Archive | April, 2009

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The Tank and Haiku

Posted on 29 April 2009 by Alex Grubard

tank

First I’ll be stopping by The Tank for Jonathan Powley’s Comedy Jam at 7:30 to do a guest spot. The Tank is at 354 W. 45th St. and this show costs $5.

jeollado

I like this show a lot. It’s run by my friends Gabriel Pacheco and Daniel Mahoney. A bunch of comedians do sets and some end theirs with Haikus because the show is called Haiku and it takes place in a delicious sushi restaurant. The show is free, starts at 8 PM and is on E. 4th St. between 1st and 2nd Ave. The restaurant is called Jeollado and is very difficult to spell, in my opinion. There are also cool characters on the walls.

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The Internets

Posted on 29 April 2009 by Alex Grubard

The cliche, I think, is that the youth of the nation knows everything about the internet. Most people think that if you’re born after Watergate you can do internet things as well as William Gates. The internet is not for old people. They don’t understand it like us young guns.

I understand the internet. I get that Geocities web sites are pieces of shit and why Hopstop serves more of a purpose for me than Mapquest (Hopstop is so great, by the way. I use it way more than I need to. I can get around this city better than King Kong and yet I still look up how to get to Bleecker and Bowery on a web site).

Now I would like to inform you all that I know nothing of the internet! Uploading videos, registering domain names, buying the Snuggie, I can’t seem to do any of it!

Today I tried uploading a video of my stand-up comedy joke speeches on Vimeo and it took 3 and a half hours. From the moment I woke up at 1 PM to the moment I had my pre-dinner snack of a carrot covering in basil. Then when it was all finished I went to watch the video and I was brought to a page that stated, “This video failed to upload.” My world came crashing down. I will never get those 3 and a half hours back and now my life is completely ruined. No lie.

I’m going to let you in on a little secret. When I was fourteen or fifteen I decided that it would be a good and fun idea to learn HTML. Like learning a new language. “Today I decide I am going to speak French.” So I bought a book on HTML that was over 1,000 pages. I read every page; mostly in a hotel room on a family vacation no doubt. I retained none of it. And I don’t mean since I read the book I cannot remember anything. I mean I finished the last page and went, “I’m still dumb now!”

There you have it. The internet is one of the limits of my brain. I can’t figure it out. It exists and that’s good enough for me. My relationship with the internet is I will continue to browse it with severe intensity and make the occasional blog post. Don’t expect any DIY internet companies from me though.

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Beauty Bar Tonight @ 9 PM

Posted on 26 April 2009 by Alex Grubard

I’ll be performing at Beauty Bar (231 E 14th St.) tonight at 9 PM. The show is run by Jesse Popp and Vince Averill. Two hilarious motherfuckers.

I’ll be doing some Hipster Grifter stuff so it should be pretty fun! Maybe she’ll be there. That might be awkward. She’s probably going to all the best parties these days.

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Restaurant Review: Tom’s

Posted on 22 April 2009 by Dan Tovrov

tomsinwinter

A few Saturday’s ago, in accordance with what was an officially planned event (thanks to Grubard and his supposedly ironic facebooking), Stacey and I met Grubard and Julie (did you know they are dating on facebook?) at Tom’s Restaurant (not the Seinfeld one). It’s right next to my apartment (and therefore right next to Grubard’s too). It was a rainy rainy morning, but we stood in line outside anyway (I had heard such good things about this place, we decided it was worth it). The line moved pretty fast for what it was (and even went through half the restaurant inside, but even the wait was enjoyable, the reasons of which your about to find out) As we stood there, every three minutes (on average) an employee would walk up the line with a big tray of food – cookies, french toast sticks, sausages, strawberries and cream, and even mugs of coffee for everyone (cream and sugar if you wanted it). The owner (Gus) made himself known to everyone there, and was really funny and friendly; as if we’d been friends for years. And the people he really was friends with (of which there were quite a few) he treated even better, going as far as giving a little black boy a two minute bear hug and then a handful of money. And the food was good too (really really good).

Since moving to New York, I have embraced the brunch culture; although I unwittingly started this affair with brunch back in Boston, when on Friday mornings, tired, hung-over, and suffering after 11am math class, my roommate Greg and I would hop in my Subaru Legacy and go out for breakfast, each week trying to find and evaluate a new and unknown diner (The Tufts brunch scene was dominated by only two restaurants, where you would have to wait in enormous lines, with the people you didn’t want to talk to at the party at the night before, for the same food every week. These places were good, though). This weekly sojourn caught the attention of my other roommates and friends, and we would go venturing into Medford with increasing numbers, and even my current relationship with Stacey was, in a large part, founded on these mornings. Now, in New York, I have a neighborhood, a village, an island, five boroughs, a city to explore, two days a week. And for the months I’ve been here, and the months earlier spent visiting and crashing on floors, I hadn’t yet tried Tom’s, the fantastically reviewed and homey diner right next door to me. Quickly into our meal there and with great grinning mouths, Julie, Stacey, Grubard, and myself ecstatically claimed this was the best place we’d ever been to. Now with about a week to think and move past our original, excited hyperbole, the place has been properly digested in mind. It is great. But, are there any ways it could be better? Let’ see:


The Food:

It’s good. It’s great, really. But, it’s not fancy. Pretty standard breakfast fair – eggs, pancakes, waffles, french toast, etc. Not fancy is fine, but since I’m used to the east village, I generally see all sorts of fancy, specialized toms-restaurant-picconcoctions, and figured this was the NYC rule; so Tom’s could be seen as antiquated, un-hip. But, the food was good enough to cancel out any issues one might have had, and any frilly foods would have been completely wrong for this place, a rupturing and uneasy mixture. Furthermore, even though you had to choose from typical moring starches and proteins, Tom’s tweaked every dish, making the food unique and incredible. Dozens of different types of pancakes, even with corn or cranberries, chorizo with lemon instead of normal sausages, even three different types of butter, including cinnamon, strawberry, and mango.
The Food – I wouldn’t change anything.

The Waitstaff:
About four minutes after we ordered our food, Gus walked up behind Alex and Julie with four plates in his arms and amiably said “sorry about the long wait.” That should speak for itself.

But, if it doesn’t, more analysis: The real waiters were business like and swift. They did what they needed to, filled your coffee, and pretty much stayed out of the way. I like when waiters don’t interrupt too much, but if you don’t and want your waiter to be your thirty-minute friend, don’t worry, I think the attention and jokes one gets from Gus and his wife more than fill the empty void inside you that you need waitresses to occupy.

Any other ways the make the waitstaff better? Topless waitress: believe it or not, this idea has been tried and it failed. A donut store off the highway in Maine tried to mix sex and breakfast, but quickly went under. Health violations aside, making Tom’s anything but a family joint would ruin the aesthetic and consequently the enjoyment. For the same reasons I don’t really like eating at Hooters, lewdness and heart-warming food cannot connect pleasantly for me.

The Coffee:
Honestly, the coffee wasn’t great. It was watery and not very strong. But, it was cheap – less than a dollar – and I had a cup in my hand since I got into line, and the refills were free and prompt.

The Decor:
Like the food, the decor is an amalgamation of past virtues. A frantic amalgamation at that. The place is packed with old pictures and reviews, strung up with colored christmas lights, and perfumed by randomly set potted plants. tomdecorIndividual highlights from the menu are written on colored posters that polka-dot the walls. It’s a mess. It works. Unlike those family chain restaurants that cover their walls in old metal prints and antique furniture and sports equipment (I’ve always theorized that there is a catalog for those restaurants full of that random crap), the decorations seem genuine and sweet; a relic, like Gus himself.
Would I change the decor at all? More christmas lights? Naw, it’s good.

Can Tom’s be any better? Maybe lower the price by a dollar. That might be it.

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Dan Tovrov’s Book Club – Twilight

Posted on 20 April 2009 by Dan Tovrov

Dan Tovrov’s Book Club
Twilight Series

I thought I would kick off my book club with a series of books that’s become quite a phenomenon in the past year or so. Twilight, by Stephanie Meyer. There are four books in all, and the first one, and soon the rest will be too, is a major motion picture.

The books follow Bella, a sixteen year old girl who just moved to Fork, Washington, where she meets Edward, a teen-age Vampire, and there subsequent love affair and the complications involved with a paranormal romance. Now, the whole series is a pretty translucent allegory for the Ramayana; the epic Hindi poem from the second century BC, but it also could be an allegory for the Egyptian-Nubian war, and the invasion of the Hyksos under emperor Rehoboam II, but I thought that would be ridiculous. It’s a bit of a stretch, you see.

Moving on. Twilight, as a literary work, is completely obsolete, even though it came out only last year. In fact, it was obsolete even before it was published. Meyer failed comprehend the metaphysical magnitude of the figure of the vampire, especially in relation to the relation to the symbolic order, which we all know, is constructed around the void of the metonymical chain of signifiers.

As a creature, the vampire represents those outside the hetero-normative symbolic order, a body-politic based on the concept of reproductive futurity. The vampire, being an ‘undead’ creature, is instantly and textually castrated. It is neither living, nor dead, and so how can it exist in the realm of futurism, am I right? BEAT Vampires can of course reproduce, but only in a viral way, by attacking a host and planting it’s phantasmagorical essence inside a person, a person created by the very social order the vampire is ostracized from. So, back to Twilight…

When Bella gets pregnant with Edward’s half vampire child, the very significance of having a vampire in the first place is shattered by the ungraspable ironical nothingness! We cannot ignore Jacques Derrida’s famous axiom “Il n’y a pas de hors-texte” when thinking in these provisos, especially when dealing with Lacan’s post-structualist symbolic order. Shouldn’t Edward be the representation of The Big Other, the petit object a to Bella’s desire? The answer is yes! He should, but he isn’t. There is no jouissance in Bella’s orgasmic petit-mort. Edward lies un-ironically inside the very system based on futurity that repudiates him! It’s ridiculous!

The vampire represents the trope, the way at which all words are built around nothing. Like the vase, which is clay molding around lack, around an empty centre, but the emptiness only becomes emptiness when a presence is constructed around it. The Vampire, like that absence, is always already present. It’s both representative and queering the very element…

That’s queering like gay, in case you haven’t been following this.

So, the book sucks.

That’s correct, Dan Tovrov’s book club is for books I don’t like.

So, what else is in there? All of the Harry Potter books, except the third one, The Adventure of Tom Sawyer, the collected works of Emile Zola, Are You There God? It’s me Margret, and Totally Frank: The Autobiography of Frank Caliendo.

Lastly, the final reason these books suck is because the vampires can come out during the day, which is totally gay.

Thank you.

(The actual clip from the show to be up shortly, and is currently available on the Yippie Museum feed with the rest of the show)

twilight-movie-poster

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Notes From A Notebook II

Posted on 20 April 2009 by Alex Grubard

Dan and I both keep little notebooks (as well as larger ones) that we use to jot down ideas whenever inspiration hits. Sometimes some of our best ideas come from this. Sometimes, it doesn’t turn out so well. I often go back through and have no idea what I was thinking when I wrote them.

Here are some excerpts for Notes From A Notebook II:

You’re right, you’re right… you’re wrong. Throw the book at you.

What religion am I? Not telling.

Sometimes pot tastes green.

Ha Ha Huh?

My daughter already wishes she was black, so I must be doing something right.

I don’t make Citizen’s Arrests; I write Citizen’s Tickets.

Sirens echo through cities.

I need health insurance like my life depends on it.

Why does Bazooka Joe wear an eyepatch?

I’ve got a little captain in me. Captain Crunch.

I don’t like artificial light. It feels so artificial.

This ain’t my first rodeo.

Insecurities is arrogant

Awwdorable.

God Almighty Dollar

Renegades of Roulette

Don’t you love all the fireflies? They buzz around your brain and fall over into the fountain. Wahoo! Poems, poems, poems.

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Things I’ve Learned About L.A. Through Movies About L.A.

Posted on 19 April 2009 by Dan Tovrov

I’ve been to Los Angeles, but I’m going to assume what they show in movies is more correct.

- It’s easy to make it big.

- The Chinese are everywhere

- The town is run by the Jews terminator02

– Easily infiltrated by robots

- The surf is always good

- There’s a problem with water

- Everyone has a pool

- It’s hard to make it big

- There are lots of diners

- These diners are not safe places to be. You could be murdered, or robbed, or see homeless monsters behind dumpsters

- Writers get murdered there

- Famous movie stars get murdered there

- Starlets get murdered there

- People get murdered there for no reason spinner_concept_la

- In just 10 years, it’s going to look a lot different. The future does not treat LA kindly

- Even in the future, people dress like it’s the fifties

- All the women are really hot. And they will have sex with you!

- There are so many Private Detectives. I’m surprised they don’t run into each other more

- Everyone’s out to get you

- There are vampires there… but where aren’t there vampires

- Unfrozen cavemen can go to prom

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I Lived With Korean Abdul Jabbar

Posted on 15 April 2009 by Alex Grubard

The Hipster Grifter
Meet kari Ferrell: Criminally Hipster
Oh, Crazy Kari

The NY Observer wrote an article about the girl that sublet my apartment while I was on my road trip across the country. When I got back she moved into our storage closet and then we found out about all her shit right after the Super Bowl and kicked her out.

A couple little details from the Bergen Street part of the story:

-She was late on rent a couple of times and the first time she went to the landlord instead of my roommate on the lease. That caused problems.
-She skipped out on a cab at 4 in the morning and the cabby buzzed every apartment in the building looking for her. She got on the intercom at one point and told him that “no one had ordered a cab.”
-She skipped out on a Thai food bill and the delivery boy came looking for her about five times. We now get a deal there though. Thanks Jimmy!
-One night my phone was dead and I got home at 3 in the morning. She’d called and when I didn’t answer assumed I wasn’t coming home and so I found her and her boyfriend Bobby sleeping in my bed.

She was really nice and fun and all sorts of shit, but she’s crazy. What’re you gonna do? We called the SLCPD and they told us to get rid of her and then we called the NYPD and they were like, “Call us when she kills somebody.” The system (doesn’t) work!

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Sunday Night Stand Up @ 8 PM – Three of Cups

Posted on 12 April 2009 by Alex Grubard

sundaygiraffeonlineTonight I’ll be hosting at Three of Cups for Sunday Night Stand Up. It’s at 83 1st Ave. The show is run by RG Daniels and Erik Bergstrom. It’s free, it starts at 8 PM and it’s a really good show that you would enjoy.

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Beware The Flying Pies

Posted on 12 April 2009 by Alex Grubard

yippie10
Thanks to everyone who came out to The Yippie Museum last night. I think we all were just having a good time until some slumlord kicked Dan Tovrov and I off stage. Damn the man!

How was the show? It was wonderful! I thoroughly enjoyed it as did several viewers. There was a pie on the counter, but no one dared to throw it. Although there was a man at the computer in the front who has experience.

Thanks to Trey Galyon, Ross Hyzer, Billy Conohan, Jon Clarke, Joseph Rocha and Cool Guygot. It all went according to plan!

I also want to thank Stab for getting my back. He was going to defend our show’s honor to the bitter end. Fight, fight, fight for your rights!

And thanks to that guy who changed the HEAL THE SICK placard. I have no idea where you came from, but you’re right; the sign can’t be upside down.

Thanks to The Mike Bjella Quintet who played before us. Good work. You’re officially New Orleans approved.

Thanks to the Yippie Museum for the coffee and for streaming the whole show online. It’s the whole night of April 11th, 2009. Transcendentalist Television starts one hour and a half in. But check out The Mike Bjella Quintet. They were talented. We’ll soon (hopefully) have a better tape, but this was made instantly. Isn’t that awesome? It’s like the internet is our friend.

I hope that kid found a place to sleep.

All in all it was a fantastic night and I will cherish it for centuries. When we are aware of our next show we will bring it to your attention as soon as possible. Here’s a hint though: maybe take up residence in Boston, Massachusetts.

Yippie!

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