• The Screengrab Holiday Special Intermission: "Jeepers Creepers, Semi-Star"

    Just a few weeks ago, I cracked open the New York Times and received a bit of a shock when I saw that Ted Neeley, star of the 1973 film version of Jesus Christ Superstar, is still out there playing the lead in a touring production of the prehistoric rock musical, despite the fact that, at 65, Ted is close to twice the age of Jesus at the time of his death. Which, I'll admit, strikes me as kind of funny. If you kids are curious about what struck some of us as kind of funny back in the mid-'90s, this parody from the Bob Odenkirk-David Cross sketch series Mr. Show may prove instructive. That's Sarah Silverman as the woman in the crowd who gets beaned with a rock; the beaning was unscripted, and her reaction was improvised.

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  • Mike White's Amazing Race

    I’ve been a fan of Mike White since his peculiar and memorable performance as a possibly sweet but potentially scary BFF stalker in the peculiar and memorable indie Chuck & Buck. In fact, I remember encountering him in an elevator at the Sunset 5/Virgin Megastore complex in West Hollywood around the time of the film’s release. I didn’t say anything about his awkwardly funny, fidgety performance at the time because I didn’t want to bother him...but Mike, if you’re reading this now, nice job!  And good luck on The Amazing Race!

    Yes, that’s right...for those of you outside the reality show loop, Mike White, whose acting and/or writing credits include Freaks & Geeks, Year of the Dog and School of Rock (in which he played Sarah Silverman’s pussy-whipped boyfriend, Ned Schneebly), kicked off the first leg of the fourteenth season of the globe-trotting, Emmy-hogging CBS game show last night, partnered with his father Mel.

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  • Bill Maher’s Religulous Bravely Takes On Christians, Muslims...Not So Much Jews

    Full disclosure: I was raised Unitarian, which is technically a distant branch of Protestantism, but which (as my Christian friends used to scoff) is pretty much “just” a philosophy that cherry-picks most of the “be nice to people” bits of the world’s belief systems while jettisoning all the dogma and certainty.

    So I’m very much the choir to whom Bill Maher is preaching in his current documentary, Religulous, which posits fervent religious belief as a potentially dangerous mental disorder that’s caused untold suffering and could easily lead to a self-fulfilling prophecy of man-made Armageddon if the rational atheists and agnostics of the world aren’t willing to stand up and be counted.

    Of course, one topic Maher doesn’t cover in his fish-in-a-barrel interviews with “reformed” homosexual Christians and deluded Muslim rappers is the hypocritical dogma of many atheists, whose strident and absolute faith (ah, there’s that word) in a godless universe is just as annoying and potentially harmful as the religion they rail against -- the Khmer Rouge, Maoists, Stalinists and Manson Girls managed plenty of atrocity without benefit of supernatural holy books, after all -- and Stephen Hawking can Vocoder me ‘til he’s blue in the face about the Big Bang, but I’m still gonna wonder what came before that and what it’s all for...and until science can absolutely prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that my soul is nothing but chemical illusions and existence is essentially meaningless, I’ll happily continue to ignore THAT grim fucking view of things, no matter how much the atheists shake their heads and chuckle at my naïveté.

    But far more conspicuous in a movie predicated on skewering religion is Maher’s near total refusal to criticize one important world religion centered in the Holy Land that's had an effect on recent (and ancient) Middle Eastern history...no, not the Christians or the Muslims but, y'know...

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