Tag: ricky gervais

  • A Bit Of A Chat with Ken Plume & Ricky Gervais 3

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    I’m Ken Plume, and soon you’ll be listening to “A Bit Of A Chat” with me, Ken Plume.

    In this episode, I have another chat with Ricky Gervais, about Derek, puppies, man tackles, beards, and babysoft Hodgman.

    The second season of DEREK is now available in the US exclusively on Netflix.

    Hope you enjoy…

    Download “A Bit of a Chat with Ken Plume & Ricky Gervais 3“:

    [audio:http://traffic.libsyn.com/bitofachat/bit_of_a_chat-ricky_gervais_3.mp3]

    (PREVIOUSLY: A Bit of a Chat with Ken Plume & Ricky Gervais, A Bit of a Chat with Ken Plume & Ricky Gervais 2)

    SUBSCRIBE
    Subscribe to this Podcast via iTunes

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    Drop Ken a line HERE.

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    You can also find more of my interviews by clicking HERE.

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  • A Bit Of A Chat with Ken Plume & Ricky Gervais 2

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    I’m Ken Plume, and soon you’ll be listening to “A Bit Of A Chat” with me, Ken Plume.

    In this episode, I have another chat with Ricky Gervais, about tweets, presidential pajamas, Muppets, mooks, and the evolution of man.

    Hope you enjoy…

    Download “A Bit of a Chat with Ken Plume & Ricky Gervais 2“:

    [audio:http://traffic.libsyn.com/bitofachat/bit_of_a_chat-ricky_gervais_2.mp3]

    SUBSCRIBE
    Subscribe to this Podcast via iTunes

    ##

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    Drop Ken a line HERE.

    ##

    You can also find more of my interviews by clicking HERE.

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  • Weekend Shopping Guide 1/25/13: Size Matters Not

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    The weekend’s here. You’ve just been paid, and it’s burning a hole in your pocket. What’s a pop culture geek to do? In hopes of steering you in the right direction to blow some of that hard-earned cash, it’s time for the FRED Weekend Shopping Guide – your spotlight on the things you didn’t even know you wanted…

    (Please support FRED by using the links below to make any impulse purchases – it helps to keep us going…)

    It’s because Warwick Davis is a brilliant actor and was such a delight in the guest role he had on Ricky Gervais & Stephen Merchant’s Extras that I looked forward to the three of them teaming up for Life’s Too Short (HBO, Not Rated, DVD-$29.98 SRP) and presenting a skewed version of Warwick himself that’s just as wonderfully uncomfortable as Curb Your Enthusiasm‘s Larry David. Bonus materials include deleted scenes, featurettes, and outtakes.

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    The swan song of the great Douglas Adams’s tenure on Doctor Who was, for many years, never seen by the public. Due to an industrial action (strike), filming was never completed for the story, and it was shelved… Until many years later, the existing footage was resurrected with newly shot intros and context of the missing scenes provided by the story’s Doctor, Tom Baker. Now, Shada (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP) comes to DVD, featuring that reconstructed version, as well as copious amounts of newly-produced documentaries chronicling the doomed tale’s creation, and its late creator. The set also includes a 3rd bonus disc featuring the documentary More Than 30 Years In The TARDIS, which is just the cherry on top of a must have release.

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    While he’s certainly a more assured filmmaker by the time you get to Hannah And Her Sisters (MGM, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$24.99 SRP), I’m a much bigger fan of Woody Allen’s out-and-out comedy period, which is best represented by Sleeper (MGM, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$24.99 SRP). With both now available on Blu-Ray, you can decide for yourself.

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    If you still have friends who dismiss the ukulele as a beautiful, versatile instrument (the fools), let them have a listen to Jake Shimabukuro’s new album, Grand Ukulele (Mailboat Records, $9.99 SRP), and they’ll hear a true master at work, who manages new and unique explorations in every track, even on well-established standards.

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    It’s been a few months, so like the seasons and the tide, it was inevitable we’d get another release from the denizens of Bikini Bottom in Spongebob Squarepants: Extreme Kah-Rah-Tay (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP), sporting eight episodes, including the show’s transition to widescreen. Finally.

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    You’d never guess by its title that 30 Nights Of Paranormal Activity With The Devil Inside The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo (Fox, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$29.99 SRP) was the latest in the now-long line of everything and the kitchen sink pop culture parodies, would you? Thought not.

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    There are plenty of documentaries about what’s wrong with the world. That’s why it’s wonderful to have a genuinely joyous documentary like Searching For Sugar Man (Sony, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$35.99 SRP) come down the pike. For almost 30 years, fans in South Africa had idolized a pair of albums from an artist named Rodriguez who never achieved success in the US, and was believed dead. Desperate to find out what happened to this mysterious idol, fans eventually found that he was, in fact, alive. And, well, just watch this. You won’t regret it. And while you’re at it, pick up the companion album.

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    After a routine traffic stop puts them on the wrong side of a vicious drug cartel, a pair of LAPD officers (Jake Gyllenhal & Michael Pena) do what they can to try and make sure they make it to the End of Watch (Universal, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$34.98 SRP). Bonus materials include an audio commentary, featurettes, and deleted scenes.

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    Nerdist guru Chris Hardwick gets his first solo Comedy Central stand-up special with Chris Hardwick: Mandroid (Comedy Central, Not Rated, DVD-$14.99 SRP), which finds him waxing geeky on all matter of topics both various and sundry. Bonus materials include a pair of Hard N Phirm performances (with the great Mike Phirman) and a super-secret Easter egg.

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    The latest slickly-produced big-ticket history documentary from the reality show producers The History Channel focuses on The Men Who Built America (History Channel, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP) – which includes such groundbreaking industry titans like Vanderbilt, Morgan, Carnegie, Rockefeller, and Ford. Also included is a clutch of extra material not in the original air versions.

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    Continuing to blend all kinds of stories from the comic book mythos, Iron Man: Armored Adventures Season 2 Volume 3 (Vivendi, Not Rated, DVD-$14.93 SRP) finds Tony Stark mired in the Armor Wars against Iron Monger, facing Iron Man 2099, and upgrading to Extremis. Bonus materials include production art and character galleries.

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    Scholastic continues to release their wonderful series of Storybook Treasures collections of fine children’s books, the latest being the collection Stories From African American Heritage Featuring March On! (Scholastic, Not Rated, DVD-$24.95 SRP) and Stone Soup …and Other Stories From The Asian Tradition (Scholastic, Not Rated, DVD-$14.95 SRP).

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    It’s almost a year past the centennial of the doomed ship’s sinking, but the arrival of the Clifton Webb/Barbara Stanwyck Titanic (Fox, Not Rated, DVD-$19.99 SRP) is still welcome, as it’s a lovely, if flawed, representation of the legendary journey. Bonus materials include audio commentaries, featurettes, and more.

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    Taken once, shame on you. Taken 2 (Fox, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP)? Shame on Liam Neeson’s Bryan Mills, who finds himself taken hostage with his wife this go round, which can only mean we’re cruising towards Look Who’s Taken Now in the very near future. Bonus materials include featurettes, deleted scenes, and an alternate ending.

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    Assassins, monsters, and sorcerers are no match for the threat that Morgana’s ambitions pose to Camelot in the fourth season of Merlin (BBC, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$49.98 SRP), as both Arthur’s future and the fate of the world hang in the balance. Bonus materials include audio commentaries, featurettes, deleted scenes, and outtakes.

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    Our trio of aging pensioners age another year with Last Of The Summer Wine: Vintage 1997 (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$34.98 SRP), the latest volume in Roy Clarke’s answer to those pesky kids with their shows.

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    The UK’s classy answer to CSI, Waking The Dead (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP) returns for its seventh season, filled with more unsolved cases for the Cold Case Squad to tackle, from sex offenders to human trafficking.

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    The original, and superior, version of the monstrous roomie drama Being Human (BBC, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$59.98 SRP) continues to plug along with its fourth season, with new roommates, hunters on their heels, and Old Ones on their way. Bonus materials include prequels, interviews, deleted scenes, and featurettes.

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    So there you have it… my humble suggestions for what to watch, listen to, play with, or waste money on this coming weekend. See ya next week…

    -Ken Plume

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  • Weekend Shopping Guide 1/11/13: Flibble

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    The weekend’s here. You’ve just been paid, and it’s burning a hole in your pocket. What’s a pop culture geek to do? In hopes of steering you in the right direction to blow some of that hard-earned cash, it’s time for the FRED Weekend Shopping Guide – your spotlight on the things you didn’t even know you wanted…

    (Please support FRED by using the links below to make any impulse purchases – it helps to keep us going…)

    I was genuinely wary about how good Red Dwarf X (BBC, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.98 SRP) would be. It had been over 10 years since the last actual series, and while it had its moments, the recent Back To Earth was a relatively dry affair. Thankfully, the Dwarfers return to a studio audience and the character comedy that I fell in love with from the show’s early seasons. Bonus materials include deleted scenes, a gag reel, and an absolutely incredible feature-length documentary chronicling the difficult journey in producing the show’s return.

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    Thinkgeek time! Whether it be for travel purposes or just emergencies, having battery backups able to recharge mobile devices is a plus, and one of the newer ones to consider is the iGeek Large Capacity Portable Charger ($69.95), which has the unique distinction of being able to recharge the power hungry iPad.

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    Much has been said about the genius of Looper (Sony, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$35.99 SRP). But, truth be told, I don’t share the hyperbolic enthusiasm – rather, I’ll just say it’s en enjoyably solid time travel flick anchored by wonderful performances from Joseph Gordon Levitt & Bruce Willis, and leave it at that. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, featurettes, and deleted scenes.

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    Making the transition from TV to feature film is an often tricky proposition, and its quite a rare thing for it to be a comedy making that transition. To do it and to do it well is nearly unprecedented, which makes the success of The Inbetweeners Movie (Lionsgate, Rated R, DVD-$26.98 SRP) worth celebrating. And it’s also a great film, which finds the 4 lads out of school and having a decidedly awkward holiday. There’s also hours of bonus materials, from featurettes and deleted scenes to a gag reel and 24 takes of walking out of a door.

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    It was quite a surprise to hear that Tim Burton’s nigh-legendary stop-motion short made during his brief tenure at Disney would be turned into a full-fledged feature, but then it shouldn’t have been, since Frankenweenie (Walt Disney, Rated PG, 3D Blu-Ray-$49.99 SRP) was a charmer, and the expended film largely manages to keep that charm of a young boy using science to bring his dearly departed dog back to life intact. Bonus materials include the original live action short, a making-of documentary, and a brand-new short subject, to boot.

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    If you’re curious about how moderate John McCain compromised his principles and ultimately threw away his chance at the Presidency, take a look at HBO’s Game Change (HBO, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$24.99 SRP), which dramatizes the machinations of the 2008 election that led to such a downfall in principles. Bonus materials include a pair of featurettes.

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    If you enjoyed the first series of Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant torturing the hapless Karl Pilkington by sending him to exotic locales within which to moan, then expect more of the same with An Idiot Abroad 2 (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$34.98 SRP). Just don’t expect him to bungee jump. Bonus materials include featurettes and deleted scenes.

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    Though I wasn’t expecting much from it, it was a pleasant surprise to a find a fun outing in Episodes (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP), the tale of a husband-and-wife UK writing team whose delight at having their hit show adapted for the US market turns to despair as the adaptation of their intelligent show turns into a dumbed-down sitcom starring Matt LeBlanc (hilariously sending himself up). The 2-disc set contains the first and second season, but sadly no bonus features.

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    As long as teenage girls go crazy at the sight & sound of the latest pop sensation, much to the confusion and consternation of adults, then the musical Bye Bye Birdie (Masterworks Broadway, $11.99 SRP) will still be as relevant today as it was 50 years ago, as the tunes in this newly remastered version of the original soundtrack recording (starring Janet Leigh, Dick Van Dyke, Ann Margaret, & Paul Lynde).

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    It’s saccharine sweet, but there’s something in how matter-of-factly The Odd Life Of Timothy Green (Walt Disney, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP) presents its simple little fable of a mysterious boy who arrives one night to be a barren couple’s perfect son that caught me off guard enough to accept its sweetness at face value. Fancy that, eh? Bonus materials include an audio commentary, featurettes, deleted scenes, and a music video.

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    In the rush to dramatize the killing of Bin Laden, the first film out of the gate was Seal Team Six: The Raid On Osama Bin Laden (Anchor Bay, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$24.99 SRP), which – while lacking the Oscar pretensions of the more recent take on events – is a solid look at the dangerous operation and the servicemen that carried it out. Bonus materials include a making-of featurette.

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    Combining the best of Mad Men and Newsroom, the BBC period drama returns in The Hour 2 (BBC, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$34.98 SRP), which brings the team to 1957 and rapid change, both social and from within the office.

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    I know it’s got a rapid fan following, and for those rabid fans, the arrival of Archer: Season Three (Fox, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP) is probably a cause for celebration, as it brings with it audio commentary on select episodes, featurettes, and an enhanced version of the “Heart Of Archness” Trilogy.

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    So there you have it… my humble suggestions for what to watch, listen to, play with, or waste money on this coming weekend. See ya next week…

    -Ken Plume

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  • A Bit Of A Chat with Ken Plume & Warwick Davis

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    I’m Ken Plume, and soon you’ll be listening to “A Bit Of A Chat” with me, Ken Plume.

    In this episode, I have a chat with actor Warwick Davis about ewoks, leprechauns, Jedward, panto, chat shows, digestives, Ricky Gervais, and idiots.

    Visit his official site at
    www.warwickdavis.co.uk

    Hope you enjoy…

    Download “A Bit of a Chat with Ken Plume & Warwick Davis“:

    [audio:http://traffic.libsyn.com/bitofachat/bit_of_a_chat-warwick_davis.mp3]

    SUBSCRIBE
    Subscribe to this Podcast via iTunes

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    Drop Ken a line HERE.

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    You can also find more of my interviews by clicking HERE.

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  • Weekend Shopping Guide 1/13/12: Idiots Abroad

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    The weekend’s here. You’ve just been paid, and it’s burning a hole in your pocket. What’s a pop culture geek to do? In hopes of steering you in the right direction to blow some of that hard-earned cash, it’s time for the FRED Weekend Shopping Guide – your spotlight on the things you didn’t even know you wanted…

    (Please support FRED by using the links below to make any impulse purchases – it helps to keep us going…)

    What do Ricky Gervais & Stephen Merchant do when they’re bored? They send the decidedly reticent Karl Pilkington on tour of the wonders of the world in An Idiot Abroad (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$34.98 SRP), in which every globe-spanning destination is geared to make poor Karl that much more uncomfortable. Quite fun to watch, though. Bonus materials include the preview show and deleted scenes.

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    I’m always interested in products that take up less room but still accomplish a job I need, which is why the Tiltpod ($14.99) is such a compact gem, as it’s a tiny ball-socketed magnetic “tripod” – really, a foot – for your digital camera. Nice, right?

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    It’s a new year, and waiting for us in the bright and shiny are a pair of new classic Doctor Who releases – the Jon Pertwee story Invasion Of The Dinosaurs (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$34.98 SRP) and the Tom Baker Android Invasion (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$24.98 SRP). That’s two invasion stories for you, both packed with audio commentaries, documentaries, featurettes, and much more supplemental material than you can shake a sonic at.

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    Want to know just how snowed under I’ve been for, oh, ages? I actually missed that a pair of new Rifftrax shorts collections AND a Rifftrax holiday special had been released on DVD. Rectifying that glaring oversight, I’m here to recommend you rush over and pick up your very own copies of Rifftrax Shorts: Old Tyme Shorts Roundup, Rifftrax Shorts: Shorts To-Go, & Rifftrax: Santa And The Ice Cream Bunny (Legend, Not Rated, DVD-$9.95 SRP each). Get them. Get them all. NOW!

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    I resent a sports film that makes me like it in spite of it being a sports film. Because I really do not like sports. So damn you, Moneyball (Sony, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$35.99 SRP), for being a film about baseball that kept me engaged throughout. Maybe it’s because it’s not really about the game, but the mechanics of the business behind the game. And it stars a totally engaging Brad Pitt, Jonah Hill, and Philip Seymour Hoffman. Yeah, that can’t hurt. Bonus materials include deleted scenes, featurettes, and a blooper.

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    What does work, though, is HBO’s miniseries adaptation of Mildred Pierce (HBO, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$49.99 SRP), starring Kate Winslet as the Depression-era single mother struggling to make a go in a time when the odds are stacked demonstrably against her. Just see it.

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    Want to be depressed this holiday season with a fearsome piece of plausible disaster? Then kick back with some egg nog and candy canes and watch Contagion (Warner Bros., Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$35.99 SRP), in which a killer virus runs amok and claims Gwyneth Paltrow. Bonus materials include a trio of featurettes on the real world implications and possibilities of the premise.

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    You may not remember (though fans most certainly do), but there was a massive outcry a few years back when the first couple of seasons of both Roseanne & 3rd Rock From The Sun hit DVD. The trouble? Instead of the original broadcast versions of the episodes, the DVDs featured the edited syndication cuts. Yeah, so fans were not happy. Well, thanks to the fine folks at Mill Creek, you can now get Roseanne: Season 1, Roseanne: Season 2, 3rd Rock From The Sun: Season 1, & 3rd Rock From The Sun: Season 2 (Mill Creek Entertainment, Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP each), all completely unedited and retaining all of the featurettes and interviews from the original sets. So, perfect world.

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    The kids will feel a seasonal chill from Spongebob Squarepants: Spongebob’s Frozen Face-Off (Nickelodeon, Not Rated, DVD-$16.99 SRP), which pulls together 7 episodes, some of which have a decidedly icy setting. Bonus materials include episodes of Fanboy & Chum Chum & Tuff Puppy.

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    Though it’s produced by Martin Scorsese and one of the writers from The Sopranos, the period piece Boardwalk Empire (HBO, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$79.98 SRP) has not become the destination viewing that it should be, considering its pedigree and star Steve Buscemi. Taking place in 1920 Atlantic City during the rise of Prohibition and spotlighting the corrupt society that grew up around it, I really should have liked it more. Perhaps viewing it again will soften my disappointment. Bonus materials include audio commentaries and a clutch of featurettes.

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    It’s the end of the road for Steve McGarrett as we finally arrive at the 12th and final season of Hawaii Five-O (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$49.99 SRP). The 5-disc set contains all 19 episodes plus a promo and a music video tribute.

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    Buoyed by still-powerful performances from Gary Oldman & Chloe Webb, Sid & Nancy (MGM, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$24.99 SRP) makes its way to high definition looking and sounding great, and sporting a pair of featurettes… Though a Johnny Rotten commentary track must remain an unfulfilled wish.

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    I have to be honest in saying I’m not much for the dimensional beastie hijinks of Primeval (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$49.98 SRP), but I know there are plenty of fans who will probably be wanting to pick up volume 3, and will enjoy its featurette and prequel webisodes. So enjoy!

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    So there you have it… my humble suggestions for what to watch, listen to, play with, or waste money on this coming weekend. See ya next week…

    -Ken Plume

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  • Weekend Shopping Guide 11/25/11: When The River Meets The Sea

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    The weekend’s here. You’ve just been paid, and it’s burning a hole in your pocket. What’s a pop culture geek to do? In hopes of steering you in the right direction to blow some of that hard-earned cash, it’s time for the FRED Weekend Shopping Guide – your spotlight on the things you didn’t even know you wanted…

    (Please support FRED by using the links below to make any impulse purchases – it helps to keep us going…)

    I’m still not entirely sure I understand everything that happened in the 6th season of Doctor Who (BBC, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$79.98 SRP), but you have to admire the narrative chutzpah that showrunner Steven Moffat brought to the table as we dealt with the Doctor’s march toward death and the unraveling story of River Song. The 6-disc set contains all 13 episodes plus the Christmas special, plus newly-filmed additional scenes, audio commentaries, Confidential featurettes, the Comic Relief sketches, prequels, monster files, and trailers.

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    Having a high capacity external battery source handy is always a good thing, which is why the New Trent iCruiser Power Pack ($79.99) is pretty darn nifty, as the rechargeable battery provides hours of power with overheat/overcharge/over-discharge/short-circuit protection.

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    Borne of dozens of cable TV viewings in my youth, Three Amigos (HBO, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$14.98 SRP) is one of those comedies that holds a warm place in my heart, much like Trading Places, Blues Brothers, Caddyshack, and Vacation. So yes, it’s nice to see it in high definition, looking great, and even sporting newly discovered deleted scenes, a cast interview, and a cast reunion booklet celebrating the film’s 25th anniversary.

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    As the big screen feature makes its debut, I’m a little disappointed that we’re only getting the first season of the fun, and faithful, animated Adventures Of Tintin (Shout Factory, Not Rated, DVD-$19.93 SRP) instead of the complete run. The 2-disc set contains 13 episodes, and is well worth giving a spin.

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    Has it really been 10 years since the debut of the original – and still far superior – version of The Office (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP)? It must be, because there’s a brand new 10th anniversary special edition set available, sporting both seasons and the Christmas special, plus brand new episode introductions, extended interviews with Ricky Gervais & Stephen Merchant (and celebrity fans), the Comedy Connections documentary, and the original pilot. If that weren’t enough, the set also ports over all of the special features from the original set. So yeah, a must have.

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    I’m baffled as to why the beautiful Prep & Landing (Walt Disney, Not Rated, DVD-$19.99 SRP) shorts are only making their seasonal debut on standard DVD and not in glorious high definition Blu-Ray, but at least they’re available, along with bonus materials including elf training reels, commercials, and more. But please, Disney – high definition. Stat.

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    It could be a lot shorter, but My Fair Lady (Fox, Rated G, Blu-Ray-$29.99 SRP) is one of my favorite film musicals, owing mainly to the charming chemistry between Rex Harrison and Audrey Hepburn. Now, it’s made its way to Blu-Ray, all spruced up and looking and sounding loverly. Bonus materials include a making-of documentary, featurettes, an audio commentary, alternate Audrey Hepburn vocals on the songs, and more.

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    I couldn’t shake the feeling while watching JJ Abrams’ Super 8 (Paramount, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$44.99 SRP) that I was watching an homage to classic Spielberg films so slavish as to be completely off-putting in how it tries so hard with an effort that keeps shoving itself in your face. Say what you like about Spielberg’s button pushing ways, in the films that made him a legendary director, that button-pushing came from a genuine place. It’s as if Abrams doesn’t quite understand what he’s trying to capture (the same problem his lamentable Star Trek had). For a point of comparison, see how effortlessly yet completely Attack Of The Block captures the feel of a classic John Carpenter film. Well, at least this had a halfway interesting train crash. Almost balanced out the lens flare. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, featurettes, deleted scenes, and a deconstruction of the train crash sequence.

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    It’s no great shakes, but kids will probably enjoy the 4th film in director Robert Rodriguez’s Spy Kids trilogy, Spy Kids: All The Time In The World (Anchor Bay, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$39.98 SRP). The film introduces a new pair of kids (with supporting roles given to the old guard) taking on a maniacal villain (Jeremy Piven) bent on time-based world domination. Ricky Gervais even shows up. As a talking robot dog. Bonus materials include featurettes, deleted scenes, and more.

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    For all of the little princesses in your life, Disney has released a new special edition of the direct-to-video Beauty And The Beast: Belle’s Magical World (Walt Disney, Rated G, DVD-$29.99 SRP) and the high definition debut of the holiday-themed Beauty And The Beast: The Enchanted Christmas (Walt Disney, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP).

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    So there you have it… my humble suggestions for what to watch, listen to, play with, or waste money on this coming weekend. See ya next week…

    -Ken Plume

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  • A Bit Of A Chat with Ken Plume & Ricky Gervais

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    I’m Ken Plume, and soon you’ll be listening to “A Bit Of A Chat” with me, Ken Plume.

    In this episode, I chat with Ricky Gervais about fancy hats, pajama pants, talc baths, wise owls, gin lists, and twee tweeting.

    Hope you enjoy…

    Download “A Bit of a Chat with Ken Plume & Ricky Gervais“:

    [audio:http://traffic.libsyn.com/bitofachat/bit_of_a_chat-ricky_gervais.mp3]

    SUBSCRIBE
    Subscribe to this Podcast via iTunes

    ##

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    Drop Ken a line HERE.

    ##

    You can also find more of my interviews by clicking HERE.

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  • Weekend Shopping Guide 1/7/11: Of Schmucks & Pilkington

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    The weekend’s here. You’ve just been paid, and it’s burning a hole in your pocket. What’s a pop culture geek to do? In hopes of steering you in the right direction to blow some of that hard-earned cash, it’s time for the FRED Weekend Shopping Guide – your spotlight on the things you didn’t even know you wanted…

    (Please support FRED by using the links below to make any impulse purchases – it helps to keep us going…)

    I think it largely disappeared from theaters, which is a shame, because Dinner For Schmucks (Dreamworks, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP) is actually a fun little comedy in the vein of most recent pics starring Paul Rudd and/or Steve Carrell – affable, funny, and heartwarming. Rudd stars as a business exec whose attempt to get a better position are hindered only by making a good showing at the titular dinner, which requires executives to find a bizarre person to bring as a guest to be mocked by the others. Naturally, Rudd pegs onto Carell to be his guest, but things don’t go quite to plan. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, featurettes, deleted scenes, and outtakes.

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    Want a little bit of quick, cheap work area light with the convenience of USB? Then the USB LED Desktop Lamp ($7.99) is the convenient, bright, perfectly-named solution to your needs. Easy, right?

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    If you enjoyed the Ricky Gervais podcast, the animated versions made from those recordings and presented as The Ricky Gervais Show (HBO, Not Rated, DVD-$29.98 SRP) don’t really enhance the humor that much, but serves as a nice “best bits” collection that just happens to have some visuals attached. The 2-disc set contains the entire 1st season plus an episode storyboard and Comedy Gala animation.

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    After a smattering of single-disc releases, the long-awaited second volume of iCarly Season 2 (Nickelodeon, Not Rated, DVD-$19.99 SRP) has arrived, sporting 12 episodes plus a small clutch of behind-the-scenes extras (though it’s ridiculous there aren’t far more).

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    When I first saw My Dog Skip (Warner Bros., Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$19.98 SRP), I feared it would some kind of saccharine, nostalgia-fueled snoozer. To my surprise, it was actually a sweet little flick that’s largely carried on the back of the then still-lovable Frankie Muniz. Don’t believe me? Give it a spin via this new high-def edition. Bonus features include audio commentaries and additional scenes.

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    The fourth season of Big Love (HBO, Not Rated, DVD-$59.99 SRP) finds multiple-family man Bill Hendrickson out from under the thumb of mad “prophet” Roman Grant, but will his plans to run for the Utah State Senate tear apart his happy homes? Bonus materials include a special behind-the-scenes featurette for every episode.

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    Like most Ron Howard films, I found Backdraft (Universal, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$26.98 SRP) to be wholly competent, but ultimately lifeless and dull. Sure, the fire visuals remain impressive – more so now in high definition – but the story and its execution by Howard just sort of sits there. Bonus materials include an introduction, featurettes, and deleted scenes.

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    It’s in re-watching it that I fully understood just how mannered and poor man’s Wes Anderson (which, really, should be left up to Wes Anderson) Sofia Coppola’s Lost In Translation (Universal, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$26.98 SRP) is. Though, I admit, it’s always fun to see Bill Murray on autopilot. Bonus features include featurettes, deleted scenes, a music video, and more.

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    ABC Family’s The Secret Life Of The American Teenager (ABC Family, Not Rated, DVD-$39.99 SRP) continues to steam along, as the 5th season finds the characters facing teenage pregnancy head-on. Bonus materials include a quartet of featurettes.

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    Yeah, Family Guy‘s Star Wars parodies are largely inferior to Robot Chicken‘s, but that’s largely due to the former’s shoehorning of their characters into the roles, instead of being allowed to just play with the universe as it exists. Thankfully, they’ve come to an end with the 3rd and final installment, Family Guy: It’s A Trap (Fox, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$29.99 SRP) which, as you can guess, takes on Return Of The Jedi. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, featurettes, and outtakes.

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    It’s a daunting proposition, revisiting a film that defined the 80’s with the simple phrase “Greed Is Good”, and I’m not entirely sure Oliver Stone succeeds with Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps (Fox, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP), which comes on the heels of the economic collapse of the past few years that itself has played like an awkward sequel to the financial whirlwind of the 80’s. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, interviews, featurettes, and more.

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    For fans eager for its release the wait for the complete high definition release of Battlestar Galactica: Season Four (Universal, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$88.98 SRP) have had their prayers answered by a robot with this 6-disc set featuring audio commentaries, featurettes, deleted scenes, extended cuts, video blogs, and more.

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    The idea of carrying on a TV series in comic book form – written by the showe’s creator and writers – is actually a pretty good idea. Sadly, Buffy The Vampire Slayer: Season 8 (Fox, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$34.99 SRP) is a motion comic version of the comic book series that managed to maintain the same level of tragic mediocrity that marked the pitiful end of that once-proud series.

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    The Warner Archive Collection certainly has been going full bore when it comes to their catalogue releases, and have ramped up things considerably on the animated side. I mean, I don’t think anyone ever expected they might one day be able to purchase a complete series set of Hanna-Barbera’s short-lived Swat Kats (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$34.95). But here it is.

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    I thought the fine folks at Sideshow did a bang-up job with their original Indiana Jones Premium Format figure, taken from Raiders Of The Lost Ark and holding the golden fertility idol. As well done as that mixed media figure was, they’ve trumped it with the one-two punch from Temple Of Doom with Premium Format Figures of both Indiana Jones ($309.99) and Mola Ram ($294.99). Both are very limited editions, and supplies are dwindling fast. I’d recommend you pick both up before you miss out, or you’ll regret being left at the mercy of the aftermarket for these gems.

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    So there you have it… my humble suggestions for what to watch, listen to, play with, or waste money on this coming weekend. See ya next week…

    -Ken Plume

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  • Weekend Shopping Guide 8/20/10: That Trick Never Works

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    The weekend’s here. You’ve just been paid, and it’s burning a hole in your pocket. What’s a pop culture geek to do? In hopes of steering you in the right direction to blow some of that hard-earned cash, it’s time for the FRED Weekend Shopping Guide – your spotlight on the things you didn’t even know you wanted…

    (Please support FRED by using the links below to make any impulse purchases – it helps to keep us going…)

    It’s been years – YEARS! – since fans were left in the lurch after the release of the third season, but the waiting game comes to an end with the release of Rocky & Bullwinkle & Friends: Complete Season 4 (Classic Media, Not Rated, DVD-$19.98 SRP). Gone are the lovely bonus features, but at least we get 19 more episodes of remastered hilarity.

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    You want not only the ultimate remote control, but also the ultimate wireless keyboard? You know, the kind of keyboard that allows you to do anything from a distance, in ridiculous comfort? Well, the ProMini Wireless Keyboard with Trackpad ($69.99) fits the bill, allowing you to pretty much do whatever you’d want to do with your electronics. It’s almost scary.

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    While I didn’t dislike it, I was certainly disappointed in Ricky Gervais’s The Invention of Lying. It just never seemed to gel into the kind of transcendent piece he was capable of. Well, Gervais and co-writer/co-director Stephen Merchant have hit all the right notes with the elegant, elegiac Cemetery Junction (Sony, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$30.96 SRP), a period piece about a trio of friends in a dead-end town in 1970’s England and the difficulties in dreaming yourself out of a bleak future. Bonus materials include audio commentaries, interviews, featurettes, deleted scenes, and bloopers.

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    I didn’t think I’d much care for it, but I was pleasantly delighted by Emma Thompson’s Nanny McPhee (Universal, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$26.98 SRP), which has a verve and fun energy that elevates it beyond just a Mary Poppins clone. It’s now in high definition, with an audio commentary, featurettes, deleted scenes, and a gag reel.

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    It’s the full text – a rarity in filmed form – and one can certainly say that Kenneth Branagh’s Hamlet (Warner Bros., Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$34.99 SRP) is an epic, star-studded undertaking. Whether one can say it’s entertaining is a matter of taste – personally, I tend to drift in and out of it. Still, it does look incredible in high definition – as it was filmed in 65mm. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, featurettes, introduction from Branagh, the 1996 Cannes Film Festival promo, and the theatrical trailer.

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    Claire Danes is wonderful as the lead in the biopic Temple Grandin (HBO, Not Rated, DVD-$26.98 SRP), about a young woman who didn’t let autism – a mysterious condition during her childhood of which little was known – stand in her way, as she eventually became an expert in animal behavior. Oh, just watch it. Bonus features include an audio commentary and a making-of featurette.

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    Never really watched One Tree Hill (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$59.98 SRP), but I’m sure there’s a dedicated fanbase eager for the complete 7th season set, where they’ll also be rewarded with deleted scenes, featurettes, audio commentaries, and a gag reel.

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    Despite knowing the creators/showrunners, I’ve never been able to get into Courtney Cox’s MILF comedy Cougar Town (ABC Studios, Not Rated, DVD-$39.99 SRP). Maybe it’s because the writing just seems so forced (something the creators/showrunners suffered from on the latter seasons of their previous show, Scrubs). Either way, the first season set contains featurettes, deleted scenes, and bloopers.

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    Take a group of overweight Brits, dress them in period clothes, and make them participate in weight loss regimens commensurate with those periods. What do you have? The documentary series The Diets That Time Forgot (Acorn, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP).

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    Saved from the ax by DirecTV, the 4th season of Friday Night Lights (Universal, Not Rated, DVD-$29.98 SRP) changes things up in its truncated 13 episodes, bringing in new characters in the aftermath of the splitting of the school district. Bonus materials include audio commentaries, deleted scenes, intros, and a trio of featurettes.

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    It’s been a slightly bumpy road the past few seasons, but everything course-corrected and ended exactly as everyone thought it would in the fourth and final season of Ugly Betty (ABC Studios, Not Rated, DVD-$39.99 SRP), as Betty steps out of her awkward, ugly duckling phase. Bonus materials include audio commentaries, webisodes, featurettes, deleted scenes, and bloopers.

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    The fine folks at Sideshow continue to deliver tremendously spiffy collectibles to Disney fans, following up on their incredible premium format Evil Queen from Snow White and The Rocketeer with an absolutely massive mquette of Fantasia‘s Chernabog ($299.99). Clocking in at 18″ high and an expansive 13″ wide, the piece contains a light feature that illuminates the underside of the demon’s front section, and the Sideshow Exclusive edition also contains one of Chernabog’s minions.

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    So there you have it… my humble suggestions for what to watch, listen to, play with, or waste money on this coming weekend. See ya next week…

    -Ken Plume

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  • Weekend Shopping Guide 1/22/10: If I’m Lying

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    The weekend’s here. You’ve just been paid, and it’s burning a hole in your pocket. What’s a pop culture geek to do? In hopes of steering you in the right direction to blow some of that hard-earned cash, it’s time for the FRED Weekend Shopping Guide – your spotlight on the things you didn’t even know you wanted…

    (Please support FRED by using the links below to make any impulse purchases – it helps to keep us going…)

    Overlooked at the box office, I will declare here and now that Ricky Gervais’s The Invention Of Lying (Warner Bros., Rated PG-13, DVD-$28.98 SRP) is a comedy that is destined to become as beloved a cult classic as Office Space before it. Think I’m wrong? See it for yourself, as Gervais creates a world wherein the act of lying does not exist – until it’s discovered by Gervais’s character and proves to be a world-changing superpower. Bonus materials include video podcasts, a prequel, behind-the-scenes featurettes, additional scenes, and a gag reel. A Blu-Ray edition ($35.99 SRP) is also available, with identical bonus materials.

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    You may not know this about me, but you certainly will now. “What is it? What is this secret?” you ask, breathlessly. C’mere, and I’ll tell you…. Closer… Closer… Okay. I like playing with magnets. I think they’re cool. I’ve thought magnets were cool ever since I was a kid. I also like money. Sadly, US coinage is non-magnetic, so I was never able to combine my two loves, Reese’s style. Until now. The Magic Penny Magnet Kit ($19.99) contains two powerful magnets and 24 British coins (they’re magnetic!), as well as a US penny (for comparison) and a book full of pretty nifty tricks you can do and sculptures you can make. Dreams do come true.

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    I never thought I’d see the day when Kingdom Of The Spiders (Shout! Factory, Rated PG, DVD-$19.99 SRP) – that Saturday afternoon schlock staple starring jobbing-in-the-70’s Shatner – get a special edition. But here it is, with an audio commentary, behind-the-scenes footage, a featurette with spider-wrangler Jim Brockett, and a brand-new interview with Shatner.

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    Michael Adams took a bullet for us all when he decided to sit down for a year and watch some of the worst movies ever made, and provide not only a chronicle of that feat, but also analyses and perhaps even an appreciation for crappy filmmaking. Of course, perhaps he didn’t take the bullet too soon, as I’ve seen many of the flicks in Showgirls, Teen Wolves, and Astro Zombies (It Books, $13.99), but it’s Adams’ insights that make reading the book worth it.

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    For anyone that came out of the tepid Funny People hoping that they had instead been able to see more of Aziz Ansari, your prayers have been answered with the DVD arrival of his debut stand-up special – Aziz Ansari: Intimate Moments For A Sensual Evening (Comedy Central, Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP). The stand-up is strong, and there’s even an encore performance as his Funny People character, plus 30 minutes of additional material. A CD ($12.98 SRP) is also available.

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    It’s mindless action, yes, but it’s a shame to see Gerard Butler and Michael C. Hall slumming it in the B-movie actioner Gamer (Lionsgate, Rated R, DVD-$29.95 SRP), about a condemned criminal forced to play in a real-life video game, as prisoners are controlled in a death arcade by remote players. Will Gerard’s Kable make it out when he decides enough is enough? Bonus features include an audio commentary, featurettes, and the theatrical trailer.

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    Glaringly absent from the high definition catalogue up until now, you can put a check mark beside a pair of much-requested Paul Thomas Anderson flicks – Boogie Nights & Magnolia (New Line, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$28.99 SRP each). Both transfers are sparkling, as you’d hope. Boogie Nights features a pair of audio commentaries, additional scenes, “The John C. Reilly Files” extended sequences and outtakes, a music video, and the theatrical trailer. Magnolia sports a video diary, the Frank T.J. Mackey Seminar, the “Seduce & Destroy” infomercial, a music trailer, TV spots, and the theatrical trailer.

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    Shot as he was covering his final murder trial for Vanity Fair – that of Phil Spector – Dominick Dunne: After The Party (IndiePix, Not Rated, DVD-$29.95 SRP) is a fascinating portrait of the writer, Hollywood outcast, and defender of victims’ rights in a career that spans over 50 years. The 2-disc set contains an audio commentary, additional/extended interviews, home video, photos, and more.

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    The first two Bourne films arrive in high-definition as the inaugural entries in Universal’s new line of flipper single-disc Blu-Ray/DVD combos. I loathe flipper discs with a passion, so even though I understand the cost-cutting thought behind it, I can’t get behind the concept. Looking at the Blu-Ray side, The Bourne Identity (Universal, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$29.98 SRP) features a load of featurettes, an audio commentary, an alternate opening/ending, deleted scenes, and a music video. The Bourne Supremacy (Universal, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$29.98 SRP) contains an audio commentary, featurettes, and deleted scenes. Great content, great flicks, shame about the flippers.

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    If fans of English costume drama were to do a dream casting session, they probably would arrive at the cast that was assembled for Cranford – Judi Dench, Michael Gambon, Eileen Atkins, and Imelda Staunton. Cranford revolves around the ruling ladies of the titular town in 1842, for whom etiquette and custom reign supreme but are a thin veneer over secrets and change. Think a corseted Desperate Housewives. Your best bet is to pick Cranford: The Collection (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$49.98 SRP), which contains not only the original series, but also the Return To Cranford follow-up.

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    It was like a poor man’s Guy Ritchie (which is odd, since he’s already filled that role himself in recent years), but there was a sliver of fun to have from Smokin’ Aces (Universal, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$26.98 SRP), which hits hi-def with audio commentaries, featurettes, deleted scenes, outtakes, and an alternate ending. Even less enjoyable, though, is the nobody asked for it sequel, Smokin’ Aces 2: Assassins’ Ball (Universal, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$29.98 SRP), containing an audio commentary, deleted scenes, featurettes, and a gag reel.

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    Instead of abandoning release of the shows in mid-stream due to sales issue for niche fan-favorites, Shout! Factory has taken the welcome step of making new season sets of the shows in question available directly from their website. This makes the economy feasible and fans happy – especially since the discs are identical in quality to their store-bought predecessors. The first sets to get the direct-purchase treatment are Mr. Belvedere: Season Four ($29.99), Ironside: Season 3 ($49.98) and Room 222: Season Two ($34.98). Make sure to snag yours so this fan-friendly program can continue.

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    And in this weeks soundtrack round-up, we’ve got John Murphy’s score to Armored (La-La Land Records, $17.99 SRP), Joseph LoDuca’s score to the series Leverage (La-La Land Records, $17.99 SRP), John Frizzell’s Legion (La-La Land Records, $17.99 SRP), and The Hurt Locker (Lakeshore Records, $18.98 SRP), by Marco Beltrami & Buck Sanders.

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    The disc-on-demand Warner Archive continues to live up to its name and promise by releasing a little-seen TV movie, adapted by Richard Matheson from his short story – Dying Room Only (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$19.95). Starring Cloris Leachman, Dabney Coleman & Ned Beatty in a nice chiller about an LA couple who wander into a hostile small town where things quickly go to hell.

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    Nancy Botwin is full ensconced with her business south of the border in the 5th season of Weeds (Lionsgate, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP), which finds her in awkward territory after getting pregnant via a high-powered politician turned drug lord. It’s just another in the long line of complications that make the series a continued must-see. The 3-disc set contains all 13 episodes, plus audio commentaries, featurettes, and bloopers. A Blu-Ray edition ($39.99 SRP) is also available, with identical bonus materials.

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    A co-ed crew exploring the solar system gets up to sudsy scientific exploration in the first season of Defying Gravity (Fox, Not Rated, DVD-$49.98 SRP), which stars Ron Livingston as veteran astronaut Maddux Donner, who leads his fellow crewmembers on a journey none of them expected. The 4-disc set includes 5 unaired episodes, plus a featurette and deleted scenes.

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    The 12th season of Dallas (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP) features everything you want in the wild world of the oil baron Ewings – most of it featuring the trials, tribulations, double-dealing, and womanizing of rotten patriarch JR Ewing. The 3-disc set contains all 26 episodes (which are, unfortunately, still presented on those damnable flipper discs).

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    It dips into melodrama occasionally, but for the most part Thirtysomething (Shout Factory, Not Rated, DVD-$59.99 SRP) holds up as a rare late-80’s drama that provided a well-written, grounded look at the trials and tribulations of Americans coming to terms with aging and family life. And now that I’m of that age, is rings even more true. Scarily. The 5-disc second season contains all 17 episodes, plus audio commentaries and new cast interviews.

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    Using none of the original voices and sub-par animation, there’s nothing much about Fraggle Rock: The Animated Series (Lionsgate, Not Rated, DVD-$19.98 SRP) that I liked as a kid. However, as a pathetic completionist, I’m happy that the complete series is being released on disc. That’s 13 episodes, plus a making-of featurette, galleries, and storyboards.

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    It’s not something I would have made a night out for, but watching Whiteout (Warner Bros., Rated R, DVD-$29.98 SRP) is a nice little home video flick. Its tale – of a murder at Antarctica’s remote Amundsen-Scott Research Station , which leaves a U.S. Marshal (Kate Beckinsdale) a limited time to solve the case before being stranded in six months of winter darkness with the killer – is perfect home video fare. Bonus features include additional scenes. A Blu-Ray edition ($35.99 SRP) is also available, which adds a pair of exclusive behind-the-scenes featurettes.

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    There was a constant fear it might stumble in its first season, and there’s always fear of a sophomore season fail, but Damages (Sony, Not Rated, DVD-$39.95 SRP) came through its second season even stronger than it started, which is in no small part to a wonderful balance between strong writing and the performances by leads Glenn Close & Rose Byrne. The 3-disc set contains all 13 episodes, plus audio commentaries, deleted scenes, character profiles, and featurettes.

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    So there you have it… my humble suggestions for what to watch, listen to, play with, or waste money on this coming weekend. See ya next week…

    -Ken Plume

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  • Contest Round-Up: 2010-01-20

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    Welcome to our weekly round-up of featured giveaways here at FRED. Every Wednesday, we’ll present a new clutch of DVDs, books, and other cool stuff you can take a shot at winning. All you have to do is click on the graphics below to be taken to their respective contest pages. And good luck!

    In conjunction with Sideshow Collectibles, we’re giving away THE DEAD: SPECIMENS.

    In conjunction with Warner Bros. Home Video, we’re giving away five (5) copies of THE INVENTION OF LYING on both Blu-Ray & DVD.

    In conjunction with Warner Bros. Home Video, we’re giving away five (5) copies of WHITEOUT on both Blu-Ray & DVD.

    In conjunction with BBC Home Video, we’re giving away three (3) copies of MI-5: VOLUME 7 on DVD.

    In conjunction with Fox Home Video, we’re giving away two (2) copies of WHIP IT on DVD.

    In conjunction with Shout Factory Home Video, we’re giving away three (3) copies of PARKER LEWIS CAN’T LOSE: SEASON 2 on DVD.

  • Win THE INVENTION OF LYING on Blu-Ray & DVD

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    In conjunction with Warner Bros. Home Video, we’re giving away five (5) copies of THE INVENTION OF LYING on both Blu-Ray & DVD.

    Contest ends at 11:59pm EST on Wednesday, February 10th.

    CLOSED! THANKS FOR ENTERING!

    Official Rules

    No member of FRED Entertainment or their immediate families may enter.

    No Purchase necessary to win.

    Must be 18 years of age or older to enter.

    One entry per day, per person.

    All submitted entries must be received by 11:59pm EST on Wednesday, February 10th.

    The winner must allow 4-6 weeks after notification of win to receive the product.

  • Soapbox: Golden Globes, Ricky Gervais, AVATAR, & A Few Other Buzzwords

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    Golden Globes, Ricky Gervais, AVATAR, & A Few Other Buzzwords

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    depGolden Globes night. I had just cracked open a cold bottle of Paulaner Hefe-Weizen, while recalling my grandfather’s now-legendary words of wisdom: “Just remember, you can’t drink it all – they’ll always make more.”

    Even now, years later, I see no reason to attempt to prove him wrong.

    I was primed for this awards ceremony, having seen Ricky Gervais several days prior on The Tonight Show with Conan O’Brien, where the subject of his hosting the Globes was discussed briefly. More importantly, Gervais made it quite clear in his comments to Conan whose side he was on, and he doesn’t strike me as one to pull any punches. Gervais + Pro-Conan Stance + Hosting an awards show on NBC = a recipe for some potentially (unintentionally?) hilarious disaster.

    I was in no way disappointed. Gervais made some comments that made me squirm in my seat and laugh nervously, repeatedly finding a welcome distraction in my wheaty beer (I would drink three bottles before the show finally ended). A small sampling of what I mean:

    – In his opening bit, Gervais expressed his concern that NBC might suddenly replace him as the host of the awards, and put Leno in his place (adding at one point, “I’m not used to these sort of viewing figures … neither is NBC, for that matter”). This didn’t get unanimous laughter from the star-studded audience. Ricky, Ricky, Ricky… this is a Hollywood audience. Leno’s been around since before Jim Carrey was doing In Living Color, for cripe’s sake – he’s gotta have more than a few friends in this audience. Nervous laughter.

    – The original creative power behind The Office, Gervais complained to the audience that everyone thinks Steve Carrell is the brilliant one, as evidenced by the fact that he gets all the movie deals. He referred to the American version of the show as having “jumped the shark” (literally, “Arthur Fonzarellied”), and promoted the British version of the show on DVD. More nervous laughter.

    – Gervais spoke of having flown over on the same flight as Sir Paul McCartney (who was nominated for Best Original Song from a Motion Picture), noting that McCartney flew coach because he was “saving money… he spent an awful lot last year.” Jokes about divorce are rarely funny to the person who just experienced one. Still more nervous laughter.

    – Before introducing Mel Gibson, Gervais walked on-stage with a beer, admitted to having “had a few”, then delivered the blow: “I like a drink as much as the next man… unless the next man is Mel Gibson.” Then he left the beer on the podium, thus setting up one of the night’s funnier moments, which came, not from the show itself, but from the Twitter stream: Ken Plume (@KenPlume) quipped, “Ricky even left the drink out for Mel. Now THAT’S a good host.”

    Which brings me to my next point: I watched this entire event with my Twitter stream flowing, washing gently over me and keeping me informed, in 140-character quips, about what other people wanted to say about the show. It was like watching the whole thing with a room full of friends, who for some reason would only speak in short sentences, and only all at the same time. Oh well. At least I didn’t have to share my beer with them.

    The whole live-tweet experience probably colored my perception of the awards show. There were a few genuinely funny moments in the show itself (see McCartney’s quip, “Animation is not just for children, it is also for a-dults who take drugs”), but most of the laughs that came from me, specifically (as opposed to “you”), were prompted by comments from the tweeple I follow. When Mickey Rourke walked on-stage in a too-large-to-be-taken-seriously cowboy hat, Ricky Gervais refused to poke fun at him (“mainly because he has arms as big as my legs”, he explained). Thankfully, Caissie St. Onge (@Caissie) was there to jab, “I love that Mickey Rourke declined to do banter of any kind. You’re not going to get wittier than that hat”, while Tim Siedell (@badbanana) noted, “Not sure Mickey Rourke knows someone put a hat on him as a joke.”

    These were the golden moments of the Golden Globes. It gave me a great idea for future ceremonies: live-streaming Twitter feeds, running constantly on a jumbo-tron in the background. Wouldn’t that be awesome? We could sit in the comfort (read: safety) of our own homes and launch our stream-of-consciousness thoughts directly into the audience. I’m betting that would change a few things about the environment and atmosphere of those shows. Granted, Ashton Kutcher (@aplusk) might have to stop tweeting during those events, but I consider that a net win, really.

    It also made me wonder: in what other scenarios might this live-tweeting medium prove to be a major enhancement to the event currently being experienced? Sporting events? Movie premiers? Book readings at the local Tea Society? Papal Vespers?

    I don’t know. But I think I’m close to discovering something big here. I’ll let you know when I figure out what it is.

    (A quick BTW/PS: I know, this post was about the Golden Globes, and I didn’t say anything about which movies won which awards. It doesn’t really matter. Same amount of shockers, upsets, disappointments, complaints, victories, no-kiddings, and they-deserved-its as last year.)

    Jacob Michael

  • Weekend Shopping Guide 4/3/09: Out Of England

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    The weekend’s here. You’ve just been paid, and it’s burning a hole in your pocket. What’s a pop culture geek to do? In hopes of steering you in the right direction to blow some of that hard-earned cash, it’s time for the Quick Stop Weekend Shopping Guide – your spotlight on the things you didn’t even know you wanted…

    A fair share of the comedy is familiar to anyone who’s seen his three UK stand-up DVDs – Animals, Politics, & Fame – but Ricky Gervais: Out Of England (HBO, Not Rated, DVD-$19.98 SRP) is a very nice, very funny entry point for a US audience largely unfamiliar with extracurricular stand-up activities. Bottom line? Get it. The sole bonus feature is an interview with Ricky. Sadly, no editors are duct-taped.

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    I’m a sucker for anything with the word “magic” in the product description, and I have to admit that the Magic Spinning Globe ($99.99) certainly lives up to the title. Through a combination of fluids, plastic, magnets, light, and the Earth’s magnetic field, this globe will actually rotate as the Earth does. It’ll even do it while you’re holding it. How freakin’ cool is that? I mean, seriously, that’s some scientific “magic” I can get behind.

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    Since they started coming out on Blu-Ray last year, I’ve been patiently awaiting the high definition arrival of my favorite Bond flick, and it’s finally come with the James Bond Blu-Ray Collection: Volume Three (MGM, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$89.98 SRP). Not only do you get Goldfinger, but also Moonraker and The World Is Not Enough. As with the previous releases, the bonus materials are essentially the same as the standard special editions, with a few new bells & whistles. A must get.

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    Watching Slumdog Millionaire (Fox, Rated R, DVD-$29.98 SRP), it’s clear why it’s lodged itself firmly in so many viewer’s hearts – it’s a grand, ultimately feel good celebration of the power of film to get the audience excited. The tale isn’t all sunshine and roses, but the rise of “slumdog” Jamal Malik (Dev Patel) on India’s version of Who Wants To Be A Millionaire and the potential that he may actually secure his true love as well is… Well, see it if you haven’t already. Bonus features include an audio commentary, featurettes, deleted scenes, a short film, and a music video. A Blu-Ray edition ($39.99 SRP) is also available, with identical bonus materials.

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    The second season of The Fugitive (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP) wraps up with the second volume of 15 episodes, fully restored, as – you guessed it – Dr. Richard Kimble is STILL on the run from the law and searching for the one-armed man.

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    Although the laughs sometimes get a bit sparse, I always enjoy a comedian like Jim Gaffigan – who exists in a world all his own, and takes the audience down to his own speed. You can see what I mean in the document of his 2008 tour, Jim Gaffigan: King Baby (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$16.99 SRP). The disc features an extended cut of the Comedy Central special, plus 3 episodes of the online serial Pale Force (co-starring Conan O’Brien), 4 episodes of Our Massive Planet, and interviews.

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    Ever since descending into a bizarre pit of arch-conservatism, it’s been difficult to remember that Dennis Miller was once quite a funny comedian. If you’re having trouble remembering, too, pick up a copy of Dennis Miller: The HBO Specials (SRO Entertainment, Not Rated, DVD-$29.99 SRP). The 3-disc set features 1988’s Mr. Miller Goes To Washington, 1990’s Black And White, 1994’s Live From Washington DC: They Shoot HBO Specials, Don’t They, 1996’s Citizen Arcane, 1999’s The Millennium Special: 1,000 Years, 100 Laughs, 10 Really Good Ones, 2003’s The Raw Feed, and 2006’s All In.

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    Say what you will about the quality of the films themselves, eye candy like The Fast & The Furious Trilogy (Universal, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$99.98 SRP) was made for people to show off their Blu-Ray players – and now you can do just that. The box set sports all 3 flicks, all of the bonus features available in the standard DVD releases, plus all-new featurettes exclusive to Blu-Ray. You’d never guess the 4th film was right around the corner, would ya?

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    As rom coms though, Marley & Me (Fox, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP) is pretty inoffensive, often staying relatively enjoyable. I think most of that comes from leads Jennifer Aniston and Owen Wilson as a young couple who try to allay their fears of eventually being good parents by adopting a dog. That’s the spoiler-free short of it. The Blu-Ray edition contains a bonus standard DVD of the film, along with an audio commentary, featurettes, deleted scenes, and a gag reel.

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    I don’t know if it’s all of the Scientology gobbledygook swishing around in his brain, but Will Smith has been off his game for a few movies now. A once-surefire sign of at least a good watch, Smith is now starring in middling, pretentious, often baffling fare like Seven Pounds (Sony, Rated PG-13, DVD-$28.96 SRP), about a lost man who finds he’s able to change the lives of seven people… Or something. I got bored. Bonus features include an audio commentary, deleted scenes, and featurettes. A Blu-Ray edition ($39.95 SRP) is also available, featuring identical bonus materials.

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    It’s pithy and disposable, and now Hope & Faith: The Complete Season 1 (Lionsgate, Not Rated, DVD-$29.98 SRP) – starring Faith Ford and Kelly Ripa – is on DVD. The 4-disc set features all 25 episodes, plus audio commentaries, interviews, and a blooper reel.

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    Disney has released a pair of new discs for kids, the first of which is School House Rock: Earth (Disney, Not Rated, DVD-$19.99 SRP) – containing 11 new songs from the original creators about the environment. Next is Handy Manny: Manny’s Green Team (Disney, Not Rated, DVD-$19.99 SRP), another environmentally themed outing. Last up – for the bigger kids – is Hannah Montana: Keeping It Real (Disney Not Rated, DVD-$19.99 SRP), which contains six episodes and a featurette.

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    So there you have it… my humble suggestions for what to watch, listen to, play with, or waste money on this coming weekend. See ya next week…

    -Ken Plume

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  • Contest Round-Up: 2009-03-25

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    Welcome to our weekly round-up of featured giveaways here at Quick Stop. Every Wednesday, we’ll present a new clutch of DVDs, books, and other cool stuff you can take a shot at winning. All you have to do is click on the graphics below to be taken to their respective contest pages. And good luck!

    In conjunction with Adult Swim, we’re giving away one (1) copy of VENTURE BROS: SEASON 3 on standard DVD, and two (2) copies of VENTURE BROS: SEASON 3 on Blu-Ray.

    In conjunction with HBO Home Video, we’re giving away five (5) copies of RICKY GERVAIS: OUT OF ENGLAND on DVD.

    In conjunction with Comedy Central Home Video, we’re giving away five (5) copies of JIM GAFFIGAN: KING BABY on DVD.

    In conjunction with MGM Home Video, we’re giving away five (5) copies of THE OTHER END OF THE LINE on DVD.

    In conjunction with Fox Home Video, we’re giving away three (3) copies of SLUMDOG MILLIONAIRE on DVD.

    In conjunction with Disney Home Video, we’re giving away two (2) copies of SCHOOL HOUSE ROCK: EARTH on DVD.

    In conjunction with Disney Home Video, we’re giving away two (2) copies of HANDY MANNY: MANNY’S GREEN TEAM on DVD.

  • Win RICKY GERVAIS: OUT OF ENGLAND on DVD!

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    In conjunction with HBO Home Video, we’re giving away five (5) copies of RICKY GERVAIS: OUT OF ENGLAND on DVD.

    Contest ends at 11:59pm EST on Wednesday, April 15th.

    CLOSED! THANKS FOR ENTERING!

    Official Rules

    No member of Quick Stop Entertainment or their immediate families may enter.

    No Purchase necessary to win.

    Must be 18 years of age or older to enter.

    One entry per day, per person.

    All submitted entries must be received by 11:59pm EST on Wednesday, April 15th.

    The winner must allow 4-6 weeks after notification of win to receive the product.

  • Win GHOST TOWN on DVD!

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    We’re giving away, in conjunction with Paramount Home Video, five (5) copies of GHOST TOWN on DVD.

    Contest ends at 11:59pm EST on Friday, January 2nd.

    CLOSED! THANKS FOR ENTERING!

    Official Rules

    No member of Quick Stop Entertainment or their immediate families may enter.

    No Purchase necessary to win.

    Must be 18 years of age or older to enter.

    One entry per day, per person.

    All submitted entries must be received by 11:59pm EST on Friday, January 2nd.

    The winner must allow 4-6 weeks after notification of win to receive the product.

  • Ricky Gervais: Holiday Havoc

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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 FRED, 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 festive audio easter egg from my recent in-depth interview with Ricky Gervais. Be sure to pick up a copy of GHOST TOWN on DVD and Blu-Ray this holiday season…

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    Download “Happy Holidays From Ricky Gervais“:

    [audio:http://asitecalledfred.com/holidayhavoc/ricky_gervais_ken_plume-holiday_wishes.mp3]

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

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  • Interview: Ricky Gervais

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    -by Ken Plume

    Ricky Gervais, along with Stephen Merchant, is the co-creator of both the original British and American versions of The Office and two series of the BBC/HBO hit Extras, as well co-host of the most downloaded podcast in history.

    He’s written an episode of The Simpsons, performed a trio of sold-out stand-up tours (all of which have been released on DVD in the UK as Animals, Politics, & Fame), co-starred in A Night At The Museum & For Your Consideration, written a series of Flanimals books for children, and won more awards than you can shake a stick at. He also fronted the big Hollywood flick Ghost Town and makes his big screen directorial debut with next year’s This Side Of The Truth.

    On Saturday, November 15th, he brings his US stand-up tour to HBO in the form of Ricky Gervais: Out Of England, airing at 9pm EST.

    I’ve spoken with Gervais more times than I can shake that aforementioned virtual stick at, and this is our latest…

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    KP: I was just looking over my records and this is actually the fourth time that I’ve done an in-depth piece with you…

    GERVAIS: Wow. Wow. There you go. Cool. I’ve got nothing new to tell you.

    KP: And not once have you interviewed me. I’m kind of hurt about that.

    GERVAIS: Well, we’ll do a mutual one. I’ll start. What’s the best interview you’ve ever done with me?

    KP: I think it would probably be the second one.

    GERVAIS: (laughs)

    KP: The nerves were kind of gone. You were successful but not quite as successful as you would eventually become.

    GERVAIS: So still humble.

    KP: You still had that touch of humility…

    GERVAIS: No… Now I know you’re lying, because I’ve always been an arrogant swine. Even when I was a nobody.

    KP: You covered it really well early on, though.

    GERVAIS: Okay.

    KP: It wasn’t until after Extras that really you just said, “Fuck it all.” Then all the pretense was gone.

    GERVAIS: I know. Exactly. I might as well just admit it.

    KP: But it was a beautiful point.

    GERVAIS: Lovely.

    KP: Now, though, I’m sure this is going to be a complete disaster.

    GERVAIS: Yeah, but that’s your job – to make it look good.

    KP: And I promise I will try my best.

    GERVAIS: All I do is give you one revelation.

    KP: Oh, I get one?

    GERVAIS: Yeah.

    KP: I like the fact that you’re parceling them out now.

    GERVAIS: The reason I’ll never box again is because I killed a man. That’s not true. I’ll have to make something up to be exciting. Look, I’ll tell you what; we’ll stick to the truth and you make it look exciting.

    KP: You should just throw out the name of a minor UK celebrity that I’ll never follow up on.

    GERVAIS: (laughs) Yeah. Oh dear.

    KP: Or you killed Bill Oddie.

    GERVAIS: Hey! Now there’s a reference.

    KP: You took out at least one of the Goodies.

    GERVAIS: Yeah! (laughs)

    KP: As part of your long, ongoing Goodie feud.

    GERVAIS: I knocked them off their bike.

    KP: Yes, yes. While they were doing the funky gibbon.

    GERVAIS: Wow. Well, that’s more than most British people know.

    KP: Probably with good reason.

    GERVAIS: You just summed up the Goodies.

    KP: Yes. A bike and a funky gibbon. And being knocked off something at some point.

    GERVAIS: (laughs)

    KP: I guess the big news since we last talked was that you finally took the plunge and tried to conquer the US.

    GERVAIS: Well, I don’t know if I’ve ever taken a plunge. It’s sort of been drip feeding. But they had The Office on BBC America, and then the Golden Globes helped a little bit – and then, you know, Extras on cable, but I think it’s that nice sort of cult thing. The right people are aware of you and the offers came in and I took a few little cameos. Obviously with Christopher Guest. He’s a comedy hero. Ben Stiller, I’d worked with him on Extras. I returned the favor there. And we know what happened with Night At The Museum. I think it made about 800 million dollars or something. That was fun. I only got half of that, obviously.

    KP: That’s why you’re now on your third agent.

    GERVAIS: (laughs) And I did a film called Stardust to work with De Niro. I got him in Extras. So yeah, I need more than one reason to do a film. And Ghost Town, there was loads of reasons. It was the funniest script I’d read. It was really collaborative. It was just my sort of role. It was that sort of unsympathetic sort of smart assed curmudgeon, and it had some redemption – which is one of my favorite themes now. But I’ve never really done things to up my profile or further my career. I’ve done things that were fun and were right. And I probably turned down some things that were fun and were right, but I was busy on other things that were more fun and more right.

    KP: Now, when you say redemption is one of your favorite themes now…

    GERVAIS: I never understood it growing up. I was one of those kids that didn’t understand things like the prodigal son. I thought, “Well, why is he getting all the attention? He screwed up once.” But as you get older you understand that, you know, forgiveness is possibly the greatest virtue. You’ve got to be a very cold person not to genuinely accept a heartfelt apology. And in fiction it is the most beautiful theme. I think we did it in The Office. I’m particularly proud of how we did it in Extras with Andy Millman, who was basically body snatched by fame – this trivial, awful, shallow, shiny object – and left behind the total opposite of that, which is friendship. And that was a joy. I was more excited about that than all the guests and all the funny lines put together.

    KP: I would say that Andy was a willing participant in his body snatching…

    GERVAIS: Well, of course he was, but that’s what it is, isn’t it? When you become a zombie you like eating flesh…

    KP: And you’re wondering why all your friends don’t…

    GERVAIS: Yeah. This metaphor’s gone… I don’t know what we’re doing now.

    KP: I’m waiting to see how far you take it.

    GERVAIS: (laughs) Wow. What I’m saying is he was a willing participant, but it wasn’t his fault. It’s like that episode of Batman when they gave Robin a pill and he was suddenly bad. Batman knew he couldn’t help it. He had to fight him, but he still loves him.

    KP: Do you think it’s sort of a case where you get in too deep after a certain point?

    GERVAIS: Are we still on Batman now?

    KP: We could still be on Batman if you want to talk about that instead…

    GERVAIS: No. (laughs) I tried to throw in a worse metaphor so you took your eye off the first one.

    KP: You almost accomplished that.

    GERVAIS: What I’m saying is yeah, these people are willing participants, but it’s not their fault because, by definition, they have been body snatched. It was gradual. It started off, you think he’s an alright guy – and he was a very normal man. More so than David Brent. Cleverer than David Brent. A more normal person than David Brent. But because of all those things, he was a more dangerous man than David Brent in many ways. And when he put his mind to it, he decided that if he couldn’t beat them, he’d join them. And when we were first writing Extras, we realized that there was something missing with Andy Millman, and that was that he was alright and he didn’t care. And we had to give him that obsession. We had to give him this foible. We had to give him this jeopardy. And that was the fun duality with Andy Millman – that he was normal and funny and he was surrounded by idiots except when he needed something from someone. So when he talked to a director he was suddenly a bumbling fool who was on the back foot and would sell his soul, and he did sell his soul at the beginning of series 2 when, you know… and I wasn’t even saying he should have walked away. I’m saying that that’s one scenario that might happen when you give up integrity for success, in a way. I just think he would have been happier going away and doing something he liked on possibly even a smaller scale. And of course, a lot of it was a little bit of a parallel universe with my career. There but for the grace of God, go I. I always took the other route. But who knows. What if the BBC had said, “We want The Office to have catchphrases and we want you to appeal to four year olds.”

    KP: Andy always struck me as a character that had a delayed sense of self-awareness.

    GERVAIS: Well yeah, because… you see, that’s what happens as well, because these things are flattering. Some people say, “Oh, he’d never do that.” And sometimes the money goes up. Or their appeal goes down. Or they look around and they’re very Nietzschean about it. They start… people grow stronger on the things you leave behind. It starts getting to them. Some actors take roles because they don’t want another actor to take it. Some actors take roles because even though it’s a bad film, and they know it’s a bad film, they think they can make it a good one. Some actors take films because they think they won’t be asked again. Some actors take films because they don’t give a shit about the film and they want the paycheck. You know, there’s loads of reasons why these people take it. And they’re all fine. All those reasons are fine. But integrity is doing something that you know you shouldn’t really. There’s nothing wrong with doing a comedy that’s catchphrases and putting on wigs if that’s what you like. But it’s if you don’t like that – if you know there’s something better, if you know there’s something more in you, if you know you think you might regret it, if it’s not what you set out to do – than it’s a compromise. And I think compromise in art is a bad thing. And I think it’s a bad thing across the board, by definition, because you either care or you don’t. And if you care, I don’t know what a compromise is, really. One of my favorite sayings is “comedy is a horse designed by committee”. Now, there’s nothing wrong with a camel. Let me say now – I’ve got nothing against the camel…

    KP: Well, that’s just to placate the Camel League…

    GERVAIS: (laughs) Yeah. My favorite bit of the camel is the hump. So let’s get that out there. All I’m saying is, Andy knew… he took a risk with his happiness, and it didn’t pay out.

    KP: So how close have you personally come to crossing that line?

    GERVAIS: Well, you know, I get these little challenges all the time. Again, there’s nothing wrong with doing adverts. I think I did a couple first out, but I wasn’t proud of them. And when you don’t need to do them, how rich do you need to be? I remember I said I don’t do adverts, and I got offered… it was a drinks company in America, offered me a million pounds for a day’s work. And I thought about it and I thought, “That is a lot of money.” But I thought, “I’d hate myself.” And I said no. They came up with two million. They thought I was negotiating. Which annoyed me. So then I really wanted to take that two million, but I couldn’t. (laughs)

    KP: So, because of your nonparticipation, you killed the re-launch of Mr. Pibb.

    GERVAIS: (laughs) There’s things that sometimes I don’t do because I don’t want to have people sick of the sight of me. I could be on every panel show in England. I could be on telly every day. But what good would it… why? These people who look through the paper and go, “Where am I? Where am I? I’m not in the paper today. Maybe I don’t exist any more.” Jesus. You know, we put that in there when Maggie says to Andy, “You’ll never be happy because you’ll never be famous enough.” If you judge your happiness on how famous you are or how many column inches you’ve got, or ratings… then you won’t be happy. You’ll never be happy. You’ve got to be happy in what you do. And I couldn’t be prouder of The Office if it had got no ratings, no awards, I couldn’t be prouder of it. Because I enjoyed every minute of it. I enjoyed every minute of writing, acting, and editing. I did love the awards because I like the look on the other people’s faces. (laughs)

    KP: Did you ever go up with a camera just to capture that moment personally?

    GERVAIS: (laughs) It’s usually captured for me, but they always clap and smile like they’re going, “Oh, I’m glad you won.”

    KP: See, at that point, you might as well get the digital camera out, go up to each of them in turn, ask someone to hold the camera, and take the photo as you’re holding the trophy.

    GERVAIS: And go, “Look at you. Say it, admit it – you’re gutted. Admit it – you are absolutely dying inside.”

    KP: “Would you like to touch it?”

    GERVAIS: Yeah. “Admit it – you want to shove this Golden Globe right up my ass, don’t you?”

    KP: “Come on, say it…”

    GERVAIS: The Golden Globe is actually the perfect shape. It is a giant metal suppository. The Emmy? That would be like something out of Se7en. But the Globe, I think, wouldn’t cause too much pain.

    KP: See, you should just invite the other four nominees on stage. You get them all together with you holding the trophy in the center.

    GERVAIS: Hmm. Exactly. It would be like a group of firemen with a battering ram. It would be like that statue when they’re putting up the flag.

    KP: Yes, with you holding it aloft.

    GERVAIS: (laughs) Oh dear!

    KP: That is the moment, I think, where they show their true acting skills.

    GERVAIS: Yeah. (laughs) Oh dear.

    KP: That’s a career defining moment. I noticed that, particularly on the panel shows when you rarely used to do it in the past…. I wouldn’t say panel shows – when you were a guest on a show…

    GERVAIS: Yeah, I do chat shows…

    KP: I was thinking like a Room 101

    GERVAIS: Oh, that was fun ’cause that was almost like a piece of work. Because… yeah, I mean, I try to be funny and stuff, so I would do things like that where it’s… I do chat shows and I do things like Room 101 and I do things like Desert Island Discs because it feels almost nearly a part of your body of work. Whereas when it’s like this… yeah. I mean, I would still do those. I do those sort of things.

    KP: I was just looking at you as a guest on Vic Reeves Examines

    GERVAIS: My god. I think that may have been the first show that I did as a guest when I was just starting out.

    KP: You were still on the 11 O’Clock Show

    GERVAIS: I know. I think that was the very first thing, and it was this thing about whistling, and it was… there was no pre-interview. Well, you could tell. It was totally made up as it went along. He’d made it up as he went along, and I had to react. It was quite a nice sort of shambles, as I remember.

    KP: It certainly plays as an interesting piece of make it up on the fly TV.

    GERVAIS: Yeah, yeah. I don’t think anyone was watching it.

    KP: No, and I think Vic knew that.

    GERVAIS: Yes, I think that’s exactly right. It was almost like radio that they filmed.

    KP: There was a little segment showing what art little Vic had done at school…

    GERVAIS: I think he takes those pictures quite seriously. I think he sells them now.

    KP: He does, but I could see the look on your face going, “Should I give my real opinion?”

    GERVAIS: (laughs) I can’t remember them. I did go to an exhibition and he was very funny. The art, you know… he’s very funny.

    KP: And then you had the whistling gentleman from the pub come in.

    GERVAIS: I can’t remember that.

    KP: You sorta gave a look like, “I’m gonna have to react to this. I’m gonna have to be really positive.”

    GERVAIS: Oh god. What was this on YouTube?

    KP: Oh no. It wound up on the internet. Somebody put the entire series up that they had recorded on VHS.

    GERVAIS: Jesus Christ. Yeah.

    KP: Everyone has copies of something somewhere.

    GERVAIS: Well, this interview is already on YouTube.

    KP: It is. It’s already a two star rating.

    GERVAIS: I’m listening to it back now just a few seconds out of synch just to make sure what I said.

    KP: Have I already been reviewed negatively?

    GERVAIS: Yeah, there’s some comments coming up now. I’ve never found either of them funny.

    KP: Yeah. Well.

    GERVAIS: Oh, there’s a good one. They go, “They both rock,” so it’s even.

    KP: Yeah, but that’s probably John Hodgman saying that.

    GERVAIS: Oh, now there’s a man. There’s a man who I can’t get enough of. He asked for a quote for his book, so I said he was a very clever, brilliant man, but he has a face like a giant baby.

    KP: You’re right. I mean, you’re not wrong.

    GERVAIS: I like that in an intellectual.

    KP: John’s a friend of mine. In fact I’m the one who send John your way all those many years ago.

    GERVAIS: Oh, right. He interviewed me for The New Yorker.

    KP: He was basically running up against a brick wall trying to get in contact with you, so I discretely passed along your cell number and said, “Just call him.”

    GERVAIS: Excellent. Well he’s done a lovely turn in The Other Side Of The Truth.

    KP: And now look, he gets in the movie.

    GERVAIS: He’s great.

    KP: And I never got a phone call.

    GERVAIS: I didn’t know you could play a funny vicar.

    KP: You know what? I’m probably less versatile than I think.

    GERVAIS: (laughs) I would love that on my CV. Just the opening sentence. “Dear Sir or Madam, I would like to start by saying I am probably less versatile than I think. But this is what I think anyway. I am very versatile. And you just turn it around in the first two sentences.

    KP: “My entire goal with this CV is to keep expectations low. I cannot fail to impress.”

    GERVAIS: (laughs) Oh dear.

    KP: “I’ve done very little in my life. As you will see.”

    GERVAIS: “Remember – you have to gauge everything by calibrating it at 50% lower than everything I say, and then you will get a true reading of what I am really like as a person.”

    KP: “I perceive myself as mostly competent.”

    GERVAIS: Yeah. (laughs) “Although others have always disagreed.”

    KP: Yes. “And I am always willing to be more competent.”

    GERVAIS: (laughs) Yeah, “I am not capable. I’m very willing but incapable.”

    KP: “Responds well to most criticism.”

    GERVAIS: (laughs) Oh dear! “PS – my anger management classes are going very well.”

    KP: Yes, “and you’ll be seeing me shortly.”

    GERVAIS: John Hodgman is a very funny, nice man.

    KP: And I see that you had many debates. We had a massive two and a half hour argument about what I thought was a vital choice that one should have to make. In fact, I’ll ask you the question if John hasn’t already.

    GERVAIS: What’s that?

    KP: If you had to choose – you could lose one thing painlessly, and your choice is either a finger or a toe. Which would you choose?

    GERVAIS: Yeah, but do I get to choose which finger and which toe?

    KP: Yes.

    GERVAIS: Well, it would probably be a little toe on my right foot.

    KP: That’s what he went with. I went with the finger because I was more interested in the balance issues.

    GERVAIS: Well, I did think of the balance, but I think I use my right big toe a lot more on my right foot than I do on my left. I think I might be right footed and use that right toe a lot more. I’ve got a huge right big toe. It’s twice as big as my left one. In fact, it’s got toes of its own. It’s actually another foot. I’ve got two right feet and one left foot, so it’s nothing to me, that little toe.

    KP: Purely for balance.

    GERVAIS: Yeah. I swim in circles. Yeah I think so. I asked him what would he rather have – I think this is on YouTube – tiny penises for nipples or breasts for testicles. And he said it’s a no brainer. He said tiny penises for nipples.

    KP: I thought his rationale was well thought out. Those breasticles…

    GERVAIS: (laughs)

    KP: You know, he didn’t do the ultimate monkey’s paw and say maybe you could just wish for a small cup size…

    GERVAIS: Yeah.

    KP: He automatically thought they would be double D’s hanging between. He could have specified.

    GERVAIS: He asked me also, flight or invisibility.

    KP: I think you made the valid point of saying it would have to be powered flight.

    GERVAIS: Yeah. That was my fear, was that I’d choose that like in the monkey’s paw and it’s a stitch up and I’m just flying six feet off the ground and people are punching me in the face.

    KP: So, if you had to choose salt or sugar for the rest of your life, which would you choose?

    GERVAIS: You mean to add to things? Obviously you can’t live without either, but you mean… so I could eat a plate of food…

    KP: As the sole additive that you had.

    GERVAIS: As the sole additive, no doubt about it, I’d lose sugar.

    KP: So salt is a no go for loss for you.

    GERVAIS: Yeah, I’d like salt, I think. These are like Maggie questions from Extras. We do this all the time.

    KP: But really, these are the questions that define who you are.

    GERVAIS: In fact, I think in one episode she says what would you rather eat, too salty or too sweet? I said it doesn’t matter. If it’s too anything it would taste disgusting. She went, “Well, I’d have too salty, because I like crisps.”

    KP: Let’s see if you think your way out of this one. So you’re only allowed one food item…

    GERVAIS: Right.

    KP: And you have to eat that food item every day.

    GERVAIS: Yeah, but you have to define what an item is. Because obviously, you’re not going to break it down to its component food groups. You’re obviously not gonna say a roast dinner. So what is an item?

    KP: No, you could say a roast dinner.

    GERVAIS: Oh, you can have a meal.

    KP: Yes, but what is your meal that you would choose for perpetuity.

    GERVAIS: Jesus.

    KP: But you can’t have anything else. No other variation. It would be that exact same meal for every meal for the rest of your life.

    GERVAIS: Well obviously, I mean, surviving and health is very different to what you get sick of. So assuming you’d get sick of everything, I would go for something that would at least bring me health. So a rough estimate I’d probably have to go something like… oh god, it’s difficult. Because you’d need a chicken or fish in there, wouldn’t you. You’d have to have a chicken or fish. Oh god. It would all get bad, wouldn’t it? It would all get really bad.

    KP: I’d say after the first week you’d pretty much regret it.

    GERVAIS: Yeah, you’re screwed anyway, so you want to get all the groups. Oh, it’s got to be like a meat and two… I mean, the sensible thing to do would be something like a Cobb salad. I think you’re pretty much covered there.

    KP: Yeah, but what kind of life are you leading then?

    GERVAIS: Well, you started it. Cobb salad. I think you’re annoyed that I’ve come up with the best idea you’ve ever heard. And it shot through your head. You thought, “That’s brilliant.” It’s so much, it’s got everything. Avocados, it’s got chicken, it’s got bacon, it’s got the salad. It’s got every vitamin under the sun there and it’s got an egg. And you’re kicking yourself, and that shot through and you felt slightly stupid and you lashed out. And shame on you.

    KP: And now that you called me out, I’m crying right now.

    GERVAIS: Yeah. So Cobb salad. There you go.

    KP: I chose a pizza with literally everything.

    GERVAIS: (laughs) I take back my speech. You win! Why didn’t I think of that? A pizza with literally everything is the best answer I’ve ever heard. A pizza with literally everything!! Oh god.

    KP: Now, admittedly, it’s gonna take a while to pick through things each meal.

    GERVAIS: Oh god. I’d just have a piece of toast. I’m fine.

    KP: But you got a buffet on a crust.

    GERVAIS: It’s amazing. That’s amazing. A pizza with literally everything. Yeah. I mean, I’m looking at it now and it’s actually got a can of Coke and a pint of beer. Oh, amazing.

    KP: You gotta monkey’s paw through these things.

    GERVAIS: But you’d be fat and happy, but I’d be healthy and bored.

    KP: It is a remarkable trade off that I probably would have to deal with, wouldn’t I?

    GERVAIS: It’s funny, because that is… I am fat and happy. Where I see a lot of other people healthy and bored. (laughs) It’s like, that’s what I chose in life. I chose the pizza with everything.

    KP: When was the last time you had a Cobb salad?

    GERVAIS: I can tell you exactly when. It was the Four Seasons Hotel in Los Angeles about a month ago.

    KP: And prior to that, the last time you were in the Four Seasons Hotel?

    GERVAIS: I think it was. I think the last time was when I was in the Four Seasons in Los Angeles. (laughs)

    KP: So the Four Seasons is literally the personification of your wish.

    GERVAIS: But salad makes sense when it’s 85 degrees and you’re sitting outside.

    KP: No it really doesn’t, I wouldn’t think.

    GERVAIS: It… yeah. Well, I only had it once. I was there a week and I had it once. I didn’t make a habit of it.

    KP: Was it based on a recommendation? Had you had Cobb salad prior…

    GERVAIS: No, but I like it because it is a little bit of everything.

    KP: So you can feel healthy.

    GERVAIS: There’s nothing quite like… I laugh at vegetables. They’ve got nothing. They’re smug and I laugh in their face. I should dismiss the avocado. But when you taste it, it’s like the banana of the vegetable world. It’s tasty, it’s fatty, chewy. There’s a bit of substance to it. And I respect it.

    KP: That’s why the early Californians called it the calana.

    GERVAIS: What does that mean?

    KP: I don’t know, I just made it up.

    GERVAIS: (laughs) Okay. Yeah. Oh dear. It’s like the chicken of the tree.

    KP: It is literally the chicken of the tree.

    GERVAIS: It’s the chicken of the tree. I want…

    KP: That’s what avocado means in the native language.

    GERVAIS: If the Avocado Society of America need a slogan: “Avocado – It’s the chicken of the tree.”

    KP: I want to see the PSA that you do for them.

    GERVAIS: I don’t even know if they grow on trees. Do they? I imagine they’re more on bushes, aren’t they?

    KP: No, I believe they’re avocado trees.

    GERVAIS: Yeah, but you believe some strange things.

    KP: And I’m willing to put my complete sincerity behind it in hopes that you’ll go along with it.

    GERVAIS: Yeah, but the difference between me and you is you’re gonna look it up afterwards on Wikipedia.

    KP: I could look it up right now to make it really awkward.

    GERVAIS: Okay, go on then. What is an avocado, as well? I think it must be a fruit. It’s got a seed, it’s got flesh, and it’s got a skin, so it must be a fruit, surely.

    KP: Let’s see… avocado. We’ll go to Wikipedia because they’re never wrong.

    GERVAIS: Don’t diss Wikipedia. I’ve dissed it before and I felt guilty because they’re a non profit-making organization.

    KP: No, they are trees.

    GERVAIS: They’re fruit then, aren’t they…

    KP: It is a fruit, yes.

    GERVAIS: It is a fruit, but I’ll tell you what…

    KP: Also known as the butter pear, or the alligator pear.

    GERVAIS: Yeah. It may be a fruit, but in a war, it would side with the vegetables.

    KP: I would love to see the fruit-vegetable war.

    GERVAIS: The tomato would be… well, it would literally go red because it wouldn’t know what to do, but I think they would sort of… The fruit goes, “You’re a fruit…” and it would look over the vegetables and the vegetables go, “Think of everything we’ve been through. Think of it.” And the tomatoes would go, “Okay, we’re gonna fight with the vegetables.” And all the plums and tomatoes would be going, “Fucking tossers. You fucking…” and the avocado would go over there and the fruits wouldn’t even know it’s a fruit. The avocado would go, “Leave him alone, leave him alone!” And the fruit…

    KP: You sure they wouldn’t just call them, like, the Vichy fruit?

    GERVAIS: Yeah, they’d be caught in the middle, I think. I don’t know. That’s interesting. I really don’t know what would happen there. Maybe you could talk to John Hodgman.

    KP: Or would the tomatoes be the ultimate double agent?

    GERVAIS: I don’t know, but I feel…

    KP: The fruits going, “Listen, you’re the one who can pull it off. You need to go in there as a vegetable and find out what they’re doing.”

    GERVAIS: I really think a tomato feels more at home with other vegetables than fruits. I genuinely believe that. There’s no tomato jam; there’s tomato ketchup.

    KP: I think there’s no tomato jam because no one had ever tried.

    GERVAIS: I know but it wouldn’t… it’s silly. There’s marmalade that’s made of oranges. There’s strawberry jam. You’ve got all the fruit jams you want. And likewise there’s no strawberry ketchup. So let’s be grown up about this. Let’s not look at the biology – let’s look into the heart and ask it, “What are you?” It would say, “I’m a vegetable.” It would look at other vegetables and go, “Listen, I don’t care about who my biological… you’re my real dad.”

    KP: But do you ever think about the hurt that might be there? He might be the outcast of the fruit world, going, “I could have the taste really if you just give me…” “No. You do not taste like us.”

    GERVAIS: Yeah, I think it’s been kept from him. I think no one has ever… I think it’s a revelation. I don’t think the tomato knows it’s a fruit, really. It’s so vegetable-y. It’s so…

    KP: Do you think it’s like the white child raised by Indians?

    GERVAIS: Exactly like that. Although we call them Native Americans.

    KP: As do we.

    GERVAIS: (laughs)

    KP: You know, really this interview is just a function of you tearing me down now, isn’t it?

    GERVAIS: (laughs) Yeah, but you still are winning. You’re still up because you got ten out of ten for pizza with literally everything.

    KP: I appreciate that. It’s how I win all arguments now. I just pull that out.

    GERVAIS: Yeah. Have we done anything so far that you can use?

    KP: Believe me, this is on par with all of our previous interviews.

    GERVAIS: (laughs) Well, then I can only blame you.

    KP: I’m completely fine with that. Really, aren’t these the important topics we’re discussing?

    GERVAIS: They are. I mean they’re things that…

    KP: They’re timeless.

    GERVAIS: I was asking Karl Pilkington today… He was getting really stressed…

    KP: No…

    GERVAIS: (laughs) Yeah. I was saying, if you’re the last man on a desert island and there’s one orangutan, a female orangutan, and you have kids with it, little kids…

    KP: So we’re already pushing past that initial choice…

    GERVAIS: (laughs) Yeah. And I get him hooked in, like, he’s got no choice. And I can see it happening. I can see my slight of hand work when his eyebrows go down and now he’s… ’cause I don’t give him a chance to go, “Definitely not.” He’s already there.

    KP: Now he’s a committed family man.

    GERVAIS: And I know that I’ve got him there, sitting on the beach. And now he’s, like, fifty, and he’s shaved her arms and done something with her hair, and she’s slimmed down a little bit, and he’s got his three little oranguhumans just sort of running around. They look a bit like him but with shorter legs. And I say, and then the kids grow up and you’re there and you’re in your twilight years and you’re just sitting there holding hands with your wife. I said, would you look back and think it was weird, the first 30 years? You know, “I had houses.” And he thought about it for a while, and he goes, “I wouldn’t do it.” And he’d gone through this whole thing, the whole scenario with me, and then at the end he said he wouldn’t do it. I said, “Is it the sex?” He goes, “Well, yeah, but I wouldn’t…” I said, “Well, what if you can artificially inseminate her?” And he went, “I wouldn’t want to. Forget it.” I go, “Then you’ve got to populate the world.” He goes, “Forget it. If we couldn’t survive, we don’t deserve to survive.” (laughs) Oh god!

    KP: I love how he called you out on your slight of hand, though.

    GERVAIS: I know.

    KP: Which was marvelous. The fact that you pushed right through that initial shock and go, “No, you’ve already got the kids. You’re committed.”

    GERVAIS: But the thing is I know that I can hook Karl with a story. I know he’s just like the best person to tell anything to. So I go Karl… and he knows. And I go, “Imagine this…” And I’ve already got him because his brain’s going. It’s in there. I’ve caught him. I’ve trapped him. He’s come into the jam jar.

    KP: You’ve already done the “ooh shiny” moment.

    GERVAIS: Yeah, exactly. (laughs) “Oh, it’s amazing!”

    KP: We were supposed to do an interview with Karl and never heard back.

    GERVAIS: Oh, that’s ridiculous.

    KP: He’s almost as elusive as Jonathan Ross.

    GERVAIS: Oh yeah. He gets enough publicity. Speak to Karl.

    KP: Although considering how much money he’s getting from the license payers, maybe I should just call the government and ask for an interview with Jonathan.

    GERVAIS: Me and Karl have to earn our money in the free market.

    KP: I have noticed over the past year or so Jonathan is making more and more awkward jokes about how much he’s wasting.

    GERVAIS: Well, that’s probably to annoy the papers that say he’s not worth it. You get to a point where… that’s why I still say I tend to be arrogant at awards shows, because I like annoying the people it annoys. (laughs) So you get to that position where you think, “Why is my life annoying someone else?”

    KP: So you’re saying you’re just going for the Daily Mail readers.

    GERVAIS: Well, I’ve named nothing.

    KP: I have, though, and you haven’t denied it.

    GERVAIS: (laughs) Wow. (laughs)

    KP: That was my own cunning trap, Ricky.

    GERVAIS: I don’t know that I am going for the Daily Mail reader.

    KP: I’m sorry, the ones who go for the coloring.

    GERVAIS: I don’t know that…

    KP: Because we both know about…

    GERVAIS: I don’t think people are that are stupid, anyway. I think people read these things, but I don’t think they’re swayed either way. It’s a weird thing. It’s like… I don’t know.

    KP: So who are the people that test you at this point?

    GERVAIS: No, what I mean is… yeah, if a journalist says…

    KP: You hate Simon Pegg…

    GERVAIS: Oh, that was mental, wasn’t it? Because Simon was clearly joking.

    KP: I love how they’re so desperate for some kind of feud – because there’s nothing happening in the news right now, by the way.

    GERVAIS: Of course. Well, apart from the war and the credit crunch, yeah.

    KP: They need to start a feud between you two.

    GERVAIS: And Simon sent me a thing saying, “Apparently we’re at war because I called you a fat idiot.” And I sent back, “It’s glandular, you cunt.” (laughs)

    KP: He wasn’t buying it though. Are you familiar with The Little Rascals in the UK? The black and white comedies?

    GERVAIS: Yeah, I’ve heard of that.

    KP: You just brought up glandular. I was doing some research about the film series. And they had, starring in the early versions of the series, these incredibly overweight kids to the point that they looked like they were three and a half foot tall and stuffed in sausage casings. That kind of overweight.

    GERVAIS: Where they actually lose their eyes. Where their forehead starts meeting their cheeks.

    KP: Yes, where it’s just a gradual descent and enveloping of all sensory organs. And they found out that one of the kids was glandular.

    GERVAIS: Apparently it’s about 2% of obesity is glandular. That could be called genetically… basically not their fault.

    KP: I think it’s the ones that you see in the papers when they’re two and they’re called, like, “Thunder Baby”.

    GERVAIS: Then there’s the ones that we’re getting now, and you see the ones that are really fat, and then you see the parents are really fat, and you wanna go, “Well, yeah, because you’re feeding them what you eat. You’re feeding them too much.” Kids are mammals. They’ll eat what is put in front of them and they crave fat and sugar. You’ve got to control it. It’s killing them with kindness, that’s what they think. It’s terrible. And they’ve started something now – we’ve talked about this on the new podcast – they’re weighing the kids at school and they’re sending a letter to the parents saying “Your child is obese.” And my point is the parents will go, “Yeah, I know – we have to push him out the door to get him to school. We know how fat he is. We have to change his trousers every two months because he eats too much.” Like the parents don’t know when their kid is waddling and sweating from going one room to the other, of course they know he’s obese. But when he goes, “Mom, I want a biscuit.” They go, “Oh, give him a biscuit. It’ll shut him up. Give him a biscuit.” It’s ridiculous.

    KP: Well, that’s why they’ve started spray painting them with those scarlet O’s.

    GERVAIS: The scarlet what?

    KP: O’s.

    GERVAIS: What are they?

    KP: O for “Obese”.

    GERVAIS: Oh, I see. (laughs)

    KP: “Oh, see, the fatty’s got the mark.”

    GERVAIS: Although I don’t think you need to spray them. I think you can tell. It’s the ones that block out more light than the other children.

    KP: They’ve also installed them with those backing up beepers.

    GERVAIS: Yeah exactly. They have other children spinning around them in their orbit.

    KP: “Child Reversing.”

    GERVAIS: They start appearing on the ordinance survey map.

    KP: Yes. “Oh, he’s now a landmark.”

    GERVAIS: Yeah – “You can’t move him; he’s a permanent fixture.”

    KP: That’s horrible. This is the audience of the future, Ricky, if they make it that far.

    GERVAIS: Well, they’re good, fat people, because they can’t move. They can’t even use the remote after a while because their fingers are too fat. So if you’re on the channel their telly is stuck on, they just watch you.

    KP: Yes, but imagine if you had the corner on the muumuu market at this point.

    GERVAIS: That would be good.

    KP: Now the market’s supplying all of these overweight people.

    GERVAIS: Well, some of them don’t even bother getting dressed. They just lay in bed.

    KP: Just lay in bed?

    GERVAIS: Yeah. I’m starting to feel sorry for them now.

    KP: They’d change if they could, Ricky. It’s not their fault they wished for the pizza with everything.

    GERVAIS: Well, I do this on my standup…

    KP: You go down…

    GERVAIS: He weighs a thousand pounds, and my point is when he got to 500 pounds, didn’t he start thinking, “That’s a bit much?” That that’s heavy for what is essentially a land mammal? How does it get to that? How do you suddenly start getting 500… I mean, it’s different… by then, something else kicks in, doesn’t it? Something else kicks in.

    KP: Sort of a self denial, or…

    GERVAIS: I don’t know.

    KP: Maybe they live close to a canal.

    GERVAIS: Well, maybe some of them who do get to this point already have some sort of genuine mental illness. I don’t know. I don’t know why they don’t… because… Oh, it’s incredible. Some of them literally can’t move. There was this awful program…

    KP: You’re going to name one of those wonderful documentaries that air in the UK…

    GERVAIS: It was in the UK, yeah. It was called Fat Girls and Feeders. And it’s about these men who find women on the internet and they’re attracted to them, and these women are flattered, and then they feed them until they can’t walk anymore, and that’s their thing. It’s like something from a horror film. I mean, the mentality of the men.

    KP: So it’s sort of like Hansel and Gretel?

    GERVAIS: It’s weird. And they’re trapped. And they have to be saved by their family, and they just keep feeding them And they want to get them to the point… and what it is, it is a psychological disorder on the male part. They want to get them to the point where they’re totally dependant on them, so it’s a power thing over another human. So they have to wash them and clean them. Empty their bedpan. And it’s really, really strange.

    KP: I’m really glad I found out about that.

    GERVAIS: See, I brought the tone down.

    KP: But now what you’ve done is you’ve rock bottomed it, so now we can only go up.

    GERVAIS: Well, sort of. Except I could probably find some more horrific things to talk about. Or find some really horrific things to talk about and then laugh about them so you’re really in a turmoil. You don’t know what to believe anymore. I’ve actually changed your moral compass to a point where you would leave here now and you’d be a different person and you probably would do something quite horrendous.

    KP: I’m waiting.

    GERVAIS: (laughs)

    KP: When you throw the gauntlet down you’ve got to follow up on it.

    GERVAIS: You can’t use any of this.

    KP: Have you read the other interviews that we’ve done with other people? Surely you haven’t.

    GERVAIS: Damn, I’m worried now. I was saying this because I thought you couldn’t use it. Now I have to go back and look at what I said..

    KP: Trust me. One of the things we enjoy is the fact that at least there’s a conversational aspect to it. Even if, frankly, I’m gonna have sleepless nights over it.

    GERVAIS: I think this will have people rushing to watch my standup special. They go, “Well, if he says those sort of things to a learned member of the press, what is he gonna say to a load of people in a room that are drunk?”

    KP: Now, who are you saying it to again?

    GERVAIS: I don’t know. I’m like one of those people – I’ve lost the will to live now. I just want a Mars bar.

    KP: That’s good. We’ll call up Jamie Oliver.

    GERVAIS: I’m seeing him tomorrow.

    KP: Oh really. Are you now on social terms with him?

    GERVAIS: Yeah.

    KP: Or does he have, like, a weekly barbecue?

    GERVAIS: No, he’s a nice bloke. I’ve only met him a few times. He’s coming to a screening of Ghost Town.

    KP: Is that what you’re going on Jonathan for this Thursday?

    GERVAIS: Exactly, yeah. Yeah, that’s right. Wow. It’s like you’ve got a big telescope.

    KP: Well, I keep up on happenings within the UK.

    GERVAIS: I know. I was impressed last time when you started saying things from… you shocked me with one that was really obscure.

    KP: Well, give me time, I’m sure there’ll be another. Now going back, speaking of the standup, I remember pitching and railing and wondering and questioning and querying you in one of our first interviews, after having seen you UK standup, about why it wasn’t being released to DVD in the US, and you claimed that the humor wouldn’t travel and you were wary about it crossing over…

    GERVAIS: No, I did have to… well, there’s two reasons. Obviously, some of it won’t travel. Cultural references won’t travel. You would get references to some of my Big Brother winners and the Goodies and Jonathan Ross, but most people wouldn’t. So I take out all those very specific cultural references. And then anything else goes, really. I don’t take out anything else on concept or taste and decency. And the things that are left are all the universal subjects: Hitler, famine…

    KP: Again, it’s a feel good night.

    GERVAIS: (laughs) I could have released the videos, but I think 30% of it would be lost. So what I did was…

    KP: It certainly would have cut off the bootlegging market.

    GERVAIS: … I conflated them, and so it’s like you’ve got the greatest hits. I gave you the greatest hits.

    KP: So we’re seeing the Amalgamated Ricky Gervais Stand-Up Special.

    GERVAIS: You’re seeing like, oh, um… you’re seeing all three shows with all the bits referencing people you’ve never heard of taken out. And so who’s left? Hitler. Gandhi. Stephen Hawking. And I think when you’ve got those three…

    KP: And you’re assuming Americans have heard of at least two of those.

    GERVAIS: (laughs) When we have to do the DVD for The Office, we repackaged it for BBC America, and there was a glossary. And I understood the glossary of terms like “wanker” and “bender”. But they put in Shakespeare. And I thought, “Now that is too patronizing.” Because if someone’s getting that DVD and they haven’t heard of William Shakespeare, they are not gonna like The Office. Let me guarantee you that now.

    KP: But you’re not looking at the other side. Maybe this was their clever way of getting some poor American to look at that and go, “Who’s this Shakespeare guy?” And that person went to the library they’d never gone to before, found Shakespeare, and went, “You know what? The Office has opened up an entire literary world to me.”

    GERVAIS: I still stand by it. If you have heard and seen the British version of The Office, you have definitely heard of William Shakespeare. My Venn diagram would be two complete circles; one engulfed in the other.

    KP: It’s not really a Venn diagram at that point, is it?

    GERVAIS: And if you know what a Venn diagram is, you’ve seen the English version of The Office and you know who William Shakespeare is. (laughs) That would be another subset.

    KP: Yeah, with about 15 or 16 states in the US that exist outside that Venn diagram.

    GERVAIS: Yeah, exactly. (laughs)

    KP: Now, if it also included, I don’t know, Days Of Our Lives, or some other soap opera…

    GERVAIS: Well, yeah. It’s not a perfect system.

    KP: It’s not, but you need to fix it, Ricky.

    GERVAIS: Yeah. But then again, what sort of weird society is it that goes around giving you one choice of meal for the rest of your life?

    KP: A society that realized that choices must be made.

    GERVAIS: Death row is the only establishment that gives you one meal for the rest of your life, and it is only one meal.

    KP: No, I think by law there’s a requirement of some kind of variety even there.

    GERVAIS: Is there? That’s the saddest thing in the world, being given a last meal. I can’t even think about it.

    KP: What if you were to ask for a taste of freedom?

    GERVAIS: Yeah, exactly. A pizza with literally everything, and that includes a key to the cell. Oh, why is there still death row. Now I’ve brought the tone down again.

    KP: You have. I think this is becoming one of the most philosophical interviews you’ve probably ever done.

    GERVAIS: Yeah… May I just get serious? Stop capital punishment. There you go. Stop capital punishment. Stop killing people. Stop state condoned violence. It doesn’t do any good.

    KP: This is why you’re so good on Comic Relief.

    GERVAIS: (laughs)

    KP: Now I see why you don’t do any in-studio bits.

    GERVAIS: Did you see the bit I did last year when I pretended to be in Africa and cry?

    KP: Yeah, actually, I showed it to an audience at a film festival a few months back.

    GERVAIS: Well, one of the execs at BBC said that when I cried, donations hit the peak of the night. And then when they realized it was a joke, they dropped. So in my own way, I have affected Africa.

    KP: Yes. Someone can’t be cured of some kind of very simple disease now.

    GERVAIS: Yeah. And that’s my fault.

    KP: They lost the ability to buy at least a thousand mosquito nets because of you.

    GERVAIS: And if you haven’t heard of The Office, don’t know what a Venn diagram is, and never heard of William Shakespeare, you’ve never heard of Africa, either.

    KP: Well, that’s true. I think you need to start a Venn diagram of things that Americans have never heard of.

    GERVAIS: (laughs) That’s easy. That’s everything in England. Everything in England except Simon Cowell.

    KP: Just one circle that says Americans and one circle that says the world.

    GERVAIS: America is the world. Let’s face it.

    KP: You gotta think, “All we need is a war there.” Then we’ll know more than we ever want to know about it.

    GERVAIS: No, you can’t have a war here. We’re an island. No one travels to have a war in.

    KP: Could happen.

    GERVAIS: Well, France would have a go. They’re very close. That’s happened before.

    KP: Yes. I love the fact that France is waiting on the sidelines going, “Oh, we’re just itching for a fight.”

    GERVAIS: Exactly, yeah.

    KP: “Give us a moment – you’ll be ours.”

    GERVAIS: It’s 22 miles. You can nearly walk it.

    KP: For the people there, the wars of the Middle Ages never ended.

    GERVAIS: Well, that’s where… oh, you don’t have that sign, do you – putting two fingers up. You have one finger, don’t you?

    KP: I know which gesture you’re speaking of.

    GERVAIS: You know what it comes from, don’t you?

    KP: Yes.

    GERVAIS: Yeah, exactly.

    KP: Now we’ve got literally five or six people scrambling who are reading this interview looking to find our what we’re talking about, because we’re not gonna tell them.

    GERVAIS: Well, I suppose it sort of makes sense, as well, because Americans are a lot younger. The post bow and arrow era. You’re showing that middle finger that was on the trigger.

    KP: Yes – when you’ve had your pointer finger shot off.

    GERVAIS: (laughs) Yeah, exactly. I can’t pull a trigger. Well, John Hodgman couldn’t, anyway, because he’s had his fingers removed instead of his toes… Oh no, that’s you, isn’t it?

    KP: That was me. He chose toe.

    GERVAIS: Yeah, exactly.

    KP: See, that’s my own way of making sure that warfare doesn’t perpetuate itself.

    GERVAIS: Yeah. People can’t pull the trigger.

    KP: But they can run. With a nice, even gait. And that was all I was really looking for in the end.

    GERVAIS: Run away. Being able to run away.

    KP: That is exactly it. That is what I chose. I don’t want to fight. I don’t need that fighting finger.

    GERVAIS: Yeah. You can run away and count your nine fingers.

    KP: I’ll still be alive to do so.

    GERVAIS: I suppose so.

    KP: So, in the end, I think I made the smarter decision. Obviously John, being the warring fellow that he is… as you’ve seen, he’s a very violent man.

    GERVAIS: I think he wants to continue playing piano but without the pedal.

    KP: The pedal just holds you back.

    GERVAIS: (laughs) Yeah, exactly. Yeah.

    KP: That’s because he was born and raised playing just saloon piano.

    GERVAIS: I can imagine. John is the man least likely you’d ever see in the saloon. Except he’d be the doc who would go, “I don’t want to get involved. I’m just taking a bullet out. I don’t know anything.”

    KP: “Why did I come from the East? Why did I let my wife talk me into this? I had a nice practice in Boston. She said, ‘Yeah, but the land is so cheap…’”

    GERVAIS: (laughs) I’d love to see him in a really rough saloon!

    KP: Sitting there with his fruity drink.

    GERVAIS: Imagine if he got drafted. Imagine John in Saigon in 1972. Just with the same glasses on. Just in all his equipment.

    KP: Sitting back, singing a Doors tune to himself.

    GERVAIS: (laughs) Oh god!

    KP: “This pack is really chafing on me. Can any of you help?”

    GERVAIS: “My good man, if you don’t know what chafing is, please look it up. I have a dictionary in my…” (laughs)

    KP: “Is anyone up for Scrabble?”

    GERVAIS: Poor John! It’s like we’re a couple of bullies! It’s like we’re calling him a little bookworm behind his back. Just because he likes to read books.

    KP: He’s rough and tumble. Have you seen the photos of him with his ponytail?

    GERVAIS: I don’t want to.

    KP: Oh, it’s a completely different John.

    GERVAIS: No, I don’t like that at all. I don’t like the idea of that. That’s brought the tone down. That’s brought the tone down worse than having the go at capital punishment.

    KP: So you haven’t seen the new book yet?

    GERVAIS: No I haven’t, no. I wonder if he used my quote. I’ll be so insulted if he didn’t.

    KP: Oh, it’s on the back.

    GERVAIS: Oh is it?

    KP: It’s rather prominent.

    GERVAIS: You know everything. You’re like some sort of weird oracle. Unless you’re part… I think you’re, like, some sort of cyber creature. You’re permanently plugged into Wikipedia.

    KP: Yes, I exist within my own matrix.

    GERVAIS: Yeah. So have you got anything you can use for the interview yet?

    KP: I think so.

    GERVAIS: I think these are the highlights. Jesus I’m struggling.

    KP: You’re struggling to find highlights?

    GERVAIS: Right. I love the fruit vegetable war. That’s got to make it in the top ten. I love the one meal. I was so smug when I thought I did a better answer than you.

    KP: I know. I was letting you go with that.

    GERVAIS: (laughs) And the more we can insult John Hodgman, I think we’ve got a great interview.

    KP: But I will say this. Let me make it clear – he is a wonderful person.

    GERVAIS: Well, yeah, but you don’t need to worry about this because you’re in charge of the edit, anyway. So you can just leave out all the nasty things that you’ve said and you probably will.

    KP: No no, I tend to leave them in because it preserves the flavor of the awkwardness.

    GERVAIS: I quite like the fact that you couldn’t just cheat and say it’s editorial – you had to use it as a quote. You had to say it in this interview for real so you could say it as a quote.

    KP: It’s the only way to preserve the integrity of this entire conversation, isn’t it?

    GERVAIS: I started off taking this interview quite seriously and now I feel like a fool.

    KP: So did I, and so do I.

    GERVAIS: (laughs) Oh good. Well good. It’s been a pleasure.

    KP: And so the standup, were you happy with the US tour?

    GERVAIS: Loved it. Absolutely loved it.

    KP: Was there anything that surprised you?

    GERVAIS: It was great. I love the Kodak. I did two nights at the Kodak, and then that was my favorite venue in the world. And then I did Madison Square Garden, and that was just as good. I thought they were amazing crowds. In fact, doing America made me really love standup, and I’ve started working… I now work on my standup every day, a little bit, and I never did before. I used to sort of do it in… and now I can’t wait. I go to sleep at night and I wake up, and I’ve got a routine. I think of something new every, every night now. I can’t wait. I get a little adrenaline rush thinking, “This will be my best standup ever.” And it was because of the American dates. They were so smart, they were so on it. They all knew their Shakespeare. They knew what a Venn diagram was. And they’d all seen the English version of The Office.

    KP: Now, which cities did you play?

    GERVAIS: LA and New York.

    KP: Cased closed.

    GERVAIS: Well. In fact, on it I say it’s lovely to be doing this American tour. I go, “It’s not a tour. Let’s face it. I messed up and left out the middle bit.” I think that’s in the finished cut.

    KP: Have you ever traversed the US via car or other means of transport?

    GERVAIS: I haven’t. I’ve only been to LA and New York. No – I’ve been to Boston, obviously. And I think Texas, I went once. But no, it’s…yeah, it’s New York and LA all the way. And I think I’ve spent a lot more time in New York. Well, I know I have. It’s probably 95% of all my time in America has been New York. And when I say New York, I mean Manhattan.

    KP: Don’t you have a residence now in New York?

    GERVAIS: I do, yeah. So now when I say Manhattan, I mean the Upper East Side.

    KP: So not only have you gone to only the elite centers of the US, you now live in the elitist part of the elite center.

    GERVAIS: Yeah. It’s funny as well, because I’ve never been interested in politics. I never even watch British politics. But I’ve been following this election more than anything else. Maybe it’s ’cause I’m gonna be there. Maybe it’s because I’ve spent more time in America. Maybe it’s because Obama’s, like, the most charismatic senator in my living memory. But I can’t believe that one of the criticisms of him is that he’s elitist. What they mean is he’s educated. It’s sort of like, imagine not trusting a man because he knows about stuff. (laughs) It’s like the whole of America do to him what we just did to John Hodgman.

    KP: Now you’re making me feel bad all over again.

    GERVAIS: Yeah. It’s like, “Well, how were we meant to choose our president?” Just a drinking competition?

    KP: Rock paper scissors?

    GERVAIS: I don’t know what he’s done wrong by being sort of thoughtful and intelligent…

    KP: I think you really just give them a wedgie, and whoever doesn’t cry gets to be president.

    GERVAIS: Someone asked me what I thought of Sarah Palin the other day, and I said I know one thing about her and I don’t need to know anything else. And that is that she thinks that if you’re raped by even a family member, you should not have an abortion. There is nothing… I don’t need to know any more about her. In fact, I don’t want to know anything. That’s the only thing I ever want to know about her.

    KP: And beyond that, in her municipality when she was mayor, she made rape victims pay for their own rape kit.

    GERVAIS: Okay. Yeah. But the thing is… it’s like you’ve told me that Hitler cheated at Trivial Pursuit. I’m not going to hate him any more.

    KP: Oh no, I’m not saying that that was meant to push you over the edge you’ve so clearly crossed.

    GERVAIS: No, that is mental though. That’s proper… that’s mental, because that’s slightly weird because it’s almost like a psychological torture.

    KP: Well, that’s like slapping someone and having them say thank you.

    GERVAIS: It’s genuinely… Okay, yeah, now I got a little bit of an adrenaline rush there. That is worse. Okay, now I know two things. Jesus Christ.

    KP: She’s just insane. Have you seen the video of her being exorcised of witchcraft?

    GERVAIS: Oh, for fuck’s sake.

    KP: Oh, YouTube is great. You can do a double watch of that and her talent portion of the beauty contest…

    GERVAIS: Oh, someone’s put one on today that I saw. “Sarah Palin is like David Brent.”

    KP: Oh really?

    GERVAIS: Yeah, and she does this thing. They show the thing from The Office and this thing from Sarah Palin, and it’s just like it. It’s like when Brent lies, it’s really good. It’s really funny. I laughed, I laughed. Because I knew what was coming. I knew what they meant before they showed the bit from The Office, and it’s really, really good.

    KP: So how does it feel to be a cultural touchstone?

    GERVAIS: Well, the other day someone said McCain was like David Brent, so maybe David Brent’s just like everyone.

    KP: So he’s an archetype.

    GERVAIS: Yeah. Maybe he’s a cliché. Maybe I’m not as clever as I first thought.

    KP: Maybe he’s an archiché.

    GERVAIS: (laughs)

    KP: I’m glad that such a simple, stupid joke as combining two words got a laugh out of you.

    GERVAIS: (laughs) That’s good. I like that. Unfortunately, I’m gonna have to go now.

    KP: Well it’s not the first time I’ve head you say that.

    GERVAIS: This is always a pleasure.

    KP: And I still say finger and not toe. I should email you the contract… because we made a bet on the finger or toe thing. I was about to do a convention with the people we were debating with, and we made a public bet about who would be the winner and who would have more people choosing finger or toe.

    GERVAIS: People are always gonna choose the toe.

    KP: You know, and I don’t get it.

    GERVAIS: People are always gonna choose the toe. Same as anything to do with eyes. Nothing’s gonna be eyes. I think they’d lose both hands before they lost both eyes. People want to see. People want to be out there and people want to…

    KP: Why don’t people want to have good balance? And a steady gait?

    GERVAIS: (laughs) I love this new campaign.

    KP: And here’s the thing; we actually were so bad in our argument we pulled in the table next to us at the bar we were arguing at. And this lovely couple who were having dinner, going, “You know, we couldn’t help overhearing – what the hell are you arguing about?” So we let them in, and the woman goes, “Well, I’d pick finger.” “Why would you pick finger?” “Well, I’m a runner.” That made sense. That person’s a runner.

    GERVAIS: That’s true.

    KP: Her boyfriend, at that point, then picked toe. And we proceeded over the next 40 minutes…

    GERVAIS: Because he’s a pianist.

    KP: Well, we proceeded to destroy their relationship as they began arguing about it.

    GERVAIS: Brilliant.

    KP: And eventually left the pub ticked off at each other about the choices they had made.

    GERVAIS: That’s amazing.

    KP: I’m just saying – John and I bring people together.

    GERVAIS: Yeah.

    KP: And tear them apart.

    GERVAIS: It’s like the opposite of the Nobel Peace Prize.

    KP: It is the Hodgman-Plume Peace Prize.

    GERVAIS: And say hello to John for me.

    KP: I will do so. His book comes out next week.

    GERVAIS: Brilliant.

    KP: Then he starts on his book tour.

    GERVAIS: If it does better than the last one, it’s mainly due to my quote.

    KP: That should be your quote on the third one.

    GERVAIS: On the third one, yeah.

    KP: “I would like to claim all responsibility for any sale that he might have gotten.”

    GERVAIS: I think it should be all my quotes and just him on the back saying, “This is a book of Ricky Gervais’ quotes.”

    KP: I don’t know why you don’t market that.

    GERVAIS: (laughs) Yeah. I suppose that’s sort of what writing a book is, isn’t it? A book full of your quotes.

    KP: Here’s something that aggravated me. There’s an author named Sarah Vowell in the US who does these wonderful books exploring history. Very much like what John does, but she does it for history and it’s actually true. I was reading the reviews of her new book on Amazon, and one of the criticisms was “It’s too wordy.”

    GERVAIS: (laughs)

    KP: I mean, by it’s very definition, shouldn’t a book be wordy?

    GERVAIS: That’s really good.

    KP: Otherwise it’s just blank pages!

    GERVAIS: Yeah. I think Leonardo DaVinci had a similar criticism where there was “too many pictures.”

    KP: “You’re too thinky.”

    GERVAIS: Yeah, “too thinky.” (laughs) That’s good. I like that. “John Hodgman’s too thinky.”

    KP: Well, it’s been a pleasure yet again. We’ll have to make this like a yearly thing.

    GERVAIS: It’s a deal.

    KP: Yeah, I’ve heard that before.

    GERVAIS: (laughs) No, definitely.

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