The Deathkill

January 7th, 2008

So my buddy Don has been working on this film called The Deathkill. It is about time travel and computers. I had a dream about the Deathkill last night but it really has nothing to do with his premise.

The Deathkill can happen to anybody at anytime. You can’t stop it or control it. It takes over your body and fills you with a rage that you can not ignore. I was at my house old house on the river when it happened. We were having some sort of family get together. I was helping my brother fill up his car with gas. The Deathkill came and entered somebody. The only way to kill them was to completley cut them apart. And I saw this being done all around me. Some how I survived for quite some time because those infected by the Deathkill had a strange sense of torturous humor. They would chase you around and prolong the fact that they wanted to take you over. I don’t know how it worked. By touch, maybe bite? They weren’t zombies though. I ran to a large industrial sized kitchen where I grabbed a knife. I swung it right into on of their necks and it dug in. But with every swing the knife felt loose and I was afraid to lose it. Then my cousin came in the room, infected by The Deathkill, I cut his hand off and it was horrifying. It just came right off. I kept trying to explain to people what The Deathkill was. It couldn’t be talked to or negotiated with. It was pure evil plain and simple. Because the Deathkill wasn’t a disease with a cure or a supernatural force wioth some kind of sentience. It was like anger or love, its just an emotion or state of being that exists and we can do nothing to stop or control it. A great poet wrote about the Deathkill and I had his book and was trying to read about it. It was somebody like William Blake but I can’t remember beyond that.

301’s Sea of Green

January 7th, 2008

Biirdie’s new album Catherine Avenue drops January 22nd. Can’t wait to get my hands on a copy! Read an interview I conducted with the band back in 2005 here.

I keep trying to think of the perfect way to explain why I like Biirde. After many failed attempts over many years I have decided to forget any kind of professional presentation and just cut straight to the chase. You know that photo you have of your brother/sister/mom and you sitting in front of some monument on a vacation you took years ago. Small fragments of that time remain in your memory, it is hard to remember all of it yet it still feels like it was just yesterday. Nothing that was the norm back then is the norm now. You live somewhere else, you know different people, you do different things. That’s what Biirdie is to me, that photograph.

I was 20 in 2005, working with my friend Josh Benfield running Little Reggies Productions, putting on small rock shows for kids at the Jaycees in Melbourne, Florida. I was going through what I thought were old e-mails to delete them when I stumbled across a message from the band Biirdie about playing a show in our town. Why they wanted to play our town I really still have no idea. I was told that Jared wanted to play some shows around his home state but I was still convinced there had to be some mistake. Melbourne? Regardless we jumped on the opportunity to book them and we set up a show for March 11. In the months leading up the show, and beyond, our office was filled with their debut album Morning Kills The Dark on constant repeat.

That summer was full of boogie boarding, booking shows with my best friends, bar-b-quing, community college, and Biirdie. I was on that edge between high school, college, and the real world. I had so many plans for what I wanted to do and what I knew I could if I had the chance. Unfortunately at that stage in my life I was tied down by lack of age, experience, time, and money. I was determined to work hard despite my position and somehow booking this band would help validate all my efforts.

Before they even arrived I realized that Kala was Fred Savage’s sister. I grew up on The Wonder Years and once made a sequel to The Wizard in a CiCi’s pizza arcade, so for me this was a big deal. I had already confirmed that I wouldn’t say anything about it to her, or at least not until the end of the night. I was just this kid in a small nowhere town and this band that was 1/4 Savage family was coming all the way from LA to play for us. They represented so many things I wanted to accomplish, experience, and be a part of. LA, Hollywood, Fred Savage, success, and fulfilling goals.

Would they like the venue? Would they think the sound sucked? (btw, it probably did!) As the band stretched outside of their van I approached them with my clipboard in hand. I had done this hundreds of times before but on this occasion I was actually nervous. Unlike all the other bands who had come through our town this one truly meant something to me on a personal level. Soon my nervousness faded completely. They were everything I had hoped for. Kind, friendly, understanding, eccentric, whimsical (I hate that word but can’t think of anything better at the moment). They were all the things their music represented to me. They were from a world I had never experienced but wanted to more than anything.

That night, and on repeated visits, I kept trying to figure them out. Were Kala and Jared and item? Did they really like Melbourne or were they just being polite? Why such the obsession with LA and Florida? How is this music both happy and sad at the same time? The one thing I could confirm was that they were friendly and receiving yet still reserved. Maybe that comes with maturity, experience? I was used to having these teenage hardcore bands come through that either tore the place apart or were your instant “best friend” and invited you to go on the road because you were such a “cool brohan.” The hardcore bands were never earnest with their sentiments. Maybe Biirdie seemed so aloof because they were actually genuine? It wasn’t all or nothing like with other bands. The band members and the music were intricate, balanced, and real. They weren’t a gimmick, a fad, or some product of the times. They seemed to be doing exactly what was right and honest. They were a family not just four people hitting some notes on a stage.


They continued to play in Melbourne and Orlando for us over that year but then just as they had suddenly arrived in our lives they left again. Not in the bad way but in the way you have to split apart from a friend you make at summer camp. You both say you will remain friends and that you will write although in the back of your head you know that it may be the last time you will ever see that person and all you will have are some memories and photographs.

We continued to speak here and there on the phone. I would call Kala to see how they were doing and tell her about film school and Little Reggies. Yet despite the fact that we would occasionally chat, and I was sure I would see them again someday, I always knew that I would never get that moment of my life back and the strange obscurity the band once held. Every now and then as I drive around a new town, work a new job, or make a new friend Biirdie will come to mind and I will slip back into a time that seems so long ago but like it was just yesterday.

I know their songs about Indian Rivers and Satellite Beaches aren’t about me, or the time they spent in Melbourne, but there will always be a side of me that refuses to believe they aren’t.

Halloween 2008!

November 1st, 2007

Don, Brett, and I went to the zombie dance our buddies at A Comic Shop threw. Unfortunately they only got one photo of us! I didn’t do much for Halloween. I was pretty much the only person dressed at work in my full white jumpsuit and glasses there as a time traveler from the year 2525. One of our patrons, Tom, let me know about the free burrito you can get at Chipotle if you go dressed as a burrito. A quick $1 investment in tinfoil at the dollar store took care of that. Later that night we stopped by our old roommate Brian’s house for a small Vietnam War themed party. Brian’s new place is way nicer looking than our shack. I’m thinking about re-decorating. A little throw pillows, a TV news reporter. What do you think?

Jump On Board

October 31st, 2007

School is great. Work is great. The two together is not so great. I have been having a hard time balancing the two together and working on Allen Fallsworth 2.

I typically can’t fall asleep until 2 am and have to get up most days at 6:30! Needless to say I take naps in between work and school which leaves me social life in the gutter. Not that I hang out with anybody anyway. Dan, Brett, Krissy. Thats it. Although I am going to Brian Bo’s tonight for a bit.

I didn’t even get to see Muscles the other night. I showed up and had missed him. I have convinced going downtown officialy sucks! Unless you have a purpose, like filming the zombie dance.

One-Inch Badge Pin

October 22nd, 2007

Can’t freakin wait!

Photoshopked

October 17th, 2007

This is the only proper photo I have of my girlfriend and I. It is photoshoped and that is obvious. But it kind of sums up our relationship, TOTALLY FAKE.

The Librarier

October 16th, 2007

So I got a job at the Orange County Public Library. It may very well be THE greatest job I have ever had. It is just enough work to keep me interested all day long without becoming overwhelming. There are always plenty of great people on staff, the pay is great, I get all the movies I could want, I get to help older folk (and others too but they aren’t as nice to talk to) find books all day, and a paid break in between all of that.

PS - What if after all this time the Kool Aid guy was just a fan of the product and was actually a pitcher full of blood?

What I Want for Birthday/Christmas

October 10th, 2007

November 19th / December 25th / Just around the corner!

Jason Takes a Cruise Ship

October 9th, 2007

Just watched Jason Takes Manhattan for the first time a few weeks ago. What the hell? Do you have any idea how amazing this film could have been? That’s quite a boastful title for a film that takes place mostly on a boat. Don’t get me wrong, the movie still delivers the gore and is even more 80s than the rest of them (a big plus!). The above poster alone gets me excited about this film regardless. Although I might add that the city of New York was far from happy when they saw the poster and had the studio replace them. But even so, the replacement poster still looks amazing.

I guess that is what the Friday The 13th series is all about though. All thriller, no filler. I have to write a paper for American Cinema about a film comparing rural/suburban life to that of the city and the dangers it presents. I considered JTM because I like to pick films on the fringe of the requirements but considering Jason just kills people at Crystal Lake and in New York I really don’t have much of an argument.

I think I like the idea and aesthetic of the Jason movies more than the actual movies themselves. I find it interesting that Jason wasn’t the killer until the second film and didn’t even get his mask until the third. I guess that is the film student side of me studying how a franchise can grow with each film becoming progressively different from the original work. When I was 6 or 7 I had never even seen these films yet knew exactly what a hockey mask and the term “Friday the 13th” meant. Despite what one may say about the integrity of the series that says something.

Far From Over

June 11th, 2007

Dear Mr. Stallone,

I would like to thank you for choosing my hometown of Melbourne, Florida as one of the locations on your current touring route. I am a 22 year old film student living in Orlando and have been a fan of your music for quite some time now. I work in music promotions and I feel that most of today’s music fails in comparison to the styles you work in. I will be driving home for the weekend to watch your performance. I look forward to shaking your hand and showing you my gratitude in person! Please keep up the good work!

Best,
Nick