Category Archives: Cartoons Comics and Animation

Nina Paley: No One Misses "TV Pollution" in Public Spaces

TVBGpackage.jpgProspect Heights cartoonist and animator Nina Paley created the artwork and package design for TV-B-Gone, that little keychain device that turns off “virtually any television.” DAILY HEIGHTS got Nina to reflect on National TV Turnoff Week, which just ended (April 25 – May 2).

How did TV Turnoff Week go for you?
Like any other week – I don’t have TV reception at home. I do have a monitor on which I can watch DVDs, but last week I was too busy working on “Sita Sings the Blues.”

How did it come about that you did the artwork for the TV-B-Gone package?
I knew Mitch Altman, the inventor of TV-B-Gone, way back in my hometown of Urbana, Illinois. When Mitch moved to San Francisco, he sublet and then took over my beloved previous apartment, the “pentshack” on a roof in the Castro (the NYT wrote about it and made me nostalgic). Mitch brought up TV-B-Gone at least 10 years ago, and I said I wanted to do art for it if the opportunity ever arose. It finally did.

I read on “The Internet” that you had practically begged Mitch for the opportunity to illustrate the packaging. Why?
Isn’t it obvious? A device that turns off annoying televisions! TV intrudes more and more as time goes on. It’s in restaurants, bars, train stations, buses… I’m especially vulnerable to TV. For some reason, I find it extremely difficult to take my eyes off a flickering screen. And it’s bad enough if the sound is muted, but there’s no way I can shut my ears to it. In public spaces, where people socialize, TV is an overwhelming intrusion. It’s pollution, in fact.

Have you used TV-B-Gone in public? How did it go?
I’ve only used it a few times in public. Once at a bar that had about 15 screens all going at once. I turned off a few that were facing me. No one noticed! Another time, in a health club that had 3 giant screens showing sports. I turned one off, partly to impress a friend of mine who requested it. Again, no one noticed. No one misses TV in public.

How do you respond to critics who say “hey lady, just deal with it, and stop imposing your morality on me”?
No one’s said that to me. Regardless, it has nothing to do with morality. If someone litters, and I pick up their trash, am I “imposing morality”? No, I’m improving my environment, making it more liveable. I don’t give a damn how much TV people watch in their own environments. In a public environment, I want to interact with people, not TV.

TV Turnoff Week is over. Is it too late to kill your television?
It’s never too late. Although if you don’t like television, just don’t get one in the first place. Really, I don’t care how much TV people watch at home. It’s the public intrusion that bugs me. Until we can kill public televisions, we’ll just have to use TV-B-Gone.

Failure is Fun: Rejection Show

jonbear2.jpgWriter, comedian and Prospect Heights resident Jon Friedman brings The Rejection Show back to P.S. 122 on Wednesday, May 18th.

“The Rejection Show is a comedic based event that embraces the rejected and ‘turned down’ material of writers, comedians, cartoonists, artists, and human beings whom display their creative ‘failures’ live on stage.”
Link: The Rejection Show

WHAT’S THE STORY WITH THIS PHOTO? Jon tells us: “I used the bear as a way for me to do some comedy bits that would otherwise be rejected at other shows. For example….I slow-danced with it to Madonna’s ‘Crazy for You’, and I did a segment called ‘How My Favorite Movies Would be Different if They Were Starring a Bear.'”

The Rejection Show | May 18, 2005; P.S. 122 (150 1st Ave + 9th St.) @ 8PM

Featuring Mike Albo (Author, The Underminer), Andrea Rosen (Comedian, Variety Shac), Nick Stevens (Comedian, ESPN’s Dream Job), Chad Darbyshire, Drew Dernavich, & Matt Diffee (Cartoonists, The New Yorker) & The winner of the “Air Guitar with a Llama Contest!”

Plus “Rejection Inspection,” special guest clapper with “Rejectee” (The rejected Rejection Show mascot,) & more. Tickets available via Ticketweb or at the P.S. 122 box office.

Letter to a Comedy Club

jfcomedy.jpgThe guy who wrote this letter is comedian and Prospect Heights resident Jon Friedman. You can win a T-shirt from this guy if you go to the DAILY HEIGHTS happy hour at SODA this Thursday starting at 6.

Dear Comedy Club,

I’d like to perform my act this Friday night at your club. It is hilarious. I do a fantastic impersonation of Greg Tatum. He was in my third grade class and he used to walk with a hitch limp and slobber. The crowd loves it. I rump around the stage a bit saying “Tatum if you got ’em!” I do lots of jokes too. My favorite one is about a seal that tries to deposit money in the bank but can’t because “No pinnepeds!” The main part of my act is basically me enraging everyone. When I am introduced I come out like a pissed off hillbilly looking for my trunk of junk. Of course my trunk is already on the stage but I pretend to not be able to find it. “Did any body see my trunk of junk?” That’s what I say scratching my head for a while. People usually yell out things like “It’s right behind you.” “What are you doing?” and “Boo.” I really like the interaction I get from my audience because without interaction what do I have? Then after I locate the trunk with a gallant “Well, here it is! Shiver me tacklebox! I found it!” I open it up and take out my giant sledgehammer and a watermelon. I got this idea from this bald weird big fan pants guy who jumps on large furniture and crashes fruit. Read more…

This may be the funniest fake letter ever. If you think this is not the funniest thing you have ever read, I challenge you to post something better in the Comments. Go.

Nina Paley updates "Sita Sings the Blues" – Now with Bonus Demons!

HanuBurnsLanka.jpgCartoonist and PH resident Nina Paley is slowly turning the narrative of Ramayana (a Hindu Sanskrit epic) into a series of remarkable animations set to a soundtrack of scratchy old 78s. The result is Sita Sings the Blues, a “self-animated, unfunded, destined-to- drive-me-to- the-poorhouse feature-in-progress.”

Nina describes the latest chapter, Hanuman Finds Sita: “Gags, gimmicks, AND narrative – hundreds of pages of text crammed into 3 minutes. Plus it contains all 4 main characters: Sita, Rama, Hanuman and Ravana, with extra added bonus demons … People already familiar with the Ramayana will probably enjoy these musical bits more, but I’m trying to make the story understandable to anyone.”

You can view the entire video (~25MB) here: “The compression knocked out significant detail of this web version, especially in the night scenes. But overall I think it’s a good’un.”

Brooklyn Express at Nevins St.

final_subwaycard-thumb.jpg
Illustrator and PH resident Jon Keegan just created this postcard to promote his work: “I’m eager to send this out, as it has been a while since I carpet-bombed all ofthe Art Directors of this fair city.” See a larger version here.

Jon’s work has appeared in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, WSJ.com, and on the cover of “The Lambkins” by Eve Bunting (HarperCollins, publication date TBA): “great kid’s mystery story about a crazy old lady who shrinks kids down and kidnaps them to live in her dollhouse.”

PH Comedy Makes "Time Out"

karithfoster_crowd.jpgCongratulations to Ed Sullivan on Acid and Brooklyn Comedy Company, Prospect Heights’s two regular comedy shows. Both got a decent write-up in Rachel Kramer Bussel’s article, “Kings County of Comedy,” which appears in the April 7-13 edition of Time Out New York.

Elon James White writes: “I don’t think it’s online, but I’m vain enough that I typed up the only part that has something to do with us…”

“As the scene grows, one can’t help but wonder how long it will remain casual. One person upping the ante is Elon James White of the Brooklyn Comedy Company (BcCo) who produces a weekly stand-up show in Prospect Heights and hopes to soon – gasp! – pay his headliners. ‘We’re probably the only independent comedy show holding auditions,’ He says. ‘We’re making it cool to do Brooklyn.'”

BONUS quote from honorary ProHo’er Josh, who hooked up with TONY writer Rachel through the Daily Heights message boards: “Everyone isn’t angling to get on The Late Late Show [with Craig Ferguson], which is nice … I prefer going to places without drink minimums that don’t have autographed pictures of Jerry Seinfeld on the walls.”

[PICTURED: Karith Foster at Brooklyn Comedy Company at last week’s “Ladies First” comedy night]

Stand-up: Standing Room Only on Washington Ave.

ElonjamesIn New York Press, Lionel Beehner writes on the Brooklyn Comedy Company (BcCo), a weekly stand-up at the Ripple Bar, on Washington Ave. between St. John’s Pl. and Lincoln Pl.: "A comedy scene grows in Brooklyn … the brainchild of a 26-year-old Bed-Stuy native, Elon James White … Since (November), he’s hosted a weekly stand-up show at the Ripple Bar in Prospect Heights … recent shows have been standing-room only."

"… larger comedy clubs in Manhattan operate on the bring-your-own-crowd
rule. ‘Here’s there’re no weird policies … [We’re
just] here to do comedy for comedy’s sake.’"

"The audience at the Ripple Bar is mostly young and African-American
(when I entered, one of the comedians pointed at me and said, ‘Don’t worry, no one’s gonna…’
then made his hand into a gun and pointed it at his head)."