The Quotidian Ones

Me and my two cents

I'm not prone to giving advice, wait...yes, I am. Well, not unsolicited advice, shit, I do that, too. Sigh...

Okay: I love giving advice. I've been addicted to advice columns since I found Dear Abby on the funnies page (her hipper twin, Ann Landers, was in the Sun-Times and we were a Trib household all the way).

I especially enjoy advice on matters of the heart since I find love fascinating, although as regular readersknow, I spout off on pretty much anything within arm's reach. I loved Em & Lo, the erstwhile Nerve gals who write so well about sex, and subscribed to Salon.com not so I could keep up with their excellent news coverage but because I got tired of reading the Daily Pass ad to get to my Cary Tennis.

Ironically, though, ever since I actually have had some clue about How These Things Work, I have questioned my right to be an authority on (insert topic here). I'm definitely one of those women who suffers from Imposter Syndrome, as Jory Des Jardins describes it:

(Imposter Syndrome) is a fairly common condition that affects many women, particularly those who are achievement-oriented. It's a belief that one's accomplishments are not deserved, that one has somehow fooled the system and will inevitably be found out for the fake that she is.

As a well under-30 pup selling ads to clients twice my age, I remember having frequent "When Will They Find Out We Are Frauds" discussions with my then-boss back in the go-go '80s.

But, as usual, I digress.

I think that my youthful zeal for offering advice had more to do with my needing to be seen and valued than with any selfless desire to share the wealth. These days, I find it easier to resist offering unsolicited advice one-on-one. I figure if someone wants my goddam opinion, they can goddam well ask for it; if, on the other hand, they're just jaw-flapping, as my ex-husband used to say, and I have an excuse to walk away and not waste my valuable time and energy.

As an avid reader of Craig's List, however, I find my advice-giving buttons pushed pretty frequently, and the lure is strong. Fortunately, they make you jump through so many hoops to reply to a post that my ardor cools in advance at the prospect. In fact, I'm always shocked at how many people will jump on a lame thread in the Rants & Raves section; they must have really, really boring jobs.

But every once in a while, a post cries out to me. The poster seems to genuinely want an answer to a problem that speaks to my experience, and I have an extra ten or so minutes to devote to the issue. I consider it another way of giving back; lord knows enough people have helped me through the dark and murky times.

I won't repost this guy's entire plea for help since I don't have his permission, but suffice it to say he was experiencing some bewilderment on the dating front and, having given up entirely on meeting people in real-life venues like bars, he had now come to the conclusion that even the people looking online weren't really looking for a relationship. Worse, I could sense he was on the precipice overhanging The Dark Place; one stiff wind and we might lose him to the other side.

Here's what I had to say:

You know what? You're absolutely right...and you're absolutely wrong.

I'm a fairly cool chick (or so I've been told by some fairly cool people who didn't stand to gain anything by saying it) and I've met some pretty great guys online. And in bars. And through friends. And even, one unusual time, standing in front of a burning bus.

I've also met some equally heinous guys in each of those places. (Well, I only met the one guy in front of the burning bus.)

Point being, there are asshat chicks *and* cool chicks *everywhere*. If you're really looking for a cool one, why close off any reasonable avenue? Two caveats, though. First, in my experience, you do better if you're open but not Looking. Cool chicks can get a little turned off by guys too much on the prowl. (And nobody likes a needy person.)

And second, if you are burning out on any part of the process or developing any kind of an attitude about a particular avenue, stay away from it until you can jump back in with a better attitude. Don't date angry!

Now, I know Em & Lo would have been way funnier, and that Cary would have done a much more thoughtful job of dissecting the guy's modus operandi and even analyzing his intent. But sometimes, the best "advice" you can give is a little reassurance that this, too, shall pass, and that maybe it's a good idea to cool one's heels until one can approach the "problem" with an open mind and a fresh perspective. Especially when you don't really know the person asking the question. And as someone with extensive experience in online dating who had experienced burnout and the falling rate of return that accompanies it, I felt uniquely qualified, nay, compelled, to speak up. So I'm pretty sure I wasn't talking out of my ass.

Hopefully, I wasn't just flapping my jaw, either.

xxx c

You need more Scarlett in your life

One of the pleasures of working on the 99¢ show has been the amazing people I've gotten to meet from the cast and crew. Now one of those divine creatures is looking for a post-99 berth, and since she is such a remarkable young woman, I feel it my duty to the world to let it know that she is available. From Miss Scarlett:

Good Morning!

This is Scarlett Riley, O-Lan's niece, writing to let everyone know that I'm on the prowl for a paying position in the world. I'm here to develop my writing and my new-found love for the theater. I'm adaptable in any business situation. Coincidentally, I also consider myself to be a fast learner. I'm looking for any job in which I can be useful and challenged. Word of mouth got me my current part time job as a personal assistant-I thought I'd try my luck again. I'm also looking for a room for rent/studio if any of you know of a space avilable. If you hear of anything at all that reminds you of me please let me know and keep my number in mind. xxx-xxx-xxxx. This is my mobile phone where I can be reached at all times. Hope all is well and you have a very joyful holiday season!

Sincerely, Scarlett E. Riley

I cannot recommend young Scarlett enough, both as a worker and a Genuine Human Being. Sharp as a tack and sweet as pie, she always goes that extra mile, has an incredibly strong work ethic and a terrific attitude and skill set to match. If her understanding of text and theater is any example, I'll bet she's a kick-ass writer, to boot.

I wish I had both job and an apartment to give Scarlett, but since I do know a few people in Los Angeles via this and my other blog, I figure maybe one of my larger circle of L.A. friends and acquaintances can help.

I've blacked out her cell phone number because I feel funny broadcasting it without her permission, but contact me at communicatrix at gmail etc and I'll put you in touch.

And really, I can promise you this: if you help out Scarlett, especially job-wise, you're doing yourself the favor.

Happy holidays!

xxx c

Comic's comic

I've never been a huge fan of stand-up comedy, just like I've never been a huge fan of Westerns, musicals or reality TV. But I'm always up for exceptional examples from any genre, and Bill Hicks was an astonishing exception to the humdrum rule of stand-up.

Today would have been Hicks's 43rd birthday, and if you're unfamiliar with his peculiar brand of genius, reading up on him and his material will hip you to the enormity of the loss his untimely death was to the world.

xxx
c

Via Gawker.

Pee at Bob's

Only two weekends left to catch the funniest filthy show of the season (as opposed to the funniest clean show of the season, which also runs for two more weekends). Bob's Holiday Office Party is hilarious from start to finish. The actual show runs just over an hour, but with the (masterful) ad libbing I've come to rely on, prepare for more like 90 minutes.

In this case, "prepare" means to monitor your fluid intake pre-show. Yes, it's really that funny.

Consider yourself warned.

At the Third Stage in Burbank through December 19th.

xxx c

I'm such a proud mama, I could burst

One of the 99¢ show's Weird Family was out with strep throat tonight, so a longtime friend of and dramaturg for Orphean Circus gamely stepped in for him tonight at a moment's notice. (I swear, they're dropping like flies, it's starting to sound like a TB ward in that dressing room.) We were all a bit worried for Michael during the early show; it was already a hairy night for other reasons, and while he was more than familiar with the script and production, it's quite a different thing when you're on the other side of the footlights. Especially for the very first time.

But we needn't have worried. Not only did he do a bang-up job delivering his lines and not bumping into the furniture (who was it who said that about acting, anyway, Spencer Tracy?), our budding superstar totally grabbed the spotlight and ripped his second act solo to shreds. Barbra Streisand, look out.

As we discussed in the lobby aprés, after your first show, you wonder why anyone wants to do this; after your second show, you wonder why anyone would want to do anything else.

xxx c

Holiday hit!

stilts It's official: the "real" media have declared Peace Squad Goes 99: The Greatest 99¢ Only Story Ever Told...Ever!, a.k.a. "the 99¢ show", a hit.

We got a thumbs-up review in today's L.A. Times. There was also an excellent feature in yesterday's Times in which my gal Heseon Park catalogues her 99¢ experience from the Wine Tasting Station (not her favorite thing) to the show itself. If you subscribe to Calendar Live, you can find the article there. (And no, I'm not going to link to those cheap bastards; make the content freely available and I'll link your asses seven ways to Sunday.)

And, hooray, the communicatrix gets quoted:

What's it like wearing plastic-and-vinyl costumes for your art?

"You just have no idea how wet underclothes can get until you have done back-to-back perfs of a 99¢ show," says Colleen Wainwright, who plays a stiltwalking mom in the village.

Yup. Proof of stilts part of the equation above.

Get those tickets now. You've been warned...

xxx c

The communicatrix bifurcates

old blogging laBecause I do not have enough to do (wait...hahahahahaha!...okay...), when they put out the call for replacement bloggers over at blogging.la, I threw my gigantic (7 1/4") hat into the ring. Either they were more desperate than I thought or I managed to hoodwink them into thinking I could hang with the excellent crew already in place, because they've given me an at-bat.

I'll still be mainly blogging here, of course, but more of my L.A.-centric musings will likely land over there. (Just as well. My "categories" section here is looking, um, embarrassingly huge.)

So for future posts on Angelyne, cool L.A. art or anything else that strikes my goddamn fancy, head on over to b.la.

xxx c

Personal Swag ≠ Breaking the Boycott

Well, before I read this morning's excellent anti-consumerist post by Eschaton, I spent eight hours putting up swag on the 99¢ Show Store. So just to clarify my position, do not under any circumstances buy holiday gifts here. Go and support a brilliant theater company. Go here and show your love for the greatest holiday show on earth. Go here and buy yourself a little something stretchy to pull over your big, fat, post-holiday gut.

Go go go here, by all means, to get your Kenny merch, but not mine. I'll buy my own peace panties, please.

We can fight the power and show the love.

Peace.

xxx c

UPDATE 2/26/06: C--é----s links went bye-bye along with pro-level site, which I pulled in disgust with lousy customer service.

What's a ghoul to do? Go to the show!

zombie attack

In addition to being a stand-up guy, Justin Tanner writes hilarious plays. Zombie Attack! ran at various venues in L.A. for ten years and I can see why, it's 70-odd minutes of almost non-stop hilarity, all of it deliciously irreverent. (Bonus-extra: hottie Jeremy Sisto sighting in the beer garden apres.)

This incarnation marks the fifth anniversary of the end of Zombie's long run, and it's just wonderful. The production has Justin's usual crack team of actors and lickety-split pacing, plus more laughs per minute than you're likely to find anywhere right now in L.A. theater. It closes next weekend (the 27th) so don't be draggin' yer heels, kids.

And next up at the Third Stage in Burbank (which, bonus-bonus extra, has freaky-good art in the audience restroom and green room) is Bob's Holiday Office Party, which I had the great good fortune to catch last year, its ninth consecutive in L.A.

Put it together with Peace Squad and you've got a trifecta of good L.A. theater.

Now that's scary...

xxx c

It's better up there

durastiltsAt today's rehearsal for the 99¢ show, I got to try out my stilts for the first time. After five or ten nervous, wobbly minutes, I had to be warned to slooooow down for my own safety. Sorry, but anyone who says that being tall is overrated is short.

On a completely different note, for the first time ever my Show Crush is on a married couple. And yes, I've told both of them.

xxx c

Gitcher holiday cheer, here

99 peace squad flyerSince I can remember, I've wanted to be taller. After seeing the teeny-tiny contact pads on the stilts I will be performing with for the gloriously crazy-ass new 99¢ holiday operetta, I am reminded of the old adage, "Be careful what you wish for." Still, I would crawl much farther out of my comfort zone for Ken Roht. I'm already shamelessly plugging the show to anyone who'll listen, especially to those who can more effectively spread the word. I'm sure my friend, Rob Kendt, will see/write about it. But I'm also branching out to the hipster-journalist community, or the one member I have contact with, Heseon Park.

Of course, Heseon is way too good a journalist to take my topline word for it. Unsatisfied with the who/what/where/when info, she's forcing me to answer the "why" of it all. In multiple emails, because I'm so damned unfocussed. Which is irritating, but in a good way, because it's always good when someone gets The Spinning Top to focus her thoughts.

So here's the last email in the exchange. I think I've finally figgered out why the show is so damned wonderful:

> is this the third installment in the 99 cent only series?

Yes. Third year in a row.

> why should people come?

First, b/c it's wildly entertaining. Bottom line, I don't think anyone should go to the theater just b/c it's an edifying experience. Entertainment is the price of entry (no pun intended).

Second, b/c like the best art, it connects us to the Source and to each other. Fostering community is an important thing, right?

Third, b/c now, more than ever, we need to surround ourselves to messages of hope and peace and beauty and joy, which this suckah delivers in spades.

> what kinds of people do you anticipate will respond to this show?

Historically, kids have dug it. In fact, if parents do NOT want their child turned on by the prospect of a life in the lively arts, they should avoid this show like the plague. The joy is that infectious.

Beyond that, anyone who's not dead. Seriously. It's that much fun.

It is. I promise. Get over soon. (Info here.) Because you cannot time-shift theater. Especially with a cast of 40+.

xxx c

1st year, paper; 5th year...points?

maxpointsAwww...Max (Points, that is), the MyPoints mascot, sent me an anniversary gift of 5 points...one for each year we've been together. What a sport! Actually, I've been looking to dump that pointy-headed loser ever since MyPoints lost its first credit card partner. And as soon as I get enough points for a Macy*s gift card, I'm outta there. Not only did they yank the number-one way to accrue points towards Valuable Merchandise right from under me, they dinged my credit rating by forcing me to find a new major credit card.

So screw them. My new affinity program is Yahoo! Points. They have a rockin' program that nets me gift certs at stores that sell non-tax-deductible necessities like shoes, deep-discount luxury handbags and Cosabella thongs. Of course, as the march for the few to own the many continues, their co-branded card vendor is merging with JPMorgan Chase, so this will likely go to hell in a handbasket next.

But for now, there are only 97 points between me and the cutest little wallet...

xxx c

Magic Hour

century liquor

It took me a long time to fall in love with L.A., but from the first shoot I came out on as a junior copywriter, I knew it had one thing all over Chicago: "magic hour," that brief window of time when the sun isn't visible overhead but darkness has yet to take over. Everything looks better in Los Angeles during magic hour, even the tatty bits.

Hell, especially the tatty bits.

So I've finally put my crappy 2.0 megapixel Canon to good use (well, that 9-month stretch of hot online dating action it bought me wasn't all bad, either) and am keeping it with me to document the beauty of my adopted city at magic hour.

From my car, of course.

After all, this is Los Angeles.

xxx
c

New design portfolio up

mm heart tee olive

I've uploaded a bunch of images to the second "photo album" containing my graphic design work, including some t-shirts I sketched out for Megan Mullally & her band, Supreme Music Program, right here. Link to the first one, exclusively postcards, is here.

Feel free to hire me for all your graphic design needs, especially super-cool ones that pay gobs of cash.

xxx
c

UPDATE 2/26/06: Galleries lost in the move from TypePad. You can find my graphic design for theater on Flickr.

Snapshot, briefly

snapshot mueller

Saw a cool photography exhibit, Snapshot at sixspace, a cool gallery downtown, last night. Apparently, it was inspired by the work that came out of SENT, that phone-cam show that was making the Internet rounds a ways back, which looked pretty damned cool, too.

I liked several of the photographs in the exhibit, but I especially liked Andy Mueller's work, seen here. Not only are the photos themselves beautiful, the juxtapositions between them are startling and wonderful. It's a good thing I don't have much wall space, because I certainly don't have enough money to fill it with what I like.

xxx
c

What you can do for less than a buck

psquad bigI went with my friend, Rob Kendt, to see a pretty snazzy show yesterday at the new Kirk Douglas Theater in Culver City. It's called A Perfect Wedding, by American playwright of the moment, Charles L. ("Chuck" to his pals) Mee. There are many terrific elements, including the world's best stage kiss and an ultra-fabulous Bollywood musical number, as well as a bunch of terrific performances, including those by my friends Jim Anzide, Melody Butiu, Veralyn Jones, Leo Marks and John Fleck (whose rant on the election has garnered me more hits in one day than I will probably ever receive for the rest of my blogging life).

But you might not even get to see it, it's already sold out for the rest of the run. There are tickets here and there but they're steep; I paid $40 to catch a matinée.

So to hell with it. Come see Peace Squad Goes 99: The Greatest 99¢ Story Ever Told...Ever! (a.k.a., "the 99¢ show") instead! It's Evidence Room's annual holiday treat, and the only show we put up all year that's clean enough for kid consumption (but still cool enough for the hippest of grownups). I'm in it this year, after two years of bugging the genius behind it all, Ken Roht, for a part, but that's not the reason to see it.

I sat in on my first run-through of the show today and it was absolutely dazzling: hilarious, beautiful, brilliant number after number until I was so weak I had to lie down and have some sliced jalepeno cheese and a celery stick.

For them what hasn't had the pleasure, everything in the 99¢ show is from the 99¢-only Stores, which are the show's main sponsor: all the costumes, all the props, all the set pieces. The show's music is composed primarily on a cheap-o Casio keyboard. You have no idea how fabulous this can be in the hands of L.A.'s best theater composers and designers until, well, let's just say that every time I walk into the costume shop and see the latest creation they're building, I want to play a different part.

Opens November 27. Runs through Christmas. Deets here.

Oh, and 15 bucks cheap.

xxx
c

Make me some damned money. Click now.

In a way, Epinions was (for me, anyway) the forerunner of the blogging world: we created a tiny, electronic tribe of like-minded souls tapping away about Things Arcane and Mainstream, e-mailing and commenting back & forth. It was lovely. And then the dot-com floor fell and all electronic hell broke loose. The mainstream do-bees took over the joint and the downwardly-mobile art-trash who made the place charming and habitable took off for sunnier climes (culturedose, various movie sites, etc.).

Most of my compatriots have pulled their reviews, to post elsewhere, or not, in disgust. I'm perverse, and refuse. It's especially icky there since the shopping.com buyout, but dammit, every 12 months or so, those crazy reviews get me a whompin' $10 check. Plus it's fun to see how many more people have randomly searched for "cover songs" (a mild obsession of mine) and fallen into my tiny Epinions web.

Oh, and there are also fascinating (if marginally useful) reviews on coffeemakers, baby wipes and nose-hair trimmers. But they're charming and, quite often, amusing. And if you sign up for Epinions before you rank them, you net me a coupla video rentals per annum.

xxx
c

UPDATE 2/9/2011: If Epinions is even still around when you read this, O Person of the Future, do not bother. I sent in for my last check and will close my account as soon as it clears. Excelsior!