AMISTAD, BUT FUNNIER

Last night was a first for me. In the driving, freezing rain, a friend and I stepped on board a rusted-out, leaky boat to watch some people tell jokes. The Frying Pan is a perfect NY story – it’s this defunct vessel semi-permanently docked off the 23rd Street pier. And like all dormant artifacts, it has been converted into some weird, vertiginous party space. It’s claustrophobic, unstable, crawling with tetanus – and they serve drinks. slurp!

Some friends of mine were hosting a holiday party for the Industry Room, a (once) weekly comedy show traditionally enjoyed on dry land, without the threat of death by drowning.

DOUBLE-TAKE

Um…did the guy in the Old Navy commercial just say “fleece out”? I think he did.

LINEN-LINED POCKETS, AND WHISKERS ON CROCKETT

Visiting my sister over Thanksgiving means sneaking into her high school yearbook for the graduating class of 1986. 1986 at my high school meant a lot of things, most of which can be gleaned by reading the senior class’ individual lists of “favorite things”. At my high school, each senior was allowed five favorite things to list with his/her club activities, nickname and senior quote. Among the favorite things I saw were: “6-packs of Budweiser”, “Black Kangols”, and “hobbit holes”.

But nothing I saw on those pages filled with feather-earringed ladies (and guys) and over-the-collar gold chains could prepare me for this perfect list of favorite things, submitted by one graduating senior: “Being alive, partying, friends, Jan Hammer, family.”

PIMP IN DISTRESS

Who saw Friday After Next just moments after it was released? Me. Who published my review of it? Film Threat. Who is more culpable in this instance? I’ll leave it to the jury.

HP P2

One more on Mr. Potter, since I am on a total wizard streak this week. (having just seen the latest three-hour eyes-agog installment last night. aside from a couple friends and myself, there were about 8 other people in the theater for this 10pm show. five of those people were a puerto-rican family with children ranging from two years old to about seven. it was one of those occasions that made me wish i knew how to say “your babies probably wouldn’t be screaming hysterically right now if you’d put them to bed before 12am” in spanish. honestly, i would have even settled for “are you seriously walking into this theater in the middle of a cell phone conversation?” or “i’m sure there’s a more convenient, private place to beat your children.”)

Here is my impression of every exchange between Harry Potter and Headmaster Dumbledore immediately following an act of reckless bravery on Harry’s part:

INT. DUMBLEDORE’S CHAMBERS – DAY.

HARRY
“You wished to see me, Professor Dumbledore?”

DUMBLEDORE
“Yes, Harry. You realize your daring rescue of the Saucer of Immortality put your life, and the lives of your classmates, in grave danger. Had things gone differently, it would have meant the end of Hogwarts School and possibly the end of wizardry as we know it. Your behavior was foolhardy, and I have enough evidence to expel you from this institution. Do you understand this, Potter?”

HARRY
“Y-y-yes, Professor Dumbledore.”

DUMBLEDORE
“Very well then. Now I’m sure you also understand something must be done. That’s why I’m forced to…award ELEVENTY-BILLION POINTS to the house of Gryffindor for bravery, sacrifice, and pure, dumb luck!!”

[HARRY STARES IN WIDE-EYED, SLACK-JAWED WONDER. HE THEN EXCHANGES BUG-EYED STARES WITH RON, HERMIONE, PROFESSOR DUMBLEDORE, HAGRID, ELFINMUFFLE, SQUIDWIG, SIR KICKYPANTS, AND A POTTED PLANT. PROFESSOR SNAPE, HAVING WITNESSED THIS ENTIRE SCENE WITH A SENSE OF SMUG PRIDE GIVING WAY TO GREAT DISGUST, NARROWS HIS EYES AND STORMS OUT OF DUMBLEDORE’S CHAMBERS, TO RETURN TO HIS EVENING JOB AS THE LEAD SINGER OF NINE INCH NAILS.]

Fin.

WELCOME TO FIGGLESMOORE CASTLE

For cable subscribers, children whose parents don’t love them enough to wait in line for opening night tickets, and incurable nerds, I hereby dub this past weekend National Harry Potter Weekend. The new film was out in theaters for its second strong week, fighting its way past tough contenders like Femme Fatale and Friday After Next to rise to the top of the movie charts. The old film was on HBO. And I finally got my taste of young Harry. (i would like that comment stricken from the records, by the way.)

It has been said that children are rather difficult to direct in films. However, I think Chris Columbus had it fairly easy. He had two cards to play, asking children to alternate between reacting as if they’d just laid eyes upon the most wonderful thing they’d ever seen, and reacting as if they’d just laid eyes upon the most horrifying thing they’d ever seen. When they weren’t doing either of those things, they were eating or smoking cigarettes. Easy. I think the hardest job must have been trying to get bigger and bigger reactions, based on previous ones.

“OK, now I want you to act as if you’re seeing the most Splendifferiffic thing you’ve ever seen!”

“Remember that last scene? Well, this time you’re seeing something even bigger and better. When I yell ‘action’, I want you to act as if you’re seeing the most Magnittlefribberous thing ever!!! NO! Ron, you’re giving me Wonderjistic and I really need Magnittlefribberous. Please – focus!!”

“Now my assistant is going to hand out copies of Goonies, which ‘Cahiers du Cinema’ once called a ‘masterwork in wide-eyed takes’. I want you to study this intently, particularly Chunk’s reaction to first seeing Sloth. Tomorrow’s going to be a big day. We have both the introduction of the Fussy Book Case and Thideous, The Dancing Conflagration to film, so I’m going to need some Giggleblusteristic faces from all of you. Whoosh!”

That said, I liked the chocolate-covered frog.

THE WARNING SIGNS HAVE BEEN REPORTED

Lately, new forces are dominating my down-time. Things I haven’t yet been able to control. For the moment, I hope, a thickening social itinerary and television have outpaced quietude and inspiration. I barely have time to look at my cats, or get them drunk and steal their best ideas. I’ve become so restless, so busy that I often have to split a single act of masturbation in two separate sessions. (sometimes three.)

I’ve been catching video burn between reading some really unsatisfying fiction. (damn you, eggers! why am i so quick to drink your kool-aid when the tin drum continues to haunt me from my book shelves, bullied and wedged between robert mckee’s story and chicken soup for incurable racists?) Then I turn to my TV, and it shows me 24 and , Julien, Donkey-Boy and How High. Rare TV has even made its way into my home. The Conan O’Brien/Robert Smigel pilot for “Lookwell” (starring adam west); The Gong Show Movie (yes, movie); the Werner Herzog documentary concerning my favorite late-night evangelist/lunatic, Dr. Gene Scott. I like to be shown things. I’m not complaining.

Today I decided, by any means necessary, this would all change. I watched a segment of “The Other Half”, a morning show starring a panel of men, but still very clearly for pill-popping, stretch-pantsing, unemployed women. I was led to this segment via a link on cockybastard.com, a site I promised God I would never stop reading, for reasons strictly between us. In the segment, people with long hair were getting it DRASTICALLY cut.

Like many things on morning television, the segment really went nowhere but here’s what surprised me. If you were to watch this segment – or any segment on “The Other Half” – without sound, you would lose none of its meaning. Isn’t that odd? I mean, it’s ostensibly a talk show. But I had it muted for nearly the entire video and I followed it just fine.

In fact, when I did put the volume back on, it only became more confusing. Listening to the banter of the hosts – Dick Clark, the Partridge Family drug addict with a classic rock DJ voice, that dude who kept calling the other dude “preppy” on “Saved by the Bell”, and some quiet guy with muscles who is probably supposed to make the audience think about fucking – was sincerely no different than listen to caged lab monkeys shriek. The hosts were prancing around the stage, swinging around the recently cut hair locks of their special guests, and only occasionally forming actual phrases. Sometimes you’d catch snatches of subjects and/or verbs, like “Look at me!” or “That’ something else!” or “He’s a live one!!” or “Just like Dachau!!” But mostly it was just a series of unfinished interjections, gutteral sounds, and intense sonic noise designed to move the show along. The producers probably have a rule hanging in the conference room on a plaque or carved into some polished granite, and placed on the desk: SILENCE MEANS DEATH. One of the interns (a Wellesley graduate?), would love to point out the ironic similarity to the AIDS activism slogan, but she keeps quiet and tries not to flinch when Dick Clark throws open packets of half-and-half at her head. In six months she’ll turn her back on this horror show forever, and be well on her way to infiltrating the entertainment industry’s power structure, producing shows of her own. Shows with SMART women talking about IMPORTANT things. Her only rule, on a future slab of granite she only imagines today: “FUCK THOSE ‘RULES’ BITCHES.” She’ll create something powerful and unique. A SPONTANEOUS, UNREHEARSED talk show? What about it? Guests being real! All! The! Time! Why hasn’t anyone thought of that, she wonders as a packet of Equal hits her on the cheek, and sprays its contents across the bridge of her nose.

But I digress. I’m polishing my own clean granite slab, sending it to the engraver, so I can worship my own rule: LESS LIQUOR, MORE PROTEIN. LESS DIGITAL, MORE ANALOG. LESS ANGRY, MORE SEXY. It’s going to be a big, heavy stone.

TWEET TWEET

#1 Stunna. Manny Fresh. Lil Wayne. Goodie Mob. These are a few of the many reasons Southern (atlanta, new orleans, carolinas, whatevers) hip-hop is crazier than all other brands. It really does exist outside the norm. The artists, despite their excessive investment in fresh gear, platinum and ice, always manage to look like they work the day shift at a scrap metal yard. I don’t know what it is. Identifying characteristics of a Southern rap artist: dark-skinned, very sweaty, either too thin or too fat, and a mouth so sloppy with gold fronts that it looks like he (or she) just finished eating a whole bag of solid gold oreo cookies and didn’t bother to brush or floss afterwards. That’s the dirty dirty archetype.

One of my favorite Southern artists is Petey Pablo primarily because he, more than most of his peers, appears to have just walked right off the street. He has dents in his head and a wide-spread torso that owes its shape to the Convicted Felon Workout Program. Pablo looks like a pit bull standing on its hind legs, and most of his videos find him running around from barbecue grill to grill, in various states of removing his tank top. Pablo’s first really big single was “Raise Up”, in which he delivered some very complicated instructions to listeners. He insisted they remove their shirts and then spin them ’round (over their heads) like a helicopter. He should have also issued instructions to resist the temptation to shout “wheeeeee!” as you spin your shirt, because that shit is kind of fun. I liked this song because it took the art of call and response to a new level. Jay-Z was satisfied with hearing “nigga who?” in response to his “nigga what?” Old school rappers made it easy by standardizing. Every single artist had the same request: throw your hands in the air and wave them like you just don’t care. (some artists would build on this. biz markie would sometimes add things like “and if you got clean socks and underwears everybody say ‘oh yeah!'”) It was easy to learn, and easy to follow. But Petey doesn’t care. His call and response requires disrobing, gannt charts, storyboards, etc.

So it only makes sense that his new single has taken Pablo’s body of work chest-deep into the absurd. The single is called “Blow Your Whistle”, which is probably a tribute to the soul searchers song of the same title, and to a sort of lost phenomenon of whistle-salutes that accompanied soul and dance music in the disco-era, though I keep trying to figure out if it also means something dirty. (fingers crossed) Here’s the thing that’s brilliant about the video for “Blow Your Whistle”. The song is an elaborate imperative, asking people to blow their whistles for Petey Pablo, even if it drives parents and other authority figures insane. The video, however, actually contains tons of footage of people BLOWING WHISTLES. And not just those crappy crossing guard whistles. These instruments are hot – long, plastic slide whistles.

In the video, men, women, and children are all seen blowing whistles, and Pablo himself (still not far from a recent incarceration) can be seen leading a group of hoodrats, Pied Piper-style down the street of his neighborhood. (just before disappearing into a manhole for reasons unknown to me) He has his own whistle, too, but there’s no way Petey Pablo is going to be seen carrying a colorful plastic whistle. He’s got a pimp-flute: a slide whistle made of platinum, and encrusted with diamonds. Yes. Yes he does. Now blow it.

I think there should be a museum dedicated to everyday objects that have been inappropriately bling’d for the purpose of serving as props in rap videos. The whistle is definitely a personal favorite, and holds a spot in my heart right beside the diamond-studded children’s school desk used in Ali’s “Boughetto” video earlier this year. (scroll down to the video dated “3.02.02” and get booji and ghetto at once.)

MY HOMIE, GARY SHANDLING

By now, most people are pretty familiar with HOMIES, the 2-inch high barrio figurines that are vended from gumball machines in most urban areas. My supermarket has been carrying them alongside reflective WWE stickers for a long time now. (i think they’re already at series 4 or 5) The figures are pretty amazing. Clutching paper bags filled with 40s, chilling in wheelchairs, or just being obese, they get closer to what actual urban kids look like than the product of any series of multi-million dollar focus groups funded by Brian Grazer can ever hope to. And they were all designed by one guy, whose name I haven’t bothered to research.

Last night I went to see the film, Roger Dodger. (a movie that made me almost cry tears of joy at its visual looseness and precision dialogue.) It was playing in a large arthouse theater that just reopened in Manhattan earlier this year. (or late last year?) The theater is also screening the Seinfeld documentary, Comedian, a movie I would also recommend to anyone curious about how totally degrading stand-up comedy can be as a profession – for both the comic and the audience. In the lobby I found these vending machines that professed to contain “Documentary Action Figures”. The vending display was designed to mimic the Homies backdrop, but the drawings and plasticine figures were all based on characters from Comedian. I thought it was pretty fantastic. Imagine having a Gary Shandling or Colin Quinn figurine, and then making them fuck. (and why wouldn’t you?) I couldn’t resist, and shared $1.50 with then vending machine. In return, it gave me a Seinfeld and Robert Klein small enough to crush in my hand. Aren’t they adorable?

KLEINFELD

By the way, in searching out that link for HOMIES, I discovered how many great things you can stick inside vending machines. Look – SUPERBALLS! Also, I had no idea how many things you could stuff inside plastic capsules. Check it out – Homies Clowns. Makes perfect sense. Of course, if your mom’s on welfare (or you’re just super-corny) you can always get the slightly more affordable Hipsters, the inevitable knock-off of Homies. (please take special note of the use of red, gold, and green in the logo to connote down-ness, as well as a very familiar neighborhood fixture located in the bottom-right of this image – the bare-chested barbarian carrying dumbells.)

HOW DO YOU EXPRESS YOURSELF SO WELL?

Today, this song is helping. Me, but maybe not you.

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