNY
"Last Comic Standing" has certainly brought the comedy competitions back into the limelight. Most comedians will say that they don't approve of any comedy "contest." But the thing is, standup is such a brutal racket that those same comedians will most always enter such contests because of how tough any break is in this business. During July and August of 1989, I had finished my sophomore year at the University of Michigan and was home in Massachusetts for the summer. I wound up entering the WBCN Boston Comedy Riot.
Comedy was incredibly hot in the late 80s and even an amateur contest such as this was a big deal. At least it felt like a big deal. At the very least it would most likely lead to a solid amount of road work in the Boston area - work that I most likely couldn't take since I had to go back to school in the fall. But I am (and was) putting the cart before the horse.
I had a decided advantage over the year-round locals. The comedy scene in Michigan wasn't as log jammed with comedians - or at least starting comedians - as the Boston scene. I could get up at open mics with great regularity in the Metro Detroit area. In fact, several clubs were already giving me paid work. The fight for any sort of stage time amongst the horde of Boston open mic-ers was much more fierce and they therefore had greater struggles to work on their acts.
I shoehorned my way into the Boston open mic scene as best I could. Having the experience I had helped and I made a splash which was aided by the fact that no one had really seen me before. I came across as "a hot new comic."
I remember lots and lots of comics auditioning for the Riot and felt very lucky when it was announced I was one of the 24 to make it to the semi-finals. The way it worked is six comics performed at Stitches Comedy Club for four nights. The winner of each of the nights plus one wild card chosen by the judges would go to the finals on the fifth night, which would be held at the Paradise Theatre.
I still have the promotional card from the event. In looking over the lineup, several names of the contestants and the hosts for the night stand out. I'll post my memories of how the whole thing went down later in the week, but can you guess how the judges voted? It's interesting to note how their selections have aged over time.
I know the above isn't that easy to read. I would have scanned it, but I'm having trouble getting my scanner to work right now. Anyway, the lineups were:
MONDAY, AUGUST 7th
Hosts: D.J. Hazzard, Mike Donovan
Contestants
1. Joe Rogan
2. Nancy Munro
3. Thomas Frank (spelled wrong as usual)
4. John Cook
5. Brendon McMahon
6. Jon McPhail
TUESDAY, AUGUST 8th
Hosts: Denis Leary, Tony V.
Contestants
1. Bob Lamitie
2. Jonathan McGuire
3. Evan Kornfeld
4. Duke Dodds
5. Michael Capp
6. Brian Coyne
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9th
Hosts: Anothny Clark, Kenny Rogerson
Contestants
1. Steve Carlson
2. Dorothy Dwyer
3. Gary Silverman
4. Charlie Cadillac
5. Robert Printz
6. Paul Elwell
THURSDAY, AUGUST 10th
Hosts: Barry Crimmins, Jay Charbonneau
Contestants:
1. Todd Parker
2. Frank McPartland
3. Pat Kilbane
4. Helene Lantry
5. Greg Fitzsimmons
6. Michael Lee
Posted at 10:47 am by jmachinder
Monday, June 21, 2004
RAPPERS DON'T LOSE
I caught the last half of Halloween: Resurrection last night. I'm a big fan of the original to the point where I've been able to put up with each and every new sequel that has been released over the decades, no matter how bad. While this new "Resurrection" gets a thumbs down from me (I can't imagine the first half saving it) I have to admit that I was a big sucker for a couple of the ideas. The main gist of the plot is that six kids have stay in the Myers house for a night for a webcast (kind of reminds me of the old standard where a bunch of people have to stay in a haunted house for a night in order to get their inheritence.) Anyway, the idea of the flick was most likely the result of wanting to cash in on the craze of reality TV, as well as have lots of "Blair Witch"-type footage, but the end result produced some interesting side effects.
A bunch of kids view the broadcast from a party and, much like Rear Window, watching someone who doesn't know they're in danger can really have amped-up tension when you're sharing the suspense with on-screen characters. Much bigger though is that last girl who survives is sent text messages telling her where Michael Myers is throughout his pursuit of her. I can't count the number of horror films I've watched where you're screaming at the screen for a character not to do something or go a certain way. It was such a release to watch a heroine be sent spectator-based warnings and effectively use them. It was kind of like a Giligan's Island TV movie where they finally get rescued in the first ten minutes. It was the end of a type of horror movie blue balls that I didn't know I had.
Anyway, there's a scene where Busta Rhymes fights Michael, doesn't get killed (in fact kind of holds his own with martial arts moves) and comes back at the end to give MM a seemingly-fatal blow. Now correct me if I'm wrong, but didn't LL Cool J survive the last installment of Halloween? Also, I seem to recall LL Cool J surviving at the end of "Good Shark Hunting," I mean Deep Blue Sea. Moreover, in Exit Wounds, I believe DMX fights Steven Segal and again, holds his own. Come on, now. Hasn't this gotten out of hand? It scares me to think that rappers are so filled with ego that they won't let themselves get bested in a make-believe movie, even when their opponents are supernatural creatures. While I do firmly believe that Busta Rhymes could create a superior, more-visually-inventive music video than Michael Myers, the confrontation stretches credulity, even in the Halloween franchise. (Perhaps the biggest irony is that the one thing Busta Rhymes clearly deserves to win is Video of the Year, but he's been essentially shut out at the VMAs).
Think I'm making something out of nothing and that rappers don't care about winning pointless, fictional contests? Here's something from the book "Mr. Show What Happened?!"
"For Monk Acedemy, we needed to get a legitimate rapper. So Flava Flav came up as an option. And we thought 'Oh, great. He'd be perfect for this.' But part of the joke is that he loses to Bob (as Dalai Lama). And he realizes he is going to lose and thinks Bob's great, even though he's really bad -- it was written in the script that Bob's rapping was really goofy, and it makes no sense, he's just rhyming stuff just to rhyme. A very white-boy version of rapping. We send Flava Flav the script, and it came back that he's very interested, but didn't like the script. And that make me laugh, because you either like the script and you get it, or you don't. And the next day, we heard back from his agent that Flava Flav wants to be shown in a positive light. I asked 'What does that mean?' He wants to WIN the rap contest. It was just such a great example of someone not getting it."
(Oh yeah! Reading this, I'm reminded of something. If you've never seen the "Monk Academy" sketch from Mr. Show, it's about a bunch of monks having a Meatballs-style series of contests with their rivals from the neighboring fat-kids camp. One of the jokes is that going into the last event (the freestyle rap-off), the Fat Kids are up something like 50 to 30 points and the rap-off is worth 100 points "So it's still anyone's game."....I think you know where I'm going here. And you know what? I think I'd prefer Quidditch games if seekers were rapping instead of trying to catch the golden snitch.)
Sorry to be all over the place in this entry, but since the starting point was "Halloween," I want to mention that I found the locations of the babysitting houses from the first movie (Jamie Lee Curtis at one and Nancy Loomis across the street.) The funny thing is that these suburban houses in "Haddonfield" Illinois are actually spitting distance from Sunset Boulevard in Hollwood. They are honest-to-God very close to the spot where Hugh Grant picked up Devine Brown. It's just freaky.
Posted at 08:32 am by jmachinder
Friday, June 18, 2004
TELEVISION/STAND UP COMEDY
LAST COMIC STANDING
This season of LCS has turned into one of the strangest reality programs I've seen. First of all, an American Idol-like show about standup has a massive, built-in problem. Standup comdey is different than any other art form. Unlike singing, one performance really doesn't necessarily tell you much about the abilities of a comic. You could have the same seven comics do a week together and each one could have a night where they had the best set. While the idea itself is flawed, hey, reality TV is popular and you gotta go with the heat. This is showbiz, baby.
The first season of contestants were essentially open-mikers, undiscovered wannabes who were so raw that you couldn't really assess their potential. Again, standup has it's own laws, one of them being that it's never clear how good someone will become when they're starting out. No one, and I mean no one, is capable of forseeing that without a crystal ball. The path to fame is without rhyme or reason and the ways people can "make it" have no bounds. The problem with the first season of LCS was that these amateurs were truly not-ready-for-prime-time-players and yet they were on on prime-time.
A decision was made this season to open it up to any comic, regardless of how experienced or credential-filled their resume already was. Mind you, I don't believe this was done strictly to make the show funnier. Yeah, showcasing acts that have been honed through years and years of experience will yeild a more entertaining program, but the real issue is that standup comedy has been struggling for about a decade. Lots and lots of serious comedians are having a very tough time and it indeed seems a waste to give so much highly-watched screentime to beginners when there's so few venues for veterans these days.
But while the new approach makes sense and while being on the show is amazing exposure, it still seems odd to see these pros reduced to this. Many of the comics have already done the Tonight Show. Sue Costello had her own sitcom. Kathleen Madigan won female comic of the year in 1996. It kind of made my skin crawl to watch them have to wait in line all day and then perform in front of Ross and Bob without an audience.
I suppose the biggest irony is that the second most harmful blow to the standup comedy industry (America's decade-long disinterest in standup being the first) is the decline of the sitcom. No longer is the Montreal Comedy festival ending in a string of network development deals with breakout performers there. And why is the sitcom dying? Reality TV is certainly a huge factor. If a sitcom is built around this season's LCS champion and is aired, can it possibly be as successful as the show that spawned it? It would certainly be an uphill battle. Despite its flaws, this season of LCS does seem to have made America care about standup again.
Much has been made of the show being "rigged." While I do think NBC has covered their bases, there is a much greater connection between several contestants and some of the people making the show than is being shown. And while Drew Carey and fellow celebrity judges got mad that they felt their votes were discounted (which they essentially were), I found it equally non-objective to watch Drew judge Monty Hoffman, his buddy and old co-star from The Good Life.
Since NBC and the producers are being so surreptitious in revealing the extent of their connections to certain contestants, I feel it would be sanctimonious for me to do so as well. While I've worked with a number of people in the top 40 in one place or another, I've been buddies with John Heffron since his very first set. It seems like just yesterday that Eric Champnella and I got him booked on his first paid gig in Alpena, Michigan and then laughed our assess off because we'd both done the room and knew he wasn't ready for that hell. Well, the joke's certainly on us now. Good luck, John.
Posted at 08:50 am by jmachinder
I've been so out of it that I missed the release of a new Godzilla film. Godzilla Tokyo S.O.S. has completely slipped in under my radar and will see its American premiere later this month at the Egyptian Theatre during the American Cinematheque's celebration of the 50th anniversary of Godzilla. This sequel to the well-recieved Godzilla Against Mechagodzilla came out in Japan in 2003. How on Earth is it possible that I did not know this? Why have I not already seen an untranslated, poor quality bootleg dub of this six months ago? I really gotta start spending less time with my family and get on the ball.
I am aware that later THIS year, Godzilla Final Wars will come out, which TOHO is saying will indeed be the last big G flick. I really don't see a reason to stop, but I don't think the series is the cash cow it used to be. But I'll believe it when I see six or seven years without a new entry. I'm excited to see GFW, since -- if you look at the "monsters" link on the website -- it will see the return of a whole bunch of old-school kaiju that I never thought they'd bring back, including KING CEASAR, GIGAN and HEDORAH (aka THE SMOG MONSTER).
Posted at 07:43 am by jmachinder
While I believe that blog entries should do more than just link to other things on the net, I'm kind of at a loss for words over JAY MAYNARD'S TRON COSTUME. Where do you even begin?
Posted at 07:28 am by jmachinder
Monday, June 14, 2004
FANBOY GOLDEN BOY
It was recently announced that five more episodes of "Clone Wars" will air on Cartoon Network next March. As I've said before, the main problem with the initial runs of CW was that the mostly-three-minutes-long-episodes were too short. As a viewer, you never had enough time to get into things. Even when you watch a bunch in a row, stories never were allowed to pick up steam. The last three chapters are an exception. The two-part fight between Anakin and Asaji was great and was only eclipsed by Chapter 20. The introduction of General Grievous was amazingly well-handled and powerful. It's important to note that it was, by far, the longest chapter, clocking in at over seven minutes. It is therefore wonderful news that each of the five new episodes currently being produced will be TWELVE minutes in length. With Grievous now in the picture and so much time to tell these new chapters, it's tough not to get really excited about this.
Chapter 20 of Clone Wars is my favorite thing these days. I watch it all the time. The extent to which the Jedi are frightened of GG before you even see him says so much. The actual second Grievous is introduced -- when he stomps on the Hudson-from-"Aliens"-like padawan and then unfolds -- is quite momentous, although certainly not as cool a design or transformation as when the Iron Giant turns into Battle Giant. Things really go off the hook once he starts fighting. His moves are endlessly inventive and graceful. I haven't seen a robot kick butt so beautifully since Black Magic M-66.
The obvious comparison to this one-verses-many animated fight is the the classic appearance of Great Mazinga in the end of Majingâ Zetto tai Ankoku Daishôgun (Mazinga Z vs. General Dark). GM probably puts on an even greater show of jaw-dropping power, but since Great Mazinga is technically on the side of good, the effect is much different. General Grievous is a villain and seeing his effortless ass-whupping has a more heart-stopping impact. You're watching a conclusion where evil wins, wins easily and you can't imagine anything being able to stop it. It's just brilliant.
The success of "Clone Wars" has to fall squarely at the feet of Genndy Tartakovsky, who's really become the fanboy it-boy these days. In addition to helming these additional CW chapters, he also has just been hired to write and direct the new live-action ASTRO BOY, which will be produced by Don Murphy and Christine Belson. The project has been in development for a long time, but with the red-hot Tartakovsky on board, I'd say the classic Osamu Tezuka property will indeed finally show up on the big screen. In an age where cheerished properties are "messed up" by Hollywood left and right, it's refreshing to see something you care about fall into the hands of someone who will respect and understand the source material.
But it's important to note that Genndy isn't someone who just likes the right stuff and has fanboy street cred. His own, original creations have garnered high respect. Samurai Jack followers are almost manical in their praise of him and the internet is filled with bulletin boards pointing up clever Dexter's Laboratory jokes.
In re-watching the first 20 Chapters of Clone Wars with a friend, something was pointed out to me that I somehow hadn't noticed before: not one second of Jar Jar. Considering what a Rosetta Stone Tartakovsky has become to fanboy sensibility, it wouldn't surprise me to learn the omission was something he put in his contract.
Posted at 10:32 am by jmachinder
Saturday, June 12, 2004

Poochieness is so pervasive in our culture, that it's easy to miss obvious examples. I don't know why I didn't think of it before, but GARFIELD is pure poochie, arguably a poochie archtype. The commercials have him wearing sunglasses and even say flat out "He's got attitude." Again, although "The Itchy and Scratchy and Poochie Show" is my favorite episode of "The Simpsons," I must contest the passionate rejection of Poochie by the Simpsons-universe public. Certainly Poochie aesthetics are enemies of art, but unpopular? The Garfield movie has a 14 percent fresh rating over at Rotten Tomatoes, with many critics actively hating it. I'm sure you may know people who were dragged to it and are still trying to wash the viewing off of them. And yet, it will gross about $24 million dollars in its opening weekend, only two million less than the TOTAL domestic grosses of both THE IRON GIANT and MEMENTO.
Posted at 04:03 pm by jmachinder
Friday, June 11, 2004
A little while ago, I got an assignment to write a freelance episode of a new cartoon series on Cartoon Network called "The Life and Times of Juniper Lee." While the money isn't great in animation and it's much better to be on staff than doing freelance work, this was still a great break for me. I consider myself very lucky to have gotten the opportunity. The process was quite fascinating, surprising me at every turn. The voices for the episode were taped two days ago and I'm still shocked at how quick the whole thing went by.
The development of screenplays (which is where I had been focusing my efforts) goes on forever. I've had scripts at studios that have gone through rewrites for years and years, not get produced and yet still not be officially "dead." In the screenplay world, it's not uncommon to get excited about being replaced by other writers. This excitment isn't the result of you being tired of the script, but rather the fact that the studio will never allow you to write the shooting draft and that they're bringing in bigger names to replace you and gut your script means it could actually see production!
TV is different. Networks have to keep cranking out product and simply don't have the luxury of non-stop rewriting. What a TV writer focusses on is also very, very different. With movies, concept and tone are huge struggles. While the actual writing in spec screenplays must be of a very high quality in order to get read by anyone, it's essentially meaningless. It's guaranteed that you are going to be completely rewritten, so the real question is if the overall concept is commercial enough to warrant buying the thing. With TV writing (except for pilots), concept and tone have already been determined. Your struggles become "Does this line capture the voice of the character?," "Is this joke efficient enough?" or "How can I cram more jokes into this scene?" Movie scripts are all about macro-managing and TV scripts are all about micro-managing.
The main war of wannabe Hollywood writers is one of access. The sad truth is - and this isn't fun to hear - your opinions don't really matter. People like their own ideas and don't care about yours. The real goal is to find out what a person of power wants and then give it to them. In the long run. this approach will win out over working on your own masterpiece. At least while you're a nobody. If you become a hit TV or movie writer, you can do whatever you want and they'll throw money at you.
And the law that "people like their own ideas" is true of you as well. Writers tend not to want a word they've written to be touched. And that's not always because it's the best way, but because the ideas are their own. I've written a number of scripts with other people. Whever you do this, invariably, you'll arrive at places where you disagree. You think it should be A, he thinks it should be B. You're convinced your're right and don't understand why your partner can't see the light. You'll put a pin in the argument and say you'll come back to settle it later. I find it very telling that whenever this has happened to me, I'm shocked at how often I can't remember which side of of the argument I took. I'll have no idea whether I wanted A or B. The reason I had a preference in the first place was that I liked my own idea more.
The situation with Juniper Lee was ideal. I had direct and constant access with Judd Winick, the show creator. Moreover, Judd was able to be incredibly specific on what he wanted every step of the way. I almost feel embarrassed at how easy he made the whole thing. Make no mistake, this is far from common. Most people of power are not creative folks, and although they love their own ideas, often don't know what those ideas are or how to articulate them.
"The Life and Times of Juniper Lee" is scheduled to premier next spring. I have no idea what order they will air the episodes, but mine "The World According to L.A.R.P." is the eighth one recorded.
Posted at 11:16 am by jmachinder
Wednesday, June 09, 2004
What a surprise! I've just been doing this blog whenever I get the chance - which has turned out to be about once a week. Aside from just being plain busy, one reason has been a lack of obligation to a readership. I've just been attaching the URL as a signature in emails to freinds, who occassionally forward it to other people. But yesterday, my attack on quidditch was sent to and posted on The Volokh Conspiracy, a REAL blog with real traffic. The viewings went through the roof and the item got a high number of comments (the whole blog has had only one comment up to this point). Although I didn't forward my article myself, looking over the comments shows you just how wise it can be to really scrutinize where you link from. I'm blown away by the high quality of the discussion, which I truly believe is a rare find on the internet. Thanks to all, but it looks like the debate on quidditch is a moot point, as the following article reveals...
Posted at 09:03 am by jmachinder
HOGWARTS ELIMINTATES QUIDDITCH, WRESTLING AMIDST TITLE IX CONCERNS
-- From the Daily Prophet
Headmaster Albus Dumbledore stunned students, faculty and alumnae when he announced that Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry would no longer field the sports of quidditch and wrestling upon the conclusion of the current school year. "I'm shocked," said Draco Malfoy, Hogwarts precocious 135 pound league champion wrestler. "We've just finished one of the best seasons we'd ever had here. And with our off-season Greco training, we were even starting to show success against eastern European Trolls. What did we do wrong?"
While the elimination of a 13-3 wrestling team that showed unexpected success in the post-season was a shock to many, the real bomb came one sentence later when it was announced that the school's quidditch players would be using their broomsticks to sweep out their lockers.
"The days of revenue-producing sports being safe from Title IX quotas are over," said Jessica Gavora, author of Tilting the Playing Field: School, Sports, Sex and Title IX. "Quidditch draws big crowds and makes lots of money for schools. The layperson would think it would be immune from Title IX bean counting. But the disparity in the numbers of boys and girls interested in sports, combined with the demand that the gender breakdown of athletic participation mirror the overall student population, well, it makes a decision like this inevitable."
"It shouldn't have come to this," said Donna Lopiano, head of the Women's Sports Coven. "Title IX is not a quota. Cuts come when administrations don't allocate their resources wisely. The quidditch arms race that we've seen over the past decade has resulted in massive excesses and huge financial losses for schools. I mean, does a fourth-string bludger really need a Cleansweep Seven broomstick?"
Hogwarts had been granted a reprieve from Title IX litigation three years ago when it added equestrian and womens' crew. However, a WSC investigation revealed that all of the participants on the two teams were apparitions, the result of spells cast by Dumbledore himself. Donna DeVarona, member of the Office of Civil Rights Commission on Opportunity in Athletics called the tactic a "deceitful attempt of compliance." She added "The OCR is very clear on this. The policy clarification of the three -prong compliance test (created in 1995 when Brown University attempted to meet roster minimums for their gymnastics team by gating in female demons from other dimensions) demands that a school can claim to be 'substantially proportionate' by measuring only actual, non-hologram players. Moreover, the policy specifically forbids unused roster spots being filled with female players created by illusionary spells."
Eric LeSher, Title IX expert and head of the organization "Muggles Against Quotas," found the elimination ironic. "Advocates of the current interpretation of Title IX are always saying that the reason that more women don't come out for sports is because of the stigmas of being a female athlete. That societal pressure discourages otherwise interested women from participating. Well, I can't think of an accoutrement more associated with women than a broomstick. Witches, maids, you name it. Yet over 85% of quidditch players are male. They don't seem to have a problem of being labeled a 'sissy with a broom.' The argument just doesn't hold up to any sort of scrutiny."
Oliver Wood, head coach of the Hogwarts now swan-song quidditch team, agreed. "There's this belief that quidditch is some sort of utopian sport. That boys and girls play together with equal interest and ability. Well that's fine for some politically correct fantasy world. But at tryouts this year, I had to cut twelve males - all walkons, all willing to ride the bench for as long as it took for them to get a chance to whack a quaffle. Meanwhile, the six girls I have on the team are all on full scholarship and three of them were recruited by me in our cafeteria. And unless I let them be seekers - and start a good number of games - they don't want to play."
While there is much discomfort all around the campus, the affected athletes must quickly ponder their future. Although Hogwarts has said it will honor all existing scholarships for those eliminated, Malfoy is considering transferring, even if it means to a non-magical school. "I don't know what to do," the young wizard said "Wrestling has always been number one. It means everything to me. Why can't I play the sport I love and get a non-Muggle education at the same time?"
Posted at 08:51 am by jmachinder
|
|
|