Category: Video

  • Live at Dragon Con 2013: Thank God You’re Here

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    Aaron Fever and the multi-talented Joseph Scrimshaw put on an improv comedy show of epic proportions at Dragon Con 2013. It featured the talents of James Urbaniak, Bill Corbett, Paul & Storm, Mike Phirman, and Phil LaMarr with special appearances by Phil Plait, Ken Plume, and Molly Lewis. Somehow we were able to fit that all star line-up into just 20 minutes. If you weren’t there, fret not! Because now you can watch it in 720p (whatever that means) online! As many times as you’d like.

    Bit of a warning, there were some problems with the audio on the night so you might have issues with it in patches but hopefully not enough to take-away from the show.

    Video Credits:-
    Directed by Jon Boutelle
    Filmed by The Unique Geeks
    Edited by Aaron Poole

  • Live at Dragon*Con 2011: Molly Lewis

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    In the first of what will hopefully be a number of videos, we are proud to present the first ever Dragon*Con performance by Molly Lewis at the GONZOROO concert 2011!

    We had lots of amazing people perform on the night and Molly charmed the crowd with the best of them. Here is her set in full:

    Video Credits:-
    Directed and shot by : Jon Boutelle
    Edited by : Aaron Poole

  • QUICK STOP EXCLUSIVE: I’m F***ing Seth Rogen

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    Straight from the set of Kevin Smith’s Zack And Miri Make A Porno – starring Seth Rogen, Elizabeth Banks, Jason Mewes, Traci Lords, Craig Robinson, Jeff Anderson, Katie Morgan and Ricky Mabe – comes a decidedly NSFW cautionary tale about just what it takes to get ahead in Hollywood…

     

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    Download “I’m F***ing Seth Rogen”:

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  • The Art Of Travel Blog #6: The Jungle

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    artoftravel2008-01-011.jpgWe are happy to present the exclusive web only trailer and first of seven behind the scenes webisodes of The Art of Travel. Each month, we’ll premiere a new webisode – and in-between, we’ll have biweekly blogs from the actors and filmmakers, plus cool image captures from the movie.

    This story has been three years in the making, and shooting the film over 7 weeks in 5 countries was an adventure for the entire cast and crew.

    No, The Art of Travel is not a documentary or the retelling of the bestselling philosophy book with the same title – It is the story of Conner Layne, a high school grad with a full ride to college who finds his plans interrupted by a life changing moment… a moment which becomes the spring board to a travel adventure that ultimately changes Conner’s hopes and dreams.

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    After spending seven weeks together cast and crew becomes family. Through all the adventure we covered and the highs and lows, it’s always hard to say goodbye. We all experienced something special while making this movie. There were no Hollywood Studios to answer to or agents that ever fought what we were trying to do. Everyone was on the same page – make a fun movie that leaves you feeling good. Our hopes are that we have achieved that.

    And now our adventure becomes your adventure. One thing is certain about making a movie – there is never any such words as THE END”¦

    There are countless times for cast to reunite: There are always re-shoots, and there are always sequels!

    PS: Be sure to check us out at The Palm Springs International Film Festival!

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    Thomas Whelan, Angelika Baran, Brian La Belle, Emyr G. Graciano, Christopher Kennedy Masterson (Cusco, Peru)

    Salude from the Filmmakers!

    Thomas Whelan
    Brian LaBelle
    Emyr G. Graciano
    Christopher Kennedy Masterson

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    Download The Art Of Travel Video Blog #6:

     

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    THE ART OF TRAVEL TRAILER ““
    Before you dive into the webisodes, check out the trailer for The Art of Travel

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    Download The Art of Travel Trailer:

     

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    Download The Art Of Travel Video Blog #5:

     

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    THE ART OF TRAVEL VIDEO BLOG #4: “The Darien” ““
    Cross the formidable – and deadly – Darien Gap with the cast and crew…

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    Download The Art Of Travel Video Blog #4:

     

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    THE ART OF TRAVEL VIDEO BLOG #3: “Ladrones” ““
    How exactly do you woo a cast willing to travel into the wilds of Central America…

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    Download The Art Of Travel Video Blog #3:

     

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    THE ART OF TRAVEL VIDEO BLOG #2: “Casting The Net” ““
    How exactly do you woo a cast willing to travel into the wilds of Central America…

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    Download The Art Of Travel Video Blog #2:

     

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    THE ART OF TRAVEL VIDEO BLOG #1: “Gonzo Filmmaking” ““
    Dive into the process of pulling together the film, and the unique insanity of transporting a cast and crew into the wilds of Central America…

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    Download The Art Of Travel Video Blog #1:

     

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  • Holiday Havoc: Lucy, Daughter Of The Devil

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    Some people hang the holly, others decorate the tree, and a few even terrorize the neighborhood with off-key caroling.

    Not us.

    Here at Quick Stop Entertainment, we’re celebrating the holiday season by giving a little something back to you, our readers (you know who you are).

    Every weekday leading up to the holiday break, we’ve got uber-exclusive gifts provided by a whole range of artists, actors, comedians, and studios. One a day, straight from them to you (and you can check out last year’s fun here).

    Ain’t that cool?

    Today we’ve got an exclusive video from Satan himself, the pere of [adult swim]’s Lucy, Daughter of the Devil. With the help of creator/producer Loren Bouchard and a select group of elementary school students, Satan shares some of the holiday seasonal “Letters to Satan” that he gets (which makes a nice compliment to Satan’s special holiday recipe from the past).

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    Download “Letters To Satan 2007”:

     

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    Check out the rest of this year’s “Holiday Havoc” HERE

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  • Holiday Havoc: QI & Stephen Fry

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    Some people hang the holly, others decorate the tree, and a few even terrorize the neighborhood with off-key caroling.

    Not us.

    Here at Quick Stop Entertainment, we’re celebrating the holiday season by giving a little something back to you, our readers (you know who you are).

    Every weekday leading up to the holiday break, we’ve got uber-exclusive gifts provided by a whole range of artists, actors, comedians, and studios. One a day, straight from them to you (and you can check out last year’s fun here).

    Ain’t that cool?

    Today, not only do we have an extra special holiday sampler of the brilliantly funny UK quiz show QI, but we also chat with host Stephen Fry.

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    If you’ve never heard of the UK quiz program QI, you’re missing out on one of the funniest “educational” shows ever devised (the devisee being creator/producer John Lloyd, formerly of Blackadder, Not The Nine O’Clock News, and Spitting Image). The key to QI (which stands for “Quite Interesting”) is the central tenet of its philosophy – it’s not always being correct that counts, but interesting (and funny). The interesting nature of a given piece of information spurs conversation and debate, eventually leading round to the learning said informational nugget. Did you know that the Earth has more than one moon, for example? Or that otters kill crocodiles? Hosted by Stephen Fry, it features a rotating panel of four comedians (one of which is mainstay Alan Davies) – and it’s one of the most hilarious shows I’ve ever seen… Honestly, you’ll laugh as much as you learn. Be sure to visit QI on the web at www.QI.com.

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    stephenfry-02.jpgFar from being a stuffy intellectual, a loathsome toff, or a smug git, Stephen Fry has managed to walk the fine line of being not only a wonderfully intelligent man who unashamedly exhibits said intelligence, but also a very funny performer and an all-around humble and likeable guy.

    From out of the fertile ground of the Cambridge Footlights – alongside fellow ‘lighters Hugh Laurie, Tony Slattery, and Emma Thompson – Fry soon planted himself in the burgeoning comedy scene of the 1980’s alongside comedy partner Laurie, a teaming known by the rather straightforward sobriquet “Fry & Laurie”. By the end of the 1980’s, with Fry & Laurie fast becoming beloved members of the funny firmament, Stephen branched out into playwriting before moving into screenwriting, directing, acting, hosting, just plain bookwriting… Really, there’s not much he hasn’t done.

    Since 2003 – and over the course of 5 series and counting – he’s served as host/schoolmaster of the panel show QI.

    In the not-to-distant past, I had a chance to chat with Stephen about QI – and as a holiday treat, we finally present that interview to you, the merry masses…

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    KP: So, I suppose we should start at the beginning – how did QI enter the picture?

    stephenfry-04.jpgFRY: Well, through John (Lloyd). Through his remarkable persuasive powers. I’ve known him for years and years. Really, he was a great hero. When I was at university – he had been, like me, at Cambridge in the Footlights club, which is a famous club at Cambridge. It produces comedians, and has done so for over 100 years. John Cleese and Peter Cook and Ali G – and myself, Emma Thompson, and Hugh Laurie were all in the same year at Cambridge, and we were all in the Footlights as well. And as I say, it’s that sort of Python tradition. And John Lloyd had been in about five years before me. Same time as Douglas Adams who wrote The Hitchhiker’s Guide. They were very good friends. John had become well known to those of us aspiring toward the comedic world because of a TV series called Not The Nine O’Clock News, that he produced. When we left university, I sort of got to know him a bit.

    KP: There’s somewhat of a history with Footlights of the alumni sort of lifting up and providing opportunities for those that come afterward, isn’t there?

    FRY: Yes indeed. It causes extreme annoyance to those who were not at Cambridge. It’s often regarded as a kind of closed shop, a kind of Mafia, but it’s really just because we’re all very insecure and like working with people we know and trust, I suppose. But he did this series Not, as I say, and then Blackadder started and he asked me to be in the second series, where I played a character called Melchett, and then in the third series in one episode, and then did all the fourth series, as well. We just became friends, really. We’d go on skiing holidays together and that sort of thing. And then a few years ago he started to talk about this idea he had about this whole quite interesting thing, and at first I just thought, “Well, that sounds interesting. It’s a bit sort of Ripley’s Believe It or Not.” But knowing his track record as the best comedy producer of his generation, I kind of thought he must have some television ideas – because for him it’s a whole empire. It’s not just television – it’s books, it’s probably films, and god knows what else.

    KP: I think it’s an action figure at this point…

    FRY: Yeah. (laughing) So, he took me to lunch in a very fine restaurant of my choosing, and…

    stephenfry-05.jpgKP: So, you know how to play the game as well…

    FRY: Oh, absolutely, absolutely. And he asked if I would be in it. Either as a regular guest or as the host, and I said I’d rather be a regular guest than a host – not really knowing much about hosting and whether it was the kind of thing I wanted to do. And we did a pilot for the BBC, and he said, “Well look, for the pilot, can you be the host? Because we just can’t think of anyone else who could do it.”

    KP: So he’s actually quite sly about the way he set this up…

    FRY: Absolutely, yeah, indeed. So I did it for the pilot, and then it just seemed natural… everyone seemed to like it and said, “Well look, you must do the series. It goes through June.” So I said, “Well, okay then.” And I did it through the series. And, actually, I quite enjoy doing them, being the sort of beaming host of or, indeed, the vicious host, depending on how you look at it.

    KP: Obviously, for years you’ve done panel shows. How would you describe the difference, from your perspective, to now be in the presenter’s seat?

    FRY: Well, on the one hand there’s less onus on you to come up with witty remarks. On the other hand, there’s a strange onus on you to keep order. It’s bizarrely like being a schoolteacher, which I was very briefly before going to university. In what we call your gap year – which is the year between school and university where people like to go off usually and do the Inca trail in Peru or lounge around on Leonardo DiCaprio style beaches in Southeast Asia – but I instead taught at a prep school in England. And it’s like that. It’s like having a class of unruly people, and I feel it’s my duty to drag them back to the subject. But, on the other hand, of course, let them be amusing as well. So it’s a peculiar feeling. But it’s fun, and actually that sort of personality distinction between myself and Alan in particular is part of the fun of it, really, is that I treat him like a naughty puppy or a bad school boy.

    stephenfry-06.jpgKP: Who knew you would develop into an amazing comedy duo?

    FRY: Yes, it does seem like that. It’s great fun. We record… I don’t know how long we record. John probably knows. It’s only about an hour, from which they have to get a half an hour, of course. And because we do 12 in one series – which is a lot for an English series, although it’s nothing for an American series – it gets into a nice rhythm.

    KP: Did you know right off the bat that there was a rapport between you and Alan?

    FRY: No, no, not at all. I’ve known him – met him at industry parties, award ceremonies and things – and he seemed a very nice chap and I liked him, but no, it just did seem to work. Of course, you know he plays a lot dumber than he really is, and I play a lot smarter than I really am! (laughing)

    KP: With the benefit of the prompter, I’m sure.

    FRY: Yes, absolutely. I’ve got all the answers, but usually, obviously, the point is not to… if everyone just knew the answer it would be a very dull game. The idea is to vamp and busk and generally, as it were, scatting on the subject. And the great thing is that now it’s well established, people who’ve not done it before will have seen it on television and be less scared of it. Because when it started, when we had a newcomer they were very nervous that they wouldn’t know enough, or that they had to be funny. I think what makes it fun for everyone to be on… well, there are a number of things. One is that it doesn’t address any of the boring issues that other television addresses, i.e. the celebrity culture and pop culture and contemporary politics and so on. It is genuinely… you have weird conversations about strange insects or about the nature of the universe or a chicken that lived five years without its head.

    KP: Very much about the tangent…

    FRY: Exactly, exactly. And that’s a relief, though. And people don’t have this enormous feeling that they have to come up with smart one-liners all the time. That it’s wonderful when people are funny, but it’s also wonderful if they genuinely know something interesting. You know, and sometimes the audience enjoys that more than anything else. Some odd fact may remind them of another odd fact, because everybody does know odd things. But off the top of their head they won’t know them. You need to be reminded. It’s like priming a pump.

    KP: Alan mentioned that Hugh (Laurie) was quite nervous about doing the show…

    FRY: Oh yes, indeed he was, yeah. He’s always nervous, Hugh, mind you.

    KP: From what Alan related, he had a performance anxiety that he wouldn’t be able to keep up with you…

    stephenfry-09.jpgFRY: (Laughing) That’s nonsense! A, he can keep up with me, plus – I mean, he’s so brilliant, Hugh. And also, of course, he has so much charm that he’s always absolutely brilliant anyway.

    KP: I think, now – by law – he belongs to us in America now.

    FRY: Yeah, he certainly does, doesn’t he? Yeah. I’ve only seen four episodes, I think, but he’s terrific. Really wonderful.

    KP: I’m surprised they haven’t scheduled your stunt casting as the hospital administrator, or something…

    FRY: Well, funnily enough, when I talked to him he said, “You’ve got to come and do an episode.” I said, “I’d like to be the visiting doctor from London who’s even nastier than you are. Who makes you look like a pussycat.”

    KP: I can’t even imagine that… unless you went around performing unnecessary amputations or something, I can’t imagine a more unpleasant sort than what they’ve made his character out to be. But in a loveable way.

    FRY: Yeah, exactly. Exactly.

    KP: When you look at something like that, as far as a career trajectory, did you ever have a plan for where your career would go, or where you thought it would go?

    FRY: Never. I’ve never had a career plan or trajectory in my life. I rather enjoy the fact that I have no idea what’s going to happen next in the world, and everything’s a constant surprise. I’ve never planned more than a few months ahead. I just do or don’t do things according to mood, really. I sometimes think, “Well, if I concentrated on one thing, if I decided to be just a writer, or decided to be just a comedian, or just an actor,” I might have had more conspicuous kind of success, but I don’t regard success as meaning anything… Happiness is the only success I’m interested in, really. Rather than the kind of reputation type of success. And QI‘s just something that is fun, and it’s nice… it gives pleasure to people in a very particular sort of way. I like the fact that taxi drivers talk about it. And they say, “Oh, I thought it was going to be too poncy for me…” This very English word – too kind of “artsy-fartsy”, as you would say, I think. But they enjoy it. Because, as I say, everyone does know things that they don’t know they know, and it’s a good program, and so it gets a huge mailbag, of course, because people would say, “Oh, this reminds me of something I was told…” And, of course, people love telling me that I’m wrong.

    KP: Yeah, including Alan.

    FRY: Indeed, absolutely! Absolutely.

    KP: He mentioned that you were generally uncomfortable with the Boxing Day episode at the end of Series 2, with the tables being turned and you being placed in the hot seat under his questioning…

    FRY: Well, I just thought it was a bit… well, not exactly self-indulgent, but I was just worried that it was a bit… yeah, I mean, it looks as if we were too pleased with ourselves in a strange sort of way, as if we were making an assumption in taking for granted that people would so buy into our characters that they would be amused by something that might amuse us. So it was probably oversensitivity on my part.

    KP: See, Alan’s take on it was you just desperately didn’t like being put in that position.

    FRY: (laughing) Maybe that’s true! Maybe that’s probably the horrible truth of it, is that I don’t like not being boss.

    KP: And the problem that Alan had was that you happened to get the first couple of responses correct…

    FRY: Yes, quite. He wanted to humiliate me! (laughing) The tradition in grand English country houses is that the Duke and Duchess serve the staff, the servants, their Christmas lunch. That’s a very English tradition, that. So it’s that sort of equivalent. I become the school boy for one episode.

    stephenfry-03.jpgKP: Does it feel different to you? For years you’ve done panel shows, but being the host, was it a completely different feeling to then be put on the panel?

    FRY: Yes it was, actually. I mean, very strange, because you suddenly feel a whole different part of your comic mind is being asked questions, as it were, that you know you have to come at from a different place. Because you think, “Well now, do I interrupt here? Am I silent? If I’m silent too much people think I’m sulking. If I talk too much, they think I’m trying to take over everything.” So a rather bad bout of self-consciousness comes over one. (laughing)

    KP: Do you find that you became slightly more frustrated with the panelists at times during the first series? I remember in particular the “how many moons” episode…

    FRY: Oh, (laughing) absolutely! Yes, I see it as partly in a comic sense, but also partly in a quite serious sense to be my function, is to stop this kind of anti-science nonsense that is so prevalent amongst some, and try and sort of bang the drum for rational thought. Which is a bit like Hugh in House, actually. Try and be rational and basically push the palm of your hand hard into the face of those who doubt the value of logical thought.

    KP: I think, to some extent, Rich Hall saw a bit of an opening and a way to needle you on that.

    FRY: He did indeed. He’s brilliant at that. He’s an extraordinary figure, Rich, isn’t he? I mean, talk about dry. I don’t know anybody who’s dryer than Rich Hall.

    KP: Someone I’m glad who has found a life outside of the US.

    FRY: Yes, absolutely. Is he well known in America? I’ve never been quite sure.

    KP: Well, I remember watching Rich on Not Necessarily the News in the 80s. Which is where he really made his mark. And then, much like the US does with other things, we kind of cast him off unceremoniously.

    FRY: Right. And he has his Otis Crenshaw character as well, doesn’t he?

    KP: Yes.

    FRY: Have you seen that? Yeah, he’s kind of a trailer park character…

    KP: I’m quite glad that he has an aftermarket in the UK, and you respect him as much as we foolishly did not.

    FRY: Indeed.

    KP: We tend to be quite disposable, and you guys actually tend to respect intelligence and talent.

    FRY: Oh indeed. Yeah, we do.

    KP: Which I’m sure you’ll see, because at some point we’ll even be foolish enough stop liking Hugh, as well.

    FRY: Oh ho ho, please. He’s so sweet.

    KP: It wouldn’t be my choice.

    FRY: No, I hope not. Well he’s got to do another 22 in a few months, so he’s going to be there for a long time.

    KP: Can you envision a season lasting that long?

    FRY: No. And they work so hard on it. I’m doing this movie at the moment here in Berlin. It’s a studio picture. It’s Warner Brothers and it’s got a big budget and everything. So everything’s nice and slow. Here I am in my dressing room chatting to you. I get a nice Mercedes driving me in every morning and get nicely looked after and my own personal assistant who cleans my ashtray and brings me coffee whenever I want it and books me theater tickets if I’ve got a free evening and so on. Hugh, who is the star – and I’m only just a supporting actor – Hugh, who is the star of his own TV series, he has to drive into work, which all people do in TV. He shares a two-way trailer. I mean, he has his own section of it. And he gets almost no time in his dressing room in his trailer because people between shots are running, the whole crew is running around to do the reverse shot and they’re running to do the next shot. And they’re firing people who are a bit slow because they have so much to do. Eight, nine, ten pages a day. You know, we’re doing half a page today, and this is quite a lot of special… not special effects, but stunt work in the one I’m doing today. But give me films any day. They’re so much more relaxing! (laughing)

    KP: Plus he gets to juggle the American accent…

    FRY: Yes, which he does a very good job with – at least to my ears he does, and I think to a lot of Americans he really does do a good job.

    KP: I think it’s always a nicely disconcerting moment when interviewers actually hear his natural accent in interviews…

    FRY: Yes, indeed.

    KP: As someone who’s observing it and has occasionally dipped his toe into it, do you see a reticence for the US audience to accept British actors on their own terms?

    FRY: I think the fact that Hugh was probably best known to American audiences for Stuart Little, in which he also played an American, has made it quite easier for him, because I think with the exception of the Masteripece Theater-type audience who would have seen him as Bertie Wooster in Jeeves & Wooster, most of them will say, “Oh, that’s the guy who was with Geena Davis in Stuart Little,” and they’ll feel quite sort of… maybe feel he almost is American or, if he is English, then he probably grew up in America. Whereas if it was an obvious English actor like Hugh Grant doing it, I think they would find it rather hard to accept. It’s a tricky one. We love… we don’t mind Renee Zellweger doing an English woman, or Gwyneth Paltrow…

    KP: But you did mind Dick Van Dyke.

    FRY: That was terrible, because it was just so… Just so bad. An unspeakably bad accent. I mean, he can’t have had a dialogue coach. It was just shocking.

    KP: (laughing) But he tried…

    FRY: He tried, bless him… yeah, and, you know, he certainly was a good hoofer and he could move around and so on and, you know, I’m a big fan of his and all the rest of it, but dear me. (doing bad accent) “‘Ello Mary Poppins!”

    KP: Well, that shows you the full range of what we have to offer.

    FRY: (laughing) Yeah. But, you know, don’t… I sometimes get quite cross with Americans for selling themselves short. You’re the country that gives us The Simpsons and West Wing and things like that. There’s some really intelligent writing and performing and brilliant TV going on as well as the dregs. There’s some fantastically smart people working in television. Aaron Sorkin and people like that, David Kelly, and many of the others are really – they’re just incredible, what they put together under the pressure they do. Even things like CSI are so much better than they need to be, if you know what I mean. Obviously, after that fourth and fifth series, they tend to get more sentimental and formulaic and so on, but they’re very well constructed and very impressive pieces of craftsmanship. And at their best, like West Wing and The Simpsons, quite brilliantly written.

    KP: Another thing I regret, and QI is an antidote to that, is that we tend to be so intensely disposable because of the glut of information that we have delivered to us…

    FRY: Yeah.

    KP: Just a all of this mass media coming at us.

    FRY: Yeah.

    KP: Whereas, especially with performers – and QI being an example of that – there really is an appreciation for solid, intelligent performers in the UK that I just don’t think we have over here.

    FRY: Yes, absolutely. That is an advantage we have, no question. Yeah. It would be interesting to see what would happen if the Americans took the format, to see what you would do with it. Whether it would become more a series of one liners, whether there would be script editors. We don’t have that. I get the questions and that’s all I do, and I just say “Hi” and ask them. And the contestants… “Contestant” is not the word… The performers come along and respond to them. Some of them would like to know roughly what subject might come up beforehand, but nobody writes gags for them. Nobody tells them what to say. That’s the fun of it. I think the audiences know that somehow. They know whether something is prepared or not. And I’d be interested to see if American performers would allow that.

    KP: It seems – particularly your role within it – a very British thing compared to the US, since we really don’t have the same kind of headmaster-type role in our upbringing.

    FRY: No. You have issues with authority.

    KP: As you’ve seen with Rich.

    FRY: (laughing) Right! Exactly! (laughing)

    KP: Can you imagine hosting an American version of the show?

    FRY: It would be interesting. I would be treated, probably, like King George the Third, as someone who had to be… you know, have my tea poured over the side of the ship! (laughing) (doing American accent) “We fought a goddamn war to get rid of your kind!”

    KP: Yes… The final segment every week would be them switching places with you.

    FRY: Yeah, I mean, look at Anne Robinson on The Weakest Link. I mean, it lasted about a series or two, didn’t it, before people got fed up with this bitch from England…

    KP: I think it was just the intensity with which it was sold.

    FRY: Yeah, I think it was overdone, wasn’t it? It was ridiculously overdone.

    KP: To the point where, I think at one point they were airing it three or four times a week.

    FRY: Oh, dear god.

    KP: Eventually we had The Weakest Link: County Commissioners special.

    FRY: (laughing) Yeah, enough already!

    KP: You can only have so many variations of a game show.

    FRY: Yeah, quite.

    KP: But there’s also just the concept of the entertainer-based panel show, which really doesn’t exist here in the US. Bill Maher tried to do it with Politically Incorrect, but we really don’t have… I mean, in the UK there is that deep history of the panel show and game shows.

    FRY: Yes, there is. That’s right, absolutely. Lots and lots and lots. And I don’t know what it is. I don’t understand what psychological national characteristic is called in that gives it this kind of obsession, or at least history of it. Who knows what it says about you?

    KP: You’re someone who’s endlessly interested in being on these shows… What is the appeal, to you, of the panel show?

    FRY: Well, the fact that it’s simple and easy. I turn a lot more down than I do, but I do the odd episode of Have I Got News For You, which is a topical one, and I’ve done it about four times and it’s been going for 12 years. I’ve done a few others. And I love doing them on radio. They are enormously enjoyable.

    KP: Like Just A Minute

    FRY: Just A Minute, exactly, and I’m Sorry I Haven’t A Clue, which is a wonderfully silly one but very enjoyable. But yeah, I mean, it’s a pleasant way to spend an afternoon in a studio with… you know, (laughing) I don’t know what the answer is, I suppose. It used to be, before television took over the world, that’s how British people would disport themselves after dinner. They would play games. What’s called house party games. Games like Just A Minute all come from that. They were “parlor games” is the phrase, isn’t it? And a lot of the best games on television come from parlor games like that. There’s that play by Noel Coward, Hay Fever, which has got that classic scene in the middle where they all play this game called in the manner of the word where someone goes out of the room and everyone in the room has to think of an adverb – like “slyly”, or “astonishedly”, or whatever it might be. And then the person comes in and they ask questions, and they all have to reply in the manner of that word. And then he has to guess what the word is. And there’s this fantastic scene of violence and emotional sort of thunderstorm in Hay Fever because one of them feels humiliated because he doesn’t know the word “archly” or something, and they get in this terrible fight about it.

    KP: So this is what a repressed populace plays during a blackout…

    FRY: It would seem exactly that – rather than actually just getting straight down to it, as I’m sure you Americans would.

    KP: As opposed to expressing emotions through parlor games…

    FRY: Yeah, (laughing) that seems to be it.

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    Check out the rest of this year’s “Holiday Havoc” HERE

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  • Holiday Havoc: Paul Dini & Rashy

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    Some people hang the holly, others decorate the tree, and a few even terrorize the neighborhood with off-key caroling.

    Not us.

    Here at Quick Stop Entertainment, we’re celebrating the holiday season by giving a little something back to you, our readers (you know who you are).

    Every weekday leading up to the holiday break, we’ve got uber-exclusive gifts provided by a whole range of artists, actors, comedians, and studios. One a day, straight from them to you (and you can check out last year’s fun here).

    Ain’t that cool?

    Today, we’ve got a special edition of Paul Dini’s “Monkey Talk”, which finds Rashy and his little brother, SuperRica, swingin’ it Vegas-style for the holidays…

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    Be sure to check out Rashy’s official site at LittleRashy.com“¦ And while you’re at it, be sure to check out Rashy’s “mom”, Misty Lee, at MistyLee.com

    Check out the rest of this year’s Holiday Havoc – and past Havoc – HERE

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  • Scrubs Blog: My Horsey

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    VIDEO BLOG #100: “My Horsey” ““
    This week, J.D. and Turk encounter a uni-horned creature of myth… or do they?… as we go behind-the-scenes of this sequence from episode 7×06, “My #1 Doctor”.

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    Download Scrubs Video Blog #100:

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  • Holiday Havoc: Rifftrax

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    Some people hang the holly, others decorate the tree, and a few even terrorize the neighborhood with off-key caroling.

    Not us.

    Here at Quick Stop Entertainment, we’re celebrating the holiday season by giving a little something back to you, our readers (you know who you are).

    Every weekday leading up to the holiday break, we’ve got uber-exclusive gifts provided by a whole range of artists, actors, comedians, and studios. One a day, straight from them to you (and you can check out last year’s fun here).

    Ain’t that cool?

    Today, we’ve got an exclusive Holiday Havoc gift from Michael J. Nelson, Kevin Murphy, Bill Corbett ““ formerly of the legendary Mystery Science Theater 3000 and authors of numerous best-selling & very funny books and plays ““ and the rest of the team at Rifftrax.

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    If you’re unfamiliar with Rifftrax, they’re essentially downloadable audio commentaries that you can play back on your mp3 player of choice, which you then sync up to your very own DVDs of such classic (and not-so-classic) films as Lord of the Rings, The Phantom Menace, Roadhouse, The Fifth Element, and even Star Trek V. Even better, the commentaries feature that patented humor we’ve all been so desperately needing back in our lives.

    You can purchase these commentaries and many more directly from Rifftrax.com for only a few dollars, and additional titles are being added to the library constantly.

    Today, however, we have that special gift just for our Quick Stop readers ““ an exclusive holiday greeting from Mike, Kevin, & Bill!

    Check out the rest of this year’s Holiday Havoc – and past Havoc – HERE

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  • Scrubs Blog: My Football Stunt

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    VIDEO BLOG #99: “My Football Stunt” ““
    This week, J.D. flashes back to an encounter with the football team, and we go behind-the-scenes of this sequence from episode 7×06, “My #1 Doctor”.

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    Download Scrubs Video Blog #99:

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  • Scrubs Blog: My Man Boobs

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    VIDEO BLOG #98: “My Man Boobs” ““
    This week, it’s thanks for the mammaries as we go behind-the-scenes of an odd little fantasy sequence from episode 7×05, “My Growing Pains”.

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    Download Scrubs Video Blog #98:

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  • Monkey Talk with Paul Dini: Do The Rashy!

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    -By Paul Dini & Rashy

    Paul Dini’s “Monkey Talk” (co-hosted by his irrepressible sock monkey son, Rashy) returns with Rashy’s new dance craze that’s sure to sweep the nation – “The Rashy”! Be sure to check out Rashy’s official site at LittleRashy.com

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    DOWNLOAD:
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  • Scrubs Blog: My Aching Back

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    VIDEO BLOG #96: “My Aching Back” ““
    This week we’ve got a look behind the scenes at an elaborate bit of make-up and special effects from episode 7×03, “My Inconvenient Truth”.

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    Download Scrubs Video Blog #96:

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  • Scrubs Blog: My 7×01 Table Read

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    VIDEO BLOG #93, #94, #95: “My 7×01 Table Read” ““
    The seventh season has arrived, and we kick things off with the table read of episode 7×01, “My Own Worst Enemy”, which can be found in 3 parts below.

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    Download Scrubs Video Blog #93:

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    Download Scrubs Video Blog #94:

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    Download Scrubs Video Blog #95:

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  • Scrubs Blog: A Guided Tour – Part 5

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    VIDEO BLOG #92: “A Guided Tour – Part 5″ ““
    The final installment of the Scrubs set tour, with special tour guides Production Manager Richard Wells, Ken Jenkins, and Neil Flynn.

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    Download Scrubs Video Blog #92:

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  • Scrubs Blog: A Guided Tour – Part 4

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    VIDEO BLOG #91: “A Guided Tour – Part 4″ ““
    The next installment of the Scrubs set tour, with special tour guides Production Manager Richard Wells, Ken Jenkins, and Neil Flynn.

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    Download Scrubs Video Blog #91:

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  • Scrubs Blog: A Guided Tour – Part 3

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    VIDEO BLOG #90: “A Guided Tour – Part 3″ ““
    The long-awaited continuation of the Scrubs set tour has finally arrived, with special tour guides Production Manager Richard Wells, Ken Jenkins, and Neil Flynn.

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    Download Scrubs Video Blog #90:

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  • The Art Of Travel Blog #5: The Jungle

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    We are happy to present the exclusive web only trailer and first of seven behind the scenes webisodes of The Art of Travel. Each month, we’ll premiere a new webisode – and in-between, we’ll have biweekly blogs from the actors and filmmakers, plus cool image captures from the movie.

    This story has been three years in the making, and shooting the film over 7 weeks in 5 countries was an adventure for the entire cast and crew.

    No, The Art of Travel is not a documentary or the retelling of the bestselling philosophy book with the same title – It is the story of Conner Layne, a high school grad with a full ride to college who finds his plans interrupted by a life changing moment… a moment which becomes the spring board to a travel adventure that ultimately changes Conner’s hopes and dreams.

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    Imagine spending 370 days hacking through a jungle to make a road for a jeep, forging ahead with 6 other travelers to break a world record.

    Half of The Art of Travel revolves around this kind of adventure and how Conner becomes part of it, and what he takes from it to go further on his journey to Peru and Bolivia. They fight days of pounding rain, swollen rivers, a 7 mile switch back in the mud, and more! Although it only took nearly three weeks to shoot this entire section, it was enough time for the cast and crew to realize that such a feet would be hell! The Darien Gap has been traveled by people who sought to break records in the past, but only a couple of expeditions ever pulled it off with a vehicle in tow! This section of the film is inspired by these accounts of the Darien. Enjoy webisode 5… “The Jungle”.

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    Thomas Whelan, Angelika Baran, Brian La Belle, Emyr G. Graciano, Christopher Kennedy Masterson (Cusco, Peru)

    Salude from the Filmmakers!

    Thomas Whelan
    Brian LaBelle
    Emyr G. Graciano
    Christopher Kennedy Masterson

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    Download The Art Of Travel Video Blog #5:

     

    • Large (560 x 420 – QuickTime – 39.36 MB)
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    THE ART OF TRAVEL TRAILER ““
    Before you dive into the webisodes, check out the trailer for The Art of Travel

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    Download The Art of Travel Trailer:

     

    • Large (560 x 420 – QuickTime – 28.04 MB)
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    THE ART OF TRAVEL VIDEO BLOG #4: “The Darien” ““
    Cross the formidable – and deadly – Darien Gap with the cast and crew…

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    Download The Art Of Travel Video Blog #4:

     

    • Large (560 x 420 – QuickTime – 42.42 MB)
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    THE ART OF TRAVEL VIDEO BLOG #3: “Ladrones” ““
    How exactly do you woo a cast willing to travel into the wilds of Central America…

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    Download The Art Of Travel Video Blog #3:

     

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    THE ART OF TRAVEL VIDEO BLOG #2: “Casting The Net” ““
    How exactly do you woo a cast willing to travel into the wilds of Central America…

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    Download The Art Of Travel Video Blog #2:

     

    • Large (560 x 420 – QuickTime – 31.97 MB)
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    THE ART OF TRAVEL VIDEO BLOG #1: “Gonzo Filmmaking” ““
    Dive into the process of pulling together the film, and the unique insanity of transporting a cast and crew into the wilds of Central America…

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    Download The Art Of Travel Video Blog #1:

     

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  • Trailer Park: Missy Peregrym

    By Christopher Stipp

    Archives? Right Here”¦

    Instead of manning-up and actually going the emotionally hard route of being outrightly rejected by publishers, I’m rejecting them first and allowing you to give my entire book a preview, let you read the whole thing or, if you like, download the whole damn thing at no cost. Download and read my first book “Thank You, Goodnight” for FREE.

    Here’s how I can tell that I’m getting to know Missy pretty well: I can so spell her name without having to look it up to see if that’s really how you spell P-e-r-e-g-r-y-m. It’s like the back of my hand at this point.

    One of the reasons, though, that I genuinely looked forward to Comic-Con this year, and how it was honestly one of the most satisfying trips I’ve taken to San Diego, was that Missy is always an entertaining interview; she’s completely honest about what she’s doing, she’s never at a loss to tell it like it is and I can’t help but be amazed by the joie de vivre she possesses.

    Missy has a way of navigating the cutthroat waters of life in Los Angeles by simply shrugging at the absurdity of it all while carving out a resume that is slowly starting to generate more and more opportunities for the actress. From her stint on HEROES to her current run on the CW’s REAPER, and if you haven’t checked out the goodness that is the pilot episode I am sure those of you who are technically inclined can catch that wave somewhere on the Interwebs, Missy brings a freshness to roles that speak to her personality: charming and disarming.

    It’s hard to dismiss the fact that she enjoys what she does and is thankful for what she has but she’s markedly different from any other vapid actress I’ve ever had the misfortune to interview from the standpoint that Missy, at the end of the day, is someone who embodies the axiom of good things happening to good people. With regard to her role as someone who plays opposite of a man who has to keep a day job with the devil Missy can simply do no evil.

    To be sure, when Missy took the stage with her fellow REAPER cohorts at the panel in the biggest hall at the Comic-Con, exuding the same nonchalant attitude that has been present with every interview incarnation we’ve had, I had the feeling that if nothing else in life she can at least be someone who can say that she is who she is and isn’t about to compromise anything to get there. However, she could shill for The Ryde and hook a brother up with one of those cryptic “MMM…Burritos” shirts that she was rocking much to the amusement of this journalist during the interview I’m sure her conscious would turn a blind eye…

    Now, since this is the last installment of my Comic-Con coverage I have to publicly give much love and many thanks to my anonymous and hardest working PR source that keeps allowing me to talk to Missy and others in her employ. You made the expense of getting to San Diego worth every cent I spent and I appreciate it. I still think you need to dress up better if you ever think about taking a photo with me again but I’m sure we can work on that next year.

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    Download SDCC Missy Peregrym Interview:

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  • Scrubs Blog: My Emmy Award

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    VIDEO BLOG #89: “My Emmy Award” ““
    We chat with Production Sound Mixer Joe Foglia about his recent Emmy award, the crew that made it all possible, and what exactly a “Production Sound Mixer” does on the show.

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    Download Scrubs Video Blog #89:

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  • Scrubs Blog: My Boom Cam

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    VIDEO BLOG #88: “My Boom Cam” ““
    We thought we’d be a bit experimental this week, so we’re getting a flashback to the shooting of a scene from episode 6×22, “My Point Of No Return.” So what did we do? We strapped the camera to the boom mic. Enjoy!

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    Download Scrubs Video Blog #88:

     

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  • Trailer Park: Ted Rall

    By Christopher Stipp

    Archives? Right Here”¦

    Instead of manning-up and actually going the emotionally hard route of being outrightly rejected by publishers, I’m rejecting them first and allowing you to give my entire book a preview, let you read the whole thing or, if you like, download the whole damn thing at no cost. Download and read my first book “Thank You, Goodnight” for FREE.

    It feels good to be in the presence of someone who makes you want to be a smarter person.

    All through college I appreciated the chance to learn and appreciate what the collegiate system, I thought, was supposed to be about: to sit amidst the free flowing of ideas from various peer groups, the chance to gain wisdom from those who were hardwired to espouse thoughts related to lectures or, ultimately and hopefully, have the possibility to have your knowledge base raised a notch or two after the sixteen weeks was over.

    For me, it was exactly like this. I learned and gleaned just as fast as I could. Unfortunately, I paid the social cost of turning my weekends into extended learning time but there’s something I was frustrated I couldn’t do after I was given my bachelor’s in English: tell you why the world has turned out the way it had. I don’t know why this was such a sticking point with me but, through divine intervention, as I crammed in 12 credit hours in one summer I had to take a sociology class entitled Social Problems. It was taught by Professor Pete Padilla at Arizona State University and it pushed my understanding of the underhanded things or government is capable of to its veritable limit. To understanding what Sea Lines of Communication means to our overall military strategy and how it will impact whether we’ll defend Taiwan in the case of a Chinese assault on that island to the blatant and glaring reality that as long as you have the control you can spin any story you want, even if it’s how the ATF and FBI had a hand with what ultimately happened in Waco, Texas some decade ago.

    The thing is, though, I had my eyes opened to a whole new world and when the class was finished I felt there wasn’t a way for me to keep the intravenous information flowing into me. I was tossed into the Working World and lost my sense of sifting through the messages I was spoon-fed on a daily basis through all forms of media.

    It was about 4 years later when I found Ted Rall.

    Ted was an instant touchstone for me from the standpoint that his cartoons, which somehow sounds awfully minute and insulting when I say it aloud as you compare his work to the other funnies out there for your base amusement, represented something more than just jokes. They were actionable in that they reached out and made you agree with what he was saying or it made you want to scribble down a death threat or two as evidenced by his “Terror Widows” comic which ran five months after September 11th:

    His thoughts almost always have a heft to them when he has something to say. His book, America Gone Wild, showcases some of his own hits and misses with commentary to tell why he’s more than happy to say when he thinks his point wasn’t a very clear one or when something was written too hastily. Ted’s writing some of the most profound commentary on our modern society, with a voice that is unequaled in its ability to attract thunderous protestations from those on both sides of the political arena but, and here’s the most important part, he’s been an active voice against a presidency, the Bush presidency, that knows no limits with how far it will go to lie, cheat or steal its way into your hearts.

    Rall’s disdain for the current administration is certainly out there for all to see in its Generalissimo El Busho glory but it’s also his essays that cut straight to the quick about what’s on his mind with the world or his books on what’s happening in the Mideast or Central Asia. And it’s the latter, entitled Silk Road to Ruin, that I read after picking up at the 2006 San Diego Comic-Con which not only kicked open my closed sensibilities with regard to caring for countries I couldn’t pronounce but it made me acutely and severely aware of what is coming on our political, military and, possibly, environmental horizon with things like Lake Sarez being poised to be our next great world disaster waiting to happen.

    I had the privilege to talk to Ted for a few minutes regarding Lake Sarez, politics, whether Bush is, indeed, the worst president ever, airport security and what it takes to develop an acute sense of reading between the lines we’re fed by an anxious media.

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    Download SDCC Ted Rall Interview:

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  • Scrubs Blog: My Broadway Auction

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    VIDEO BLOG #87: “My Broadway Auction” ““
    The “Stephanie & Deb Show” returns for a third outing, this time with a special announcement about a special charity auction where fans can support Broadway Cares while picking up some cool swag from Season 6’s musical episode. Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS (BC/EFA) is the nation’s leading industry-based, not-for-profit AIDS fundraising and grant making organization. Since its founding in 1988, BC/EFA has raised over $130 million for critically needed services for people with AIDS, HIV or HIV-related illnesses. Please join us in supporting this wonderful organization. Simply log on to www.bcefa.org and follow the links to the “online auctions” page. Thank you!

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    Download Scrubs Video Blog #87:

     

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  • Trailer Park: Blair Butler

    By Christopher Stipp

    Archives? Right Here”¦

    Instead of manning-up and actually going the emotionally hard route of being outrightly rejected by publishers, I’m rejecting them first and allowing you to give my entire book a preview, let you read the whole thing or, if you like, download the whole damn thing at no cost. Download and read my first book “Thank You, Goodnight” for FREE.

    One of the nice things about actually going to Comic-Con is that you can sometimes get opinions about comics that don’t come from your average, pale, emaciated comic book shop employee.

    Blair Butler, of Fresh Ink on G4’s Attack of the Show, does readers for all genres of comics a great service by being an objective voice about what’s hype and what what’s hot within the illustrated world. Her thoughts are always interesting if for the reasons that they’re always well reasoned and come from a place of genuine affinity for the art form. The selections she chooses to champion and those that get her occasional barb help to sift through the wheat and chafe. Since there isn’t any one single platform where comics are given an objective arena to be talked about on television, and surely there could be the case that Blair could turn the segment into a full-length show with the amount of titles that are out and come out on a weekly basis, it’s her recommendations that hold the greatest weight with me; it’s due to her that I found DMZ, one of the best titles going today.

    Prior to the interview she was signing autographs with some of the other members of Attack of the Show and it was interesting to see the number of fans that were clamoring for just a few moments with her. She’s the latter day equivalent of a rock star within the context of the convention but couldn’t have been a more interesting and engaging person to talk to about the state of the comic universe. When I finally sat down with her we talked about what’s been good to read, conventions in general and the nature of the superhero genre.

    You can catch Blair with a varying degree of certainty on G4’s Attack of the Show which airs nightly or you can catch all her most recent installment of Fresh Ink over at G4’s website.

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    Download SDCC Blair Butler Interview:

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  • Trailer Park: BALLS OF FURY

    By Christopher Stipp

    Archives? Right Here”¦

    Instead of manning-up and actually going the emotionally hard route of being outrightly rejected by publishers, I’m rejecting them first and allowing you to give my entire book a preview, let you read the whole thing or, if you like, download the whole damn thing at no cost. Download and read my first book “Thank You, Goodnight” for FREE.

    Hijacked.

    Hijacked is the only way I can explain how the final moments of this interview went. Specifically speaking, and without looking at the tape to be sure, I remember talking to Ben and Thomas about BALLS OF FURY and then a wandering James “David Lo Pan” Hong comes right into the room and just devolves the moment into one big question mark about what just happened.

    The looks on both Thomas’ and Ben’s faces were priceless as I would say mine was with the exception that I was the guy working the camera. I know there was a lot of apologizing going around but it wasn’t necessary in the slightest; it was equal parts bizarre and hilarious.

    Much like BALLS OF FURY.

    The movie, which really seems like one complete extension of the idea of what would happen if you made a film about competitive table tennis, mixed in some classic Christopher Walken goodness and set the whole thing to a raging Def Leppard soundtrack. You can’t really go wrong with a comedy that takes itself so seriously when it comes to its premise and executes it with the subtle funny we’re used to getting out of the creative minds behind the production.

    BALLS OF FURY is currently at theaters everywhere.

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    Download SDCC Balls of Fury Interview:

    Large (560 x 420 – QuickTime – 83.27 MB)
    Small (320 x 240 – QuickTime – 36.27 MB)

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