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Thursday, November 17, 2011

the boy who cried "READ ME"


Well, at least my cat Corn reads my blog


In my continuing quest to figure out what to do with myself and how to be a person who just does a variety of things and dazzles people with their charmingly self-effacing and simultaneously self-obsessed personality (current heroes: Julie Klausner, Molls McAleer, Mindy Kaling, anyone who writes for Jezebel or the Hairpin), I keep coming back to blogging.

I've been thinking lately about the difference between practice and performance, and the shift towards the blurring of those two. Before the Internet, there were gatekeepers who kept the chunks of art that the public saw from just being anything. In my mind, I assume those are all dudes in suits with cigars, who talk like Garry Marshall, the kind of guy whose office that family walks into in those Aristocrats jokes. People would practice and practice before they get their stuff in front of the right gatekeepers who would show their stuff to their higher-ups and it would get passed along a chain until some corner office dude was like OK, green light! But now because of the Internet, people can get ahead without those gatekeepers and so they try. And because of the lack of gatekeepers, the quality of stuff that's out there is more varied. On iTunes, you can listen to a podcast that three friends who've never met an agent recorded where they're just shooting the shit, or you can get a Brandenburg concerto or some such other classy thing. Your Twitter feed might include a Kardashian, a Nobel prize winning economist and your mom's best friend. It's all muddled together.

The movement is towards everything being a performance. When I write a Twitter post or a blog entry or even a comment on Facebook, when I put up a podcast or do an improv show, I want everyone to read it and see it and listen to it and judge it, to give it a like or a comment, to up my pageviews. I think that's true of a lot of our generation, whether they're "performers" or not. Our Facebook profiles are a constant lesson in marketing and the performance of self. It's natural to want some sort of validation. But what we are losing is the time along the way to practice, to become a maestro in whatever field we choose. When we ask everyone we know to see everything we do, we won't be able to waste their time when we've finally perfected our craft. Our audience will have disappeared, unwilling to sit through another crappy one-woman show or read your third attempt at a single-serving Tumblr. We will become the boy who cried "Read me!"

We all think it'd be easier to be the next Bo Burnham or Andy Samberg and use the Internet and the eyeballs of our peers than wait for some SUIT to tell us we are finally good enough to perform in front of people. The whole millenial generation wants creative control. We envy the artist who's also an entrepreneur, the self-made man who can run his own podcast like Maron, distribute his own special like Louis CK and avoid having to cater to a network or corporation. But being that I also make my living by being "industry," I want to believe that there is a place somewhere for those people too.

Some part of me still wants to be the artist, and I'm hoping it's not too late and that you can be both without jeopardizing your chances of either. There are people on both sides, who are currently industry or who are currently performers, who've walked that line and been able to do things they love whether they're acting, writing, directing, producing, etc. But right now, in the words of my new improv teacher Becky Drysdale, I'm trying to build too many hamburgers. I have to focus and practice and put in the Malcolm Gladwell hours. I need to merge my millenial ambition with some good old-fashioned patience and diligence.

Monday, October 31, 2011

This is a $%*&ing Travesty.



My attempt to share with note the Google Reader blog post telling me that sharing/sharing with notes has been disabled... Kind of meta, but i know there are a select few who will understand this.

I.HATE.THIS.

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

TV: the new season!

What I've learned from watching the Emmys, the season finale of Louie, the roast of Charlie Sheen, Charlie Sheen on Leno, 2 Broke Girls, 2 and a Half Men, Dancing with the Stars, The Playboy Club, WWE Wrestling, the Republican National Debate:

You can't say midget or Down's Syndrome on TV.

You can say "I want to show you my pussy" on cable television. You can make fun of someone's friend for dying or make fun of a cherished American hero for having Parkinson's disease. You can receive a standing ovation for killing people (not just people, the most people). You can be a viable candidate to lead the free world and pull us out of an economic depression without believing in science. You can show people going totally wackadoo for months, then basically groveling to the American public for forgiveness with the most awkward television appearances in history. You can create a new genre based on nostalgia for a time when sexual harrassment was okay. You can keep Entourage going for eight seasons. You can show NANCY GRACE DANCING BALLROOM.

You can't say midget.

Oh, what a world we live in.

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

An earthquake, apparently.

From an e-mail I sent to my high school friends:

Apparently, my entire building shook (I was on the 33rd floor) but I was on a conference call and did not notice at all. When I got off (the call, not from earthquake-induced orgasm), I called Jake to see if he wanted to get lunch and he was like "Are you calling about the earthquake?" at which point I looked around and noticed that literally everyone from my floor was gone. I went downstairs and everyone on my floor had been evacauted and they were all like "Oh, I guess we should have told you that we were leaving."

The same thing happened to me when I was a freshman in college and there was a fire drill that I slept through. Why is everyone so okay leaving me to die? Is it because they know I'm a strong, independent woman who can fend for herself? I think so...

Monday, August 8, 2011

Thank God for these videos with messages!


Marlo Thomas is the original Gaga

According to Perez Hilton , the MTV VMAs will feature a new category: Best Video With A Message. Here are the nominees:

P!nk – F****** Perfect - P!nk lets out a rally cry of reassurance for anyone who’s ever felt less than perfect.

Lady Gaga – Born This Way - Mother Monster gives birth to a world free from prejudice, judgment and self-doubt.

Katy Perry – Firework - The California Gurl celebrates the spark and originality in all of us.

Eminem feat. Rihanna – Love The Way You Lie - Em and Rih Rih illuminate the pain and peril of domestic violence.

Rise Against – Make it Stop (September’s Children) - Rise Against reminds LGBT teens pushed to the edge that “It Gets Better.”

Taylor Swift – Mean - Taylor Swift cautions negative naysayers that being mean gets you nowhere.

Okay, is it just me or are they stretching here? Let's go back in time and look at some of the videos that could have made it into this category had they only introduced this category a little earlier:


1989: Madonna- Like a Prayer-- Promoting prayer in schools! Also interracial dating... It doesn't matter if she's white and he's a wooden black Jesus if they love each other!

1992: Nirvana- Smells Like Teen Spirit-- Encouraging effective deodorant use in teens

1995: TLC- Waterfalls-- AIDS, drug-dealing in front of your mom, believing in yourself, erm... This song was a little all-over-the-place, but the takeaway is something like don't go after your dreams?

1998: Madonna- Ray of Light: Encouraging the use of solar power

2001: Britney Spears-- I'm a Slave for You-- Abolishing slavery

2004: Outkast- Hey Ya!-- Racial equality between Beyonces and Lucy Lius (and baby dolls)

2005: Green Day- Boulevard of Broken Dreams-- Cleaning up our nation's highways

2007: Rihanna- Umbrella-- Sharing is caring. Also acid rain.

2008: Katy Perry- I Kissed a Girl- Encouraging sexual exploration and polyamory among young girls



Who says the era of the protest song is over?

Friday, August 5, 2011

Adventures in Sleeping and Not Sleeping



I came home to find Jake asleep. His laptop was still open on the dining room table. The TV was still on, tuned to Anderson Cooper, on mute. And every 10 minutes, his cell phone alarm would go off and he would roll over, murmur and then shut it off. At a certain point in one of those moments between alarm and snooze, he became aware I'd come home and assured me that he was only taking a nap. It was already 11pm. Perhaps we had a night of midnight frolicking ahead of us, but more likely, the nap would become the sleep. I convinced him that there was no point in getting up and back he went to sleep.

I have always had a hard time with sleep. I like to think of it as a state of inertia. When I am awake, I have a hard time shifting to sleep. And when I am asleep, I can sleep like the dead until far into the afternoon. I have lain awake, frantically trying to calm my body, until 5am, rising every so often for warm milk, peanut butter, yoga and Google searches of what cures insomnia. And I have slept through exams, appointments, work, rehearsals, my freshman-year Japanese midterm... slipping back into consciousness, rolling over and checking the clock and being shocked to find it is hours after I was supposed to wake up. How startling to hit snooze once... twice... and then find that it is suddenly and alarmingly (pun intended) three in the afternoon.

Besides these frantic moments, I have visceral memories of trying desperately to stay awake, of being mad at myself for falling asleep or staying asleep. Last nights of vacation, last nights before the end of college, last nights with best friends or boyfriends or family members where you knew you had to say goodbye in the morning... I would angrily try to convince my body that these moments of happiness were worth it but my body disagreed. My body let me sleep and in the morning, when the time I had thought we had was gone, I would feel betrayed by my own inner clock. What does it matter now, whether I slept at midnight or 2 or 4? In the long run, why do I still remember those moments as defeat at my own hand? Time would pass regardless. Staying awake wouldn't have stopped the morning from coming... although I guess I wouldn't know, since I always fell asleep before I could find out.

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Celebrities who aren't in New Year's Eve

The new trailer for Garry Marshall's romantic comedy clusterfuck New Year's Eve boasts such a wide range of celebrities.

Let's take a look at who didn't make the cut:

-Joe the Plumber
-the kid who plays Minkus on Boy Meets World
-Gloria Steinem
-Abe Vigoda
-Seth MacFarlane
-Penny Marshall
-J.C. Penney
-Marshall Mathers
-Wilson the volleyball
-Patrick Duffy
-Charlie Sheen
-Angela Lansbury
-the dog from Marley & Me
-Sinbad
-Janet Reno
-the Swedish Chef
-Boutros Boutros-Ghali
-Baby Spice
-Kathy Ireland
-Kathy Najimy
-the NY State Lotto guy
-the Old Spice guy
-Tay Zonday
-the Real Housewives of New Jersey
-those gay puppets from Avenue Q
-a hand grenade (this one would have much improved the movie)

Also, it is just me or does Hector Elizondo just get cast when they can't get Stanley Tucci? Because Lovely Bones would have been a very different movie with Hector Elizondo.

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

dogs and cats and dogs and cats



this reminds me of college for 3 reasons:
a) you hear a capella beatboxing about 75 times more in college than in the real world
b) it was sent to me by the VAJMATAJ list. post-college, you get far fewer funny video chains. this, i think, is a travesty.
c) the word axolotl will always make me think of Children of Eden and specifically, Matt Stone in Children of Eden.

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

What is Zumba?: A Cynic's Guide to Samb-ercizing



Lately, despite the fact that I am not one for diet/exercise trends, I've taken up Zumba. Zumba-- like its predecessors yoga, sushi, tae bo, and bahn mi-- has made its way from foreign lands straight to the luxurious Murray Hill Crunch gym. If you're wondering what the next of these trends will be, just imagine that Sex and the City were still on the air, picture what the girls are doing while talking about sex, and that's the new fad. My money's on either Ethiopian food or Thai sex trafficking. Cultural appropriation has never looked so chic.

For those not in the know, Zumba is a mix of Latin dance and jazzercise. Every class is populated by 2 thick black girls who look good doing the moves and 40 skinny white girls who don't. The instructor is neither of these. Instead she is that type of ethnically ambiguous girl who manages to be both skinny and have an ass. She has a wild mane of bouncy curls that she wears out, despite the fact that the rest of the class has opted for the high ponytail with optional sweatband and non-optional buckets of sweat. She is the kind of girl who moonlights as a dancer at bar mitzvahs, the only straight girl at a gay bar, and the only kind of person who looks reasonable wearing booty shorts in public. She was probably on Zoom or Kids Incorporated when she was a kid. She has the energy of a cruise ship director and somehow manages to make the hair toss, wide mouth smile, and enthusiastic "Woo!" seem natural.

(In case you don't believe me that this is a type, I can think of exactly one girl from high school and one girl from college who is literally this to a T. If you went to high school or college with me, you probably know them too. They are both stunningly beautiful and making a career acting now, so don't feel bad for them. As far as I know, neither of them has resorted to teaching Zumba or leading dances at bar mitzvahs.)



This is literally the first picture in the Google image search of Zumba teacher. Now do you believe me?

Previous to Zumba, I had taken exactly two classes at Crunch-- yoga and lyrical dance. And despite the fact that I've been dancing since I was 5 and doing yoga since high school, both classes were outrageously difficult for me. I mean, I am by no means great at either of them anymore. But everyone else in them seemed like they were professional yogis/lyrical dancers. So I sucked up the 60 bucks a month and didn't set foot in Crunch for like 3 months. (Meanwhile, it took me like a year to get Netflix Instant and when I finally do, they hike the em-effing prices.)

But somehow Zumba actually adheres to Crunch's otherwise bullshit guarantee of "No judgments." Everyone is moving to crazy music, shaking their hips, potentially thinking how great these moves are going to look on the weekend after 3 G&T&roofies (It is Murray Hill, after all). The teacher doesn't even explain any of the moves-- You're just supposed to follow what she's doing as close as possible. Nobody's body is moving like the teacher's, but nobody cares. There are "Indian" songs, "belly dancing" songs, "Mexican folk" songs, none of which really seem authentic -- mostly because they're all remixed with Pitbull-- but nobody cares. I hate big groups of skinny blonde girls and tend to avoid places where I'm surrounded by them (Pinkberry, sorority houses, Blockheads on a Friday night), but somehow I don't care. Zumba is the closest I've come to CityStep post-college, "crazy signs" post-Club Med. I am a convert. Somehow I have become the kind of girl who does Zumba and I freaking love it. No judgments.

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Hometown hero Jesse Popp




I don't mean to get all high school theatre-y on you, but I have never seen the comedy community rally behind someone as hard as they did around Jesse Popp this past week-- his last week in New York before heading to sunny LA to become a Conan writer. Watching a room full of extremely talented comedians request an encore and then shout out their favorite of Jesse's bits at Beauty Bar this past Sunday brought a tear to my eye and made me un-cynical for a good 24 hours.

Jokes.com
Jesse Popp - Specific Horoscopes
comedians.comedycentral.com
JokesJoke of the DayFunny Jokes

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

My dream hosts for the 2011-2012 SNL season

1. Mila Kunis

Now that she's a genuine movie star and sex symbol, it's definitely time for her to host. She seems like the kind of chill-ass girl who can knock a few back and hang with the boys.

2. Jim Parsons

He's racked up an Emmy and a Golden Globe for his work as Sheldon on The Big Bang Theory and is now acting on Broadway in The Normal Heart. I'd love to see him break out of his Sheldon mold on SNL.

3. Jason Segel

Always endearing and lovable, he was the saving grace to the otherwise uneven Bad Teacher, and manages to balance writing/acting in films with his regular gig on How I Met Your Mother. With his Muppet movie slated for release November 2011, he's a shoo-in. Bring out the puppets and the full-frontal nudity! (hopefully not in the same sketch)

4. Toni Collette

In United States of Tara, this Aussie transforms herself into a rambunctious teenager, a '50s housewife and a gruff trucker. No doubt she's got a few more characters and impersonations up her sleeve.

5. Jimmy Fallon

He's refined his voice on Late Night and made a couple of guest appearances in the past couple seasons of SNL, but has never returned as host. Break out the guitar! Bring back Jarrett's room! Let him re-visit the Update desk!

6. Chelsea Handler

She may not be for everyone, but she's a major force in comedy and the only female talk show host in late night. With an upcoming sitcom on NBC and a fourth book out now, this could be the year of Chelsea.

8. Ellie Kemper & Mindy Kaling

This one's a long shot, but with Kemper's role in Bridesmaids this summer and Kaling's book Is Everyone Hanging Out Without Me? coming out in the fall, these Office girls could be a powerhouse hosting team. Plus, Subtle Sexuality would make a great musical guest!

9. Kristen Bell

Since Veronica Mars wrapped, Bell has chosen projects that veered toward raunchy, nerdy and/or offbeat. She's proved she can hold her own comedically in Forgetting Sarah Marshall and as a recurring guest on Starz' Party Down. I'd love to see her impersonate Christina Aguilera in a parody of The Voice.

10. Andrew Garfield

This Hollywood newcomer impressed in The Social Network and will star as Spiderman in 2012. Break out the Bono jokes!

11. Aziz Ansari

Since his days at UCB, Aziz is the breakout comedy star of the last couple years. From hosting the MTV Movie Awards to appearing on the cover of Paper magazine, the 28-year-old has shown off his many talents. While he's there, maybe Tom Haverford will invest in one of Stefan's hot nightclubs!

12. Joel McHale

The Community star still does double duty as host of The Soup. Whether he's reacting to Abed's weirdness or the freakshow that is reality TV, he plays a great straight man. Plop him down in the french-kissing family or Vinny Vedici's talk show for maximum hilarity.

13. Sarah Silverman

Silverman got her start on SNL, writing alongside comics Dave Attell and Jay Mohr. Now that she's a star, she could return home to do some of the raunchier material that wouldn't have flown in the '90s.

14. Stephen Colbert

The veteran improviser and Second City alum once provided the voice of Ace in the Ambiguously Gay Duo cartoons. He's quick on his feet, disappears into a character, and has a huge following. The only thing stopping him is the thin line between the actor Stephen Colbert and the character Stephen Colbert. But the meta aspect of having an actor who's always in character could prove hilarious. It worked for Galifianakis, right?

Who are your top picks?

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Boo me off the stage!!!



The Boo Off is a time-honored Hot Soup tradition in which a comedian or regular schmo attempts to get boo-ed off the stage. Here's me doing it on my birthday this year.

Monday, July 4, 2011

Nostalgia is tricky.


Things it’s cool to be nostalgic about:


Salem from Sabrina the Teenage Witch
Jackee
Wilson Phillips’ Hold On
Face from Nickelodeon
Ferris Bueller’s Day Off
Goodburger
Twin Peaks
Angelfire web pages

Thing it’s passe to be nostalgic about:
The Chip ‘n’ Dales theme song
Legends of the Hidden Temple
Journey’s Don’t Stop Believing
the Smurfs
pogs
Betty White
when the Beach Boys were on Full House
the Electric Slide
Disney Adventures magazine

Things it’s not cool yet to be nostalgic about:
Game of Thrones
pre-puberty Justin Bieber (aka pre-pube-Bieb)
the Industrial Revolution
Anthony Weiner’s dick pics
the Menendez brothers
Kath & Kim
Garfield 2: A Tale of Two Kitties
Donald Trump’s presidential campaign
the Arcade Fire
Chainmail
Criminal Minds

I come back to this article when I’m losing perspective.

“There are dreams and there are career plans. They are not the same. Some dreams are compensatory: visions that we retreat to in times of stress, like blankies for infants, things that comfort us and tell us what we need to be told. The dream of being a famous writer can be like that: a dream of infantile power and attention that disguises the more immediate need — for safety, self-love, serenity, peace in our hearts.
But the work, that is another thing. The real work is staggering; the real work is work. It is not dream. It is pushing against the wall; it is hearing what we do not want to hear; it is doing the numbers; it is learning the new terms as they come along; it is sitting through evaluations and self-evaluations. It is an eternal object lesson in our powerlessness and our smallness. The real work is grinding and slow.

…When seen from afar, like a rainbow, the dream is radiant and seductive; but when you are in it, there is just a lot of steam. There are men moving scenery, huffing and puffing. It is the factory of the dream.

…Remember: You are closer to your dream than ever before. You are getting to it. The closer you get to it, the less it will seem like a dream, and the more it will seem like a job.”

Cary Tennis’ advice on working towards your dreams

Thursday, April 14, 2011

lessons in giving advice where you're not wanted

My mother has always had a strong sense of justice and disdain for incompetent or morally ambiguous authority figures, and she bestowed these on me to the point where I was an extremely argumentative 5-year-old with a precociously high level of self-righteousness. Recently, my mom told me of two experiences where her desire to help people/correct wrongs compelled her to speak up. In both instances, she felt that she observed something that went against what she believed to be morally and ethically correct and she said something.

We are told by the MTA/NYC/Bloomberg: "If you see something, say something." I know they're not talking about little trifling annoyances, but still, no matter what, more often than not, nobody says anything. When you see something wrong, from the mundane (someone cutting a line for the ATM) to the more serious (a mother hitting her kids on the sidewalk), most people's sense of societal decency and desire to keep the peace keeps them from expressing their feelings. Or maybe they were just taught differently-- that no matter what your parents taught you, we live in a free country and it's better to let some stupid people break the rules you were taught than to cause a big commotion. Or maybe they're just afraid of getting hit/yelled at/murdered by the crazy people doing stuff they disagree with. They might go home and blog about it or mumble to themselves, but rarely will they speak up. Even if there's a strong chance you're going to be helping some people (e.g. an old lady gets on the bus and a group of kids are taking up 12 seats in the front with their backpacks), most of the time, we still don't say anything. The problem for me is that my mom and I both always believe we're right, when sometimes wrong/right isn't so black and white. Who are we to be the societal justice and morality crusaders of New York City?

For example, and this is the dumbest example ever, now that I'm working in Times Square, I'm accosted by those people who want me to go to comedy shows all the time. And when I see tourists being tricked into them, I want to go up to the tourists and say, "Don't listen to these people. This is the worst comedy New York City has to offer. Come with me. I will take you to a land of amazingly talented young people who will do comedy for you FOR FREE and you can drink CHEAP BEER, fewer than two beers if you want, and you won't be teased by 50-year-old Staten Island MCs who make fun of your haircut and accent." And then I would lead them away like the Pied Piper of NY comedy that I believe myself to be. But instead, i just let them go to the crappy comedy shows. Not because I am scared of getting accosted or compelled by my desire for everyone to live their lives, but rather because I am just trying to get to work and it is hard enough to carry 3 bags and my iced coffee and get through the crowd with a book in my hand, so I can read while walking. And also, they probably wouldn't be very good audience members anyway. I mean, look at their haircuts and accents.

Thursday, April 7, 2011

"Here’s to reveling in uncomfortableness until it becomes a tool to expose inanity. Here’s to forcing visceral meaning into the monotony of the everyday. Here’s to the painful disruption of complacency. Here’s to awkward endings."
-Matthew Wollin, The Awl

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Comedy is a community. Other comics are your resource. Comics who are on your level -- that's important. A lot of comics are restless -- they want to network with the pros who they perceive as 'one level up' from them. Those guys can't help you much. It's your peers that will help you. Forget the dog-eat-dog stuff; like it's just you and your jokes against the world. That used to work, but not anymore. Make friends with people who make you laugh, produce shows together, build an audience together. Don't worry about trying to climb your way up the comedy scene, just hold hands with your friends and you'll all rise up like a balloon, laughing along the way.


-Tom Shillue, on what advice he'd give to aspiring comedians
http://www.thecomicscomic.com/2011/04/meet-me-in-new-york-tom-shillue.html