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Entries from August 1, 2010 - August 31, 2010

Tuesday Aug 31 2010 Back-to-School Checklists of the Stars

Tuesday, August 31, 2010 at 5:44PM By: Meghan O'Keefe

Summer’s over, and it’s time for tweens and teens to head back to school. However, some back-to-school checklists are a little bit different than the typical plaid skirts, number two pencils and box of tissues that most kids have. Here’s a look at what back-to-school means for some of the most famous students in the world:

Taylor Momsen, Gossip Girl starlet & front-woman for The Pretty Reckless

Required Reading: Dirty Blonde: The Diaries of Courtney Love, by Courtney Love

Class Uniform: Julia Roberts' outfit from Pretty Woman. No, not the pretty one. The hooker one.

School Supplies: Kohl Eyeliner, Razor Blades, a Tetanus Shot

A Box of Tissues? Nope. Blowing your nose is so not rock & roll.

Glen, the creepy kid from Mad Men

Required Reading: In Cold Blood, by Truman Capote

Class Uniform: 1960's Tree Farm chic

School Supplies: Box Cutters, a Skeleton Key, a Telescope to Spy on Sally Draper

A Box of Tissues? Nope. His kind of sick can't be helped with Puffs Plus with Aloe.

The Teen Moms from Teen Mom

Required Reading: Rosemary's Baby, by Ira Levin

Class Uniform: Anything that is sexy that also has an elastic waistband.

School Supplies: Diaper Bag, Breast Pump, Diaphragm

A Box of Tissues? Yep. There's going to be a lot of crying in these girls' lives, and most of it won't be coming from their babies.

Bindi the Jungle Girl, the Crocodile Hunter's Daughter

Required Reading: Cujo, by Stephen King

Class Uniform: Safari hat and khaki romper

School Supplies: Butterfly Net, Tranquilizer Darts, Taser

A Box of Tissues? Yep. Only completely recycled and biodegradable.

Justin Bieber, of Justin Bieber fame

Required Reading: The Picture of Dorian Gray, by Oscar Wilde

Class Uniform: Oversized sweatshirt, backwards baseball cap and Dorothy Hamill hair

School Supplies: Tricked Out Tour Bus, Smooth Panty Dropping Harmonies, Appointment for Castrato Operation

A Box of Tissues? Yep. For all the puddles of drool everywhere he goes.

The Apiary | 2 Comments | 14 References tagged Back-to-School in Humor Tuesday Aug 31 2010 September is National Sketch Writing Month Again

Tuesday, August 31, 2010 at 12:44PM I know most of you are focusing intensely on your onion dicing technique for Salsa Slam, but there's another big event happening in September that will require most or all of your free time: it's the return of National Sketch Writing Month.

> National Sketch Writing Month, or NaSkeWriMo for short, came about because of a message board discussion about finding the motivation to write. We decided to borrow the idea behind National Novel Writing Month and declare September to be a month for writing 30 sketches in 30 days.

I asked Ben Ragheb, who co-founded NaSkeWriMo with Michelle Dobrawsky, if he had any words of encouragement for writers who are thinking about doing it and he said, "Just try! I'm surprised by the number of people who hem and haw about whether or not to even to try to do it this year. There's no punishment for writing less than thirty sketches. And you get the benefit of having written some number."

He added, "The first year we did this, I figured everyone would want to keep their sketches private, so the website only provided a way to count how many you wrote. But a lot of people asked about posting the sketches online so last year I added an option to post the title and/or a link to the sketch itself and I think it made the whole month a lot more fun. This year should be interesting."

So start drafting a plan of attack and get sketchin'. Feel free to send us one of your best ones to share here.

The Apiary | 1 Comment | 1 Reference tagged NaSkeWriMo , National Sketch Writing Month in Sketch Tuesday Aug 31 2010 Pee Wee on the Foil Ball that is His Legacy

Tuesday, August 31, 2010 at 11:47AM Pee-wee Herman Show set | Photo: S.W. Johnson "It may sound corny and stupid, but I had an opportunity to come in under the radar and do something important. Sesame Street was already on, but it was very corporate in a certain way, and I just felt I had this opportunity to be entertaining, less 'we're going to learn the letter Q today.' They had that covered. I was going to be lighter and more specific, more like: All your friends got invited to a party, and you didn't. I was so lucky--I was presented with such an opportunity. And if I can pat myself a teeny-tiny amount on the back, I delivered. I was in a position to shape a certain percentage of kids who watched, teach them things that I think are important in life, like the golden rule, and wrap it up in colorful eye candy and make it seem like fun. It would be hard to do that at all today--and I got to do it for five years. And not only that, I can feel the effects still. I'm meeting people who say they are an artist because of my show. It's staggering. People say, 'Do you have any idea what a difference you made?' No, but I’m starting to." -- Paul Reubens in a recent interview with New York Magazine

RELATED

* The Pee Wee Herman Show Announces its Broadway Cast

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* S.W. Johnson's full photo set

The Apiary | Post a Comment | 1 Reference tagged Paul Reubens , Pee Wee Herman in Interviews Monday Aug 30 2010 Ask For It By Name: Zach Woods for Starburst

Monday, August 30, 2010 at 11:17AM

I remember lunchroom arguments about which was better: Starburst or Mamba. The answer: Neither -- they're both good. Just like this ad featuring an Asian Scotsman and a zombie-fied Zach Woods (The Stepfathers, The Office). Hm. I just watched this ad again. I take it back. Starburst is better. If only because they pick ad agencies that know how to stretch concepts, but not just for the sake of stretching. Cases in point, these two separate ads featuring area comedians Matt Oberg and Rick Younger and Kristen Schaal from a while back.

keithhuang | 4 Comments | 1 Reference tagged Kristen Schaal , Matt Oberg , Rick Younger , Starburst , Zach Woods in Ask For It By Name Friday Aug 27 2010 Low Key

Friday, August 27, 2010 at 7:12PM

Low Key is created by Andy Ross.

The Apiary | 1 Comment | 1 Reference tagged Zombee , andy ross in Low Key Friday Aug 27 2010 THE HONEY SHOT - LOVE CAN SUCK A DICK ... AND SO CAN I

Friday, August 27, 2010 at 9:00AM Leslie Meisel and Megan Neuringer | Photo: Ari Scott

* THE PLUG: Don't miss "Love Can Suck a Dick ... and So Can I," starring Leslie Meisel and featuring Megan Neuringer, happening TONIGHT @ 7:30PM at The UCBT-NY | $10

Wanna plug? E-mail me photo & credit. And join our flickr group. Send 10 days in advance.

keithhuang | Post a Comment | 9 References tagged Leslie Meisl , Megan Neuringer , UCBT-NY in Photos Thursday Aug 26 2010 Is Taran Killam Headed to SNL?

Thursday, August 26, 2010 at 1:45PM With the shocking news out today that Will Forte has left the cast of SNL, it begs the question: WHO'S JOINING SNL? I've been sleuthing out a rumor that someone from The Groundlings got cast as a featured player. And one name that's floated past The Apiary's news desk is Taran Killam. Taran currently mans a marquee spot in The Groundlings' Sunday Company, he's done recent stints on Scrubs and How I Met Your Mother and he's also got a season of MAD-TV under his belt. Granted, Taran might not have been hired at all and this could be a wild rumor on the bridge to nowhere, but let's indulge this for a moment. I imagine we'll find out for sure soon enough. Here are some videos featuring Taran: The Apiary | 5 Comments | 16 References tagged SNL , Taran Killam in TV/Film Thursday Aug 26 2010 INSIDE WITH: CHRIS GETHARD

Thursday, August 26, 2010 at 10:00AM Chris Gethard and his Magic Bus of GethTards | Photo: GLK Creative

By: Lucas Hazlett

Chris Gethard is one of the hardest-working men in the New York comedy scene. With a decade of performing and teaching at the Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre under his belt, Gethard has amassed an enviable resume of writing and performing that has led to a starring role in Comedy Central's "Big Lake," a regular spot in the theater’s flagship show, ASSSSCAT 3000, and his own popular variety hour, "The Chris Gethard Show."

This Saturday at midnight at the UCB Theatre, Gethard will host "The Telethon of Shame," a special edition of "The Chris Gethard Show," which he says will be a rare and noble confluence of weirdness, violence and good-hearted intentions. I spoke with Gethard about the telethon, what he champions in his students, and what he would do if he were ever imprisoned.

Most of the interviews you've been doing lately have -- for obvious reasons -- focused primarily on your new Comedy Central show "Big Lake." I would like to focus more on “The Chris Gethard Show." How did this show originate and what do you think it is that's made it so popular?

I think I started in 2007 doing a show called “Magic Box of Stories,” which was true stories from my life. Before that I had been doing a lot of storytelling at ASSSSCAT and “Nights of Our Lives” and that kind of built to the show, and that was the first show where I felt like I had any buzz. That show kind of led to me to doing this bus tour where I took 60 fans of the show all over New Jersey and showed them the sites where the stories took place. It was just this really weird thing to do, and over the years I have done a few weird things. I had done another show where improvisers did stand up, a tournament, and each loser was shot with paint balls. I did another show years ago where I organized a bunch of comedians who didn’t know what they were doing to box each other. So I have always been interested in doing these sort of out of the box things. The whole goal of the show is every month do something no one has seen before and probably won’t see again. And for better or worse, some have been really good, some have failed pretty hard.

With The Stepfathers | Photo: Melissa Gomez As far as why it’s popular, I think it’s just really weird, but we still put a lot of effort and try to make it feel really professional even though it’s strange and bizarre. I think that combination works. There have been so many comedians to come out of the city in the past few years who have gone on to great success and that’s a great thing, but I think it’s maybe made people walk a certain line who are being conscious of playing the game. I think this show is definitely not that. There’s a lot of things in here that could actually probably damage people’s reputations and careers. I think people appreciate seeing something that let’s its guard down.

The theme of the next Chris Gethard Show is “The Telethon of Shame." How did this show come about?

I had a friend who was a co-performer and student of mine and last year he lost a baby. You can imagine it’s one of the hardest things to watch someone go through, I can’t imagine going through it myself. My friend was so strong. There’s a lot of us who are close with him. He’s a big supporter of the March of Dimes now so I thought maybe we could design a show that will raise money and use the popularity of the show toward something more noble than us standing on stage and pissing our pants for a crowd to laugh at.

What we basically came up with as the structure is the show is free and because it’s for charity we’re going to try and stuff [the UCB theatre] full of people. we have a number of comedians who have said I will do a predetermined stunt for x-amount of dollars. I’m going to host the show naked if I can raise $750. My friend Don Fanelli is going to wax his whole body for $1000. Will Hines will smell anything for a dollar. A dude’s going to drink his own pee for $1000. I think people know that if you go to the Chris Gethard Show you’re going to see something crazy and this show you’re going to see more crazy things than ever with the extra bonus of knowing that your money is ultimately going toward something good.

A lot of the people you work with on the show are former students of yours. What do you look for or see in a student that makes you want to work with him/her outside of class?

I’ve taught for six or seven years now at UCB. I would say 99% of my students I really root for and want to see them succeed.

So many people are funny and dedicated as improvisers and what so many of us forget is that at the end of the day, taking all the skills you learn in a class and figuring out how to put your actual honest voice at the forefront of all that, using those skills as a platform for your voice, is a very important thing. We all learn from curriculums and we all learn the skills that different schools set out and those are all useful things that unlock comedy, but I wish we could put a little more priority in saying “now what do you have to say with it?” I see a little too much of people trying to erase what’s unique about them in order to get the skills right and I think they don’t have to be mutually exclusive.

I had a class where [a student] did a whole show for half an hour where he played a foot. He only played a foot. Other people were changing and editing and he managed to just play a foot. It was the weirdest thing and maybe in some ways counterproductive but it’s also I like anyone who thinks like that. If I can become someone who uses the fact that I’m a teacher to sort of encourage and protect a little bit those people who are weirdos then that I think is a pretty noble goal.

Gethard at Harold Night (March 14, 2002) | Photo: B.G. Johnson Are there any experiences you had while an improv student that informed your approach toward working with students and younger/beginning performers now?

I took my level one class just over 10 years ago now and I think one of the major differences I see now is that the stakes were ultimately lower in a way that might have been easier for me to feel like it was okay to take chances because there were less of us getting jobs, less people showing up in commercials, there was just less to screw up. I felt like I found longform and came to NYC and found UCB because there was really no other place where I felt like I fit in at all. Almost every other area of my daily life I felt really weird and out of place. It felt like [at UCB] you could go see shows like “Bogus Sting,” which was this open mic where people would just do the most bizarre stuff and it was like yes, this is a place for that.

I remember taking a bunch of classes with Michael Delaney that were all focused on sort of outside-the-box skills that you don’t normally think of in improv where he’d have us do an entire scene while moving in reverse motion just to sort of think about it in a different way. I also think taking classes with Ian Roberts. Ian was always a champion of whoever the weirdest person in the class was. The fact that I came up and was on my first two teams with [current Stepfathers and frequent ASSSSCAT co-performer] Shannon O’Neill. She’s another person who does really bizarre stuff and if we didn’t have each other I probably wouldn’t be as comfortable doing this stuff. If anything it was just easier to find the other weirdos back then.

According to your bio, you've put your eggs into a lot of baskets, having been a contributing writer and guest performer on a number of noteworthy projects. Which of those opportunities do you hope to have more of in the future? Do you want to write more? Appear on more shows?

I guess the most honest answer is I want the opportunity to do more things that will have the longest lasting effect on my ability to pay my rent consistently for the rest of my life, which I think sounds a little facetious. I hope I’m not trying to sound too much like an artist because I definitely want to pay my rent, but as long as it comes through being creative and comedy I want to make that a priority. I have felt like a failure for the majority of time I’ve been doing this. I have felt like I have not been able to figure it out. I’ve been running head first into a wall and the past few years that’s started to turn around, but I think one thing I look back on -- it’s very stressful and I had so much anxiety -- it’s that I learned there is no option I will ever cut myself off from.

I like asking improvisers/writers what they find funny because it's a great insight for students like me to understand what you're doing on stage and looking for in other comedians. What do you find funny?

I have always found sad people and tragedy funny. One of my favorite movies was always Planes, Trains and Automobiles. John Candy is such a sad sack in that movie. I come from an Irish family where my mom and my aunts used to tell these stories when I was a kid and they were always hilarious and I look back and I’m like those are miserable stories. If you take away all the laughs those are the stories of really rough times. I think I kind of just learned early that to me things that have sort of sadness or desperation or loneliness at their core can easily be converted to laughter. It all goes back to truth in comedy, right? If it seems honest it can make anyone laugh. It goes back to the question you asked me about what do I look for in students, why do I work with certain students and why do I champion certain people: if I see someone who seems to really believe what they’re saying, if it seems to really come from a place where their personal experiences dictated why they’re saying what they’re saying to me, then you can always find the way in which that is funny. I’m always impressed by people who can come up with premises on their feet. I’m always impressed by people who can play these larger than life characters at a drop of a hat, but my personal interests always tend to lean towards “that seems like that person is saying that thing because it relates to something they actually feel or have experienced.”

A running gag at the last ASSSSCAT show was the fact that the backstage area flooded due to rain. How does it make you feel knowing that two hundred people will gladly pack into a supermarket basement that drips shit and floods just to see you and your friends do comedy?

It’s really an honor. I remember when I first started coming to the city sitting in a former strip club to see comedy. The fact that now people will put up with us starting a show by saying “this theater is flooding and we may need to flee” and people stay really means a lot. In spite of how big the improv comedy scene here has gotten, it makes me feel good to realize that it still has this vibe of being like a very underground thing. People have compared UCB to being like CBGBs and to me, as a fan of punk rock music as a kid, that makes me feel good. People see that it’s okay this stuff takes place in this really shitty environment. It’s cool. It’s really cool.

Photo: Justin Purnell Last thing. There’s a famous story about Richard Pryor about how he once defused a perilous situation in jail by making everyone around him laugh. You are a brilliant improviser and a funny storyteller, but it’s also true you have a belt in jiu-jitsu.

A blue belt. The second worst belt.

Second worst belt? That kind of screws up the question a bit, but you’re in jail now and are surrounded by a bunch of roughnecks and you have to defuse the situation. Do you try and make them laugh or do you use your skills in jiu-jitsu?

What you’re describing sounds strikingly like my junior high school experience and I would say my strategy back then remains as it does today: try to make them laugh, but if they’re not in the mood to laugh I’m ready to choke someone out.

* THE PLUG: Don't miss "The Chris Gethard Show: Telethon of Shame," happening SAT, AUG 28 @ MIDNIGHT at The UCBT-NY | FREE (Advance reservations are sold out. There will be a stand-by line for this show).

-- Lucas Hazlett is a comedy geek who improvises with anyone he can. He can be followed at his blog telosandcontext.tumblr.com and can be seen performing with Nobody’s Token in the Soul Glo Project on SEPT 17 @ MIDNIGHT at The UCBT-NY.

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