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...so four months after moving to Chicago, my roommate Nellie is one of the new producers of the Lincoln Lodge, which means the two biggest alternative stand-up showcases in Chicago are centered around a household full of girls who cry watching Animal Planet and believe in the healing power of pot roast dinners and cupcakes. This can only be a good thing.
from T2Entertainment
Dangit. I know I'm a big geek, but I was really, really pumped about the LHC breaking down reality and getting to the bottom of things. I was following the initial tests via Twitter, and having updates sent to my phone, for goodness' sake - my excitement even had the New York Times emailing me for a layman's nerds-eye view of this whole thing. Then, the Twitter updates stopped.
My loved ones know I am fashion-impaired. I can try to justify it however I want: I'm too busy to think about clothes and hair and makeup. I am living on a limited budget. I'm a little OCD/body dysmorphic/self-conscious/shy.








...or "welcome to my spam filter!" I was an independent Chicago-focused comedy blogger, people. How would this possibly be of interest to me?
Here we go!
I just posted a big ol' piece about Blewtenanny on Gapers Block. Yes, that's my foxy-ass boyfriend, the producer and host.
Our sweet Emily Gordon has informed us that KUMAIL IS GOING TO BE ON SNL TONIGHT!
A couple of days ago on Twitter I saw a message from my friend KB:
A big huge article about the shuttering of the Bastion! God, that's a huge amount of my freckled face in that picture. But what an incredibly nice article. I admit I was very nervous about it.Meanwhile, McQuern was attracting attention of her own. In March 2007, she began performing stand-up (she auctioned her stage fright on eBay), where she met the comics she’d written about. The following October, she took over as coproducer of Chicago Underground Comedy. No longer an anonymous, unaffiliated blogger, McQuern found her time disappearing to paid freelance work. She tried many times to get contributors on board, but few stuck around. “There’s just more work involved than people realized or were willing to put into it,” she says. Three weeks ago, with Mangel also slammed and no one stepping up, McQuern and Sloan decided to pull the Bastion’s plug.
Despite its short, amorphous stint, the Bastion filled a void. It was an update site for outsiders and an accessible outlet for comedians hurting for exposure. It surveyed the scene through a biased lens, but readers were okay with that. Yet if the comedy community truly valued the Bastion’s input, it’s time for its members to step up to the digital plate. “Personally,” McQuern notes, “I’m still puzzled that more people weren’t writing funny blog entries for us to quote from or editing highlight-reel clips of sets or sending photography for the photo posts.” If every other comic who’s complained about the media’s lack of caring registered a domain name, the resulting vibrant, dynamic Chicago-comedy blogosphere would be impossible to ignore.
Besides "non-malicious" hacker issues, there were power problems involving a faulty transformer shortly after the initial test last week, which explains the lack of Twitter updates since then. I wonder why they didn't report it right away, though? The lack of explanation about the lack of updates was making me a little nervous.
This is the man who invented the ASCII-based emoticon, on a computer science BBS at Carnegie Mellon 26 years ago!19-Sep-82 11:44 Scott E Fahlman :-)
From: Scott E Fahlman
I propose that the following character sequence for joke markers:
:-)
Read it sideways. Actually, it is probably more economical to markthings that are NOT jokes, given current trends. For this, use :-(
Our dear little Cameron Esposito is featured on AfterEllen.com today!“I talk about my girlfriend, past relationships, and add a ton of non sequitur and weird little observations,” Esposito said. “I feel the same about my being a female comic in a male-dominated field … I can’t possibly divorce either of those qualities from my act, because they shape how I see the world.”
Previously she worked professionally in improv. Being able to quit her day job (which is the biggest accomplishment she says she’s had thus far) has allowed her to focus on her act full-time because, well, it’s a full-time job. When not performing, she’s hosting comedy gatherings at several other venues in the city and filming web shorts.
Go Cammy!
The big Midwest Living article about Chicago comedy is on the newsstands (it's in the October issue), but I can't seem to find an online version of it yet, so I might post some scans of the article later.
Before I knew what was going on, Carrie was crossing the street with purposeful strides as Nellie and I stood there, sort of stunned. "What is she doing?" "I don't know." But we knew we had to follow her. We pushed Carrie's bike across the street, where Carrie had the police on her phone while the drunk idiot yelled homophobic and sexist slurs at us. The woman, probably terrified, said nothing. My hands were shaking and my heart was pounding as they finally walked away. I hate to think what the rest of that woman's evening was like.
Since I shut down the Bastion I've been very happily putting PR people's urgent missives into my spam folder. It's one thing for Chicago improv groups to send me stuff, it's another thing for theater people, and national music people to bombard my inbox with lots of things I have no interest in. Here's the latest thing to find its way into my spam folder, and yes, there were lots of LARGE CAPITALIZED fonts involved: