Thursday, October 26, 2017

"The Speed and the Fury" by Phony McFakename

This is it, the one you've all been waiting for, the one with the title The Speed and the Fury!

Amazing that no one's ever used that title. It seems so obvious, on so many levels.

Elevator pitch: It's The Big Lebowski meets Fast and the Furious, sprinkled liberally with body horror.

Escalator pitch:

R.J. doesn't mind the never-ending car races and crime all over the city. But he's sick and tired of waking up to find doctors trying to steal his organs. 

So with help from a fresh clone, R.J. investigates. 

Amid a series of gratuitous explosions, the trail of organ theft points to the last standing car manufacturer in Detroit. What awaits him may shock you...

Or it may not! I don't know how shockable you are! You shockingly unpredictable person, you!

Enjoy the book. It's bizarro fun for the whole dysfunctional family.


-Phony McFakename

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I exist on Twitter and Facebook and InstagramAnd my books are on Amazon and Barnes & Noble and Kobo and probably some other places, too.

Wednesday, October 18, 2017

This is a Thing: Alamo Drafthouse Cinema

I write this with heavy heart.

Let's rip off the bandage...
The Alamo movie chain loves movies, clearly. They do one-off screenings of classic, quirky films. Their walls are lined with posters for classic, quirky films. Their seats are amazingly comfortable, and some even recline. They present their films in very nice theaters and they have strict rules against talking or texting. To the point they will kick you out of the theater if you're caught texting or talking.

All well and good.

PROBLEM: THEY SERVE FOOD ALL THROUGH THE FILM.

This is as distracting and disruptive, if not more so, than talkers and texters.

And you know the annoyance of seeing the guy next to you holding his glowing screen up while he checks his phone?

Well...at the Alamo, the guy next to you has a table in front of him, with a LIGHT shining under his table that he uses to read the menu during the movie and decide what food he wants to order.

This well-lit menu in the guy's lap looks like a GIANT GLOWING MENU-SIZED PHONE SCREEN. He might as well be checking TWO IPADS.

Much worse than a nearby knucklehead fiddling with their phone.

Also people talk at about half the screenings I've attended there. The anti-talking rule isn't actively enforced, you have to report the talkers. I've seen people fiddle with their phones during screenings, too. No reprisals.

Also there's TALKING during the food delivery. When handing off plates full of cheese fries or other nutritious necessities, the staff has to ask who ordered what, in addition to walking in front of an entire row of people to deliver that food.

I repeat: theater staff are walking back and forth in front of you for the ENTIRE RUNNING TIME.

And they deliver the check to tables 30 minutes before the movie's over.

I attended a (FANTASTIC!) revival screening of the 1978 Dawn of the Dead there and the tone-deaf staff delivered the check to my friend at the exact point that a main character gets killed. It's a huge emotional moment in the movie, but it happened to be 30 minutes before the ending. So boom, there's a staff member walking in front of you to drop a check. Completely breaking your engagement with the film.

Thanks, Alamo!

(Bonus bit of awkwardness: a staff member comes up to you and introduces his or herself right when you sit down at the theater, like you're at a restaurant. And if you don't want anything, you can tell they're let down, because that means they get no tip from your attendance there. And if you look to the side of the theater, they're monitoring the theater the ENTIRE TIME because of the primitive ordering system: you write your food order on a card and stick that card up on your table and they walk over--IN FRONT OF PEOPLE--to take your order. So as a former movie theater employee, I feel for these poor folks stuck standing there on constant surveillance duty, checking for upraised cards for the film's entire running time. Are they forced to watch the same movie all day, every shift? There's got to be a better way for Alamo to do that.)

Now I get it, Alamo's business model is as a restaurant, not a theater. And concessions have always been where a theater makes their bucks. And SOMETIMES staff members are discreet with food delivery, maybe leaning over a bit to avoid just blatantly walking in front of people.

But c'mon, Alamo...do the food service beforehand. Serve drinks beforehand. (That's what they do at Violet Crown, another local movie chain that's looking pretty good now in comparison. If they can do it, you can do it!) Preserve the sanctity of the moviegoing experience, don't just create a different annoyingly distracting version of it.

There, I just solved all the world's problems.


-Phony McFakename

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I exist on Twitter and Facebook and InstagramAnd my books are on Amazon and Barnes & Noble and Kobo and probably some other places, too.

Thursday, October 12, 2017

Favorite Quotes: October 2017

"Can't stop
Won’t stop
Climbing the mountain ‘til we reach the top!”
-Ice-T, Rappin’ (1985)

“Most of the world's problems could be avoided if people just said what they f**king meant.”
-Marilyn Manson, The Long Hard Road Out of Hell

“Two words: Duh!”

"What happened to sticking together?"
"I guess I'm just not feeling it anymore."
"Well, you can forget my number from your cell phone!"
-Bratz: The Movie

“I think everybody should get rich and famous and do everything they ever dreamed of, so they can see that it’s not the answer.”
-Jim Carrey

“Overkill is trying to make a murder salad of your hero’s journey!”
-The Tick (2017)

“If I laugh at any mortal thing, ‘tis that I may not weep.”
-Lord Byron

“Civilization doesn't exist to maximize capitalism. Capitalism exists to maximize civilization.”
-Seth Godin

“I feel more happy when I’m happy than when I’m sad.”
-Carlton Mellick III, Teeth and Tongue Landscape

“We stress that the activity of joking cannot be said to have no aim or purpose, for it has set itself the unmistakable aim of arousing pleasure in the listener.”

“The most powerful stimulus to the joke-work is the presence of strong tendencies, reaching into the unconscious, which represent a special aptitude for producing jokes and may explain why the subjective conditions for making jokes are so frequently fulfilled in neurotic persons.”

“There are other ways of regaining nonsense and deriving pleasure from it; caricature, exaggeration, parody, and travesty make use of it, and in this way create ‘comic nonsense.’”
-Sigmund Freud, The Joke and Its Relation to the Unconscious

"Sometimes I think I have felt everything I'm ever gonna feel. And from here on out, I'm not gonna feel anything new. Just lesser versions of what I've already felt."
-Her

“It is arguable that an element of our enjoyment of these clever jokes is a self-congratulatory awareness of our own cleverness in enjoying them. We feel ourselves to be, as it were, in the company of clever people like ourselves, and feel joyful at the distinction it confers. We laugh in self-glorifying delight.”

“Tendentious jokes thus allow us to return to primary sources of pleasure normally barred by our internal censorship.”
-John Carey

“What’s wrong with you? You just ran that guy over! You must have a low IQ!”
-Horror House on Highway Five


-Phony McFakename


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I exist on Twitter and Facebook and InstagramAnd my books are on Amazon and Barnes & Noble and Kobo and probably some other places, too.

Wednesday, October 4, 2017

TV Casualty: Shows I Liked

These shows were pretty cool: 
The Eric Andre Show, season 1-4 
Stan Against Evil, season 1 
Man Seeking Woman, season 1 and 2 
Con Man, season 1
Portlandia, season 7
Madam Secretary, season 3
Holliston, season 1 & 2 
Rick and Morty, season 3 
Decker: Unsealed
Decker: Mindwiped
Mike Tyson Mysteries, season 3
O.J. Simpson: Made in America
Will Vs the Future (pilot)
The Tick, new Amazon version
Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee
Comrade Detective, season 1
Gotham, season 3
Atlanta, season 1
Xena: Warrior Princess (saw a couple episodes for the first time, hilariously ridiculously goofy)
Norm MacDonald Show, season 2
Justified, season 1-3
The Defenders, season 1
Izombie, season 3
Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency, season 1
Larry Sanders Show, season 1-6
Hot Package, season 1 & 2
Oats Studios YouTube series
Lookwell! (Pilot)


And these just started airing, but I like what I see so far:

The Good Place, season 2
This is Us, season 2
South Park, season 21
Modern Family, season 9
Brooklyn Nine-Nine, season 5
Speechless, season 2
Curb Your Enthusiasm (2017 series)
The Orville, season 1


Also Inhumans is hilariously awful. Fun to watch for heckle-value.



-Phony McFakename


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I exist on Twitter and Facebook and InstagramAnd my books are on Amazon and Barnes & Noble and Kobo and probably some other places, too.