Ocelopotamus

News, culture, and politics. Not necessarily in that order.

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Russell Hoban, The Kraken, and the US Edition of Linger Awhile

June 5th, 2007 · Books, Culture, Fantasy, Internet, Journal, Lit, Mythology, News, Online Communities, Russell Hoban, Science Fiction

Linger Awhile US coverA few days ago I got a package in the mail from the David R. Godine publishing house, who last year republished both of Russell Hoban’s hilarious Captain Najork children’s books in the US (and did a lovely job of it).

Inside the package was an advance copy of the forthcoming US edition of Russ’s most recent novel Linger Awhile, which was published in the UK by Bloomsbury Publishing last year. It’s basically a story about a 1950’s black-and-white movie starlet who is brought to life from an old videotape, and becomes a sexed-up vampire cowgirl who terrorizes London for a while. As you do, in those circumstances.

The US edition will be published on August 16, 2007. It’s a nice trade paperback with foldover flaps inside the covers (i.e., built-in bookmarking devices), and cover art that’s very similar in spirit to Bloomsbury’s UK edition.

You can read more about it, and order advance copies on the David R. Godine Web site.

The specs:

Softcover, 144 pages
ISBN 1-56792-326-7
978-1-56792-326-1
2007, $15.95

For those of you who aren’t familiar with Russell Hoban, or the story of how I wound up as his semi-official Webmaster and fan club founder, I’ll fill you in on the backstory after the jump.

[Read more →]

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Music: “Free Money” for Rent Day from Patti Smith

June 5th, 2007 · Chicago, Culture, Music, New Wave, Video

Today’s rent day,* here in Chicago anyway, so here’s some Patti Smith to soften the blow.

This is Patti doing my favorite song from Horses, “Free Money,” at the final CBGB’s show on October 15, 2006. (Dodgy sound and video quality — looks like a phone video — but the historic nature of the occasion gives it dramatic impact.)

 
And here’s a classic performance of the song from the actual Horses era: Stockholm, in 1976. It really catches fire about 2 minutes in — takes my breath away, in fact. Much better sound and video quality on this one, too.

 
Pure magic.

*Don’t tell me you actually pay earlier than you have to? Get out of here.

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Roundup: Magnum Opus Edition

June 4th, 2007 · Apple, Books, Comics, Culture, Food, Heroes, iTunes, Language, LGBT, Lit, Media, Music, Nature, New Wave, News, Tech, TV, Vegetarian & Vegan

opus

  • COMICS: For once I’m starting out with the comics section, in honor of the fact that Salon has added Opus by the mighty Berkeley Breathed (Bloom County, Outland) to their repertoire. Oh, happy day. Here’s the first installment. Along with my favorites This Modern World by Tom Tomorrow and Tom the Dancing Bug by Ruben Bolling, Salon really does have the best little cartoon reel of any major publication I can think of.
  • Salon also has an interview with Mr. Breathed, in honor of his debut there. Key quote, on how celebrities have invaded and overrun the kids’ book publishing field: “Everyone — and I mean everyone — who has a household name is lined up and booked on the Today show to promote their children’s book. I happen to know that Saddam Hussein had been approached before the noose tightened.” Via Crooks and Liars.
  • Also, an intimate comics-style portrait of Jerry Falwell in H-E-double-toothpicks. Yes, there is a Teletubby involved. And squirrels. Via Jason.
  • POLITICS: Check out the Democratic debate talk clock. Chris Dodd’s campaign adds up the airtime each candidate got and turns it into an amusing bar graph. The disparity between the media-popular candidates and the ones who are already considered also-rans is fairly dramatic. They’re probably lucky they were allowed to appear at all. It’s also interesting that Wolf Blitzer talked more than any of the Dem candidates except, of course, Hillary and Obama.
  • Wow. Giuliani supporters have been purged by the hardline conservatives at the Free Republic. (Via Atrios.) Meanwhile, Giuliani is about to get the Harriet Miers treatment from conservative group Fidelis. Is the extreme right getting ready to swat Rudy down like a not-sufficiently anti-abortion housefly?
  • TV (but still kinda Politics): Back at Salon, Juan Cole analyzes Heroes as a left-wing response to Sept. 11 and the problem of terrorism, as opposed to the right-wing perspective of the show it’s been beating in the ratings, 24.
  • A different piece on Salon says: “NBC has also announced a new series, Heroes: Origins, which will introduce a new crew and let the audience decide which one will graduate to the parent drama.”
  • THE PINK SECTION: Dallas could become the first big city in the US with an openly gay mayor.
  • Homophobic electrician in the UK physically assaults a group of people in costume for a screening of Rocky Horror.
  • THE GREEN SECTION: Nadi, one of the last northern white rhinoceroses in the world, has died — leaving only 13 of her species alive in the world. Via Towleroad.
  • UK vegetarians manage to convince Masterfoods (maker of Mars, Snickers, Twix, etc.) not to use animal products in their chocolate. You go, UK vegetarians.
  • TECH: A day in the life of an Apple Genius.
  • MUSIC: Olivia Harrison says it may be 2008 before the Beatles catalog is available through iTunes and other online services. “We just have a few things to work out elsewhere,” Harrison told Reuters. One of the potential delaying factors is that all of the Fabs CDs have been remastered, and new artwork is being prepared.
  • Some people aren’t thrilled that the new DRM-free “iTunes Plus” downloads come with your name and email information encoded into them.
  • You can hear three songs from Marc Almond’s forthcoming album, Stardom Road (his first since the motorcycle accident), on his MySpace page. He even does an early Al Stewart song called “Bedsitter Images.” It all sounds really good, IMHO.
  • Chaka Khan says she’s “trying to forget” performing at the 2000 Republican Convention where GWB was nominated. She says she did it to bring attention to her foundation for autism education, but that “it might have done more damage than good, for me anyway, for my spirit.”
  • THE SOCK DRAWER: This news report about the kid who brought the “special” brownies on a field trip is entertaining mainly because of the adults who can’t stop giggling.
  • McDonald’s wants the OED to change the dictionary definition of the word McJob. Yeah, well, people in heck want real food and decent wages. Via This Modern World.

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Ocpot Presents … LOLHeroes

June 3rd, 2007 · Blogs, Comedy, Comics, Culture, Heroes, Internet, Photos, Science Fiction, TV

OK, I’m a late bloomer on this, but having seen all of this insanity, via Jason at What Is This, 1999?, just sort of pushed me over the lolcats edge.

I have put in my guilty share of time at I Can Has Cheezburger?, and I had previously seen the LOL Trek episode “We Has Tribbles and Also Troubles” (a masterpiece). But I think it was The LOLcky Horror Picture Show — or maybe LOL President — that took away my last shred of self-control.

So anyway, last night I wound up creating some …. LOLHeroes.

I have a feeling somebody out there has probably already done this, but once I had the idea I couldn’t bring myself to Google and check — I just needed to do it. For me.

So here you goes.

readin ur thotz

sylar in ur hed

u cant hertz claire

hiro likes hatz

oh noes glass room

time for hugz

Half a dozen more after the jump.

[Read more →]

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How a Certain Republican President Felt About US War Casualties

June 1st, 2007 · History, Journalism, Media, Peace, Politics

NixonOver at This Modern World, Jonathan Schwarz quotes a line from The Final Days by WoodwardandBernstein, taken from the phone calls with Nixon that Kissinger secretly taped and transcribed:

During another call, Kissinger mentioned the number of American casualties in a major battle in Vietnam. “Oh, screw ‘em,” said Nixon.

And as Schwarz observes:

An interesting thing about this is that if it were about a Democratic president, it would be famous. Every schoolchild would learn about the hatred that Democrats secretly harbor in their hearts for our Brave Men In Uniform. In every presidential debate the Democrat would be asked how they could possibly convince the country they weren’t like their damnable predecessor. But since Nixon was a Republican, it’s dropped out of history entirely.

The double standard for Dems versus Repubs in this kind of thing is really infuriating.

John Kerry makes a joke about Bush being dumb enough to get us stuck in a desert war, and because it’s just possible (if you hate Kerry already) to misread his statement as a suggestion that the troops themselves are dumb — or deliberately twist it into that — all hell breaks loose for several weeks as Kerry is dipped three times in tar and rolled in enough feathers for a small pillow factory.

And I firmly believe that every single media pundit who fed that frenzy clearly understood that Kerry was talking about the president, not the troops. The idea that a decorated battle veteran would want to insult his fellow soldiers like that doesn’t pass the laugh test. But the media didn’t care. They had all that good tar that needed to be used.

But let a former Republican president — who, we were told at his funeral, was really a great guy who excelled at foreign policy — say “screw ’em” in reference to dead American soldiers, and you never hear about it.

As Cindy Sheehan could tell you, it’s not too hard to deduce from GWB’s actions that he doesn’t care any more about American casualties than Nixon did. (Let alone the more than half a million dead Iraqis.)

But that’s not a story, is it? Doesn’t fit the media’s narrative, which is that only Democrats are capable of disrespecting the troops. And of course, IOKIYAR.

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Stop the Presses! Stop Everything! And Make Sure You’re Sitting Down

May 31st, 2007 · Culture, Journalism, LGBT, Media, News, TV

David Hyde Pierce is finally out of the closet.

OMG WTF!!!

… maybe the ghost of Charles Nelson Reilly gave him a little nudge.

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Cooking with Kate Bush, or The Man with the Bean Sprouts in His Eyes

May 30th, 2007 · Culture, Food, Health, Journal, Music, New Wave, TV, Vegetarian & Vegan, Video

I’m embroiled in some serious end-of-the-month deadline drama this week, so posting will probably be lighter than usual for the next few days.

Fortunately for us all, Kate Bush is here to share vegetarian cooking tips! (From a 1980 TV interview.)

Here’s to putting nuts in everything!

 
I love the way Kate and the interviewer regard the brown rice as if it were some fascinating new twist on rice, instead of, you know, its natural state.

Also, living on chocolate for a week is a great way to transition to vegetarianism … I dearly wish I’d thought of that back in high school when I made the switch.

Me, I just lived on french fries and onion rings for the first nine months, till I graduated to Health Valley chili and Morningstar Farms. And then the following year fast food restaurants suddenly discovered salad bars and stuffed baked potatoes. Saved!

(h/t Indiana Tony, who posted this video to Planet-Earthlings a while back.)

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Copy Rights and Wrongs

May 29th, 2007 · Books, Culture, Film, History, Law, Lit, Video

This way-clever video, which I found on YouTube, uses short snips from various animated Disney films to provide an entertaining education on the nature of copyright, fair use, and the public domain.

 
The daunting reality is that copyright has way gotten out of control in recent years — where once upon a time copyright lasted a mere 14 years, these days U.S. copyright lasts 70 years after the artist’s death, and powerful corporate copyright holders like Disney are allowed to extend their copyrights 20 years at a time, on and on into infinity.

Which in turn starves the public domain and strangles the creation of new art, since artists always draw from the work of artists who’ve gone before them — whether it’s Shakespeare basing his plays on stories from Holinshed’s Chronicles, or John Lennon turning a backwards Beethoven chord progression into Abbey Road’s “Because.”

And as the video makes clear, Disney’s role in stifling this process is ironic given that so much of their copyrighted work is based on public domain fairy tales.

Related: From the February 2007 Harper’s, Jonathan Lethem does more or less the same thing in text: He creates a marvelous dissertation on copyright and the nature of the artistic commons, cobbled together entirely from fair use bits of other writers’ texts. It reads seamlessly, and it does a great job of explaining exactly why a healthy and growing public domain is essential to a thriving creative culture — while dramatically demonstrating the very process he’s discussing.

I thought about quoting a little bit of it, but instead I’m just going to say — go read the whole thing. (Get yourself a cup of tea or coffee first. It’s long but very rewarding.)

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Moscow Is Burning: Russian Homophobes Attack Gay Pride Demonstrators

May 28th, 2007 · Activism, Chicago, Culture, Hate Crimes, Human Rights, LGBT, News, Politics

onion domesYesterday Russian homophobes made good on their threat to physically attack gay pride demonstrators in Moscow this year, as they did last year. The haters, who included contingents of nationalists and Russian Orthodox extremists, punched and kicked gay participants, and some wore surgeon’s masks, which they claimed was an attempt to protect them from the “gay disease.”

“We are defending our rights,” said a young gay man named Alexey, with blood pouring from his nose after he was beaten up by a man screaming “homosexuals are perverts” opposite the mayor’s office. His attacker was detained.

Gay demonstrators were trying to present a petition to Moscow’s mayor for the right to hold a gay pride parade, which the mayer has banned. Two parliamentarians from other European nations participated in the protest, as well as British activist Peter Tatchell and Right Said Fred singer Richard Fairbrass, both of whom were punched and kicked. Fairbrass wound up with a bloody face, and then was arrested by riot policemen, apparently for the crime of getting his face in the way of a basher’s fist.

Approximately 30 gay activists were arrested by Moscow police.

Scott Long from Human Rights Watch, who was there to observe, said:

“It is very conspicuous when people are arrested in front of the mayor’s office when they were doing nothing other than trying to present a peaceful petition.”

In the past I’ve sometimes criticized what a tame and corporatized affair Chicago’s gay pride parade has become over the years. What’s going on in Moscow supplies a useful perspective, and makes me appreciate what we have.

UK Gay News has a very detailed account of the day’s events.

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Roundup: Fried Ice Edition

May 28th, 2007 · Blogs, Books, Climate Change, Comedy, Comics, Culture, Film, Food, LGBT, Music, New Wave, News, Organic Food, Politics

iceberg

  • Profile of Newtok, Alaska: One of the first victims of climate change, a town gradually sinking into the mud. As the hardest hit of the 180 Alaskan villages suffering from erosion, “studies say Newtok could be washed away within a decade.”
  • Iceberg of Yuck: The Consumerist says, “Poison toothpaste, killer cough-syrup, and tainted pet food are the tip of the disgusting iceberg of yuck heading our way from China. Over the past four months, the FDA has rejected 298 shipments from China that included ‘filthy’ fruits, cancer-causing shrimp, and ‘poisonous’ swordfish.” There’s more, lots more. I think a lot of us are just starting to wake up to how much of the US food supply comes from China, and just how big of a problem that is, given the lax attitudes of Chinese suppliers toward food safety and health, not to mention environmental issues and labor practices.
  • Meanwhile, on the brighter side: In the wake of the recent food scares, new impetus to build an organic market within China.
  • Future theft: Journalist Greg Palast reveals how 4.5 million votes in the 2008 election may have already been stolen.
  • Employers in New Jersey are refusing to provide benefits to couples in civil unions. “Nearly one in eight couples who have had civil unions have been turned down for company benefits [Garden State Equality’s Steven] Goldstein said. Among the cases that have come to Garden State Equality, said Goldstein is one involving a woman who told her employer she and her partner had a civil union and was told by the company, ‘We’re not going to provide benefits. We still need the word ‘marriage’ and you two aren’t married.’ … Goldstein adds, “For those who ask, ‘So long as same-sex couples get the rights, who cares what it’s called?’ the New Jersey experience has answered the question once and for all.”
  • Military regime cracks down on bloggers in Fiji. New Zealand bloggers (including OcPot’s friends at NZBC) come to their rescue.
  • Borat book on the way: Sacha Baron Cohen has inked a book deal for a Borat travel guide. Half of it will be a guide to the US for Kazakhs, titled Borat: Touristic Guidings To Minor Nation of U.S. and A, and the other half will be a guide to Kazakhstan called Borat: Touristic Guidings To Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan.
  • Store-bought punching bag turns out to be filled with dirty, used underwear.
  • Stewart Copeland says the band thrives on creative tension as The Police reunion tour gets off the ground. They fight a lot, but they’re all buddies, and Sting is compared to a large gorilla who is not stingy with the bananas. Also, there is apparently hugging and kissing.
  • The Idiot’s Guide to Squeeze is a great overview of the band’s music and history. Lots of great links there.
  • I’m not imagining this nice review of Tim Finn’s Imaginary Kingdom album.
  • New Sinead O’Connor album to be released next month. Titled Theology, the double CD adapts psalms from the Old Testament into songs, with one side devoted to acoustic arrangements and the other to electric.
  • Paul Newman announces his retirement from the movies. “‘I’m not able to work anymore as an actor at the level I would want to,’ Newman, who won the Golden Globe for Most Promising Newcomer in 1957, told GMA. ‘You start to lose your memory, your confidence, your invention. So that’s pretty much a closed book for me … I’ve been doing it for 50 years. That’s enough.'” Among other things, Newman will be focusing on the new organic restaurant he’s opened in Connecticut, called The Dressing Room.
  • Comics: Tom Toles on China’s Olympic medal. Tom Tomorrow on the Republicans’ dream candidate: a guy in a Reagan mask! And as always, Bob Geiger has the Saturday cartoon roundup.

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iTunes Random Ten: My Very First Time

May 27th, 2007 · Blogs, Culture, iTunes, Journal, Meta, Music, New Wave

iTunes PlaylistsThe Rubber Nun is a big fan of this Random Ten meme-thingie and I’m a big fan of the Rubber Nun, so in honor of the elastic sister I thought I’d give it a spin myself.

Of course I think you’re supposed to do it on Fridays … but isn’t it still Friday in Singapore, or already next Friday there, or something?

I mean it’s always Friday somewhere, if you really think about it.

Right, then. Here goes.

  • I’m the Man — Joe Jackson
  • Sensation — Dave Wakeling
  • Memories Fade — Tears for Fears
  • It’s Only Natural — Crowded House
  • Kiss and Make Up — Saint Etienne
  • Everybody Here Wants You — Jeff Buckley
  • Love Is a Wind That Screams — Richard Barone
  • Hands in the Rain — Booth & The Bad Angel
  • Superlungs My Supergirl — Donovan
  • Harbour — Moby

It doesn’t exactly show off my hard rockin’ side, but I’ll take it.

Of course, I have to admit that my random isn’t truly random: I rate every song using iTunes’ star system, and then check the “play higher rated songs more often” box in the Party Shuffle mode to make sure iTunes serves up the good stuff.

And I know you. You want to see something that will bring the flush of shame to my cheeks. So by way of compensation, here are 10 random songs direct from my 70s Pop category, a playlist rife with both brilliance and, well, the kind of cheese that comes in a spray can:

  • Marlena — Bay City Rollers
  • Lady — Supertramp
  • Something to Fall Back On — Todd Rundgren
  • Hummingbird — Seals & Crofts
  • Nostradamus Part One — Al Stewart
  • If I Can’t Have You — Yvonne Elliman
  • Making Love Out of Nothing At All — Air Supply
  • Maggie May — Rod Stewart
  • Delia’s Gone — Al Stewart
  • Re-Jigue — The Alan Parsons Project

Aww, yeah.

I’ll refrain from further comment, except to say:
Item #1? That’s the best Bay City Rollers song EV-er.

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A Book That Will Live in Grinfamy

May 25th, 2007 · Books, Comedy, Culture, History, Journalism, Language, News

pearl harborThis is a laugh-out-loud good time. Janet Maslin at the New York Times reviews the new book about Pearl Harbor (titled simply Pearl Harbor) by Newt Gingrich and his co-author, William R. Forstchen.

The title of her review? “An Assault on Hawaii. On Grammar Too.”

OK, I could have stopped right there, and that would have been my golden moment for the day. But Janet’s just getting started:

When the attack began, it was Dec. 7 at Pearl Harbor but Dec. 8 in Japan. The book is subtly subtitled “A Novel of December 8th” to signal its attention to the Japanese point of view. On the basis of that detail, you might expect a high level of fastidiousness from “Pearl Harbor.”

And you would be spectacularly wrong. Because you would find phrases like “to withdraw backward was impossible,” sounds like “wretching noises” to accompany vomiting, or constructions like “incredulous as it seemed, America had not reacted.” Although the book has two authors, it could have used a third assigned to cleanup patrol.

Oh, my heavens, get me some air! Thank you, thank you, Newt, for living up to my highest expectations!

Wait, let me recover a sec before I go on. Okay:

This is not a matter of isolated typographical errors. It is a serious case for the comma police, since the book’s war on punctuation is almost as heated as the air assaults it describes.

Yes! And I can just picture the comma police manhandling Newt into the back of their squad car. They’d have little exclamation points for nightsticks!

Some of these glitches are brief, while some are windier. The long ones are particularly dangerous. Here is what happens when James Watson, an academic and a decoding expert who is one of the book’s cardboard Americans (as opposed to its cardboard British and Japanese figures), has lunch:

“James nodded his thanks, opened the wax paper and looked a bit suspiciously at the offering, it looked to be a day or two old and suddenly he had a real longing for the faculty dining room on campus, always a good selection of Western and Asian food to choose from, darn good conversations to be found, and here he now sat with a disheveled captain who, with the added realization, due to the direction of the wind, was in serious need of a good shower.”

Who needs a shower when random commas fall like a blessed rain from the heavens? Oh, comma comma comma comma comma chameleons, you come and go! You come and go!

“Pearl Harbor” is of course laden — or “ladened,” as it would say — with rib-elbowing parallels to the present global crisis.”

Not just ladened! Osama bin Ladened!

Oh, bless you Janet, I needed that.

Sometimes abuse of the language enrages me. But other times, I don’t mind so much, because I know the language is laughing too.

Reading Newt and his sidekick’s literary stylings is like watching a clown try to beat someone to death with a wet noodle. Theoretically it’s a kind of violence, but it’s just too damn silly to be much of a threat. And it certainly helps liven up a Friday afternoon.

Thank you, Newt. Thank you, Newt’s sidekick. If laughter is the best medicine, you guys are single-payer insurance.

(h/t Norm Sloan)

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Music: “The Wild, the Beautiful and the Damned” (and A Tale of Two Ultravoxes)

May 25th, 2007 · Culture, Music, New Wave, Video

Here’s a nice video find for Friday: “The Wild, the Beautiful and the Damned” by Ultravox! (the early, John Foxx-led incarnation of the band). This song has possibly the most figuratively ambitious lyrics you’ll find in any song not written by David Bowie, Leonard Cohen, or Bob Dylan. And what a thrill to watch John Foxx performing them.

 
I’ll send you truckloads of flowers from all the worlds that you stole from me
I’ll spin a coin in the madhouse while I watch you drowning …
Don’t ask for explanations
There’s nothing left you’d understand
You’re one of the wild, the beautiful and the damned …

But wait, there’s more!

[Read more →]

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Stephen Colbert: Behind the Maniac

May 23rd, 2007 · Chicago, Comedy, Culture, Fringe, Journal, Media, Neo-Futurists, Politics, Theater, TV, Video

For those who haven’t had the pleasure of meeting Stephen Colbert in person, this backstage video of him prepping John Kerry before Kerry’s recent Colbert Report appearance is a fun little peek behind the curtain of the character he plays on his show.

I think knowing what a charming, mild-mannered, and self-effacing person Stephen is in real life actually adds a lot to the entertainment value of watching him play his “Stephen Colbert” character.

Anyway, click the image to go watch the video.

Colbert and Kerry

I haven’t seen Mr. Colbert in person since 1995, when The Neo-Futurists were in Aspen for the U.S. Comedy Arts Festival and Stephen was there with some of his cohorts from Exit 57 and we all got to stay at the same cutesy little B&B on HBO’s dime. But for those unfamiliar with Neo-Futurist folklore, Stephen was actually an official member of the company for about five minutes.

This was the early 90s, before the Neos even had our own theater, and at the time Stephen was considering moving on from Second City, so he auditioned for Too Much Light Makes the Baby Go Blind. And of course we cast him. (Stephen was an old friend of Ayun Halliday from their days at Northwestern U, so he was already familiar to most of us when he auditioned.)

He actually participated in one rehearsal for Too Much Light, and wrote a very funny script for the show, but then he got a last-minute hail-mary promotion from Second City — someone there evidently realized they were on the brink of losing one of their brightest young lights to a bunch of scruffy storefront roustabouts with a hyphenated name.

So between the Tuesday rehearsal and the Friday show, Stephen apologetically bowed out of Too Much Light so he could continue rocketing to fame. We were much bummed to lose him, but we all understood his decision.

The piece Stephen wrote for Too Much Light — a hyperbolic rant in which he berated another performer (the late Ted Bales, if I recall correctly) for being colossally, even metaphysically, wrong about something or other — was an interesting foreshadowing of his Colbert Report persona. I wish I had a copy of the script — it’d probably be worth a bazoollian clams on eBay! — but I wasn’t in that piece, so I never got a copy of it. (Hey, copies were expensive and we were fresh-out-of-college actors and playwrights. So we generally only made enough for the performers in each given piece.) Too bad for posterity.

… Obviously, nobody’s ever going to hire me to write for some sleazy muckraking tabloid, because I would stink at that job.

“Pssst! You wanna hear the raw dirt on Stephen Colbert? Okay, here it comes …. the awful truth is — he’s really nice.”

Neeeeeeeexxxxxxt!

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