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East Coast / West Coast Musical In-Laws

I’m always happy to give shout-outs to family, and that’s what this entry’s all about!

First: a plug for Mixology,

the band in which my future brother-in-law Andy plays bass. They’re a

pretty tight bar band playing good ol’ rock and roll with a bluesy feel

who play the area between Boston and Providence “or wherever else they

have beer”. They’ve got a demo MP3 file (10 MB) online if you want to hear what they sound like.

Photo: Andy and me.

Just two Filipinos, havin’ a beer.

They’ve got a gig this Saturday at Cher’s in North Providence, Rhode Island (86 Waterman Avenue). I’d catch the show, but I live 800 kilometres due west.


Andy plays a bazillion instruments, many of which are stringed, and

many of those aren’t your run-of-the-mill instruments here in North

America. He’s an accomplished balalaika player and he’s even performed

at Carnegie Hall!

Photo: Andy in a Winnie the Pooh suit on balalaika.

Here’s Andy on balalaika, going with an unshaven, edgy look. (Taken from Mixology’s website)


On the other coast is Cookie, who’s married to my cousin Tina. I

thought I’d be the first person in my extended family to perform at his

own wedding reception, but after looking through some old photos, I was

reminded that Cookie beat the skins at his reception back in late

2000.

(Wendy’s parents very kindly set a condition on the band playing at our

wedding: they are required to let me join them on accordion any time I

want. I’ll probably do a number or two, and I’m seriously thinking of

doing my rocked-out version of Who Stole the Kishka?)

Photo: Cookie and Tina at their wedding, December 2000.

Cookie and Tina, December 2000.

My cousin Ivan — one of Tina’s brothers —

came up for a visit last week. He told me that Cookie reads this blog

daily and keeps the rest of my kin in the Bay Area apprised of my

activities. Hey Cookie — glad to have you as a reader, and hopefully, I’ll see you in September!

Categories
Accordion, Instrument of the Gods It Happened to Me Music Toronto (a.k.a. Accordion City)

Peril from Beyond Space!

My friend and fellow former regular at Tequila Bookworm Scott Watkins invited me to be the opening act for the first installment of Peril from Beyond Space,

a four-part play that spoofs those old 50’s black and white sci-fi

serials. I used to occasionally provide the music for his improv shows

when he was with Theatresports and miss performing with comedians, so I

accepted his invitation.


My musical/stand-up act is simply a more staged version of my street

musician schtick. The story behind the accordion and the busking act is

here; as for the stand-up, I got into it on a whim while living in San

Francisco. At the time, I was working as OpenCola’s developer

releations guy and shared a small but incredibly cool office with Cory

Doctorow. You could’ve counted the people I knew in town on both hands,

so when I saw a poster for an open mic comedy night at Brain Wash,

the cafe/laundromat across the street from the office, I saw an

opportunity to both meet new people and try something new. My act went

over quite well, and the event’s host, Tony Sparks

(a wonderful guy who gives the best introductions for the newbies),

invited me to do some other gigs at comedy clubs in the city.

I’ve done a little local stand-up — by accident. While hanging out at the bar at the Bovine Sex Club

with the accordion strapped to my back, a guy by the name of Bert

approached me and said “I figure that anyone who carries an accordion

at the Bovine has got

to be funny. Do you do stand-up? Would you like to?” Bert turned out to

be part of a sketch comedy troupe called Slap and Tickle, and I did a handful of shows with them, even getting incorporated into one of their skits. I believe my last gig with them was sometime in 2003.


The Bad Dog Theatre is small theatre near Broadview and Danforth — the western edge of Accordion City’s Greektown — with a main stage that seats sixty or so people. I arrived and met the cast,

all of whom showered me with “thanks for coming” and “hey, I love your

blog”. Then, we started discussing the schedule for the evening’s show.

“The show’s about forty minutes, and we need to fill an hour, so if you could do twenty, we’ll be fine,” said Cary.

Uh-oh.

“My act is seven minutes, eight if I do it like David Carradine,” I

said. “I was under the impression you wanted just the music and a

little banter.”

“Hmm…can you, uh, stretch it to twenty?”

Nearly three times as long?

“If we need to fill more time, I can do my ‘Beat Poetry of Ricardo Montalban’,” offered Scott.

“Crap,” I said, thinking about it. “Oh, what the hell. I accept your challenge!”

I mornally don’t get stage fright — a very embarassing gig in high

school, complete with TV cameras, cured me of that — but this time, I

was a little worried.

After a brief introduction, I walked on stage with the accordion and

did my bit, fattened up with a couple of stories from the old stand-up

routine. It went pretty smoothly. I got laughs for most of my gags and

I avoided the nightmare in which everyone goes silent and the comic

says “Ooh…tough

room.”

After thanking the audience, I went offstage, where the cast said they

liked it. Cary looked at his watch and said “Thirteen, maybe fourteen

minutes. I think we can work with that. Thanks!”

My thanks to the cast and crew of Peril from Beyond Space for inviting

me to open for their opening show, and also to the audience members who

came up to me after the show and said they loved the act and will never

look at the accordion in the same way again. Your taste is impeccable!


Photo: Onstage cast of 'Peril from Beyond Space' -- (l-r) Cary West, Nike Abbott, Paul Koster, Scott Watkins, Sam Agro, and Tracy Shea-Porter.

Theatre keeps them off the streets: from left to right

— Cary West, Nike Abbott, Paul Koster, Scott Watkins, Sam Agro, and

Tracy Shea-Porter.

Here’s the description of Peril from Beyond Space:

The year is 1947. The forces of democracy have triumphed. Millions of

Americans are raising families, buying refrigerators, and wearing

nearly identical suits. Now that fascism has been eradicated, Mr. and

Mrs. Average Homeowner can look forward to a bright new era of peace

and prosperity. Or can they? Little do they realize that a malevolent

alien race has targeted the planet earth – a race of demon monsters

that threatens every single person in the entire world…a Peril – from

Beyond Space!

Peril from Beyond Space

shamelessly savages those old Republic and RKO Pictures “science

fiction” serials, which were often just gangster movies with a

poorly-applied gloss of atomic age/space age paint. There’s plenty of

Buck Rogers pseudoscience hokum, what with the aliens’ anti-gravity

ray, the dashing scientist hero’s energy-damping null ray and

cheese-tastic props. They also poke fun at the old movie conventions

with Dave Till’s stentorian narration (complete with breaks for ads,

such as the coffee featuring “the ingredient that won the war”), the

beautiful fiancee who actually knows more than her scientist betrothed

or his dad even though “science is men’s work” and the best

father-to-son advice ever: “Good grooming equals good science!” My

favourite bit has to be the chase scene; somehow, with only four chairs

and solid thespianism, they pulled off the best one I’ve ever seen in a

stage play, complete with stunt jump!

Photo: Dave Till.

Dave Till is the announcer.

The well-done show ended with a doubly-literal cliffhanger (the

heroes’

car went off a cliff, and the dashing scientist’s name is Cliff), as

will episodes 2 and 3 of this four episode series. I had a ball

watching this show, and were it not for the fact that I have to pick up

Wendy from the airport this Friday, I’d catch it.

Peril from Beyond Space will play at the Bad Dog Theatre (138 Danforth,

at Broadview) this Friday, March 18th, as well as the subsequent two

Fridays (March 25th and April 1st). Tickets are a mere eight bucks

(five for students). Go support some live theatre and be entertained by

some really funny people too!

Categories
In the News Toronto (a.k.a. Accordion City)

Rannie’s on TV Tonight!

Rannie “Photojunkie” Turingan, who in my opinion is the heart and soul of the Greater Toronto Area Bloggers group, will be appearing on tonight’s edition of The Hour with George Stroumboulopoulos on CBC Newsworld at 8pm Eastern Standard Time. The topic: weblogs and his winning the “Best Canadian Weblog” at the 2005 Bloggies. Go, Rannie!

Categories
Geek It Happened to Me

Signs of Life at the Other Blogs

They’ve been keeping me quite busy here at “Dos Vacas” — so busy, in fact, that I asked ol’ Boss Ross if it would be a problem if I put The Farm and IndieGameDev

on hiatus until, say, April. Ross looked at me if I’d suggested that we

get the department all cross-dressed, liquored up and into a nice

friendly round of Russian Roulette:

Photo: Weird photo featuring three women at dinner with booze, one of whom is holding a gun and suggesting some firearms-based fun.

That’s me, Darryl Green and Ross Rader, all liquored up,

cross-dressed and ready to get our gun on. Or maybe it’s how Dave Winer

imagines the “White Males: Threat or Menace?” panel at Bloghercon would

be like.

So I spent some time this morning following the Getting Things Done

method of looking at upcoming tasks, which is pretty nicely captured in

this infographic from an entry in  MarkTAW.com

Graphic: 'Cascading Next Actions' chart from marktaw.com.

…and after a little thought decided, yeah, I can do those blogs and these projects reasonably.


The Farm has today’s posts up, and I’ll get to IndieGameDev a little later today.

Categories
Uncategorized

Happy Fun Creative Contest: Make a Conservative Counterpart to this "Liberal Agenda"

Thanks to everyone for helping me troubleshoot my RSS feed. I wasn’t expecting so many responses!

However, all those responses suggest that a number of you are actually here for some actual reading material

as opposed to calls for debugging assistance. That’ll have to wait

until later this evening; I’m working on a number of ambitious projects

that have kept me too busy to blog at work (which The Powers That Be here don’t mind, as long as it’s within reason).

In the meantime, here’s a chance for you to give your powers of

creativity a workout. Consider this page from a “Liberal Agenda”…

Hmmm….shouldn’t there be something scheduled for 4:20?

What items would appear on its counterpart, the “Conservative Agenda”? Post your ideas in the comments.

(And come to think of it, as this person

put it, why doesn’t the agenda above simply book the entire day under

the item “Serve as the critical half of a fake dichotomy?”)

Categories
Uncategorized

Do You Read This Blog Using an RSS Reader? [Updated]

[Update at end of article]

If so, I need you help trying to solve a little problem here. I’ve

received a few emails telling me that my RSS feed is showing only the

titles of my entries. This seems to be the case on the Mac, but not

Windows.

If you can, could you please look at my RSS feed and report in the

comments what platform you’re using, what you’re using to view the RSS

feed and whether you see whole articles or just the titles? Thanks.


Update:

It looks as though there’s a problem with the RSS feeds for a number of

Blogware-based blogs. The Blogware team’s looking into it right now.

Hopefully, they’ll be able to resolve the issue soon.

Categories
It Happened to Me

Congrats, Rannie!

The competition was pretty stiff, but in the end, the 2005 Weblog

Awards declared Rannie Turingan’s Photojunkie the Best Canadian Blog of

2005. Congratulations on your second win, Rannie! (He also won in 2003.)

I’d like to offer a hearty congratulations to the other nominees for the Best Canadian Blog title:

Another local blogger, Sam from Daily Dose of Imagery, also got a nomination for Best Photography of a Weblog and won. Congrats, Sam!

I got a chance to catch up with most of the nominees on Saturday at a

gathering that Rannie threw for the nominees for Best Canadian Weblog

(Kelly couldn’t make it). It was possible because this year’s nominees

were all from the Greater Accordion City Area. It was fun, and Kim has a writeup of what happened at Bacon and Eh’s — mine will appear later.

I’d also like to thank all those readers who nominated me both this year and last year. You’re the best.

And hey, I think I’ve got a good shot for the Lifetime Acheivement award next year…