Sun
I Hear You
“I hear you,” she screams,
Her voice echoing in the silence
Of a disquieted mind.
Fists pound temples
As temptation reigns
In paper-wrapped glass.
The sins of a thousand years
Await release, gnawing
At the bars built
To keep the world out
And the furies within.
Breath rasps, the belly of the snake
Drawing sinewy strength
From the still-warm sands
Of memory and desire.
Head sags, body slumps,
Blood slows, anguish grows.
Write, Sisyphus, write.
(Images are property of owners, and are used here without permission…I heard you.)
Ballerina dreams
Real
Am I as lifeless as the image
That dances before me,
Within its two-dimensional bonds
Of height and width?
Or does it ask the same questions
As it stares through this portal of glass,
Breathing and thinking in a world
That also offers depth and duration?
Which of us is the corpus
And which the reflection?
Both? Neither?
When we part company,
Who moves first?
And if I smash the glass,
Which of us ceases to exist,
Except in the multitude of shards
That fall to Earth?
(Images are property of owners and upon reflection, are used here without permission.)
Writing for puppets
As some of you may know, I am one of the comedy writers for a sketch show called SomeTV!, which is currently in production in Toronto. As our godhead Nic likes to describe it, the show takes the no-sacred-cows approach of Monty Python’s Flying Circus and combines it with the playful anarchy of The Muppet Show (no hubris here, eh?).
Now, for some, that may sound like the greatest writing gig ever. Those some have clearly never written for puppets.
Human actors—or as we call them, Fleshies—can be tricky enough to deal with. Prone to completely misunderstanding the point of a scene or sketch, they tend to have difficulty learning lines that make no sense to them.
Luckily, their natural insecurity, despite the outward facing ego, means that they can be molded into subservience, if only in two- to five-minute chunks, the longest most are willing to go without checking their make-up or cell phones for calls from their managers.
At their core, Fleshies are the rhesus monkeys of the performance world, clinging to each other for some semblance of affection but ultimately willing to give that up for warmth and sustenance.
Not so puppet actors, aka the Felts or Felties.
These are the apex predators of the performance world and should always be treated as such. Sure, they look cute and cuddly, with their giant heads, bulging eyes and disarming colours, but that’s exactly what they want you to think.
You don’t write for Felties so much as start a sentence that is perpetually interrupted with ideas or lines the bastards think are smarter, funnier, crazier.
Fleshies forget their lines because they’re not too bright…Felties “forget” because they are malicious egotists.
Adding to the challenge is the near-impossibility of figuring out a Feltie. He, she or it is the poster-child for multiple personality disorder.
You think you’re writing a scene for a young Spanish girl, when out of nowhere a tall Jovian Codswadder shows up to take the scene in an entirely new direction. (To this day, the only thing I know about Codswadders is they come from Jupiter, where given the crushing gravity, their height makes no sense.)
It’s like dealing with someone with hyperactive comedic Tourettes, and trust me, I’ve taken enough improv classes in Toronto to know what that looks like.
Felties are also astoundingly lazy creatures. Sure, they look frenetic on the television screens, but in reality, these buggers will literally not lift a finger without someone doing it for them. Our show has an entire team of Feltie fluffers whose entire job is to see to the every-last needs of these freaks. We’re talking major OCD: obsessive-compulsive demands.
Trust me, the dictionary writers of the world have the concept of “puppet master” completely backwards.
To be fair, the Felties do sometimes come up with lines that are funnier than the stuff I wrote. But on the flip side, they get away with lines that no intelligent Fleshie could ever hope to pull off.
This has two impacts: 1) the Feltie doesn’t have to try very hard to get a laugh, and 2) they can be as crude, rude and insulting as they want, knowing everyone just thinks “awwww, how cute”.
There’s a reason you don’t hear a lot of puppet radio programs…the shit they come up with is repugnant.
So, why do I stay? Why do I continue to write for these self-glorified hand-warmers?
Most days, I don’t know.
But then the rent comes due and I realize that my best chances at succeeding as a “comedy writer” is to have my words (or some semblance thereof) come out of a Feltie’s mouth…and those lint-sucking leeches know it, too.
SomeTV! is being produced by Lemon Productions Inc.
Like us on Facebook: SomeTV! / Lemon Productions Inc.
Follow us on Twitter: @SomeTVNews
Toronto Marlies hockey game
Took my camera to the hockey game the other day…which means I never really saw the game as it was being played.
Below are some of the better shots I managed to take, just part of a much larger set on my Facebook page.
890+ images taken, 180+ images imported into Lightroom, 93 photos worked up.
Looks like I missed a hell of a game.
SPOILER ALERT: The Toronto Marlies defeated the Hamilton Bulldogs 4-1.
- Always wanted a pic of the puck as it is about to hit the ice
- Even hockey players are scared of speeding pucks
10K views and 1 year later
Hey all,
Just surpassed the 10,000 view mark on the blog (as well as my 1-year anniversary), so I wanted to thank you for looking at the blog, reading the blog, commenting on the blog and recommending the blog.
I am grateful to all of you, but particularly want to thank those who take a moment to post and exchange your thoughts on what I write or photograph. For you to put out that effort means the world to me.
Here’s to the next 10,000 views!
Thank you…Randy
No
I love what I do.
I love writing. I love coming up with new ideas to write. I love helping other people put their ideas into words and then into action.
This is why I struggle with one of the shorter words in the English language: No.
Hello, my name is Randy, and I am addicted to new projects.
There was a time when my inability to tell people no stemmed from my fear of letting them down. Or more accurately, my fear of them never asking again and my value as a person being reduced to zero.
Not so now, luckily. Now, I find my value internally. I am, therefore I have value.
Interestingly, though, I still struggle to say no. But now, it’s a curse of enthusiasm and confidence, now fear and self-loathing.
And to complicate things further, that same enthusiasm and confidence attracts people who are more timid in one or both. People with ideas but lack voice, or with voice but lack means.
I am glad that they see me as a vector through which to explore and advance their visions. At the same time, I have to remember that my bandwidth is limited. It is less the hours in a day and more the daily ration of creative energy that limits me.
(BTW, this is why I don’t upbraid myself for spending hours on the computer or playing Solitaire. That is my period of recharge.)
At some point, I have to limit my involvement in others’ works. I have to save enough space for my paying gigs, lest I be hungry and homeless, and for my creative projects, lest I be frustrated and unhappy.
I have to say “No”.
You recently published a book and want to turn it into a screenplay? Great!
You’ve got an idea for a comedy sketch event? Fantastic!
I came up with another great concept for a movie? Congratulations! (Yes, even I drain my batteries.)
I’m not saying I won’t help, but don’t take it personally if I limit my involvement. It is not a reflection on you or your idea but rather on me and my limitations.
Today, I can work with you. Tomorrow, I may only be able to listen to you. The next day, I may not even be able to do that.
Oh, and I’ll do my best to recognize and respect those same boundaries in your life.
No doesn’t mean your idea sucks. No doesn’t mean I never want to work with you. No simply means I can’t, not right now, no matter how much I might want to. There are shades of No.
I can’t because I already have plenty on my plate. I can’t because I have to keep myself a priority. I can’t simply because I can’t.
But I wish you all the best in your efforts.
In a slightly unrelated brain fart, the concept of No reminded me of one of my favourite revelations from the movie Yellow Submarine, the animated Beatles film.
Early in the film, as the forces of evil are over-taking Pepperland, a ballistic glove called Glove chases people and smashes things with his giant fist, including the letters in the giant Technicolor word “KNOW”. First, he smashes the K to make the word “NOW”. He then smashes the W to make the word “NO”, which becomes black-and-white.
Late in the movie, when the Beatles—disguised as Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band—lead the people’s revolt to reclaim their land, the smashed letters reverse and become colour again.
What surprised me was that having watched the film at least a dozen times before, it wasn’t until late in my “adulthood” that I realized the message embedded within the two events.
Consider my mind blown!






























