Friday, March 05, 2010

Six Degrees of Wikipedia's featured article and Kevin Bacon

Every day, Wikipedia has a feature article. And as I've discovered, every day, that article can be linked to Kevin Bacon, with no more than six degrees of separation.

March 3, 2010

  1. Sholes and Glidden typewriter
  2. Civil War
  3. American history
  4. Richard Nixon
  5. Frost/Nixon (film)
  6. Kevin Bacon

March 4, 2010
  1. Kinzua Bridge
  2. Pennsylvania
  3. Philadelphia
  4. Howard Stern
  5. List of Celebrity Guests on the Howard Stern Show
  6. Kevin Bacon

March 5, 2010
  1. Suffock Punch
  2. USSR
  3. Cuba
  4. John F. Kennedy
  5. JFK (film)
  6. Kevin Bacon
March 6, 2010
  1. Battle of the Alamo
  2. Disney
  3. Paramount Pictures
  4. Footloose
  5. Kevin Bacon

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

The Unbearable Being of Lightness

After an 18-day vacation in the Philippines, it’s no surprise that friends and coworkers would expect a white guy like me to come back with a tan. Sorry to disappoint. I may actually have spent less time in the sun than I do at home. Why? It’s hot outside in the Philippines, and I do my best to stay inside as much as possible unless sitting next to a pool under an umbrella. With my shirt on.

To generalize, the people of the Philippines are with me on this. It’s not like the Filipinos were urging me to get into the sun, but for very different reasons.

I’d love to get a tan. Back in high school, when I spent summers outdoors, I had a great looking tan. Those were the days when I’d start in the spring with a good, solid, full-body sunburn to establish my “base tan.” After that, I could stay outside for hours without getting burnt, and often did.

Now, I stay out of the sun because I think ahead. I'm an adult. I plan for my future. Avoiding age spots, deep facial creases and perhaps even more importantly, melanoma, means no tan is a healthy tan.

In the body conscious gay community, this has meant endless snide comments and scornful leers at summer pool parties and Atlantis cruises. But just you wait, bronzed hotties. Wait until we're all 60 and you look like Abe Vigoda. It'll be revenge of the palefaces.

I’ve been using a facial moisturizer with an SPF of 30+ for at least a decade. Though it’s hard to appreciate when I hang around so many Asians, I actually look quite a bit younger than I am. I was tickled to be told this week by a casting director that I was too young looking to play the parent of a high schooler. And I recently had an audition where I was to play a high school guidance counselor. Even I thought I looked too young for the role. And when the part called for me to call a student “son,” I knew I couldn’t pull it off.

The short-term cost is I’m too pale for American standards of male beauty, and certainly gay standards of beauty, but that may be changing too. That dude from Twilight, Robert Pattinson, seems to be giving pale white guys new life, but we’re not there yet. As a woman, Nicole Kidman is admired for her milky white complexion, but as a pale guy, I feel like I should be auditioning for a crystal meth PSA--if only I had fewer teeth.

I knew I might have been overdoing my sun aversion when my doctor ordered a Vitamin D test, and then sent me a coldly worded e-mail that with the results, saying I’d have to start taking a Vitamin D supplement once a day as long as I live. Here I thought I was doing something good for my health, and it turns out I’ve sentenced myself to a daily pill to keep my bones from turning into potato chips. Somehow, I sensed in her e-mail that she relished giving me this news. I imagined a cackling, witchy voice when she scrawled “as long as you live.”

Standards of beauty are entirely cultural, and they can be reversed. For reasons that surely date back to Magellan, many Filipinos are obsessed with looking lighter. I never saw any Filipino news media after the results of Sammy Sosa’s skin lightening treatments came to “light,” but I imagine that he was seen as a role model and Google searches for “Sammy Sosa whitening treatment” must have spiked in the Philippines.

You’d be hard pressed to find a tanning bed or a skin bronzer in Manila, but drug stores and cosmetic counters are teeming with products to lighten skin.

One line of whitening creams is marketed under the name “Placenta” and actually contains bovine placenta. I suppose the theory is that babies come out with such light skin because they’ve been mixing it up with placenta for nine months.

But why use a cream when you can enjoy lighter skin by drinking a healthy lemon drink? Sold in the Philippines is a powdered drink called “Slim n’ White” which contains glutathione which “surely whitens.” Not only does the drink promote “whiter, healthier skin,” it’ll give you youthfulness and stabilize your red blood cells. And I didn’t even know my red blood cells were suffering from instability.

My Filipino partner, Robert, lamentably, fell for the marketing ploy and bought one of the whitening skin creams. There’s no subtlety in the packaging. The front of the package features no fewer than eight words alluding to whiteness or lightness: 1) Whitening + Cream + Powder, 2) SkinWhite, 3) POWERWHITENING, 4) Light beige, 5) Whitens in as fast as 7 days, 6) Whitens continuously, 7) and my favorite, Reveals your Whitest White (a two-fer).

This particular product contains a sunscreen, even though there’s no mention of its sun blocking properties. I had heard on some TV news show that most of these skin whiteners are just sunscreens, so I guess there’s nothing stopping me from using this stuff. At 55 pesos (about $1.20), it’s a heck of a lot cheaper than the Olay Regenerist moisturizer I use daily. (Who is more guilty of falling for slick marketing claims?) I should have brought back a case of the stuff.

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

The World According to CBS Morning News

Bravo to CBS Morning News for having Adam Lambert on after a queasy ABC cancelled his scheduled appearance on Good Morning America.

But just as Adam was pointing out that the media has a double standard when it comes to sexuality, CBS chose to blur out Adam's smooch with what was apparently another man, while showing Madonna and Britney's tongue action in all its glory.

Apparently, this is the world according to CBS Morning News:









But everyone loves a lesbian lip lock. Right Harry?






Saturday, November 21, 2009

Levi Johnston Playgirl photos revealed


Finally, Playgirl has released some Levi Johnston photos that show a little skin. Levi said it would be done tastefully and people would not be disappointed. Well, I don't know how you accomplish both of those goals. So far, I'm disappointed. I don't want "tasteful." I want Levi measuring his erect penis against a hockey stick. I want Levi straddling Todd Palin's snowmobile, hollering, "This is how I rode your daughter!" I want a shot of Levi squatting over a toilet, wiping himself with pages from "Going Rogue." Tasteful? I was hoping for a pictorial directed by John Waters. A Coppertone ad may be as racy as we can hope for.

Levi is my hero. Only he could tweak the sensibilities of the Palins so deftly. I love that he's dishing the Palin dirt little by little. Keep us wanting more. As he reveals that Sarah Palin calls Trig her "retarded baby" he maintains that there's a lot more where that came from. Fifteen minutes extended.

Our man Levi was in New York City last week with Jon Gosselin. The media reported that the elder Jon was giving Levi advice. About what? How to make America hate you? Levi's doing pretty well for himself. If nothing else, it's totally hot that a Alaskan guy who was wrapped up in a fancy suit and forced onstage at the Republican National Convention is now cool with gay men gawking at his nude body, and hangs with our girl, Kathy Griffin.


Thursday, April 30, 2009

I'm in the semifinals in the Great Canadian Laugh Off!



After a super performance at Yuk Yuk's in Toronto, I was just chosen as a semifinalist in the Great Canadian Laugh Off!

The significance of this event cannot be overstated. This is really big for me. Another guy (who is amazing and very polished) and I are moving on from tonight's round to the semifinal night on Saturday.

This competition is made up of 64 comedians from all over the world. Tonight, eight comedians performed for eight minutes each. The field was strong--I was found all of the performances entertaining, and some of them were absolutely brilliant.

In the drawing before the show, I landed the coveted last spot. After seeing so many strong performances, I didn't think I had much of a shot. My attitude was that I would just try to entertain the packed house and enjoy my international debut.

The owner and founder of the entire Canadian Yuk Yuk's chain, Mark Breslin, was at the show, and he took the time to tell me he thought my set was great. Are you getting this? The owner of a chain of 12 comedy clubs all over Canada thinks I'm hilarious. This is huge for me.

Before the show, we were told that only one non-Canadian has been chosen for the semi-finals so far. The implication was that it's not too likely that a non-Canadian has a chance, so we should just have a good time. That did take off some of the pressure, but as often happens, my nerves made me pee every 20 minutes and my junk shrunk into my body, and I looked like I was 7-year old who just jumped into Lake Ontario.

In working on my set, I was stressing about whether I should go with a squeaky TV-clean set, or to do more risque material. Did I mention that this competition will air on Canada's Comedy Channel? So, I had concluded that I should curtail some of my more raunchy material. But then, in our pre-show orientation, the producer said we should just go for it. This is Canada--the audience is used to edgy material, and they'd be disappointed if they weren't seeing an adult show.

So, I quickly reworked my set list, and it obviously paid off. My closer, an act-out of my version of the first sex scene in Brokeback Mountain, was, shall we say, well received. In comedic vernacular, it fucking killed.

I get to do some sightseeing tomorrow--I'd like to head to Niagara Falls. Then, on Saturday, I'm doing an interview that they'll use for the Comedy Channel show. The Saturday show will have the same format as tonight's, with each comedian getting eight minutes.

Interestingly, the sponsor hotel just happens to be right in Toronto's large gay district. It's like magic. Actually, this encouraged me to go for broke on my gay-themed material because Toronto is clearly a very hip and progressive city. Queer as Folk was filmed here, you know.

Oh, I just remembered I have hardly eaten all day long. I was strongly encouraged after the show to go celebrate in a bar tonight. I think finding a late-night snack joint is probably more my speed.

I love Canada.

Saturday, March 14, 2009

I met Conan!


This week, I got invited to meet Conan O'Brien. He was in town looking for new up-and-coming comedians to feature on the Tonight Show.

Well, not exactly. Well, not at all. He was in town to meet staff and advertisers at the local NBC affiliate. And I happen to work for one of those advertisers.

And that meant it would have been really desperate and pathetic of me to tell Conan that I'm an awesome comedian and I look forward to being on the Tonight Show. And despite the fact that I am indeed desperate and pathetic, I resisted the temptation.

Nevertheless, it was an interesting interaction. We were invited to pose for a photo with him. When it was my turn, I told him I brought my scissors to cut his string. If you aren't a huge Conan fan, you may not be familiar with a little thing Conan does at the beginning of his show involving an imaginary pair of strings attached to his hips. If you know the show, you know what I'm talking about.

So, I held up my hands as scissors by his hip and smiled for the photo. He said I should be careful not to get too close or it will look like I'm giving him a circumcision. I responded that as an Irish guy, I'd think that would have already been done. "Yes, a long, long time ago," said Conan, effectively describing to me what his penis looks like. In mixed company even.

My uncanny ability to draw out such a personal detail from a major celebrity is surely evidence that I should fall in line as the next Tonight Show host after Conan. Or at least the next host of the Late Show with Jimmy Fallon. (I mention this just in case NBC is scrambling for a replacement. Remember, NBC, Conan was an unknown too when he took that gig. In fact, Conan had never even played the Purple Onion or Rooster T. Feathers.)

After my photo, Conan came over to where I was standing and poured himself a cup of coffee (he takes Splenda, just like me!). He remarked that this was an awkward situation where all 30 people in the room are looking at him, but no one is talking to him. So, I told him that he wasn't nearly as freakishly tall as I expected him to be. The thing is, he said, a lot of Hollywood stars are really small, so he has to be careful not to make them look diminutive on his show. He had his desk lowered, and he's careful not to stand right next to the short ones. Sometimes, you'll notice he crouches down and extends his arm for a handshake to avoid towering over them.

He continued to chat and answer some questions from others in the room (Damn, I wish they'd all have just gone away, so I could have had a private audience with him), until he said we should all try to make it down to L.A. to see the show. I asked him if we should just go up to the gate and mention his name and they'll escort us backstage. In Conan fashion, he was quick on his toes and said, "Yes, just come on up, bring a firearm, whatever you like. They'll lead you right on in."

It may be an exaggeration, but when I saw the photo above, I was reminded of another meeting of two great Americans.

Hey, a guy has got to dream, right?

Wednesday, February 04, 2009

25 Really Random Things About Me

I keep reading all these 25 fascinating things about my friends on Facebook, so here's my shot. But I'm going to be true to the word "random." Random is random. Finding out a friend of mine has a tattoo of Dakota Fanning on his ass is not random. It's disturbing.

1. I'm almost out of toothpaste.
2. My left areola has a circumference of 2.8 inches.
3. I didn't measure my right areola because that wouldn't be random.
4. The second digit in my first phone number was "2."
5. My middle name is not Humphrey.
6. Monkey feathers.
7. I was once 4 feet, 6 inches tall.
8. I am not a part of the Rhythm Nation.
9. I have never wrestled a gazelle.
10. I often wear two socks.
11. I am in my early to late 30s.
12. My biological mother was female.
13. Astrology is bullshit.
14. Today I recalled how to calculate the circumference of a circle.
15. The password is "corky."
16. My cel phone is charging right now.
17. Last night, I had dinner.
18. I'm not sure.
19. 404 Object Not Found
20. Number 13 isn't all that random, but it had to be said.
21. I can't fight this feeling anymore.
22. Gurgle gurgle flub flub.
23. I'm shorter when I'm sitting down.
24. My favorite color is 7.
25. I am feeling an irresistible urge to measure my other areola.

Wednesday, January 07, 2009

One Heckle of a Show

I don't have any solid strategies for dealing with hecklers, and I really should develop some. Tonight, I learned that insulting a man's girlfriend is not a solid strategy.

I just witnessed one of the more interesting comedy shows I've ever been to. The event was actually a birthday roast of a young, local comedian, Sean Sinha. The party was held at a pizza parlor that hosts a weekly comedy show. I wasn't there to perform. In fact, I only went to the show because I had come from another comedy show at Rooster T. Feathers where one of the comics had apparently left behind his cheat sheet of jokes ragging on Sean. I stopped by the pizza parlor on my way home, thinking I might do a comic a favor by hand delivering his lost jokes.

I've only been to this venue once. I did perform, and did fine, despite the fact that the clientele and layout spelled disaster for me. While there is a decent sound system, the "stage" is right in front of the door to the bathroom, so performers can expect to have their set interrupted by customers needing to take a whiz. And with beers costing one dollar, there was a lot of whizzing going on. The lighting was the worst--all florescent overhead lights illuminating performers and would-be hecklers alike.

But worse than the set-up was the audience's attitude. Apparently, they are there to eat pizza, drink beer, and abuse comedians. Every comic was heckled by a group of 20-somethings eating pizza in a table in the back of the room. Among them was a couple of young straight guys, who looked like brothers and heckled relentlessly. All night, it appeared that this behavior was tolerated, if not encouraged. This venue is not for the fainthearted. I think this pair was too shocked to hear that I was actually gay to do any real damage back to me. After the show, one of them asked me if it was really true that I'm gay. He thought it was just my shtick.

When I got to the club tonight, I found out that the guy who left his joke sheet was not who I thought it was. He was still at Roosters, hosting the comedy show that I had just left. So I was trying to do a guy a favor and ended up stealing the guy's jokes. And I try very hard not to steal jokes. Since the roastee is a friend and today is his birthday, I decided to hang out for awhile.

The first comedian that went up was Chris Schiappacasse. Chris is a bold comedian, unfazed by any lack of appreciation from an audience. In fact, I don't think Chris thinks a whole lot about the audience, which is a characteristic I find intriguing for an entertainer. He didn't notice when a heckler wearing a camouflage ball cap threw a piece of penne pasta with creamy pesto sauce at him. This was definitely one of the same guys who heckled me when I performed there before. He's a scrawny little white guy with a serious Napoleon complex, sitting with his apparent girlfriend.

After Chris finished, the host commented that Camo Cap Guy is a pretty poor shot if he can't hit someone as large as Chris, who is a pretty big boy. This double-edged insult merely prompted Camo Cap Guy to fling another noodle at Chris, this time, successfully, as Chris was walking out the door for a smoke. Interesting venue, I thought, where audience members can literally throw food at the performers and suffer no consequences whatsoever. Even Iraqi journalists get tackled after the second shoe is flung.

Some of the roasters were actually pretty funny, and I was touched that they spent the time to write a bunch of jokes about Sean. Honestly, I thought it was sweet. I guess that's how young straight comedians show affection for one another--by writing jokes that cast aspersions on the other's ability to get sex, or worse yet, by implying that he's gay. I've become somewhat numbed to the prevelance of implicit anti-gay attitudes displayed on stage, even in our relatively progressive region.

Another comedian, who identified himself as 21 years old, didn't get far in roasting Sean before Camo Cap Guy and his girlfriend started in on their heckling. The girl mocked his stuttering over a joke, and asked if he's even old enough to vote. One of the comedian's first comebacks was to call Camo Cap Guy a faggot, and to ask if the girl he's with is his mother. Great. Now, who am I to sympathize with?

What happened next appeared to occur in slow motion. I'm not sure which insult threw Camo Cap Guy over the edge. He got up from his table in the back, and silently walked toward the stage. I could sense he was going to start a fight before he got to the front of the room. If I'd cared enough about the comedian, there would have been enough time for me to run up and stop the fight before it started. Instead, I dispassionately observed the spectacle with the ambivilance of a prison guard watching Jeffrey Dahmer get attacked.

Camo Cap Guy pounced on the comedian, but didn't seem to be trying to land any punches. A few people jumped up to pull the two apart. One young woman started screaming, "Stop or I'm calling 911 right now!" Camo Cap Guy responded "Go ahead and call!"

Fighting, I don't understand. Fighting without trying to land any punches really perplexes me. Why go after a guy and not try to hurt him? Pull some hair. Poke an eye out. Kick him in the balls. Maybe he realized at least one person was recording this show, and he knew from experience what prosecutors need to convict a guy for assault and battery.

At this point, I decided I had had enough comedy enjoyment for one evening and called it a night.

Happy birthday, Sean.

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Are You There, God? It's Me, Rick Warren.

People are atwitter about how Rick Warren will end his prayer at Obama’s inauguration. Will he pray, “in Jesus’s name” like most evangelicals do? Or will he, in a show of inclusion, throw a bone to people of other faiths and pray in the name of “the Almighty”? I’m sure God is just up there in Heaven waiting with bated breath, wondering in whose name Warren will pray on Jan. 20. That’s what prayer is, right, a conversation with God?

Such discussions remind me of one of the many factors that led me to leave evangelical Christianity years ago--the blatant disingenuousness of the oral prayer. For several years, I listened to Christians in church, at camp, and at Bible study spout off in prayer. Some people were really good at it, throwing in lots of stock phrases that prove their mettle as devout believers. To be skillful at prayer is to show other Christians in attendance that you’re a good study, but in reality, it’s just a lot of aping of empty sentiments that merely expose one’s subconscious acknowledgment that God doesn’t actually hear our prayers.

Most of the time that people are praying out loud in a group, they’re not praying to God at all. They’re praying to each other, flaunting their religious tail feathers, only to impress or influence the human beings within earshot.

At the end of Bible study or Sunday school, we’d often sit in a circle, bowing our heads and everyone is subtly encouraged to pray. Someone was designated as the person that would “close.” What resulted, more often than not, was sanctimonious theater, where peer pressure forced everyone to pray something, anything, using those typical stock phrases other better Christians had been modeling for you. If you were in that circle and did not pray, an awkward silence would ensue until the “closer” would finally give up on you, and end the prayer “in Jesus’s name.” And then we all say “Amen.”

A typical prayer would be something like this: “Lord, thank you for the fellowship we’ve had this morning. We feel your spirit among us. Thank you, Lord. Thank you for your son, Lord. For giving his life, Lord. For dying on the cross for us, Lord. And for the wisdom we find in your Word, Lord. We pray that you’ll be with is today, Lord, as we go out into the world, Lord. Keep us grounded in the knowledge of your blessed love, Lord. Thank you.”

Yes, it sounded like nonsense. Because it usually was.

Sometimes, the person praying would veer far from a prayer intended for God’s “ears,” inadvertently referring to God in the third person, then quickly correcting themselves, by throwing in the word “Lord” a lot, to remind everyone that this is a prayer, not an extension of the sermon.

If prayer is what people do to communicate directly with God, then Rick Warren shouldn’t need a microphone, and the rest of us need not eavesdrop on the conversation. It really ought to be a moment of silence. Then, even atheists and agnostics can get in on the act--we can think good, hopeful thoughts that God won’t hear too.

I suppose Warren and all those who have delivered prayers at prior inaugurations spent some time preparing what they would say. If prayer is really talking to God, writing it out seems awfully formal. If God is really listening, Rick should just think his prayer. And why wait for Inauguration Day? Why do messages to God need to be embargoed? If Warren has something to say to God about America, Obama, hope for the future, and an end to poverty and disease, he should say it, er, think it, right now.

And now, a special message for God. Dear God, are you really reading my blog? Wow, that’s a trip. Thanks for stopping by. Lord, thank you for my Facebook fan page and my website, martygrimes.com. And God, I pray that you will guide me at my performance at Harvey’s in the Castro on Tuesday, January 20 at 9 p.m. In your name, I pray. Amen.

Thursday, November 27, 2008

My Milk scene

I'm concerned that many of my friends are going to watch Milk and are distracted because they are watching for the scene I am in. I don't want you missing important scenes while you try to pick me out in the crowd scenes.

Don't call me self-absorbed. Already, two people have told me this. Now, I haven't seen the movie yet, but I can help you narrow down your search. I'm in the scene where Scott and Anne (James Franco and Alison Pill) walk into San Francisco City Hall to go to the memorial for Harvey there. As the camera pans around to show that only a few people showed up to the memorial, I'm standing in the back as an usher, next to a pillar.

My friend, Karen, was watching for me and knew exactly where to look, but still said she couldn't pick me out. Ah, the miracles of Hollywood makeup artists. It's probably because of those wicked cool sideburns they put on me. Or because I was just a blur in the background for a millisecond.

Anyway, I blogged about the whole experience back when it happened, if you want to read more.

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Comedy is a funny thing

People are funny when they meet a comedian. If it's at a party, they immediately suggest that I should entertain all of the guests with my skit.

First, I don't do "skits." Not that there's anything wrong with skits. I did skits when I was a camp counselor, and my skits rocked. We'd have a weekly competition, so being the competitive guy that I can be, I wrote funny new skits every week for the boys in my cabin, and we always won, hands down. If only I could remember them now, maybe I would work them into my set. "Set," not "skit."

Second, I don't think it's cool to impose comedy on unsuspecting guests any more than it's cool to show up at a party with your karaoke machine and insist on belting out Neil Sadaka's entire songbook all night long.

Third, what am I? An 8-year-old who just learned to play Three Blind Mice on the recorder?

Fourth, no lighting? No stage? No mike? No show. My first attempt at comedy was nearly my last. I had signed up for my first comedy course, but the class hadn't even started yet. All I had was the workbook and a few notebook pages I had filled with what I thought were infallible comedy bits of gold. I was excited to try my stuff out, so when I found myself on a camping trip with 40 other gay men, I proposed to do some of my new bits around the campfire. So let's see. Bad lighting, no stage and no sound system. Without lighting, any facial expressions are lost. Without a stage, there's no separation between performer and audience that hints to the audience that it's time for them to pipe down and listen. Without a mike, well, the comedian's voice competes equally with every audience comment or utterance.

Needless to say, it did not go as well as it had in my head. Half the jokes were so obvious, someone had yelled out the punchline before I got to it. Worse yet, their version was often funnier than mine. I managed to shake that experience off and try it again in a more suitable environment having learned a good lesson.

Last night, I was having an early Thanksgiving potluck in the Pittsburg marina, with some friends that have boats. I don't generally introduce myself as a comedian, but Steve introduced me as such, and my new friend, whose name I've forgotten, had a comeback for my reasons why the Thanksgiving potluck was not going to be interrupted by my set, my skit or anything of the sort. Lighting? We've got huge spotlights on these boats. No problem. Stage? You can stand on the boat deck and we'll sit on the dock. Mike? Ha. No mike. Discussion is over.

Then, of course, they want me just to say something funny. Cue circus seal "arfs." Maybe I'll slip something in a conversation in context, but just jumping into my act just doesn't work at a party. It'd be as jarring as busting out in song, like a Broadway musical. Though, now that I think of it, that would not be entirely unexpected nor out of place for a gay party-goer to jump on a table and start a chorus of "Dancing Queen."

Cocktail party conversations can result in comedy material, and I often surreptitiously try out some new material on party guests, but don't expect me to announce that it's coming. And if I'm not saying anything funny to you, just remember, it's you, not me. Seriously, some people inspire me to be funny, and others inspire me to play Brickbreaker on my Blackberry, pretending to answer an urgent e-mail.

It's flattering that people are interested in hearing my comedy, but look, there's a time and place for everything. I'd rather they ask where they can see me perform, how they can join my new Facebook fan page, or how they an join my mailing list. And by the way, I am available for parties, just as long as there's lighting, some configuration that resembles a stage, a functioning microphone and and an audience that's expecting comedy, and not a clown, a stripper or a camp counselor.

Saturday, September 06, 2008

Comedy Marathon at the Purple Onion

Come see me Saturday night at midnight at the legendary Purple Onion in San Francisco.

CLICK HERE for reservations.




SF Weekend Comedy Marathon Oct. 2008

Saturday, August 30, 2008

Sarah Palin -- for Enjoli perfume

When I saw this photo of Sarah Palin, I was reminded of the Enjoli "I'm a woman" TV commercial from the 70's. Dedicated wife and mother, ambitious career woman, or MILF. You decide.

Friday, August 29, 2008

Kathy Lee's commentary on falling baseball boy

I've been meaning to catch Kathy Lee Gifford on the Today Show. Today was finally the day. Obama gave a monumental acceptance speech, McCain's VP pick was pending, yet a story of a 10-year-old boy who fell 15 feet after trying to catch a fly ball at the Met's stadium. Watch Kathy Lee's insightful analysis.

Friday, May 30, 2008

Sex and the Orchard City

My manfriend, Robert, and three of his buddies have been calling themselves by Sex and the City names for years. Robert is "Carrie." Then there's a Miranda, a Charlotte and a Samantha. I know. It's the gayest thing ever.

Since I have never watched even one entire episode of the show, I never could remember who was who. Apparently, I'm called Mr. Big when I'm not around, but until he dragged me to see the movie tonight, I had no idea of this was a good thing or a bad thing.

When I noticed today that no less than seven of my Facebook friends (two women, five gays) had announced on their updates their excitement to see Sex and the City tonight, I began to realize this was going to be a big deal. I considered not telling Robert that we should pre-purchase our tickets, secretly hoping we'd be unable to see it, so we could then settle for some activity a little more becoming of a man, like perhaps a tea party in matching pink sun dresses.

But I remembered that I dragged him to see Indiana Jones last week, so I did the right thing and pre-purchased the tickets. He had been a good sport, and neither of us was thrilled with Indiana Jones. It's more of a reunion special than a sequel. Too much time has passed. I was reminded of many a crappy Gilligan's Island TV movie. OK, it's no Harlem Globetrotters on Gilligan's Island with its cameo appearance by a nearly dead Jim Backus, but during the action sequences, all I could think was, "That's not Harrison Ford. And neither is that. No way. I don't believe it."

By contrast, the timing of Sex and the City, the movie, is perfect. They waited long enough for fans to miss them, but not so long that a Samantha sex scene would be as distasteful as watching a present-day hook-up between The Professor and Mary Ann. Or Indiana Jones and Marion Ravenswood.

Three of my female co-workers sneaked out early to catch an early show. Some theaters, reportedly, were going to be handing out Cosmopolitans. A long line of women, a few befuddled husbands, and a handful of gay guys snaked around the corner at our local Campbell movie theater as we arrived. The mood was electric, or maybe that was the sparks of estrogen flying in every direction.

A chubby bald guy walked by the theater, accompanied by his wife. He asked me what movie we were all waiting for. "The one she wants to drag you to, but you'll hear nothing of it," I responded. He grabbed his wife's arm and quickly scuttled away as if to say, "Thanks for the warning, bud."

Inside the theater, the excitement continued to build. Several groups of women were posing for group pictures. We sat two rows from the top, beside two chatty women pushing 60 years old. They appeared happy to see two men coming to the chick flick of the millennium, but seemed to think we may be lost. In my case, they were right.

Yes, I'm a gay man, but really, for me it begins and ends with my actual sexual orientation. Everything else that a typical gay man is supposed to do is completely learned, and somewhat forced, behavior for me. Many a metrosexual can out-gay this gay. Robert is the shopper, the label queen, the fastidious neatnik. He and the other boyfriends before him have taught me to moisturize, to hang up my clothes, to care how my hair looks. Being gay, I have adapted over time to the gay culture that surrounds me, developing an appreciation for musical theater, fruity cocktails and the custom of calling other grown men "girlfriend." But left to my own devices, I'd just be a simple guy from the country, leaving smelly sweat socks at the foot of the bed, chewing my fingernails and spitting them into an empty can of Bud.

I won't spoil the movie for anyone, but I have a suggestion for any guy who gets unwillingly dragged out to see it. Bring a Thermos full of tequila and take a shot every time the ladies scream with glee when Samantha arrives from California. You'll be sauced by the third reel.

Robert ate this stuff up. He laughed and cried at all the right places. He's a movie producer's wet dream. I think he cried at Deuce Bigalow. I couldn't quite let myself go like that. The problem guys have with "chick flicks" is that all the car chases are replaced with discussions of emotions and insecurities that we tend to believe are better left not felt, much less discussed. Commitment, cold feet, infidelity, trust, intimacy, ego, body image--this movie is a veritable potpourri of issues that lead most men to make a mad dash for the remote.

Upon arriving home, I felt a tremendous urge to kick my feet up on the couch, find a NASCAR race on the tube, slurp down a couple of beers and pee on the toilet seat. Meanwhile, Robert's organizing his shoe collection and looking for our sushi-making kit.

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

The White Party

I'm a gay, native Californian who loves to travel, so it's beyond me why I'd never gone down to experience Palm Springs. Last weekend, the time finally came.

Even in April, the town is as sizzling as a 24 Hour Fitness sauna, and just as queer. From what I could see, Palm Springs is far gayer than San Francisco. The mayor is gay, as is much of the city council. Dozens of gay resorts dot the city, most of them clothing optional, which you hardly hear of in San Francisco, but that's surely a function of the cold fog and the associated shrinkage factor.

For the record, we stayed with our good friends Max and Jeff who recently bought a vacation condo there. A clothing optional facility would have been intriguing, but then we would have missed out on the hospitality of our wonderful hosts. We spent some time lounging at the pool among other gay men, a cute lesbian couple and their queer-friendly parents visiting from Sarasota, Florida (which caused me to be thankful for the clothing-strictly-encouraged policy).

But this was no ordinary weekend in Palm Springs. This was the biggest, fiercest weekend of the year. This was the annual explosion of reckless abandon, hedonism and body glitter. This was the weekend that convinces Larry Craig he can't possibly be gay (because he merely blows other men in bathroom stalls, not all that naughty stuff). If we were going to experience Palm Springs after all these years, we were going to do it right. We went to the infamous White Party.

The White Party is actually a constant series of parties that starts on Friday morning and goes on pretty much continuously until Sunday evening. On Friday night, an underwear party. Pool parties every day. T-dances every afternoon. One can get a VIP pass for $450 to get into all the parties. Yes, $450. But you get to go into the very special VIP lounge at the Saturday night party, so how can you argue with that?

It's the ultimate "circuit" party. Many guys save up all their money and throw their weekday suit, tie and caution to the wind, traveling all over the country, only to drag their strung-out asses back to the grind come Monday morning (if they're lucky, without a new sexually transmitted infection or meth addiction in tow). I've always been led to believe that just about everyone at these parties is high on something. You'd have to be to make it to every one of these parties. My partner, Robert, and I aren't into any of that, so we planned on going to just one of the big parties and spend the rest of the weekend exploring and hanging out with Max and Jeff.

We chose the biggest party, the Saturday night party, held at the Palm Springs Convention Center. The advertising claimed that the space would be transformed into a Studio 54 type club as the DJ's took us through the evolution of disco from the 70's to present day. All that for a mere $110 cash each.

When we entered the convention center ballroom, I'm afraid I had trouble feeling transformed. Yes, there were massive lighting contraptions, three huge disco balls and more lasers than a Beverly Hills skin clinic, but ultimately, it was still a convention center ballroom. The dance floor was that same parquet flooring that was probably last pieced together for the Rosenberg-Chan wedding two days earlier. It's hard to feel like you're in a magical time warp to 1978 Greenwich Village when you're standing right where a thousand actuaries just heard a plenary session on mortality tables and 417(e) (3) interest rates.

Yes, the ballroom is large, but the number and size of the speakers pointing into the dance floor area was at least equal to the number and size of the set-up we had at the Barry Manilow concert at HP Pavilion. (While that's a much larger venue, it too failed to transport me to the disco era despite a rousing rendition of "Copacabana.")

Hence, entering the dance floor area was torturous. Even Condoleezza Rice would have no trouble acknowledging that this was torture. Water boarding, she's not ready to judge, but the White Party? Yes. Permanent ear damage, long lines for the bathroom, $5 for a 12-ounce bottle of water. No doubt, torture. And the crowds of people packed together. Before long, I was smothered in sweat, none of it my own.

Robert and I took a break and made our way toward the bathrooms when we noticed a roped off area. We sauntered in, unaware that this was the aforementioned VIP zone. In this exclusive area was a few cushioned chairs and sofas, several pitchers of ice water with lemon wedges and stacks of plastic cups. We poured ourselves cups of water, not yet realizing that our $110 entrance fee was not enough to elevate us beyond second-class status. $110 is insufficient to get you complimentary water, silly. But it is enough to allow you to stand in a line of 30 people to wait for the privilege of buying a mixed drink for $10. Fortunately, we made it out of VIP-land undetected.

Later, we made our way to the front of the ballroom to wait for the live performances. One of our goals for the evening was to see scheduled performer, RuPaul. I had noticed there were a couple of other performers slated, but I had never heard of them. We waited for about an hour up front, as there was nothing to indicate when the show was to start. Every time a song ended, everyone around us focused on the stage. People held up their cameras and snapped photos of what ended up being a stage hand. Then they did the same thing five minutes later. And again five minutes after that.

Finally, the show began and a highly decorated black guy came out with a slew of back-up dancers. He lip-synced two songs. OK, that was nice. Later, I found out that Robert, Jeff and Max thought that was RuPaul. It turns out it was something called Flava.

Next was a large-breasted woman in a tight white outfit and lots of fur and feathers who moved very little while the back-up dancers gyrated in a fairly impressive choreography. She sort of looked like Aretha, but she was certainly not Aretha. There had been a rumor that Janet Jackson was going to be a surprise performer, but I didn't buy that either.

At least this singer was actually singing. I'm sure she must be well known in the "circuit" for some dance hit or another. I don't think she penned this, but she threw out the worn-out line, "Put your hands up in the air, and wave them around like you just don't care." This was perfect. At $110 (and no Manilow or Jacksons in sight), this evening did feel a little like armed robbery, and now they have us putting our hands up in the air.

At about 2:30 a.m., we realized all four of us had had enough, even without RuPaul. Now, don't get me wrong. I had a fun time. I can think of many things I could spend $110 on that would have produced a funner time, but it's a once in a lifetime thing. Now we know.

The odd thing is I never sensed any of the debauchery I had expected. The atmosphere didn't feel particularly sexually charged. They didn't even have any go-go dancers in thongs or porn showing on video screens like many a gay night club. I have no idea who or what proportion of the crowd was high. I never saw any of that.

But that's typical for me. I tend to miss out on things. It could have been right there in front of my face, and I didn't see it. Ultimately, I'm a square. I'm too pure for even Pat Robertson to blame me for causing a hurricane.

If I had been in Sodom, I would have been over in some corner playing Scrabble the whole time. God would be coming down to smite us, and I would have no idea why. "I'm not cheating. QAT is a legitimate word!"

The next day we had the obligatory gay Sunday brunch and lounged around until our flight brought us back to reality. I'd certainly like to go back to Palm Springs, but maybe instead of White Party Weekend, I'll go when there's something more my style going on. Like a bowling tournament. Perhaps a clothing-optional bowling tournament.

Thursday, April 10, 2008

An Audition

I went to an audition in San Francisco last week. It's for a movie trailer that is being made for the Frameline gay film festival. They'll show this clip before all of the movies. They're doing a take-off on Jeopardy, and what with all my game show experience, in a Merv Griffin game show, no less, I figured I was perfect for the role (that, and the fact that I'm a 'mo). The trailer will be seen by all the fancy gays in town, so I thought it might be good exposure. But here's the rub. I don't know how to audition. And worse, I don't really know how to act. I know," I told myself, "I'll just act like I'm an actor."

The first problem was that the announcement said they were looking for people with improv skills. I figured that since I love "The Office" and have watched a lot of "Whose line is it anyway?" I could fake it. But then I checked out a website about improv skills, and I realized I was running the risk of making a real ass out of myself. The whole audition could have been someone barking out random improv games that would mean nothing to me. "Ready? OK, Bippety Bop. Go!"

The fact that I recently enrolled in a beginning improv class at ComedySportz in San Jose was not going to help me--especially since the first class wasn't until this Monday.

I went into the audition in an industrial area of San Francisco, and they handed me a script. I went in with two other people who would be the other two would-be contestants.

One of the producers was reading for Alex Trebek. But first, the casting lady asked us to all give her a profile. And she started with me. And I had no idea what she meant by "profile." As I was ready to launch into an extemporaneous autobiographical profile (I was born in Walnut Creek, the third son...), she saw my hesitation and said, "Just turn to your right for the camera. Good. And now to your left. Good."

One of the auditioning guys then said, "I guess this might be a good time to tell you I was actually on Wheel of Fortune and won a trip to Aruba and a bunch of cash." The producers all reacted with interest. So naturally, I interjected, "And I was on Merv Griffin's Crosswords." "What did YOU win?" "This tacky watch" which I had decided to wear for this occasion, just in case this topic came up. So, that guy could have been blowing smoke, but I had evidence that I lost spectacularly on a Merv Griffin game show.

And then we start with the script. I nailed my first line. "Rubber for $200, Alex." But then, my next line was on the second page, and I missed it. Awkward pause. I apologized and said my line. After the scene, I explained that, "you see, Alex always says the person's name after they buzz in. You might want to add that." So, now I'm not only clueless, I'm an asshole.

Then they go into the improv part of the audition, which lucky for me, wasn't anything that required any specific improv knowledge. "Alex" just asked us each a get-to-know you question, and we were supposed to come up with something witty on the spot. My intro question was something like this, "I understand you and your partner are into natural foods and when you met it was something like a Reeses peanut butter connection, but you were carrying a jar of organic, hypoallergenic, macademia nut butter , and he was carrying a carob bar grown on a sustainable, free-trade cooperative farm." What my answer was: "That's right, Alex. On our first date, we went to the natural foods store and had a organic food orgy. It was fantastic!" What my answer would have been if I were little faster on my feet: "That's right, Alex. And then it was back to my place where we had an all-night session of multiple organics."

Unless they're still deliberating, I didn't get the part.

Rooster T. Feathers competition results


Here's the latest--I am advancing to the semi-final round of the Rooster T. Feathers Comedy Competition. Thank you to everyone who came to the show last night. I hope you had a good time. And I hope you tipped your server.

I will be back on Wednesday, May 7. If you would like to go that night, call early for your reservations at 408-736-0921. I'll try to work in some new material for that night so you won't be tempted to shout out the punchlines you've heard a dozen times.

Sunday, March 09, 2008

I got Milk

On Saturday night, I got a call from a casting company inviting me to be an extra on the set of Milk, the Harvey Milk Story, starring Sean Penn. I jumped at the chance to be a part of what will be an enormously important movie for the gay community.

I was told I'd be in the role of an usher, but the casting person had no further information. He verified my clothing size, made me promise to not complain if I'm around people who are smoking, and told me to bring my passport to verify my ID.

I fretted that I had just had my hair cut on Saturday. Maybe I'd get all the way up to San Francisco, and they'd turn me away because my hair was too short. I'd been reading casting notices about the movie over the last few weeks, but they've always required a weekday commitment, so I had given up on getting to be an extra. In those notices, they encouraged men to keep growing their hair and sideburns. I certainly had not been heeding that call.

My call time was 2 p.m. when I was to report to the extras holding area at San Francisco City Hall. I timed my BART ride to give me plenty of time to find the place, so when I approached City Hall, I had a moment to observe the scene outside. Clearly, they were already filming a rally scene. A crowd of several hundred people were gathered on the steps of City Hall. I could see some shirtless men in jeans and a few guys in leather. Then, I saw Sean Penn at the podium, shouting to the crowd. Periodically, they'd erupt in wild cheers.

The street was lined with 70's vintage cars. Since I was quite alive during the late 70's, I was surprised how dated cars from that era looked.

Then it was time for me to check in. The extras holding area was in a large room in City Hall, just off the rotunda. Though the room was nearly empty, rows and rows of tables were filled with backpacks, books, magazines, newspapers, and Scrabble games. Later, the owners of all of these time killers came in from the rally scene I had witnessed earlier. Suddenly, it really felt like the 70's--lots of mustaches, side burns, long hair, Farrah hair, short shorts, tight t-shirts and tank tops, knee socks, Converse sneakers, tie dye, drag queens, and black leather chaps. I would have felt like I'd entered a time warp except that all the cell phones, Blackberries, iPods and Gameboys didn't quite seal the deal.

So far, no one seemed to grimace at my short hair, so I was not too anxious about being sent to the hair and makeup area. When they saw me, they debated for a bit, and decided to slap some fake sideburns on me. I was playing an usher, after all, so the short hair wasn't going to be a problem, apparently.

While they were gluing my sideburns on, I noticed a poster board of old photos to guide the hairstylists. A bunch of quintessential 70's celebs were there--Farrah, David Cassidy, Leif Garrett. Suddenly, I realized that I could end up looking like my dad did in 1978. And then I realized that I'm actually older than my dad was in 1978. Eek! I can't get my head around my dad ever being younger than I am right now.

Then, it was off to wardrobe, which was a trailer parked outside in the back of City Hall. I was fitted with a polyester brown suit, yellow shirt and brown tie. It was then that I finally heard about the scene I was going to be in. It's apparently one of the last scenes in the movie. Hmm. I'm right now wondering if I signed anything that says I'm not supposed to talk about the movie. Well, I don't remember signing anything like that, so what the hell. I think everyone knows how the movie ends, right?

So, this is a scene of Harvey Milk's memorial service in the rotunda of City Hall. It's sparcely attended--only a few politicos have shown up. Harvey's ex-lover, Scott Smith, played by James Franco, and Anne Kronenberg, played by Alison Pill, show up and are disgusted that so few people have shown up for the service. I'll be one of two ushers at the service.

As I expected, the next couple of hours were spent waiting around. As they were preparing to serve dinner, I saw Tom Ammiano, who is quite a legend of gay history himself. I couldn't recall what his role was back in those days, but it wasn't surprising to see him on the set. I thought about going up to him and telling him that make-up has done a terrific job, you look just like Tom Ammiano. Now that I'm at home, I see that Tom is playing himself in the movie. That explains why we was all over the set like he owned the place. I thought he was up at his office working and just decided to check things out.

But playing yourself 30 years ago? That's quite a stretch, and I'm not implying he's had a face lift.

During dinner, Sean Penn came in. I had figured he had someone bring him his food, but for some reason, he was at the buffet table. That's all I saw of him. He obviously wasn't going to be in my scene. For the record, he's short.

Shortly after dinner, the politicos, the other usher and I were called to the set. The crew doesn't do a very good job introducing themselves, so I had to just guess who was who. Initially, someone who acted like a director told all the politicos where to sit at the memorial service and placed me and the other usher in the back behind all of the chairs. When he was done placing everyone, he said it was good, but he knows it'll all get changed anyway. Later, another guy came in who really acted like a director and changed up all of the politicos in the audience again and took two of them out completely. He ended up directing the scene, but he definitely wasn't Gus Van Sant.

Before the scene was shot, we waited around--we think it was to wait for the sun to go down since it's supposed to be an evening scene. As we waited, Tom Ammiano again walked through the set, clearly enjoying this whole experience.

The actual scene, if it makes it in the movie, is probably only about 20 seconds long. They filmed three takes. I don't know if I'll actually be seen. If I am, it'll certainly be a split-second shot. But no matter. I'm just glad I got to be a part of this experience.

As I left, they were again filming outside. The scene is what Scott and Anne encounter after they leave the "lame" memorial service. Outside of City Hall, they see that dozens of lesbians, gay men and hippie types are arriving at City Hall and placing candles at the steps. This is the scene they were filming tonight. The rest of the scene was filmed a few weeks ago, when Scott and Anne see that not just a few dozen people had brought candles, but thousands were lighting up Market Street with a spontaneous march towards City Hall. That image already gives me goosebumps.

Thursday, January 24, 2008

Merv Griffin is dead to me

My episode of Merv Griffin's Crosswords aired today, so now, I am no longer contractually obligated to keep the results a secret.

SPOILER ALERT!
I was the biggest loser. All I got out of this show was the promise of a cheap looking Croton watch with the Merv Griffin's Crosswords logo on it. Oh, wait. It's a custom Croton watch that I'll never wear. I don't wear watches. I wear a cell phone. It hasn't even arrived yet, ten weeks later. Yet, after I and the three other contestants lost to "Steve," we all immediately started focusing on the watch. When do we get our watch? How much are they selling for on eBay?

But I was excited to be on TV. You know, my 22 minutes of Hollywood fame. I checked and double checked my TiVo to make sure it was all set to record while I was at work. I told everyone what day and time it was airing. I fiendishly kept my friends in the dark about the outcome. To my glee, TiVo did not fail me. But as I watched the show, imagine the horror when I saw that I'd been covered up by a news crawl. I've been upstaged by a dang weather report. I don't mean to be vain, but a news crawl on my face is just not my best look. And look closely. I'm the only contestant who got covered up. It's a conspiracy, I tell you! And it's not even a major storm. Come on, Bay Area. So it's going to rain tomorrow. Big deal. Is that really worth putting a weather crawl right over my face? Aren't news crawls supposed to be at the bottom of the screen?

I didn't win squat, but I also didn't make a total idiot of myself. From the clues I flubbed, it's now forever established that I don't know anything about golf clubs, military formations (wedge) or French pirates (Jean Lefitte). But dammit, I was the only one on the stage that knew of the Hanna Barbera cartoon character, the Grape Ape. I can live with that.

If you were watching at home, you should notice that I did buzz in quickly all through the third round, but the guy who won didn't give us any chance. Steve was on fire. I even started buzzing in when I had no clue what the answer was, just so it would look like I knew. Why am I admitting that?

I knew Steve was going to win. Moments before we went on the set, someone asked him if he'd been on any game shows before. He'd been coy all day, but now admitted he'd been on Jeopardy, Win Ben Stein's Money and some other show I can't remember. Getting on Jeopardy is hardcore. I knew I was a goner.

That's why I bet all my money, $1,750, when I did get to the front row and got one of the Crossword Extras. That's a clue where only I got to answer and I had to choose my bet. I figured I wouldn't be up there for long, so I might as well try to double the pot so someone would get more winnings. But I lost it all on Jean Lefitte. Who knows that? People who read?

And I didn't appreciate how host Ty Treadway then explained how Lefitte was a pirate who fought in the Battle of New Orleans like he really knew that. When Trebek smugly explains an answer, I believe he actually knew it. Treadway? I'm not buying it, pretty boy.

And another thing, what kind of cheap game show only gives an average of about $6000 to the one winner in every show? Everyone else gets the watch. Oh, and the winner might get a trip, but only to destinations like CancĂșn and Palm Springs. And they never say "you and your guest will travel to..." I have a hunch it's really a trip for only one person.

But I'm not bitter. It was a fun experience. The lunch buffet was good. I got to be on TV. Well, at least my torso got to be on TV. And might I say, my torso looked fantastic. Maybe my torso will get an agent.