Archive for August, 2009

The Philosophy of Dancing on Bars

Last week, all my free time was consumed by improv/theatre side projects.  This week, I’ve got nearly nothing after work.  It gives me time to reflect on the real reason I spend my free time doing this hobby:  going to philosophically sound after-show parties.

To illustrate what I’m talking about, let us discuss the topic of dancing atop bars.

When dancing atop a bar, many ladies draw from the a school of thought I refer to as ‘Faux-Stripper’.  A wildly individualistic school, Faux-Stripper focuses on hair flips, slinking, and moves that call attention to various body parts.  Philosophically, the school is depressing.  It can be thought of as a meat-sales technique for use in a zero-sum environment.  Devotees of the school who find themselves simultaneously bar-dancing are, by definition, in cutthroat competition with each other for attention.  The ‘winner’ is the one who garnered the most attention for later use as social capital.  Sure, some people may be more skilled in the school than others, much as some used car salesmen may be more skilled than others.  It doesn’t make the ‘thought’ behind the ‘craft’ any more dignified.

The female cast members  of an Improv Troupe, on the other hand, veer towards collaborative improvised choreography when dancing on the same bar.  The focus shifts from individual self-sales to cooperation.  The goal of the cooperation?  To make something interesting happen.  In this context, ‘interesting’ means just about anything the Improv devotees wish, up to and including a Kaufmann-esque inversion of expectations (which I would call nega-sexuality).  This has the advantage of being infinitely more amusing, and being philosophically sound.

I say philosophically sound because improv bar dancing finds itself free to break away from an inherently sexist architecture, as the goal is self defined, and not necessarily getting people to notice that you have any given body part.  It also breaks from the zero-sum mentality adopted by the FS school, and proves that collaboration, specialization, and a plurality of actors provide a superior experience.

Now, at this point it may seem to you that I’ve just conflated some aspects of modern economic thought with different approaches to dancing atop a bar.  To this I say:  damn right I did. To me, one of the  background insights that underpins ‘The Wealth of Nations’ and other modern (vs medieval) economic thought is that life is not a zero sum game, except on very small scales.   Seing anyone challenging the notion that any given game is zero sum makes me HAPPY, even when the challenge is taking place on top of a bar in Hermann, MO at 12:30 AM.

Add comment August 31st, 2009

Catch 22 and Improv don’t mix

Open on freeze tag.  Dave has clenched fists, Michael has his hand over his heart.

Dave:   I pledge allegiance…  (pause)  Say it!

Michael:  I pledge allegiance…

Dave:  To the flag…

Michael:  To the flag…

Dave:  Of the United States of America…

Michael:  Of the United…. (sob)

Dave:  Say it!

Michael:  (sobbing)  I just wanna fingerpaint!

Dave:  (screaming)  Not until you prove your loyalty!

Add comment August 12th, 2009

Script Editing

Ugh.

I’m collaborating on a scripted show with four other people.  We’re using a software package called celtx, along with their online version control and collaboration service.  We all have access to the most recent version of all the scripts, access to the prop lists, it’s available in the cloud, and anyone can download and print the most recent version of the script, which is automagically formatted to match standard stageplay format.

Up until now, I have liked all these features, and been happy with the software.

However, I’ve just discovered that there is no diff functionality.  Sure, you can have the web interface display two versions of the same script side by side, but it makes no effort to highlight the differences between the two.  The only way it suggests that a change is present?

It reports a difference in word count.

WORD COUNT.

I have a 45 page script, Celtx developers.  The last version I touched has 5888 words.  One of my writing partners updated it so now it has 5936 words.  Good luck to me, figuring out where those new 48 words are hiding!    ARGARGARGH.

2 comments August 10th, 2009

I am a helpful fiancé

Rhiannon is looking for wedding venues.  She’d like to do something different; for the day to be special.  I don’t have a clear idea of what I want, except that we end the day wed.

For the moment, my role is to remind her that all her ideas are pretty good, by suggesting ideas that are much, much worse.

  • We could have a flash mob wedding! You get to explain it to our grandparents!
  • Renting an antique steamboat on the Missisippi is expensive.  However, renting a modern coal barge is quite cheap…
  •  We could be wed during a re-enactment of the Battle of Fort Anderson!*  Your side of the family could play the Union.  I’m fine with playing the Confederacy; I look good in butternut.
  • We could rent the polar bear enclosure in the zoo.  The polar bear died earlier this year, and the space is just going to waste at the moment.  The guests could stand outside the enclosure?
  • I know a guy who’d let us a basement for cheap.  It has chairs, and everything!

* It could be a civil ceremony!

Add comment August 6th, 2009


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