
Hey loyal readers. I'm
soooo sorry I have been away for so long. This past week was pretty busy and this weekend was jam-packed. Jam-packed with what you say? Well, on Saturday and Sunday I attended the Mecca for geeks. The Holy of
Holies for nerds. The Shrine of the Silver Monkey for dorks. Yes. I ATTENDED COMIC-CON. I was one of 125,000 people there to see all the celebrity chocked filled Panel discussions, Q + As, Exhibits, and much much more. I have a shit ton of pictures on
facebook which I highly recommend viewing as they have very funny captions and are for the most part, interesting if not exhilarating.
Let me start by saying the weekend was crazy. Insane. I have never seen so many costumes, gross wispy mustaches and back hair in my life. There were weirdos, hot

girls in leather, children, grandparents, grandparents in leather and much much more. The way it is set up, there is a giant exhibition hall with all of the booths and stations for every comic book publisher, movie studio, TV network etc. There are also "artists alleys" where comic artists will draw whatever you want and sell it to you for $25 and a handy (minus the handy). Upstairs there are conference rooms were all the panels are held, and all the lines are formed. Downstairs there are the HUGE halls where panels for movies like "The Mummy 3" and "Pineapple Express" are held. There are also giant rooms to play Magic: The Gathering, Pokemon,
Yugio etc AND halls that are filled with societies that try and get you to join such as "Star Wars Rebel Fleet Society of San
Yisidro" and "Middle Earth
Trekkies of Fullerton." There are even artists that will sit and discuss your portfolio with you and talk about what you should work on as an artist.
Now that you have a scope of what Comic-Con is, I will discuss some of the highlights.
1. Seeing storm troopers taking a shit in the bathroom. I walked in and saw one, mask on, coming out of a stall. A little surreal.
2. Hearing Billy West having a conversation between Fry, Professor and Dr.
Zoidberg from
Futurama. That guy is unbelievable. Also hearing Doug
Funnie AND Roger
Klotz come out of his mouth brought tears to my eyes.
3. Hearing the guy who does the voice of OLMEC from Legends of the Hidden Temple!
4. Watching Joan Allen talk about why she signed on to the movie Death Race. Surprisingly, she omitted the fact that she was going to be paid

enough money to buy 2 new houses in Bermuda.
5. Hearing Jason
Statham talk. That dude is just too cool for school.
6. A little girl asked Justin Long in the HUGE auditorium, "do you...umm...actually own a Mac?" He laughed and said he did. Somewhere, Steve Jobs was wiping his brow.
7. Whilst sitting down in the huge auditorium where movies were being discussed, I saw
Aziz Ansari from Human Giant walk in front of me. I
didnt know why he wa

s there. But then during the "Pineapple Express" session, all of the Human Giant guys lined up for questions. Paul
Scheer (the bald one) asked first: "Um...first off, I'm so nervous my butt is so sweaty right now. Um...I saw Frank Miller here. Do you um....know Frank Miller?" Judd responds--No, sorry. Seth
Rogen is laughing. Paul: Um...do you know how I can get in contact with Frank Miller. I think he is so
coool!" Then Rob
Schrab (host of
MILF Island) gets up and says, "Hi, I'm also
sooo nervous right now. My butt is like,
so sweaty.
Umm....so Frank Miller is a genius..." and then went on and on to talk about Frank Miller. Finally,
Aziz went up and said, "Hi, I'm like
soo nervous, my dick is so sweaty and hard right now" and then asked some more funny questions.
Take my word for it, Human Giant is hilarious. If you've never seen anything they've done, go to
FunnyorDie or
youtube and look them up. I especially love the one with Will
Arnett (who I was told by Will's business manager was too embarrassed by it to show his parents). All those guys are going places.
8. Nervously asking my que

stion to the Pineapple Express panel: In Knocked Up you guys smoke up in a variety of different ways. What is the craziest or most creative way you've ever blazed? Answer from Seth
Rogen: "The fishbowl scene in Knocked Up is something we did in High School and thought was really cool, but Danny McBride smokes out of his own butt sometimes. And out of a human skull." Danny then agreed!
Side-note: Judd
Apatow is hilarious in person. I expected Seth
Rogen to be laugh out loud funny, which he was, but Judd is actually the funniest person there. I realize know why he is the king of comedy. He himself is a great comedian.
9. Will Ferrell talking "via satellite" to the crowd for his "Land of the Lost" panel. While at first it actually seemed like he was there, saying hi to people, talking about the movie, even interacting with the cast. Then he started "taking questions." The first person asked, "why did you decide to work on this movie." After a really long delay, Will started laughing and said, "funny you should ask about the
sleestacks, they were really a handful to work with...." Then after every question was asked, he'd respond with a wildly incongruous answer. It was really funny.
10. Meeting t

his guy dressed as the Mad Hatter who talked like the Mad Hatter ALL DAY.
11. Meeting all the guys who used to write for MAD Magazine in the 60s. I used to read all of my dad's old
MADs and they all used to be so good. Now they're crap of course, but hearing stories of how the MAD Fold-In started (We thought, Playboy has a fold-out, lets have a fold-in!) was really cool.
12. SWAG. Everywhere I went I got free shit. Free Dwight
Schrute poster, Pineapple express car freshener, comic books, pins, "The Flash" and "The Green Hornet" rings, limited edition Iron Man hologram DVD cover, HUMONGOUS
Smallville bag, FOX Poster holders and more and more and more stuff. Really a SWAG overload.
It was a physically exhausting day (we got there at 8:30 AM and stayed until 7 PM on Saturday) and by the end of it, my body had just shut down, but it was really fun and if anyone wants to go with me next year, it would definitely be a lot of fun.
On anothe

r note, I saw Step Brothers over the weekend and loved it. It was hilarious--the dinner table scene in
Talladega Nights was really the type of movie it was; just a bunch of hilarious conversations. I read an interview with Adam McKay (the film's director/co-writer) who said that when him and Will start to write a movie, first they come up with a concept, then they write tons of scenarios or scenes that would be funny in the movie, then they write things they want to see in ANY movie, and only then do they start writing the actual movie/plot. I
dont really think this movie made it to the 4
th stage, as there was no real plot to be found. HOWEVER, it
didnt matter. Most scenes in the movie made me laugh out loud, and every actor really went all out and brought stuff to the table. One of the real scene-
stealers was Adam Scott playing Will Ferrell's ultra-successful
douchbag, hot-shot brother. My favorite line of his was "Honey. Dane Cook. Pay-per view, 20 minutes!" Hearing Will Ferrell sing opera was also magical. Interestingly enough, the whole movie didnt have as many memorable lines as it had memorable situations.
The one unfunny element of the movie was the constant usage of the word "fuck." The word obviously is not a big deal anymore and I use it colloquially myself, like it is used in
Apatow movies. But in "Step Brothers" the word itself was used as a punchline. The first time you heard an adult (Richard Jenkins) say something like, "I
dont give a fuck!" it was funny. The second time, when Mary
Steenburgen said it, it was kinda funny, but by the third, fourth, and fifth times, it had lost it's shock value. One of the reasons why Anchorman was so popular, was that with the PG-13 rating, they had to make exclamations without using the word fuck. That's why you get phrases like, "Great Odin's raven" instead of "What the fuck!" When, in Step Brothers, the audience was expected to laugh simply because a character said "fuck" in a shocking way, it
wasnt funny. The comedy moral of the story is: Use the "f word" sparingly, so when you do use it, it can have a powerful effect. Case in point: "Go Fuck Yourself San Diego."
Until Tomorrow--
ps. If I had known there would be all this talk about "Shes the Man" I would have written a whole post about it. I
dont really want to write a whole post about it, so I will say that I do think Amanda
Bynes is very talented, very hot (especially in Hairspray), but her one flaw is that as a child, she helped usher in the "overacting/over excited" style while she was on All That and The Amanda Show that every Disney/Nickelodeon actress uses. Especially Hannah Montana.
pps. I think I spoke too soon about Shia LeBeouf having a blemish-free career. That DUI and hand injury is gonna suck for him.
ppps. Hi Cara