Tag Archives: television

Supercomputer defeats the champions of Jeopardy.

Get used to it.

Andy Kaufman

As of recent, I’ve been developing a huge amount of admiration for the late Andy Kaufman. A concept-driven performance-artist, Kaufman was brilliant and awkward, an  individual highly capable of constructing a scene and directing an audience in any given direction. With typical reactions to his work varying between alternating levels of love, confusion, and abhorrence, Kaufman  sincerely strived to redefine the relationship between performer and  audience, challenging the expectations of exactly how an “entertainer” is supposed to fulfill their role.

His world was a palimpsest, his “acts” and “put-ons”  so utterly convincing and complete that they merged with the everyday, his performances and his life becoming at times indistinguishable from one another.  From eating a bowl of ice cream as part of a stand-up routine to taking a sold-out crowd at Carnegie Hall out for milk and cookies, Kaufman’s repertoire was rooted in an understanding and appreciation of the quotidian, elevating, celebrating even, the everyday.

Thankfully, there is a lot of footage to be watched via YouTube to allow for a better understanding of the breadth of Kaufman’s work. Well I strongly recommend viewing these gems of the internet on your own, prolonging multiple mornings with esoterica, Elvis impersonations, and children’s television for adults, I wanted to feature a few of my favorite clips.

This  performance is totally, totally amazing. Not that this particular clip showcases it, but Andy Kaufman was actually quite the vocalist. All of his Elvis impersonations were sung rather than lip-synced. As Kaufman was always reluctant to call himself a comedian, I believe he would have much preferred the title of “song and dance man”. I suppose one of the elements of this routine that is so funny is how utterly awful “I Trusted You” is as a song and the fact that he was allowed to perform this sort of act in front of a live audience on national television. My favorite part is when Andy returns for his encore and moves into the audience, aggressively pointing at individual members in the front row,  adamantly repeating the songs only line.

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“What’s he doing now?”
“Oh, he’s playing with the medium…”


If Andy Kaufman could have had Paul Ruben’s job we likely would have been left with  more scenes like the one above—odd forays into the world of Kaufman, rife with imagination and references to his childhood. Kaufman had been quoted as saying, “While all the other kids were out playing ball and stuff, I used to stay in my room and imagine that there was a camera in the wall. And I used to really believe that I was putting on a television show and that it was going out to somewhere in the world.”

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As Kaufman’s reputation as a performer earned him more and more fame, he seemed rather infatuated with ideas involving banishment and failure. Always testing the limits of the entertainment industry, Kaufman exploited his notoriety in order to conduct experiments in performance he may have otherwise been unable to do. Additionally, as  an entertainer and an artist, Kaufman had a serious interest in creating a commentary on the business he was inevitably apart of. One of the characters primarily responsible for Kaufman’s rise to mainstream attention, Latka, originally served as a means for Kaufman to intentionally bomb. The “comedian” would painfully present a series of awkwardly-paced, thickly accented puns, unbeknowest to the  audience that this foreign man was  in fact part of an act by a young performer from Long Island, New York who was about to transform his rueful character into a dead-on Elvis Presley impersonator.

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After audiences were initiated and better understood the inner-workings of Kaufman’s routine, Tony Clifton was created, a role he shared along with his best friend and co-writer, Bob Zemuda [one of Zemuda’s finest stunts as Clifton can be seen here]. Along with creating this abrasive identity to employ, Kaufman undertook additional ventures which were essentially exercises in failure, such as inviting his entire family to perform along with him on Thanksgiving in front of six-hundred people at Kutscher’s Hotel, a performance so upsetting to the resort’s management that Kaufman, along with his entire family, were immediately evicted from the hotel after the show.

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The above clip serves as an excellent example of one of Andy Kaufman’s excursion into the awkward and uncomfortable, the laughter noticeably subsiding during the routine and the reality of the performance being brought into question. In an act such as this, we can see that “Andy Kaufman the Celebrity” essentially served as another character for the performer to use.

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But so as to not end on a morose note, click here.

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The Walking Dead

[Image: One of the zombies introduced in the The Walking Dead’s first episode, Days Gone By.]

AMC has a new miniseries, The Walking Dead, based on a graphic novel of the same name. The show takes place in the ruins of a zombie apocalypse. Just as in 28 Days Later The Walking Dead begins by depicting  the main character going through a trial of surreal moments, waking up in a hospital bed  and navigating through a ravaged world.

Why a riot of zombies can cover the face of the earth, including inside the actual hospital building, and somehow overlook a person passed out in bed is beyond me. Regardless, an unconscious patient seems to be a relatively successful way to introduce a protagonist to the viewer as well as the newly cleared out/decimated world. In this case Rick Grimes, an injured small-town sheriff, discovers the horror of piles of dead bodies and mangled carrion shells of the once living.

Kind of like a nightmare, kind of like a smattering of every other zombie flick out there, the world portrayed post-zombie apocalypse in this miniseries is one in which emptiness is eerie and the urban areas are the most dangerous, though in this case alluring due to the misconception that they may provide a form of hope or salvation (spoiler alert: but really a bunch of zombies will just eat your horse instead).

[Image: Zombies eating the innards of a horse.. Scott Garfield.]

 

I would be curious to see, not just in this particular zombie escapade but in most contemporary zombie media,  how survivors actually survive beyond just fighting zombies. How are basic needs met after the collapse of industry and in what ways, if any, does an intelligible infrastructure present itself over time?

I like watching dead people get hit in the head with baseball bats as much as anyone else, but I wonder about ten, twenty, one hundred years past a zombie invasion, assuming that survivors last long enough to procreate and a sort of normalcy can set in in the same way a country reverts back to it’s everyday proceedings after a nuclear attack or natural disaster, adopting new ways of living and adapting to the changed world.

And how long can zombies survive for anyway? I guess you can rudimentarily freeze them in some snow-capped mountain like the zombie nazis in Dead Snow. But besides for that, one would think that over a certain period of time, the carcasses of zombies would have to undergo a process of organic decay, eventually just rotting away into nothingness. After all the zombies were gone, how would the world rebuild itself? What decisions would it make differently, ensuring it’s safety, comfort, and chance of any further outbreaks?

You can watch the first episode of The Walking Dead here.