« January 2004 | Main | March 2004 »
February 27, 2004
Music of the Orient
We had a rehearsal for Cinema 2.0 last night and Ben Taylor, our musical director, brought along his new toy -- his new iBook with GarageBand and USB keyboard. It sounds great! Ben, with Todd Leibov on lap steel guitar, will be creating an entirely improvised soundtrack for our improvised interpretation of Hero's Blood. Is it cheating that Ben went and found some loops with Asian drumming? Nope, just preparedness, I say. Preparedness and cool.
Posted by Fuzzy at 2:49 PM
February 24, 2004
Your darkest desires realized
Oh, I can see what you're dreaming of... you want... you desire... MP3s of news satire radio segments I did 4 years ago. And so you shall have them.
Posted by Fuzzy at 10:13 PM | Comments (1)
Only 9 months behind
I've finally put up screen grabs of my fourth tattoo that I got as part of the Neutrino/FuzzyCo joint show back in, umm... May. 2003.
For historical reference: one, two and three.
Posted by Fuzzy at 8:56 PM
Hero's Blood
Oh, what a difference expectations make. Hero's Blood is a terrible Kung Fu movie, largely because there's very little Kung Fu in it (there's a little wrestling and some sword fighting). Really, it's a Chinese Historical Drama (and not a great one), but there's not a big market in the U.S. for CHDs, so it gets marketed as a Kung Fu movie -- the DVD even has a bonus "Art of Kung Fu Biography" (a short, written history of Kung Fu that scrolls quickly over a picture of Bruce Lee).
And so... it's a perfect Cinema 2.0 movie. I'll be sitting in with the cast again this month as we attempt to make (non)sense of this sprawling mess of a movie. Saturday, Midnight, at the Lake Shore Theater.
Posted by Fuzzy at 4:36 PM
Bare... writes?
Shaun and I have been doing improv as Bare for four years now, and we have plenty of improv shows coming up, both in Chicago and around the country. But for the last year or so Shaun has been talking about Bare doing a sketch show. As part of pushing that along, we had our first meeting tonight with our new writing coach, Phillip Mottaz of Superpunk.
I haven't really written any sketch since the days of The Outliers. Shaun writes sketches all the time for CCC, but they tend to be so finely-tuned for a specific corporate environment that they're not really suitable for anything else. So I think we both have some work to do.
Another part of pushing the sketch show along is... booking shows. So Shaun has signed us to do a sketch slot at "Sunday Setlist" at Frankie J's on Sunday, April 4. Eek.
Posted by Fuzzy at 1:18 AM
Damnation Crawl
My friend Dan Izzo has a new show opening soon called The Damnation Game. This last Sunday the cast went out in costume to do a promotional pub crawl and at Dan's request I tagged along to take pictures.
P.S. I loooove photo boothes, but the one at Schubas is a rip-off -- I fed it money for 4 strips, but only two came out and one of those was under-developed. Boo.
Posted by Fuzzy at 12:15 AM | Comments (1)
February 16, 2004
DWG inches closer
Matt sends proof that Dancing With Gaia has been duplicated and is inching its way towards my mailbox:
UPDATE: I've got it! I've got it!
Posted by Fuzzy at 12:00 PM | Comments (2)
February 13, 2004
Scotto in the News
My friend, and fellow National Velveeta alum, Scott Starkey, is in the Lafayette Journal & Courier with a story about the publication of his first game, Mother Lode of Sticky Gulch.
Update: The Purdue Exponent got in the act, too, with an article about Scotto's new game. In delightful Exponent fashion, the reporter just made some of the stuff up (e.g. Scotto was inspired by German games, but hasn't ever been there).
Posted by Fuzzy at 10:00 AM
February 12, 2004
Just in case you're gonna be in Aspen...
Neutrino, the New York group that created the Neutrino Video Projects (a version of which FuzzyCo performs in Chicago as Neutrino Project 30,000) will be appearing at the HBO's US Comedy Arts Festival in Aspen in March. I've mentioned this before, but I've just been informed of their show times:
In Salon 2 of the Grand Ballroom at the St. Regis Hotel in Aspen, CO
Wednesday, March 3, 9:00 pm
Thursday, March 4, 8:30 pm
Friday, March 5, 4:30 pm
Posted by Fuzzy at 5:29 PM
February 11, 2004
Schadenfreude -- One Night Only
(Little cough, lean in a little too close) Have I mentioned that I'm the executive producer of the Around Midnite Series? OK, I don't really do that much (no, really, I don't really do that much).
When we moved the AMS over to the Lakeshore Theater, we lost one of the shows that made up part of the series. Rather than try and find a new show that could commit to once-a-month performances from January to May, I decided to fill the slot with 5 different groups and call the slot "Wild Card." The first Wild Card was WNEP's Angry White Guy last month. This month, on Saturday, February 21 (at, duh, midnight) we have Chicago's own Schadenfreude.
Schadenfreude is one of Chicago's best sketch comedy groups and this marks one of their rare live appearances since they began airing their radio show on WBEZ (91.5 FM). And it's only $5.
(This weekend at the AMS is The Sickest F***in' Stories I Ever Heard, in a special all-female Valentine's Day edition.)
Posted by Fuzzy at 5:16 PM | Comments (0)
February 9, 2004
The where-I'm-living (and where-I'm-not) story
So... I moved last week. But not in the manner I would have liked nor, no offense to George et al, to the kind of place I was hoping. How rushed was this move? I don't have any pictures of the move. If you know me, think about that for a second. I have photos of everything.
I moved to Chicago 4 1/2 years ago, and I've lived in the same place on Kenmore the whole time, with a succession of roommates. The first four years my landlord was a nice, but crazy (the numerology! those gold balls on the fence! the light fixture with "diameter"!), German man named Bernd.
We were on very friendly terms, but every April he was very formal about getting me to sign a lease for the next year. This year, however, he never mentioned it. I wondered what was up, but I didn't bring it up when I saw him, because Shaun and I were looking at buying a place and being lease-less gave us the most flexibility about moving dates, etc. In September we even found a place and signed a contract, but the seller pulled out at the last minute because her Belgian work visa wasn't coming through.
Soon after that we found out why Bernd didn't bother getting a lease from us -- he had sold the building, as well as the two connected buildings (18 apartments altogether) to Venter & Associates. We received a letter from Bernd telling us where to send our rent checks and the building super told us that the sale meant "no change" for anyone. But fairly quickly, the other residents (including that super) began moving out and then workers started showing up and gutting the empty apartments.
At this point it was obvious that we were going to have to move out sooner or later, but we were still looking for the perfect place to move to, and based on our sketchy understanding of Chicago housing law we were pretty sure that even without a lease the landlord would need to give us 30-days notice to move out, so we figured, you know, why not wait until we got that notice and then we'd have 30 days to plan, pack, and move.
Over the last few months, all of the other residents had moved out except for us and two new Romanian guys on the first floor of our building, who were relations or acquaintances (or something) of the landlord, who were acting as caretakers (or something). (Radu and Kris were nice guys, but there was a small language barrier, and little was ever explained to us.) There were a few small problems with the heat (too hot because the system was trying to heat up the other empty, doorless apartments) and the water (only hot water for a few weeks, only cold water for a few days) but everything kept getting fixed. And the work on the other buildings kept stopping because they hadn't secured any permits to do the work, so the police kept stopping by to shut them down (usually leaving an extra-dangerous mess in the back parkign lot.)
On an expedition to the basement of the adjoining building, where the hot water heater is, we did discover a flood of water from, evidently, an over-enthusiastic sledge-hammerer. I began to have paranoid fantasies that the same could happen to our apartment, because they were beginning to gut the third floor apartment above us.
Two weeks ago, on a rather cold Friday night, the water pipes coming into the buildings froze. And since radiator heat needs water, the heat then turned off. Radu told us that the landlord "didn't care" and tried to fix the problem himself with a blowtorch and that heating tape. Over the weekend we tried to contact the landlord ourselves, but only got voicemail at his office. We went out and got jugs of water, and a heater for the living room, and hunkered down (I had numerous kind offers of couches and spare rooms, but I had some sort of stubborn impulse to not be driven from my home.)
On Monday morning we contacted our Alderman, whose staff was very helpful and got right on the case. They were evidently able to contact someone, because Monday night some guys came and began banging around down in the basement. Eventually, late Monday night, the water and then the heat came on. It was still very cold in the apartment, so I huddled under my quilts in the living room and went to bed to the sound of clanking radiator pipes.
When I woke up in the morning, the house was a reasonable temperature, so I was in a good mood until I walked to the back of the apartment and discovered that in Shaun's room a Horrible Thing had happened. For some time there had been a small leak in the radiator in Shaun's room, but since the heat never came on full force for more than an hour or so, he had been living with it by draping a towel over the pipe and occasionally opening the window. When the heat had run continously all night, the steam had also spewed all night. When the steam hit the still-cold air, it had condensed causing it to, in effect, rain in Shaun's room all night. Everything exposed was covered with water and the carpet was soaked.
I called Shaun and we decided that we had to move right away. If we got out by that weekend, we wouldn't be liable for February rent and could legitimately ask for the security deposit back. So instead of 30 days we had 6.
Just to raise the bar a bit, I got food poisoning on Wednesday and spent Thursday sleeping on the couch. I think I worked up the energy to pack one box that day.
The rest of the weekend is a blur of U-Hauls and packing and carting boxes to-and-fro and the incredible helpfuness of Amy, Dan, Jin, Kate, Homer, Megan, and Sean.
Moving highlights:
- Sledge-hammering my old entertainment center to get it out of the apartment without having to move it all at once
- Throwing bottles of condiments at the wall of the adjoining building (I swear, the ground was already covered with broken glass -- I'm sure we made no difference to the safety of the place)
- Collapsing into sleep on Saturday night and waking up a few hours later with a terrible stutter
- Shaun wearing the skin on his hands down to raw flesh carrying boxes
- Listening to Amy, Dan, Jin, Kate, Homer, Megan, Sean and Shaun each note how much stuff I have
- Shaun's room brcoming more and more swamp-like as the week went on
- The UHaul battery dying on Monday morning, and then starting just fine later in the afternoon
- Finishing
And finish we did. Monday night Dan and I put the last UHaul load into the storage space I'd rented (Dan is the Storage Stacking Master). I have a room in George Eckart's apartment and Shaun is shacking up with Beth. The cats are at Beth's and it's dumb, but I miss them. We're looking to move... somewhere... soonish.
Posted by Fuzzy at 5:30 PM | Comments (1)
February 6, 2004
Happy Birthday, me
The Village Tap has a photobooth -- an unexpected birthday bonus.
Posted by Fuzzy at 11:23 AM | Comments (1)