Three Funerals And A Film Deal

I was standing over an open grave in a snowy country cemetery out in the wastelands of rural Ontario last weekend and I got to thinking, “I should really take a vacation from funerals.” Three funerals in three weeks, it starts to feel like a routine. I know so many people who died this year, it’s like living through the Spanish influenza epidemic of 1919. Twenty-two days left in 2008 and I’ll count myself lucky if I get out of it alive myself.

Let’s ignore all that, shall we, and get some updates out of the way. The body count may be out of control, but life marches on. My career is taking off, even while the number of friends and family who might be pleased by that fact dwindle.

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Turbo Dogs  started running on Saturday mornings on NBC recently. Two of my episodes are somewhere in the mix. Supposedly the CBC is airing it too, but I have no clue when. No one tells me anything. I suppose I could look it up myself, but I’m lazy. And there’s a limit to how interested I am in watching computer animated cartoons aimed at five-year-olds, even when I was one of the writers. Someone will send me a DVD eventually. But if you have any five-year-olds handy, don’t let me discourage you from plopping them down in front of the boob tube bright and early Saturdays while mommy and daddy stay in bed and get busy making more pre-schoolers to fill the ranks of that essential pre-branding demographic broadcasters lust after like a salivating pedophile chaperoning a pajama party.

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Looking like a lot of fun for older kids up to my own advanced age is Kid vs Kat. Apparently only a few episodes aired earlier in the fall as a teaser to the regular run that hasn’t begun yet. But a couple of clips on Youtube have surfaced, including one from a development episode I wrote, and they look pretty damn cool. Of course, I can already tell the end results have been toned down from my original scripts. A bit. For instance, in this clip, Coop no longer attempts to hammer a wooden spoon through Kat’s heart with a meat tenderizer as originally intended. Gone, it seems, are the days of the Looney Tunes ramming dynamite up each other’s asses and lighting it with a flame thrower. And I don’t think Standards and Practices will let those happy days return anytime soon. Still, I encourage you to keep an eye out for KvK on YTV, and scan the opening credits for my name, which will be on four of them.

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Last month I was one of five writers in Quebec selected to attend the “Feature It!Telefilm workshop and get some seed money to develop a feature film project with your tax dollars (unless you’re not a Canadian tax payer, in which case I don’t owe you shit). The workshop amounted to four days in a Delta Hotel hanging out with writers, producers and distributors, listening to lectures and talking business over bad hotel food and worse coffee.

It was sort of like being inducted into a cult, complete with long hours, sleep deprivation, and utter lack of private time — including in the toilet where the wheeling and dealing continued unabated. I’d never personally witnessed film industry people talk shop during a bowel movement before, but I can now cross that one off my bucket list.

The project I was shilling is the crassly titled Sex Tape which, surprisingly, is not targeted at the same demographic as Turbo Dogs or Kid vs Kat. I’m in option talks with it now, and looking to make the next funding deadline which will kick it farther down the road towards the eventual goal of getting it in front of cameras and making everybody enough money to pay Telefilm back.

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For reasons that remain nebulous to me and pretty much everyone else who attended the Telefilm workshop, we were required to take a Myers-Briggs Type Indicator test. Quote my results, “Shane, your scores indicate a preference for introversion, intuition, thinking and judging. That gives you a temperament of NT.”

I think that means I’m a sociopath. Or something. I’m not really clear, and I meant to ask someone before I stabbed them all and danced naked in the moonlight wearing only their blood and a modest loin cloth of stitched-together scalps. Oh well. Guess I’ll never know for sure.

Not that I’ve ever had much luck with any of the tests meant to determine just who or what I am. I took one in college that told me my personality was overwhelmingly feminine, and that I didn’t have a single creative synapse firing in my logical clockwork brain. And the last IQ test I took saw me score a mere 136, an extremely irritating four points short of genius level. I demand a recount!

If you want to take a personality test I consider much more informative, try this one to determine your nerd-geek-dork leanings. I like this test, because it finally defines the very real differences between what makes a nerd, a geek, or a dork. They’re actually quite separate concepts. In case you’re wondering, I’m 74% Nerd, 48% Geek and 39% Dork. For once, that sounds about right.

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Speaking of nerds, geeks and dorks…COMICS! Yes, the comic book. A medium that truly embraces all variety of spaz. After many beer-soaked visits to our comic jam dive of a bar, a new issue of What the F***?  is now complete. Due to a tragic inking mix-up, the infamous “Fucking Raccoon” page did not make this issue and it will likely be another year before we finally get to see the end results in all their rascally glory.

Still, there’s gobs of good material to be had in issue #8, including work from the far-too-young and far-too-talented Nicolas Plamondon, the newest member of the gang who I refer to as “the cute goth chick” behind his back. Mostly because I’m a prick who wishes I could draw so well. But also because he’s got it coming for misplacing the raccoon page so close to deadline.

Three bucks postage paid will get you the latest from Chompers Comics, 700 Richmond Street, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, H3J 2R9 or you can go online here to get more information about back issues and some of the contributors.

I Never Expected To Outlive Anyone

It seems a silly notion to even try to offer up some sort of introduction to who Emru Townsend was. I mean, everybody knew Emru. Really.

Everybody. Knew. Emru.

He was one of the very few people I’ve met in my life who seemed to be connected to every group, sub-group and community in some way shape or form. People usually have to become movie stars to get the kind of notoriety he enjoyed throughout his adult life. I walk in a number of different circles myself, and know whole clusters of people who have no knowledge of the other clusters I’m friendly with. But they all knew Emru in their own way. If you’ve ever watched a cartoon in your life, you probably knew Emru. Or emailed with him. Or at least heard of him.

He was the first animation nut I ever met. Particularly when it came to anime. When Japanese animation was far from being the staple of mainstream North American pop culture it is today, he was a walking encyclopedia on the subject. Even as some of the more notorious anime features crept into limited release over here, Emru was quick to arrange screenings of the original uncut versions so we could get the full experience, unfiltered by the delicate sensibilities of edit-happy distributors.

Emru wrote extensively on the subject and established entire magazines to spread his passion, most notably Frames Per Second, which continues to thrive as a hub for animation fans. The first short story I ever had published was printed by him in his small-press zine, Quark.

If you’ve only recently become aware of Emru Townsend, it was probably because of his headline-making search for compatible bone marrow to combat leukemia, and his efforts to bring more awareness to the need for donors. The campaign blitz he and his ever-adorable sister, Tamu, launched elevated Emru from mere ubiquitous man-about-town to full-fledged media darling.

The last time I saw Emru was almost exactly a year ago. I was on my way to catch the premiere of Lions for Lambs with some friends who had comp tickets. We ran into Emru and Tamu at the theatre and they encouraged us to ditch our tickets and go with them to the premiere of Bee Movie instead. They only had a couple of comps themselves, but a word from Emru was all it took to make a couple more materialize at the guest services desk. In the end, we all agreed we had probably ended up seeing the more political movie of the two.

Afterwards we went to a nearby Canuck-Mex dive for food and drinks. Emru was quick to produce one of his techno-gadgets to show me the latest animation production he was exited about. I updated him about what was going on in the world of Pucca and other cartoons I was working on. As the evening wrapped up, we swapped our latest business cards and promised to keep in touch.

A few weeks later, Emru was diagnosed with leukemia. I watched him fight it through regular updates online and in the media. Given how organized and vigorous his campaign was, it was a relief but hardly a surprise when he found a donor despite the huge odds against it. His cancer wasn’t in remission yet, but they went ahead with the transplant in September to give him the best possible chance. But it was just a chance.

Emru died last night. I’d known him for twenty-two years. He was thirty-nine-years-old.

In the summer of 1987, a group of friends got together in a cabin in the woods to drink some beer and play some role playing games. One of them – me – sat out the game to take a photo and draw a picture of the event instead. Emru is the one supplying the much-needed ethnic diversity.

Feefty

I’m over the hump.

The estate sale is done, the house is now empty and on the market, and it seems there may yet be an end to settling this whole succession affair. It was the estate sale hurdle I dreaded the most. Decades of accumulated stuff (some of it dating back a century or more) from two aunts and a grandmother were put on the market and advertised heavily, drawing the inevitable feeding frenzy of dealers, bargain hunters, and curious gawkers.

They were lined up outside nearly two hours before our starting time, clawing at the door, whining to get in. The sheer scale of the event required two days’ worth of traffic to clear it all, and a staff of seven on hand to deal with sales and security, including three professional organizers and a bouncer/doorman.

Set up with the cash box in the kitchen, as soon as the front door was flung open I was witness to the unsettling sight of dozens of early birds bursting in and hitting the first major intersection in the house. With a choice of going left, right or straight ahead, they had to make a quick decision which way to dash to get to the stuff they wanted before anyone else could lay their greedy hands on it. And few of them had any idea what it was they wanted. This generated a lot of jostling and crazed animal looks, like a herd of cattle being prodded into the abattoir and seeing nothing but knives and saws down every conceivable passage.

Two minutes after the door opened, the first customer arrived at my station to pay, and from that point on I was handling three or four transactions a minute straight through to lunch. With antiques and curiosities collected from around the world, I at last knew which items would go first and prove to be most popular with the masses.

The crap. They wanted the crap. The crappier the crap, the more they wanted it. The elegant and refined were consistently passed over for the plastic and pointless. Even at clearance sale prices that I feared would make my aunt rise from the dead, scream in horror, and then return to the grave to roll over in it for the rest of the weekend sale, the good stuff had few takers. Dirty old, mildew-ridden patio furniture? Sold! Rusty odds and ends from a tool box hidden in the laundry room? Sold! A Zamphir audio tape of pan-flute atrocities? Sold! Any shit that wasn’t nailed down and didn’t even have a price tag on it because who in their right mind would want it? Sold!

I can’t remember exactly what we sold first. But the second thing out the door was a badly broken wooden boat I thought we’d never be able to get rid of. I put a six dollar price tag on it the day before and hoped for the best. The buyer offered me five.

“Sure,” was the only sane response.

There are three distinct types of buyers at this sort of event. The people who quietly pay the listed price in total. The ones who haggle a token buck or two off the stated price. And then there’s the serious negotiators.

Witness The Cartel. They arrived around mid-day — a whole family from Colombia who spoke almost no English. I speak no Spanish, so we ended up communicating in pidgin French. They would buy a few things, load up their van, disappear for an hour or two, and then return. And return and return and return some more. I came to refer to them, affectionately, as The Colombian Cartel. They were our best customers and bought enough stuff to furnish an apartment or three, including a hide-a-bed sofa, a second sofa, three large plush chairs, two end tables, a coffee table, a dresser, several lamps, every blind in the house, several changes of clothes, silver plates, bronze artifacts and an assortment of odds and ends I lost track of early on.

And they drove a hard bargain.

“How much ees thees?” they would ask in their heavily accented, limited English, coming across yet another piece of furniture that struck their fancy.

“A hundred and seventy-five dollars,” is a typical figure I would quote them for a large piece.

“No, feefty,” they would haggle.

“Ok, a hundred.”

“No, feefty.”

“Seventy-five.”

“No, feefty.”

“Sixty?” I would vainly suggest, hoping to salvage some shred of bargaining self-respect.

“No, feefty.”

“Okay, okay,” I would give in, abandoning all hope of anything resembling a decent price. “Fifty! Just take it.”

In another few days, it would have been dragged onto the back of a charity truck for nothing. I took what I could get.

They consumed the place like a school of piranha fish. A nibble at a time until there were only inedible bones left behind. Then they asked about what else I might like to give them for free.

“Cadeau?” they would innocently inquire about this thing or that. A pillow here, a blanket there, a knickknack either tasteful or tasteless.

“Okay. Cadeau. Just take it,” I would end up saying most of the time.

By the end of the day I think I’d met their entire huge family. They kept producing more of them. Just like they kept coming up with more cash to buy stuff just when I thought I had drained them dry at last.It could have been yours!

The final thing they took from the house — and it took nearly all of them to lift it out — was a fake fireplace/stereo system from the ’70s, complete with turntable, eight-track, and working faux-fire. It was, in many ways, the central piece of the entire sale. Everyone thought it was weird and funky and retro-cool. But no one actually wanted it. No one but The Cartel. It was the last of many possessions and paintings and furniture I remember being in my family for my entire life. One by one, I’d watched all these artifacts from Simmons history get carried away by total strangers for token sums of money. In a weird way, I was saddest of all to see that horrible kitschy fireplace drive away down the road. It marked the end of an era, symbolizing much of what had passed away with this latest death in the family, and a physically tangible bit of closure to many of my childhood memories.

I got feefty for it.

The Last Gasp

Ah, the end of the month and a last desperate attempt to get in a blog entry for April.

It’s not that I don’t have stuff to update you about. I do. But I’ve been terribly busy of late, and not with all those personal writing projects I’d been pondering about as of my last blog. You see, I’ve taken on a full-time job.

No, I haven’t given up my career. Rest assured, all those concerned friends and fans who got in touch with me after my last melancholy musings, I didn’t freak out and join the rat race. It’s just that there’s been a death in the family. Yes, another one. Big family, finally starting to run low on members of what was once a particularly vast generation.

The difference is, this time I’ve sort of had the estate dumped in my lap. With just about everyone else dead and buried, they’re scraping the bottom of the barrel as to who gets to play executor. As a result, I’ve had to step up to the plate as the one best qualified to do the paperwork and legwork. “Best qualified” basically means not disinterested or deranged. All the writing I’m doing these days involves letters to lawyers, bankers and investment brokers, trying to sort out a ten-way inheritance split between two generations of Simmonses. It feels so much like a real job, I’ve been reminded why I dropped out of that whole scene a good fifteen years back in favour of the leisurely life of a scribe. I expect to be over the hump in this settling of affairs by the end of May, but until then most of my time is spoken for.

As far as updates about my real job go, I just wanted to mention that the second season of Pucca began airing earlier this month. That’s seven more of my cartoons that should be showing up on all your favourite pirate sites in dribs and drabs before too long. If you never caught the first season, half of it has now been released on DVD in two volumes of random episodes. Each disc features only one of my toons in the mix. The other five will doubtless appear on the next release. Still, it’s a little bit exciting since this marks the first official release of any of my material on DVD. My episodes of Sci-Squad were released on video as part of a teachers-aid educational series, but video hardly counts for shit these days.

It would be more of a cause for celebration if I actually received any royalties for this, but sadly I won’t be seeing one red cent in residuals. So when I direct you to where you can buy these DVDs online, be confident that I only do this as a well-intentioned service, and not as a shameless cash-grab attempt to boost sales.

Lost

If you know your comics, you’ll know who Steve Gerber was. And you’ll also know that he died last month. Back when mainstream comics were dominated by superheroes (which, unfortunately, they kinda still are) he was writing satire for Marvel. Yes, satire. For Marvel. I’m not exactly sure how he managed that, but one of the most interesting comic books to come out of the 1970s was Howard the Duck. Although this title was sadly tarnished forever by the George Lucas crapfest movie that came out in the 1980s, those who remember the original comic book remember it fondly as a skewed look at America (and American comics) with a whole bunch of bad attitude. Steve worked on many other comic series, but he’ll be forever remembered as the man behind the duck.

Another comic industry figure you may also be aware of is Rich Johnston, one of the top comic book columnists out there. He writes Lying in the Gutters, and I once had the pleasure of sitting through the Eisner Awards in San Diego with him back in the mid-1990s. Referring to Steve Gerber’s death in one of his columns, he continued with the thought:

“But one thing stuck out about Steve not being appreciated by the industry during his lifetime. Which sent me thinking. Who else are we ignoring right now, who has been rewriting the rules and setting the scene for many?”

Among the select list of notable names and projects he rattled off, there was this paragraph.

“Shane Simmons. Author of the two ‘Longshot Comics’ and the lesser ‘Money Talks’ series and one of the most inventive, creative and consistent creators. Imagine Chris Ware crossed with Groucho Marx. He writes television now. We lost this one, folks.”

I’ve been writing television for about twelve years now. And when I started to get enough screenwriting work to earn a living and keep me financially afloat, I quickly began to drift from the comic book scene. It’s been years since I’ve published anything new outside of my contributions to Rick Gagnon’s What the F***? comic jam compilations. Even my attendance at those events has become spotty. Not through disinterest, mind you, but thanks to frequent scheduling conflicts.

I was able to get to one of the jams just a couple of weeks back, however. Since the days of the massive Gallery Stornaway events that drew comics artists from all over the province, outside Quebec, and even outside Canada, the local Montreal jams have become smaller and more nomadic, drawing no more than a dozen artists at a time and often far fewer. This latest one was held in a dead little dive of a bar, selected not for its inspiring ambiance, but for its bright lighting and lack of loud music. There we sat, a mix of Francophone and Anglophone comic artists, and worked on the next batch of pages that would grace a future issue of What the F***? — now due for its eighth small-press volume. Among the attendees was Jack Ruttan, a frequent contributor to the scene. He snapped some photos and drew some portraits and wrote a blog about the event on his web page.

I started the evening with a single large panel I had dreamed up earlier in the day. I had the layout in my head, as well as all the words and balloon breakdown for the dialogue. I decided to spend an hour or so penciling and inking the entire thing, completing my first whole panel, start to finish, in far too long. It was labour intensive and felt like a long time to create something that people would read in the space of about five seconds. Yet I felt strangely satisfied in way I haven’t felt…well…also in far too long a time.Shane Simmons as cartoon

This isn’t the first sketch a comic artist has done of me during one of our gatherings, but it’s probably my favourite. Mostly because it’s in colour, I look sinister, and have hands that could crush men’s heads. Illustration by Jack Ruttan.

Shane Simmons as cartoonist

The reality is rather less fearsome. Photo by Jack Ruttan.

Recently, copies of the new Italian edition of Longshot Comics: The Long and Unlearned Life of Roland Gethers arrived on my doorstep. It’s been out since November, but I only got them now after the first batch went missing in the mail and the second batch was stopped, opened and inspected by Canada Customs before being allowed on its way. It’s a routine I grew used to early on in my self-publishing career when I was receiving packages of comics and videos from all over the world. Our dutiful authorities must open everything coming into the country just in case in contains child pornography. Good work guys! Glad to see you’re still trying to catch the one remaining pedophile who doesn’t have internet access yet. Keep at it, you’ll nail him one day.

As I’ve been informed by the publishers, the new translation is selling briskly in Italy. Reorders are building up and a lot of copies moved at the Lucca Convention. It’s also been nominated for a “Best Independent USA Comic” Comicus Prize. Shhh. Don’t tell them it’s actually a Canadian comic.

I’ve been exceptionally pleased with the care taken on the design and translation of the book. There’s even an index of notes to further illuminate some of the historical references and terms sprinkled throughout. It feels weird, after all these years of screenwriting and the associated ham-fisted butchery that goes along with it, to have my words so carefully handled and respected by others. And it also feels weird that such respect has become so alien in my career. It didn’t used to be like that.

The newest incarnation of Longshot Comics has arrived. The covers, although different from any previous edition, show a loving attention to detail in their successful recreation of my intentions, both artistic and comedic.

Longshot Comics, remains, I think, the most artistically successful, well known, and widely renowned project I’ve ever worked on. And there’s one simple reason for that. There’s not a word or a letter or a dot or a line I didn’t put in there myself. Editorial input was zero. I sent the artwork to the publisher, they sent it to the printer, they sent it to the distributor and they sent it to the comic shops. It was a pretty long route to get it into the hands of the consumers, but the end result was a direct unfiltered line between my brain and the readers’.

I don’t much care for the prospect of spending my days second guessing the decisions I made years ago. A successful screenwriting career is nothing to turn my nose up at, but I can’t help but wonder, almost on a daily basis, if I’m on the right track here. I think I am generally, but not all the wheels feel correctly aligned with the rails. Something’s grinding and kicking up a lot of sparks.

Maybe it’s this early-onset mid-life crisis I’ve had going on perpetually since the day I turned 30, but I’ve been wondering a lot lately. How lost have I become?

Things I Learned In 2007

Another year and what’s it all come to? Even a know-it-all like me has to admit that a full year of travels and experiences must still amount to some measure of enlightenment. Here are the few pearls of wisdom I managed to glean from 2007 by keeping my eyes and ears open.

1. I’m allergic to Ground Zero.

During my recent trip to New York, I started to experience a severe allergic reaction to something. My nose was in agony, with a tickle deep in my sinuses, and my right eye was leaking like a tap. These symptoms dogged me for the better part of a day before finally fading in the evening. What had I done to bring this on? Well, I’d eaten a salmon omelet, driven in a New York cab, watched Fox News, visited Ground Zero, had a bag of vendor peanuts…

Wait, back up.

Watched Fox News. Hmmm.

No, forward a bit.

Visited Ground Zero.

Damn near everything I was interested in seeing was shut down thanks to various entertainment industry strikes. But at least one stage show was still packing in the crowds. The circus that is Ground Zero remains a vibrant tourist trap, filled with rich opportunities to gawk, grieve and buy tacky twin-towers souvenirs.

Or you could just try to sell your conspiracy-theory manifesto like this guy, who didn’t particularly care for me snapping his photo — obviously at the behest of a Black Ops death squad that has been monitoring his thoughts via satellite technology obtained from a crashed alien spacecraft in Area 52.

I considered my allergies might have been a reaction to the general filth of New York City, but the symptoms returned the next day when I traveled to the south end of town again. I really think it was Ground Zero. The ongoing construction continues to stir up who-knows-what toxic crap that still remains in the area. Conspiracy theorists are free to speculate what exactly that toxic crap may be. Personally, I expect it’s something rather mundane and boring. Like asbestos.

2. It takes a German.

Body Worlds 2 enjoyed sell-out crowds in Montreal this summer. This was the second in a series of shows that travel the world displaying human bodies prepared by plastination. Yes, we’re talking real dead people, skinned, preserved, and posed under glass to illustrate the wonders of our insides. The Body Worlds exhibits have been going on for years, but remain controversial because of their uncomfortable mix of science and art. Seeing what people’s muscles and organs look like as they perform common activities has value as a teaching tool. But some of the bodies — like the one that had been effectively turned into a chest of drawers, with different compartments left ajar in an oddly aesthetic cubist manner — seem to be the hapless victims of Hollywood’s next franchised serial killer. The creator of the show, Gunther von Hagens, makes sure everybody knows that all the bodies were obtained through detailed consent forms. If you have any doubt, you can grab one of the consent forms yourself. They’re readily available to anyone interested, and I couldn’t help but wonder who there was already eyeing my carcass for a future display. I don’t think I could qualify as the next “Basketball Player” or “Swimmer” body, but if they’re planning a “Television Watcher” display, I’m their corpse.

3. Fuck the Smithsonian.

A weekend trip to Knowlton in the Eastern Townships of Quebec brought me to a little rural museum run by the Brome County Historical Society. As we were driving into town, it was casually mentioned to me that the museum housed an actual World War I fighter plane that had been sitting inside since 1920. Being a bit goofy for WWI aviation history, I had to check it out. Sure enough, they have their very own Fokker D VII, the last of its kind in the world still with its original canvas skin. It was one of a few brought back to Ottawa as war trophies following Germany’s defeat. When the Brome County Historical Society wrote to the government asking for something — anything — from the war to put in their museum, they received a bunch of packages with an entire disassembled airplane. It took them a couple of years to construct a building to house it. Once it was done, they put the Fokker back together inside and its been sitting there ever since, perfectly preserved. Several years ago, a goon squad from the Smithsonian Institute dropped by to visit the museum’s prized possession. They were horrified to see it was in a wooden building with inadequate fire protection. They expressed their great interest in procuring the D VII for their own rather-more-famous museum. The Brome County Historical Society told them, in their polite Canadian way, to get bent. And they were absolutely right to do so. Sure, maybe this priceless war relic will burn to the ground one day when some smoker gets careless with a butt. But the Smithsonian has enough shit already, so fuck ’em.

4. Not everybody in Canada is an atheist yet.

I hadn’t been to Halifax in years — not since I took a sixteen-hour bus trip to visit friends in university and shared a single bed with a close friend for one uncomfortably close night. My travel experience this time around was rather more relaxed because I was flying there, staying in a beautiful oceanside house, and sharing a double bed with my wife. You’d be surprised how these little luxuries can improve the whole experience. When I wasn’t eating tremendous amounts of sea food, I was taking in the sites. Being mostly outside the city this time around, it struck me how much the locals wear their religion on their sleeve. I expect bible quotations on convenience store signs when I’m in Texas, but not so much when I’m anywhere in Canada. Maybe it’s because I’m from Quebec, a province that used to be run by the Catholic church until everyone collectively decided they’d had enough of that shit and abandoned religion in such numbers that there’s nothing left to do but turn all the churches and convents into condos. Faith remains alive and well in the maritimes it seems. I expect it has a lot to do with the fishing industry. The sea has a habit of eating sailors mercilessly and completely at random. I saw enough graveyards scattered throughout the area to remind me of this. I guess if your job is that dangerous, you’d better believe in something bigger than a retirement fund.

5. The Chinese are even smarter than I thought.

Why invade when you can just send your enemy lead-painted toys? America thinks they’re winning the cultural cold war with China by turning them into capitalists. But China is simply using the free market to further weaken the United States and turn it into a nation of retards by feeding its children a steady diet of brain-damaging heavy metals. The American feast of lead paint explains much about where they find themselves today — up to and including the Bush presidency. One more generation of this and they’ll be so stupid they’ll lose the ability to press the right combination of buttons to launch their vast nuclear arsenal. And by then, the landing crafts will be at their shores. Americans will be reduced to throwing their own poo at the invading red army, and they’ll go down in history as the first empire to fall through idiocy alone.

6. I don’t attend to my blog enough.

But you knew that already.

As the final hours of 2007 tick away, enjoy some more random snapshots from my digital photo album.

I had to go visit Peggy’s Cove again. Last time I was there it was a gale and all I saw was inky blackness and rain hitting my face.

Nova Scotia has no end of quaint fishing villages trying to unload all those damn lobsters.

What Nova Scotia vista would be complete without a washed-up lobster trap?

I have a fetish for aircraft of the Great War. I’d just never go up in one of those death traps.

I also have a fetish for the Chrysler Building — home of Q, the winged serpent.

This does absolutely nothing to stop insane New York drivers from honking constantly.

Ok New York, you win. You have the creepiest mannequins.

Does your city have a 3600-year-old obelisk? No? Then I guess your city just sucks.

Sometimes I take pictures because I think they’ll make a pretty desktop background.

The hippest hole in the ground in the world. Come visit before they fill it all in with buildings and parks and crap.

This tent-like structure just adds to the circus atmosphere.

But then again, the whole city is a big circus freakshow.

If you bought this bridge on eBay, please be advised the City of New York will not honour your purchase. I found this out the hard way and now my PayPal account is down fifty bucks.

The Death Of Ambiguity

It’s official. Ambiguity in popular culture died today after a lengthy illness. After years of damaging attacks by the media, consumers and hack writers, it was taken off life support earlier this week when J.K. Rowling removed the respirator and David Chase pulled the plug on the pace maker.

Rowling, somewhat famous for her success elevating derivative plagiarism to a high art and a higher bank roll, recently announced that Albus Dumbledore of the Harry Potter series is gay. Aside from giving new meaning to the term “headmaster,” this also marks the first time a major author has outed one of their fictional characters, thereby removing the need for speculation, debate, or any sort of imagination on the part of her readership.

In an unrelated incident, David Chase went on record about the notorious cut-to-black ending of his HBO series, The Sopranos. Concluding that any amount of discussion or interpretation by fans of the show was needlessly contrarian to nail-on-the-head, no-room-for doubt, bloody-fucking-obvious American television, Chase explained what it all meant to a spoiler-obsessed public, thereby removing any need for them to examine the content of the shows leading up to this ending or think for themselves.

Ambiguity is survived by its two children, Nuance and Subtlety, neither of which is expected to survive to year’s end. In lieu of flowers, mourners may send hate mail to J.K. Rowling and David Chase instead.

Yes, ambiguity is dead. Or perhaps not. There remains a doubtfulness or uncertainty as regards the interpretation of said concept.

But what does it all mean?The final moments of The Sopranos. Make of it what you will.

A Uni-Cellular Dad

If only I could claim it was work that was keeping me so busy. But I’m afraid not. These days, most of my time is consumed by lawsuits and court actions, throwing my hat into the ring as one of the possible biological fathers of the late Anna Nicole Smith’s baby. I keep offering DNA samples to anyone who will listen. So far, no takers.

My darling vaguely-conceivable fruit of my loins –- Baby Gravy Train as I affectionately call her –- is caught in the middle of an ethically dicey custody battle between several dozen men who may have popped a bun in Anna’s ample oven around the time her daughter started dividing cells and dreaming of one day becoming a complex multi-cellular organism and heiress. Now these desperate heartbroken men, who all meant so much to Anna for so short a time, are lined up around the block (and the next block, and maybe the block after that as well) to be the one who gets to lavish love and affection and fatherly advice on Baby Gravy Train. Love of her inheritance, affection for her trustee bank account, and fatherly advice on how many luxury yachts the money should be invested in before legal adulthood inconveniently separates child from father-slash-accountant in a mere eighteen or so years.

I don’t know about the others, but I for one am fully prepared to accept the enormous responsibility of managing the tens of millions of dollars worth of inheritance money and assets recently decided upon by the Supreme Court of the United States of America. And the raising a baby part, too. Something to do with changing diapers once in a while I understand.

I’m convinced my claim is rock solid. Anna and I met at a methamphetamine-pie-eating contest in Albuquerque. I passed out early after opting to eat too many of the pie crusts. How was I to know the majority of the crushed tablets were baked into the crust rather than the filling? Last a remember, Anna was well on her way to winning the blue ribbon, determined to eat that as well. I woke up three days later in the Bahamas with no passport, a sore ass, and a raging case of crab lice. I can therefore only logically assume that I’m in the running for official recognition as one of the army of potential sperm donors. They say romance is dead, but not I. Not I, dear reader.

But the battle to prove my parentage is a difficult uphill slog. Meanwhile, I have all these DNA samples lying around going stale. And I just keep producing more and more of them. It’s like they grow on me or something. If you would like one of my DNA samples, they can be ordered through my online store. Sales are prohibited where customs laws restrict entry of unregistered biological or chemical agents. Act now. Supplies are unlimited.

Damn you, Larry-King bookers! Where’s the love? I’m in line, too!

Anna, sweet, Anna. How could I resist that face? I’m not made of stone.

Prophecy Of Doom

As I continue to grind my way through my 30’s, I’ve become increasing obsessive about mortality. Intellectually, I always knew the final dirt nap was going to happen one day. But I never really grasped it on an emotionally visceral level until a few years ago. Usually it takes a doctor bandying about words like “polyp,” “biopsy,” and “malignant” to pound that final fact of life into the brains of people who are too busy running through the rat maze to take a look at the big picture. Me? Well, I turned 33, which is as good a time as ever to start worrying about death.

You could call it a mid-life crisis. I preferred not to, because if 33 was mid-life, 66 promised to be an uncomfortably early end. Most people respond to these irritating twinges of fatalism by squeezing out kids in an effort to live forever through their perpetuating DNA. Personally, I never found my DNA to be so terrific that I wanted to start cursing future generations with it. I figure the sooner we can wipe British crooked-teeth out of the gene pool, the sooner we can free all those orthodontists to pursue their true calling in life — torturing small animals in cosmetic testing labs.

When bobbleheads pass awaySo instead of desperately trying to introduce my sperm to an egg in a womb-bound social mixer, I decided to settle down into a rigorous regiment of worry. I’d worry five or six times a day. If I was feeling really ambitious, I’d go all out and worry once an hour every hour. And then I started to worry that all this worrying would poison my system with nasty stress chemicals that would kill me all the quicker.

At night, I’d lie awake at night pondering the great existential questions. How long did I have? Was there enough time to achieve all I wanted to achieve in life? Will Paula Abdul be permitted to return for another season of American Idol?

My deeply-held religious beliefs offered little comfort or guidance in this matter. Orthodox atheism doesn’t have much of a support group going for it. I’d have gone down to the local atheist church and/or temple for solace, but there isn’t one. And if there were, it would be empty.

One question hung over my head like a guillotine blade. How was I going to go out? Every sniffle, every ache became a portent of medical disaster. Every street crossing or car ride, a gruesome road fatality waiting in the wings. I realized that my preferred mode of departure (instant pulverization by an express train while out for a stroll at spry, healthy age of 114) was fairly unlikely. Death likes to surprise you. You never know where, when or how.

Unless, of course, you do. And this knowledge has given me a much more positive outlook on life and the future as a whole.

Because I am immortal.

That’s right. You heard it here first. I am never going to die. Ever.

I got the good news a little over a month ago. It was Hallowe’en night. Hallowe’en is my favourite time of year because it’s full of ghosts and monsters and spookiness, and because I’m morbid in a way that makes the Addams Family look like the Partridge Family. Every year I sit at the door, dishing out candy to kiddies, and then stay up all night watching classic horror movies starring long-dead genre stars. Normally I don’t give much of a crap about kids or candy, but put the two together and you get a brilliant fashion show better than anything you’ll ever see from skinny supermodels on a runway.

I always take careful note of which costumes are the best, and which are the most popular. Harry Potter seems to finally be on the downswing, but Darth Vader is making his strongest comeback since the late 70’s. Batman and Spider-Man duked it out in a giant-sized Marvel/DC crossover. There was no clear winner until late in the evening when it was settled in a spectacular tie. One kid, who couldn’t decide if he wanted to be Batman or Spider-Man, went as both, with a mixed and matched costume and half-and-half makeup. He won.

But the kid I’ll best remember was dressed up as some sort of mauve Grim Reaper. He quietly accepted his candy and began to walk away. Then, as though he had forgotten something quite important, he turned back and looked up at me. In a hurried, rehearsed monotone, he told me this:

“One day you’re gonna go to Parc Safari and a tiger’s gonna eat you and that’s how you die.”

And then he left without another word.

Trick or treat are the usual options offered by the candy beggar brigade. This kid, however, had decided there was a choice C. Trick, treat, or prophecy of doom. I expect he was going door to door, telling people their fortunes. Or misfortunes as the case may be. I doubt it went over very well with a lot of people, who don’t like to be reminded they’re going to die, and especially don’t want to hear about it if it involves a final resting place in a mound of carnivore stool. But I was delighted.

I immediately turned to my wife and announced, “I’m immortal.”

All I have to do is never go to Parc Safari again. Which is fine by me. I went once or twice as a kid, I took a ride on the monkey bus, I saw the bored lions calmly check to see if the windows of my parents’ car were rolled up. Yes, I exploited exotic animals in the name of cheap entertainment and now I’m done. No need to return. Immortality assured.

That is, assuming the kid’s prophecy is on the money. But when is a kid dressed as a mauve Grim Reaper ever wrong? Never in my experience.

And that’s all the reassurance I need to get on with life.

My Chicken Has The Sniffles

Happy Pandemic!

Okay, maybe not yet, but soon maybe (fingers crossed). The promise of a new worldwide epidemic (“pandemic” for those of you interested in expanding your vocabulary) that could top even the razzle-dazzle body count of the Justinian plague has the nipples of the world media outlets standing at attention. But does the chance of a massive-scale human cull translate into more than just another ratings bonanza for news networks that have been flying high on earthquake and flood footage with snazzier visuals than the boring political corruption that’s sweeping across the States on a scale Katrina could only ever dream of?

Panic Central, CNN, has been offering round-the-clock coverage of every chicken with a fever, duck with a chill, or pheasant with a chronic cough, just in case one of them has cooties that might leap onto the nearest television journalist, and then leapfrog across the rest of humanity from there. With no really interesting hurricanes left to cover, they have no choice but to sit around all day promising that Anderson Cooper will snag an exclusive interview with the first mutated avian flu virus capable of human-to-human infection the moment it evolves (or is created by God for viewers in the south). A microscope with a satellite uplink is ready to roll, and a set of blue index cards stands by for Anderson to read questions off of. Probing inquiries such as, “Are you a sign of the apocalypse?” “What do you have against mankind anyway?” and “How much money would it cost the American taxpayer to get you to leave our nation alone and go bother someone else like…say….North Korea?” should keep viewers riveted long enough for the virus to further mutate into one that can comprehend these questions and articulate a response in a known language (preferably English because CNN viewers don’t like subtitles unless they’re in the form of an amusing and insightful ticker that scrolls across the bottom of their screens and tells them who won a Grammy).

I know I may be jumping the gun, but I’ve already applied for a position as a mass-grave cart-puller. I’ve always dreamed of holding a job that allowed me to ring a bell and call, “Bring out your dead” all day long. You’d be surprised how rarely I get to do that as a professional screenwriter. I figure it’s a good idea to have another line of work ready since I doubt there will be much call for cartoon and miniseries scripts once most of the human population is wiped out and we descend into another dark age because everybody who knows how everything works will be roasting on a pyre with the billions of diseases chickens we used to need to feed ourselves.

You know, I recently had a pitch for a TV episode turned down because it was deemed “too ghoulish.” I can’t understand where they got that kind of idea about my work.