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With Distribution Deal Set, Blind Filmmaker Puts Finishing Touches On Debut Feature

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With Distribution Deal Set, Blind Filmmaker Puts Finishing Touches On Debut
Feature

CAPE CORAL, FL: It’s been a journey spanning nearly 5 years, cast and crew
replacements, two hurricanes, four states and a suicide, but comic book
writer-turned-director Joe Monks, with one distribution offer firmly in
place, says the end is finally in sight…so to speak.

“We’ve had a zillion things go wrong,” says Monks of his directorial debut,
The Bunker. “Everything from reshoots to footage being ruined because
someone clueless was standing next to our cameras with his cell phone on
vibrate, to rescoring the entire film after receiving an offer for
international distribution. I’ve had to dump a lot of dead weight along the
way, but with the path finally clear, The Bunker should be out in 2011.”

Monks, who lost his eyesight in 2002 to complications from diabetes (he’s
been a Type 1 diabetic since age 12), viewed the obstacles and distractions
as opportunities to make the film stronger. “You learn a lot about the
people around you when you’re tackling a project like this. Something that’s
never been done before, something that’s going to be groundbreaking. Either
you fold and give up, or you find ways to make your film better. I wasn’t
about to let anything keep me from finishing the movie, the way I wanted it
done. Not blindness, not diabetes, not sabotage from within. The rough cut
got great festival reviews, our screener was well-received, and a cut
without final sound design, film look or score secured us a distribution
offer covering at least 5 territories. Why would I let distractions derail
me?”

To ensure the final cut is as good as it can possibly be, Monks has entered
the uncharted waters of microfinancing, putting up a project on the popular
Kickstarter.com website. “I’ve refused to cut corners,” says Monks. “I’m
blind. I don’t get another chance to make my first film. This one has to
count. We’re raising some additional funding to make sure everything’s done
right. The film look, the sound design, some ADR and re-recording, etc. What’s
left is largely cosmetic, so we’ve hired a post house equipped with the AVID
system, which I think is going to be a substantial bonus in terms of
production value. But it costs money, so we’re going the microfunding route
to put that together.”

To view The Bunker project on Kickstarter, please visit:

http://bit.ly/b0iNJh

For more information about the film, writer/director Joseph M. Monks, or
Sight Unseen Pictures, please visit:

http://www.sightunseenpictures.com

10 Epic Fails

If you’re not familiar with the term, it’s become quite the popular Twitter hashtag. And, if you’re not familiar with what a hashtag is, just stick with the overall concept: Epic, and fail and you’ll be all right.

1) JaMarcus Russell
Now, without question, the biggest bust in NFL history. And, I’m not talking breast size. Recently arrested for possession of a controlled substance (probably the only thing he controlled, his passing accuracy with the Raiders was nonexistent), this guy looks to have all but pissed away a career that easily could have been worth a few hundred million, due to his laziness, lethargy, and a work ethic that makes my cats look industrious.

2) The Obama Administration response to the BP oil spill.
Actually, ‘response’ is kinda stretching it, because almost three months in, and there’s hardly been one. Oh sure, some trips, some speeches, a televised address. But…where’s the actual *response?* Where’s the acceptance of international help from the 30+ nations offering it? Where’s the waiver of the Jones Act in order to have the best-equipped ships in the world circling the Gulf non-stop? Where’s the EPA to step in and take over, or the Army Corps of Engineers, once it became obvious that nothing BP tried was effective in protecting the entire Gulf of Mexico and American coastline? Where’s the free access to the beaches for the media, since BP swears up and down that it isn’t using private security firms like Talon and Wackenhut to prevent reporters from seeing the true magnitude of the devastation? Basically, where is the leadership, which should’ve shown up somewhere around day 5 of this disaster?

3) New Jersey Nets.
Jay-Z? That, and oodles of money, was the best you could do in trying to woo LeBron James to your sorry franchise? With Chris Bosh already off the table, and the Knicks having snagged Amare Stoudemire, then LeBron darting to Miami from Cleveland, where’s your backup plan? Six teams wanted James, and only one could get him. As other free agents rapidly disappear, you’re next move is…what, exactly? Have Jay play power forward?

4) Lindsay Lohan.

What, do I really need to spell it out? Is there anyplace this celebrity train wreck *isn’t* an epic fail, except in the being-able-to-drink-you-under-the-table department?

5) France’s World Cup soccer team.

Wholly embarrassed first by their play on the field, then by internal strife, then by their players’ mutiny and refusal to practice, the 2010 World Cup squad shamed an entire nation. Sorry, I don’t care if you believe the coach is doing a lousy job. When you suck in terms of being competitive, and you refuse to practice, you can’t blame the coach for not putting the ball into the net. And, last I checked, it’s a really, really, really big net. Plus, consider this. Given how few substitutions are made, and how long you prepare, how important is the coach when it comes to the players’ actual performance? Your 11 best guys can’t work hard, practice hard, and play a faster tempo than the coach directed? When your country’s best athletes are on the pitch and the wheels are falling off, what? You’re not men enough to forego the coach’s strategy and play aggressively? Play to win? It’s not like the coach can pull all 11 of you if he doesn’t like the style of play, so what gives? Why be such whiny bitches in front of the whole world? Oh, wait, I forgot. You’re the French. Never mind.

6) Nancy Pelosi, in claiming unemployment checks are a great job creator.
Huh? Really, Nancy? Yeah, let me get this straight, because I’m not sure which school of economics you’re subscribing to. Unemployment checks, which represent a fraction of what you *used* to make when you had a job, is essentially survival money. And that pittance of former wages is supposed to be a good job creator…how? By taking taxpayer money away from the employed, who could use it on discretionary spending, and giving it to people just looking to get by, we’re growing the economy? Is that really what you tried to say last week? And you’re still in office??? No doubt, there’s truth to your claim that it’s money that goes right back into the economy. People use it to buy necessities. But, given how you brag about how you’ve passed this over and over and over and over and will pass it again (extension of unemployment benefits), can you please explain why unemployment is still around 9.7%? Do you honestly believe that the jobless rate is based solely on an economy of bread, milk and egg sales? Get real. The best job creator is lower taxes, private sector growth, and households with increasing disposable income for discretionary spending. If 50% of the people in the country were all getting unemployment, trust me, the job growth and economic benefit wouldn’t support your premise, just as it doesn’t right this minute, especially since unemployment’s risen since Obama took office, it’s risen since you became house speaker, it’s risen since you and your pals took over congress in 2006, and that’s *despite* multiple-passages of unemployment benefits extensions. Sorry, just the facts, ma’am, which show you to be a clueless boob.

7) The dismissal of General Stanley McChrystal.
Uh, remember when it was General Shinseki criticizing Bush for not having enough troops in theatre and he became the darling of the left and the mainstream media? When John Kerry spoke his name like a mantra? How it was speaking ‘truth to power’ to be critical of leadership? Tell you what. Go read the Rolling Stone article. The whole thing. Most of the critical comments? Made by aides and associates, several unnamed. Read what McChrystal actually said. Then, think back. Oh yeah, McChrystal was put in charge by…Barack Obama, who dumped the previous General. And why??? So McChrystal could conduct a review of Afghanistan war policy, make recommendations, and turn the war around. McChrystal does it, and Obama sits on his ass, so McChrystal talks, and everyone freaks. Recall, however, that Obama *did* adopt not only McChrystal’s strategy, but grudgingly gave in and increased troop levels. Funny, criticize a republican commander-in-chief, and the world’s your oyster. Criticize a democrat commander-in-chief, and be summarily removed and replaced, by the *same* guy the left ran ads about, labeling him, “General Betray-Us.” Uh, you see any such MoveOn.org ads shredding Obama’s new man in Afghanistan when that announcement was made? Nope. Not a peep.

8) Joran Van Der Sloot retracting his confession.
Oh, he was tricked into confessing to murder? The FBI lured him to Peru in an attempt to sting him over the Natalie Holloway disappearance? O-kay…sure. You know, I have no clue why the FBI luring Van Der Sloot anywhere is really important, because unless he can prove it was the FBI who walked into his room on videotape with that woman, and the FBI who walked out and left her corpse behind…who gives a damn *how* he wound up in Peru? The key is, he and a woman retired to his room. Only one of them left still breathing. I don’t care if space aliens transported him there from Holland on the say-so of Tommy Lee Jones and Will Smith acting on behalf of the U.S. government, bottom line is, that dead girl? She’s on your tab, Joran, no matter how much you try and muddy the waters. Why you were there isn’t remotely as important as what you did once you arrived.

9) The Mets trade talks for Mariners ace Cliff Lee.
Are you serious? Was Omar Minaya just blowing smoke, or really trying to pull off a trade? With…what, exactly? And, how was he planning on paying Lee? Lee was available before, and the Mets didn’t make the move, yet they somehow thought that now, because they’ve been overachieving, that they could get the Mariners to just give him away? Look what it took the Rangers to get him, guys, getting into the bidding just looks plain embarrassing now.

10) Jonah Hex.
You know, it didn’t matter that I couldn’t see the Jonah Hex flick. I was happy it was finally going to get made. If you want to know how long this one’s been kicked around, I could still see and was doing comic conventions regularly when the notion of a Jonah Hex film first started gaining traction. So, too late for me to enjoy it, but so what? I missed the long-discussed fourth installment in the Indiana Jones franchise, but I was still glad Harrison Ford donned the fedora again. Along the way, I find out that the movie is going to have big budget special effects, nobody’s going to pretty up Hex’s scarred face, that solid actors (Josh Brolin and John Malkovich) are going to star, and they filled out the sex appeal quotient by casting Megan Fox as Lilah. Hex is a bad ass, it’s a western, should be a cinch to make a fun comic-book movie, right? Well, how the filmmakers managed to so destroy everything (from concept to credits) I’m not quite sure, but this sure as hell looks like one cinematic Hindenburg. Malkovich, I’m told, is awful. Brolin mumbles almost unintelligibly throughout. Fox is shriekingly bad as Lilah. The movie only runs about 80 minutes—and ten are credit sequence! Just a debacle, and Roger Ebert had a great line about it, check out his Twitter page, I won’t spoil it for you. I’ve seen several reviews, (Sci-Fi wire had one of the best), and this movie makes Giglie seem like a critical darling. Oh well, so much for that franchise…

Americans won’t do certain jobs? Hogwash. (But, here’s 10 I wouldn’t be thrilled with…)

You’ve probably heard the arguments in the illegal alien debate—they’re just looking to make a better life for themselves. They want to embrace the American dream. And of course, the ol‘ ‘They’re willing to do jobs Americans don’t want to.’ Well, I think that’s utter crap, particularly with the economy in the shitter, but really, if you want some jobs even I wouldn’t want? Here they are…

1) Pope
In addition to the atheist thing being guaranteed to make my hiring uncomfortable, there’s the whole hassle of having to pray all the time, not to mention traveling to third world countries where I wouldn’t want to go even if I were immune to all forms of bacterial infection. Add in the funny hat and the sex scandals over kiddie diddling? Nope, not for me. Juan, you’re up!

2) Naomi Campbell’s housekeeper
The truth? I’d rather enlist and go to Afghanistan. At least there’s a gig where you know every dollar you earn is hazard pay. But getting spit on, clawed, and having cell phones fired at you like grenades with ring tones? Nope, sorry. I’ll pass. I’m sure Courtney Love’s place can use some sprucing up, instead.

3) Chair of the IPCC panel on global warming

Who’d want Rajendra K. Pachauri’s job? First, you have the folks who understand that, hey, climate has always changed, and so don’t subscribe to Al Gore’s sky-is-falling approach to global warming. Then, there’s that sticky scandal over the e-mails that leaked, which pretty much show the IPCC to be working a scam the likes of which Bernie Madoff could only dream of. Oh, and then there’s the hysterical claims about the way Himalayan glaciers would disappear by 2035, which turned out to be based on *zero* scientific evidence or research, and which has since been wholly debunked? Yeah, *not* exactly a good career move, taking that position. Plus, even if you’re not full of shit, you still have to deal with the UN. Who needs that kind of aggrivation? Why not be a mule for a Mexican drug cartel, instead?

4) President of ACORN
Yeah, I know. Most of you’d rather be a fisherman in the Bering Sea during the winter months in a leaky boat. Still, it’s a job, and some schmuck has to do it. Although, the good thing is, perhaps not for much longer. If congress changes hands, maybe there’ll be some pressure put on the administration to actually investigate these fraudsters, and they can be taken down in a RICO-style prosecution. At least prison would spare these scumbags from having to appear in any more Breitbart undercover videos, right?

5) Head coach, Oakland Raiders
You get to work for Al Davis, who has a penchant for trying to force coaches to quit, or simply firing you without paying off your contract unless subjected to protracted legal action. Your input into the draft is secondary to any athlete’s time in the 40, which seems to be the benchmark by which Grampa Al judges all players. Your boss fired a coach for noticing that JaMarcus Russell was perhaps the worst quarterback since Ryan Leaf to throw a pass, and who guaranteed the league’s biggest bust $39 million guaranteed. Need more? Well, there’s the need to live at least close to Oakland. And Darius Hayward-Bey, who catches footballs about as well as anybody with lobster claws for hands. Oh, and did I mention Al Davis? Hey, cheer up, Pedro, you can probably secure a job with the Sacramento Kings if it doesn’t work out for you with the silver and black.

6) Fact checker on a Michael Moore documentary
Sure, at first, it looks appealing. Like being the on-call physician to a superstar like Michael Jackson. But despite no experience necessary, and needing to pay zero attention to detail, there’s still the need to work with Moore, and having to go home knowing you earned a paycheck for doing absolutely nothing. Kind of like Harry Reid, only you get less face time. But I can see the appeal to Esteban, who may be up for slacking off after time spent with the great Mexican symbolic figure, Manual Labor.

7) Security chief, Columbia University
How tough is it to secure a small lecture venue in order to ensure that an invited guest can give his/her scheduled speech? Obviously, harder when it comes to the founder of the Minuteman organization than for the President of Iran. Talk about a lousy gig. Kids with banners and pies can rush the stage at will, making you look like a total bonehead, and in response you get to…ignore it. Yup, you don’t actually get to escort any protesters out. You don’t get to allow the event to actually take place. You just eat shit and look incompetent because the university doesn’t give a damn about freedom of speech for a U.S. citizen who is interested in talking about upholding the law. But it’ll make you bend over to take it in the ass if a single heckler dares whisper too loud when a man who calls for the extermination of all Jews is holding court in your rotunda. Miguel? you may want to pass on this for something easier, like being on the anti-gang task force…in Compton.

8) Babysitter/nanny for Nadya Suleman
If you fill out an application to work for Octomom, you’re already being taken advantage of. Not only were the eight kids *not* enough for the wannabe reality show baby factory, she has a total of 14 kids. Think about that. Single mom, small home, 14 infants and toddlers. There are penned chickens who have better working conditions. Cows who find the slaughterhouse preferable to that zoo. She’s broke, the house is under threat of foreclosure, and her most promising job offer is to do a gang-bang video wherein she takes on eight guys. Can you imagine having to help her prep for that? Not only will you be running around changing diapers ‘round-the-clock, but in between swabbing asses and cleaning spit-up, you’re expected to hurl jello shot cups of warm mayonaise at her to get her ready for her small-screen debut? Without question, hadda be better to be an orderly at Bedlam. Hey, I’m half-Hispanic, so I understand the stereotype. Latinos know from having big families. But *this* kinda big? Even the most desperate of border jumpers might run back to Chihuahua after a week of handling infant bodily functions to the 14th power.

9) Any position, ScottEVest
Check out some of this ass clown’s response videos to Loren Feldman, of 1938Media.com. Scott’s abusive, foul-mouthed, prone to fly into a rage at the slightest thing, and in general, can’t understand one of the shortest words in the English language: No. This guy has terrorized people he’s dealt with over the phone, so I can only imagine what working for him directly must be like. This guy was such an asshole, I had to step in to tell him he had to stop calling my wife’s company. She didn’t want to take his phone calls any longer, he was that bad. I can be rather unpleasant on the phone when pushed to it. It isn’t pretty. But that’s reserved for worst-case-scenarios only. This mental midget? I had to tell him straight up, he could never, ever again call any of our phone numbers. That we would never, under any circumstance, work with him again. That no matter how desperate he might need something done for his online store, his money was not worth having to deal with him, on any level, for any amount of time. He finally took the hint. But don’t take my word for it. Check out his ‘douche bag’ video (and the ring tone Loren made of it) for just a taste of what this loser is like. He’ll attack you, your wife, anybody he can when things don’t go his way, as evidenced by his own uploads. Yolanda? Given the choice? Naomi Campbell is starting to look better…

10) Agent, Tiki Barber
NBC has pretty much phased him out of their Football Night in America broadcast (though at least he doesn’t have to work with Keith Olbermann any more). He’s listed as a contributor for the Today Show, although they aren’t exactly ringing his phone off the wall with assignments. He tried going to FOX, and they didn’t want him. He pissed off the Giants when he ran his mouth after retiring (after which they promptly won a Super Bowl). Now? How marketable is a guy who just dumped his 8-months-pregnant-with-twins wife, for a babysitter he’s reportedly been fucking behind her back for over a year? How many networks want *this* guy working their broadcasts? He’s going to get cleaned out in the divorce (his wife’s already filed papers, according to reports), and the market for signatures on pro football cards isn’t exactly a big bucks proposition. You’ve probably got a better shot being the agent for disgraced New Jersey governor Jim McGreevey, trying to pimp a new reality show for motorcycle guru and fellow cheater Jesse James, or putting together a big Jacksons reunion tour now that Mikey the molester is dead. Sure got your work cut out for you, Mariella. And you thought being a prostitute in Tijuana was a dead-end job…

Brief Observations

Weekend’s here, and while waiting on some Bunker stuff, music video stuff
and Bunker-documentary stuff to come together, figured I’d take a break from
the filmmaking updates to make a few comments and observations.

1. BP’s oil cap seems to be working. Finally. Yet, while the administration
and BP try to put a happy face on it, where’s the outrage? Is the mainstream
media really going to let this one go despite the fact that for nearly 90
days, the administration stood by and whistled as oil gushed into the Gulf
unchecked? Why isn’t anybody beating down the White House doors over the
fact that we *still* don’t have ships rushing in from other nations which
have offered help to clean the Gulf up? Why hasn’t Obama waived the Jones
Act in order to facilitate the fastest possible ecological recovery effort?
Why is the administration looking the other way as BP pumps tons of
dispersants into the Gulf that are so toxic nearly every country in Europe
with so much as a decent sized lake has banned its use? Is the media so
invested in this guy that they’re going to give him a pass on allowing one
of the worst environmental disasters in the past century to play itself out
while he postured and tsk-tsked at the damage without addressing it head-on?
Tell you what, it’s easy to make comparisons, but if Bush had been in office
every environmental group would have been storming the castle with
pitchforks and torches (bio-diesel torches, of course), demanding immediate
action. Like, within 72 hours. Obama futzes around for nearly three *months*
and everybody’s glad handing now??? Are you kidding?

2. For everyone who thinks Mel Gibson’s career is dead, come on, be serious.
Take a step back. You think a guy with Gibson’s earning power is done for?
If you believe that, Look at Victor Salva, and tell me, if a convicted
kiddie diddler (Salva pled guilty to 5 counts of felony child molestation in
1988) can keep getting work, that Mel Gibson can’t? No doubt, Gibson is an
ass, and a bigot. Fine. But if being a pedophile with a conviction for
sexually abusing a young boy isn’t a death sentence in Hollywood…what’s it
take?

3. Robert Byrd croaks, and suddenly he’s beloved. Forget his KKK past,
forget that he once used senate procedural rules to bar a disabled woman
from using her guide dog on the senate floor-despite knowing she had used
the dog during the previous session without issue, and forget Byrd’s
unparalleled pork-barreling. The talking points of the day when he kicked
all pretty much stuck to the dem party line, “He’d given that up (his racist
viewpoint) long, long ago. He was a champion of diversity!” Oh yeah? Well,
it wasn’t all that long ago that Byrd was using the term niggers on FOX
News, folks, remember that.

4. Now that the World Cup is over, besides a few Spaniards you might
know…you still experiencing soccer fever in your neck of the woods? No?
Exactly. Soccer now goes back to being a sport largely ignored by everybody
save for parents of kids who can play cheap because all you need is cleats,
unlike hockey or football or baseball, which cost more. And, by the time
those kids are 12-14, they’re moving to sports with more wide appeal to
Americans, like basketball and football. And, by the time you get to
college-age? Only scholarship kids are still interested in the sport, and a
tiny fraction of the American sports-viewing audience. You think soccer is
going to rival the big 4 any time soon, as many pundits were proclaiming
when the U.S. team was still alive in the tournament? Dream on.

5. The economy still sucks, jobless rate is still in the 9.7% range, and the
administration is crowing about how many jobs the porkulis bill saved? Nancy
Pelosi is out there saying in video interviews that unemployment checks are
great job-creators? Huh? Did Nancy take Economics 101 in high school, like I
did? Maybe if this was 1850 and the economy was more rooted in sales of
bread, milk and food staples she’d have a little ground to stand on, but
given that the congress has approved extension after extension after
extension of unemployment benefits (and are about to do so yet again), and
that *plus* a trillion bucks in so-called stimulus money haven’t created any
jobs, ain’t it time to admit you screwed the pooch and try what worked for
Kennedy, Reagan and Bush-tax cuts and small business incentives? Or, isn’t
four years of a huge congressional majority enough to get the unemployment
rate back to what Bush had it at during the first 6 years he held office,
which was down around 4.5%? What, that wasn’t good enough for you?

6. Jesse Jackson has every right to whine about Dan Gilbert ripping LeBron
James. But…slave mentality? Really, Jesse, you passed over Oscar Grant to
grandstand about *this?* What horseshit. Gilbert (like those fans who were
burning LeBron’s jersey in the streets outside the bar down the block from
the Cavs’ arena who *weren’t* white) has every reason to feel betrayed.
LeBron was the city’s hope. In fact, he was the face of that whole city, 10
story mural tall. And, he ignored the hometown boy aspect to go play where
he’d have a better chance to win a title or three. Which is fine. Feeling
betrayed when one of your own bolts for greener pastures is natural. But,
Jackson bringing up slavery is so beyond the pale that it’s repugnant.
Remember, LeBron went elsewhere to take *less* money, Jesse, not more. He
went to win titles, not because the Cavs were abusing him by offering him a
bigger salary and promising to try and sign an even better supporting cast.
(This, despite last year’s supporting cast widely thought to be enough to
get him to the finals). Gilbert and the Cavs were offering LeBron, by all
accounts, a whole lot more than the Heat could afford. But LeBron wanted to
win, so he and D. Wade and Chris Bosh all are gonna make less than they
*could* to try and win. Nothing wrong with that. Nothing wrong with the city
and Gilbert turning on their See Ya Later superstar, either. Only thing
wrong here? The race-baiting ‘reverend’ yapping because he needed to drum up
some instant face time on CNN. That people actually gave him any coverage
shows just how willing the media is to pander to the lowest common
denominator. Unless, of course, they were just afraid Jesse would give
frequent partner in shakedown crime Al Sharpton a call and camp out in front
of their studios. That might be part of it, too…

7) Is Lindsay Lohan really that big a deal? Seriously? Not sure which is
worse, seeing idiots who somehow think it’s wrong to lock up this tabloid
sales-generator simply because she’s been in a couple of movies, or the
hypocrites who are thumping their chests and cheering that she finally got
some jail time when they’ve got their own DUI histories or drug arrests, or
prescription pill scandals and/or addictions in the closet.

8. How many stiffs can M. Night Shyamalan churn out before somebody takes
him aside and straightens him out? I mean, the guy has talent, everybody
knows it. But when pro athletes get in a slump, like batters or golfers,
they bring in swing coaches and hitting gurus who try and get them back on
track. Doesn’t M. Night have a buddy who’s making hits who can give him a
hand?

9. Gee, Raiders former quarterback and all-time biggest NFL draft bust
JaMarcus Russell has a problem with Purple Drank, huh? What a surprise.
Could drinking cola laced with codeine syrup perhaps explain his lethargy
addiction, lazy approach to football, lackluster performance, nonexistent
work ethic and weight problem? Just maybe…?

10. The scumbag in the Connecticut home-invasion slayings is actually
claiming (well, having his lawyers do it for him), that the death penalty is
cruel and unusual and shouldn’t be applied in his case? What?! This guy and
his partner broke in, raped women and children, tied them to their beds and
poured gasoline on them, and then *set them on fire!* He also tried to
strangle the dad. Uh, lethal injection is too cruel for a guy who burned
women alive after sexually assaulting them??? What fucking chutzpah. I know
it’s deep-blue Connecticut, but I’d hope there’s at least one reporter up
there willing to say what needs to be said, and that’s: “How do you walk in
those pants with balls that big, you miserable piece of shit?”

* * * * * * * * * *

Currently listening to: Funhouse by Pink

First 10 things George Steinbrenner will do upon reaching heaven

1) Hire Billy Martin

2) Shake up that ’27 Yankees lineup

3) Threaten to sit Lou Gherig next time his batting average drops below .320

4) Raise ticket prices for seats in Jesus level and apostle box seats

5) Fire Billy Martin

6) Interview managerial candidates. On short list: Casey Stengel, Billy Martin…

7) Demand God supply new stadium with more luxury boxes. See if there’s anything the big man can do about getting Ronan Tynan up here quicker.

8) What do you mean, I can only sign dead Yankees as free agents? Got to challenge that rule.

9) Hire Billy Martin. Get into fight at press conference. Fire Billy Martin.

10) What? No premium cable package? Everything’s on free TV? Gotta have a word with the big man about *that.*

Finally...

It’s been a long time coming, but after many starts and stops, delays,
cancellations, etc., we’re getting the Coffee House Gypsies music video
rolling, oh…in just about eight hours. Can’t begin to put into words how
jazzed I am about getting back behind the camera again, because this project
poses all sorts of challenges, and I’m excited about meeting and exceeding
‘em.

Initially, we were supposed to shoot this in Miami, but when Pam and I found
a house at a price that could not be beat, and moved across the state, that
put everything on hold indefinitely. Since then? I’ve gone through two
different cameramen, several different (and equally unreliable) models, had
other projects come up, etc. So, despite the shoot being relatively simple
in terms of concept and execution, between flaky camerapeople and
model/actresses, it’s been a frustrating process.

In a couple hours, though? If all goes well (knock on wood, rub o’ the
proverbial rabbit’s foot), the hassles’ll all be in the rear view mirror and
we’ll get in a good morning of shooting, knock out 1/4 of the shot list, and
see where we stand. Then, Thursday, we go back to shooting for Inside the
Bunker, the documentary chronicling the making of my first feature film.
While we’d finished a cut of the documentary back in ‘07, so much has
changed, and I’ve needed to replace so many parts, that it only made sense
to revisit ITB. So much had happened-from Gary Finneran’s death requiring me
to find a new composer, to various people getting booted off the film, to a
seemingly endless stream of post-production nightmares, we felt that there
was just too much that went into making the movie that was left out in the
original cut. Now, we’re shooting additional interviews, covering some
aspects that I’d initially intended to ignore, and fleshing it out a bit.
Thursday, we’re probably going to knock out two segments, with three
different shooting subjects. After that, we need to schedule a date at the
location I want to use for the new introduction, and nail that down. After
that, we should be pretty much finished with shooting. It’ll be into the
editing bay again, stitching the new segments in, smoothing out the sound,
and we should be good to go.

Should be able to report some more on progress tomorrow, maybe with a few
pics from the shoot. After all, you can never go wrong uploading pics of
sexy girls, can you?

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You on Facebook? Twitter? Myspace? Well, so am I. Hit me up with questions,
comments, off-color blind jokes, your own filmmaking nightmares, whatever,
at any of the following places:


http://www.facebook.com/joemonks


http://www.myspace.com/joemonks1


http://www.twitter.com/josephmonks

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Curious about the first feature film ever directed by a blind filmmaker?
Check out the trailer, and some clips from the Making of… documentary:

Film trailer:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hobK0nS5me4

Inside the Bunker documentary clip 1:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YrrKjzNepzc

Inside the Bunker documentary clip 2:

http://youtube.com/watch?v=QXpb2F8FqgI

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Currently listening to: Marilyn, My Bitterness by The Cruxshadows

Eleven days I would like to return to via time travel

This list is Quantum Leap defined, meaning, I could only travel to one point or another in my lifetime. Still, no shortage of visits I’d like to make to the past.

1) Sept. 10, 2001
Could I stop it? Maybe, maybe not. Isn’t this the conundrum everyone from Steven Hawking to theoretical physicists to Gene Roddenbury has with time travel, changing the past? My thought? Fuck it. If I could go back to the day before the September 11 terrorist attacks, I’d do everything possible to alert the authorities, and spare the U.S. and those killed. Be nice if the hijackers still wound up dead, though, in some freakish series of simultaneous incidents post-arrest. To Hell with what the Council on Islamic-American relations would’ve said…

2) Second Wednesday in April, 1984

I’m pretty sure this was the day. Given a calendar, I could probably figure it out. But the exact date isn’t important. It’s not like a historical event (see No. 1) occurred that day. But I did cut school, met up with my girlfriend (who had also cut school, delinquints such as we were), and spent the day fooling around. Some pretty serious fooling around, at that. Won’t go into details, but as you can imagine, for a 16 year old? It was a pretty memorable day. Well worth skipping class. Not that any reason wasn’t a good one to skip class, but still…

3) Friday, April 16, 2010
Think I pegged it right, if my (often lousy) math is correct. Only a brief jaunt to the past, so as to breeze into a service station and pick up a Powerball ticket. Trust me, the clerk who won the $254 million bucks? Wouldn’t have bitched about winning $127 mil if he didn’t know any better.

4) November somethingorother, 1992
The date in question? The night my hockey team played the heavily-favored Devils for the league championship. We’d gotten blown out in game one, 12-2 I believe. Then, we pulled out a win in Game 2, forcing the deciding rubber game. We were down 2-0 late in the second, when I took a puck out from the corner, got up to about the red line, and just teed off, with time running out. I caught a break, the shot dribbled in, and we went to the third trailing by one. Midway through? I caught a great pass (think Brian Mackie fed me on it) and snapped a low wrister into the twine to tie it up. And, the reason going back would be so fun? With about two minutes left in the game and near the end of a long shift, Mike Richford has a guy freaking draped on his back, moving behind the net, trying to get free. Whilst taking a beating in the slot from a sonofabitch named Biggs who’d absolutely planted me early in the first, I got Mike’s attention and a bouncing pass which I one-timed low glove side. I can remember the shot like it happened yesterday. Kings win, 3-2. I probably oughta credit an ex who delivered a bit of motivation prior to the game but…well, won’t get into details on that part, either.

5) First Saturday in December, 1991
Another date I could probably figure out, because I think I still have the ribbon from that tournament. Only, it wasn’t hockey, but Fordham debate. I had a pretty good weekend, but the real reason for the return to the past would be to change what went down. Or, didn’t, as it were. See, this is one of those mistakes I would correct having the benefit of hindsight. I had a shot to make a move on my debate partner, after a relatively ugly incident earlier in the evening had me and two other guys ready to go crack some heads. Our hosts (three guys from Rhode Island College) were kind of crossing the line with the girl in question, and all four of them had probably had one too many. Back then? I carried (discreetly) one of those bad-ass Crocodile Dundee knives. Thing was freaking enormous. And I had it out, talking with Dave and Sloane about putting it to use in getting a couple of drunken bozos to back off my debate partner. Luckily, it never came to it. But she and I wound up staying up real, real, real late, and the opportunity was there. I’m not talking about anything serious, not sleeping together or anything like that, but at least to make the move. I didn’t act on it. I should have.

6) September 6, 2005
A couple of weeks after wrapping principal photography on my first feature film, The Bunker, I sent off the master tapes to Hart Fisher, who was supposed to do the rough cut. The editor I’d hired to cut the flick, who had a killer reel, wound up having to move to Jersey, where he or his wife (I forget which) had gotten a sweet offer with a TV station up there. Hart was never supposed to be the editor on The Bunker, but he volunteered to do the rough cut, so I sent him the tapes. I had all sorts of other hassles—hurricanes were waiting in the wings to screw things up on several scenes, for starters–but if I could go back, he’d never have even touched the footage. Incompetence, huge delays, an inability to do a decent film look, and three years later he still hadn’t cut the stuff he was originally supposed to. I wound up hiring somebody else, much better, right out of film school, and she put together a cut that got screened at the Halloween Horror Picture Show film festival; Jani Con; showings at two Florida SuperCons, and which garnered two offers from distribution companies (one being Galloping Films) to release the movie. If I didn’t have to reshoot a scene to trim the last vestiges of HDF involvement from the film, the thing would have been out back in 2007 when it was supposed to be, before the economy tanked and cash deals for indie flicks dried up like a salted slug. There’s not a lot of mistakes I would want to go back and correct that badly, but this is at the top of the list.

7) May 21, 1981
I’m sitting at home, waiting excitedly for 8 o’clock to arrive, because the Islanders are home for Game 5 of the Stanley Cup playoffs, and I have no doubt that they are going to roll over the Minnesota North Stars to win their second straight Cup. The phone rings. It’s my Dad. He tells me to get dressed, we’re going out. I tell him, we can’t go out! The Islanders are playing for the Stanley Cup. His reply? “I know. I just got tickets.” So, we wind up sitting about five rows off the ice, and the Isles deliver, knocking off Minnesota 4 games to 1. It takes us approximately two hours just to get out of the Nassau Coliseum parking lot, and the traffic didn’t bother us at all. Fans were dancing on the rooves of their cars, the chants of “Let’s Go Islanders” could be heard with accompanying car-horn beeps…it was everything you imagine winning a major championship in pro sports is like, and being there live to see it. I went to a shitload of Islanders games over the years, but I’ll go to my grave remembering that night, and the great time we had. Perhaps second to the game in terms of memorable? The look on my Dad’s face upon our foray into the Men’s room after the second period, to find it so overcrowded that two guys were simultaneously pissing in a sink. Unpleasant? Sure. But the look on my Dad’s face was utterly priceless. He probably remembers that as much as the game itself, and we still laugh about it to this day, almost 30 years later.

8) April again, 1995 this time
I can probably look it up online, because I believe it was Easter weekend. I went to the Dallas Fantasy Fair, unattached and ready to spend a couple of days out of town, hanging out with friends Keith and Shannon, at promoter Larry Langford’s huge comic con. That weekend, I kept bumping into a girl named Jen, finding it odd that we kept winding up in the same places and in the guest suite at the same times. Could be it was entirely chance, although I wound up staying with Keith and Shannon for several days after the show, where I discovered I should have been paying more attention. Yep, big damn finger snap after missing that opp. Oh well, things worked out all right the next time I had a chance to hook up with a girl from Texas, but still… Yeah, that hindsight thing again. If only you could bottle that shit and have it around whenever you needed some.

9) May 17th, 1999
I’ve just moved to Florida, and my freaking car decides to give up the ghost. Been in town a week, don’t hardly know anybody, the move cost me a bundle, and I towed the fucking thing 1,600 miles only to have it die in rush hour traffic, leaving me stranded. My Dad helped me out with a down payment on an Isuzu Hombre (which Pam and I still have and which runs *great*), but right after I bought the truck, I had a shot to buy a motorcycle, cheap, from a guy in the complex where I was living. Later on, I would get another cycle (I had one briefly in NY), but I should have grabbed the bike, and got in some more riding time before the lights went out on me. I miss a lot of things I did when I was sighted, but playing ice hockey and riding a motorcycle are probably at the top of the list, 1-2. (Working for a porno company? A very, very close 3rd.)

10) September, 1992
Little fuzzy on the timetable, but this is close enough. I’m driving through New Jersey with Annie, my girlfriend at the time, and we come around a turn, heading to some restaurant we wanted to check out. (Well, more likely she wanted to check it out and I was going along for the ride, as it was a health food place). Out of the corner of my eye, I spot a FOR SALE sign in the windshield of a vehicle parked on the corner of a gas station. About fifteen seconds pass, then Annie and I look at one another and at the same time we each say, “Did you see that?” Yep, we had. And so I turned my Ford Taurus around, and we went back to inquire about the spiffy vehicle on the lot. A 1972 Cadillac Hearse. I’m talking old-school. Fender skirts, curtains, huge and black and about the length of a small yacht. We talk to the owner, and he shows off the inside. In the back? Two huge cabinet speakers on their sides provide a killer sound system. Thing runs like a charm. The guy wants a grand for it. I know what I have in my pocket, and what I can yank out on my ATM card. I offer him $900 in cash and tell him I can be back in ten minutes. We shake on it, and fifteen minutes later, Annie is driving my car back to her place and I am rolling through Lake Hopatcong in this monstrous old horror-movie vehicle. Loved that thing. Both of us did. We even used it to go camping at the NY Renaissance fair the following spring. What a trip *that* was. I wound up putting a futon mattress in the back, which turned the thing into a rolling camper. I once drove half the hockey team to a game in it. We looked quite the sight piling out of the deathmobile, that’s for sure. When I drove into the Village and there was no parking? I simply pulled up in front of a church in a red zone and left it. Nobody ever said Boo about it. On the highway with the lights on? People automatically changed lanes. Didn’t get much to the gallon, but boy, the extra bucks I spent on gas were well worth it.

11) March 1, 1984
Here’s a mistake I would go back and correct. In January, I’d sent in my entry form to take part in the Golden Gloves, the premiere amateur boxing competition in the country. They have Golden Gloves all over, but New York is considered the top of the line. In February, I got my confirmation in the mail, and the date for me to go into Brooklyn and get my physical. No sweat, right? Well, by March my Mom’s back was in really bad shape, and she went into traction for a couple of weeks. I decided not to go take the physical, thinking if I missed it, I’d just go back the following year. You know the rest. One thing happens, then another, then I’m in college, then I have a real job, and so on. I should’ve gone, and kept it a secret. Fought once, and if I won, quit undefeated, just to say I did it. Now if I want to box (and trust me, I do), I’ll have to find somebody equally crazy to get in the ring, because I don’t want to fight another blind guy. I’ve figured out a way to make fighting a sighted guy feasible. Maybe when we get the next film rolling and I’m up visiting my producer Joe in New York, we can set it up on Opie & Anthony. Hey, if I can sword fight with a martial arts expert, I can throw leather for three, six, or nine minutes, right?

Getting away from it all

If it seems like forever since I’ve put up a new blog, that’s ‘cause it has been. Things’ve been utterly crazy around here on a number of fronts, (primarily the filmmaking front with The Bunker and Inside the Bunker, the Making of… documentary), but though it’s late and Pam and I just got back in from checking out two local bands, figured I’d blast this one out.

Two weeks ago was our 23rd wedding anniversary. Wait…6 years? Oh, that’s right. Just feels like 23. (Okay, okay, just kidding. I may be sleeping on the couch tomorrow night for *that* one.) Anyway, Pam and I hadn’t done anything in a while, so we just packed up our stuff, dropped the mutt off at my parents’, and headed outa town. No particular destination, just…North. Eventually, we tracked East, hit Orlando, and skipped Universal and Disney (we’ve done both before a couple of times), in favor of checking out a lot of the other things. Old Town, The Fun Spot, some of the smaller attractions, Universal Walk (which has restaurants, clubs, bars, etc.), that sorta thing. Had a blast, and I’ll be posting some video from the trip sometime later this week. Did the country’s biggest slingshot ride (very cool), Pam raced on a number of nutty Go Kart tracks (including one with a wipeout turn which was constantly soaked with water), spent an interesting night in a guerrilla-comic-con-flashback sleep-cheap, and ate enough to make me think twice about doing it again any time soon. Only thing we were thinking about doing and didn’t was water-skiing. (And trust me, if I get on water skis, that will *definitely* warrant it’s own video upload).

So, we bummed around aimlessly in Orlando for four days, hit the Bob Marley restaurant, hit Ponderosa (which became a fave of ours and poet Alex Ness when we did MegaCon together last summer), and eventualy wound up in Ybor City, checking out where the Castle is (the top goth spot in FL), and, a place we didn’t wait around for to open, but which you can see already has a special spot in my heart.

On the way home, I was not to be denied. The last couple of times Pam and I have been up North, usually in Tampa, I’ve missed out on hitting a Krystal Burger. Now, for those of you not in the know, Krystal is pretty much the South’s version of White Castle. Since there isn’t a White Castle within a thousand miles or so (that may be an exaggeration, but I don’t believe there’s one in FL or GA), Krystal is a must-stop type of establishment. Well, okay, not for Pam, but she didn’t grow up in Valley Stream, with a Castle right in Lynbrook, where on any given weekend, me and my buddies would all wind up sometime between three and five in the morning, after hitting McQuades, or the Dublin, or coming back from midnight hockey, or an Islanders game, or… You get the picture. White Castle. Murderburgers. Sliders. Belly bombers. Call ‘em what you will, but I’ve always loved the things and you just can’t get them down here.

But you can get Krystal, and despite the nearest one being about an hour and forty minutes away, I don’t get there as often as I’d like. So, en route home, we diverted just South of Tampa, and hit the home of little square, paper-thin, practically meatless hamburgers. Even brought a dozen home for my mom, who also likes White Castle. Occasionally, she gets a package of the frozen ones from Publix that you gotta microwave. Now, trust me. There’s not much you can do to lessen the quality of a White Castle burger. But microwaving frozen ones…? Even I have *some* standards.

So, we made the pilgrimmage to Krystal, brought back a still-warm sack as payment for the dog-sitting, and staggered on home after an exhausting four days. We also thought about Adventure Island in Tampa, the huge water park across from Busch Gardens, and we might check that out next month. Do a quick overnight, grab a cheap room at the hotel we stayed when The Bunker screened up there in ’07, and make a day of it. It’s less than two hours, so going up and coming back doesn’t create impossible hassles with Pam’s internet biz.

Here’s some pics, video to come, and a whole lot more to update you on regarding The Bunker and the docu. Check in over the next couple of days, things’re definitely heating up with the flick.

Oh, and for those who’ve been waiting, the Every day you haven’t written is a day you’ve written off… tees are back in stock. Here’s a coupon code you can use to get a couple bucks off.

Enter code: WRITETEE

‘Til next time…

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Currently listening to: Hollow by Drowning Season

Top 12 niceties at the Robert Byrd memorial service

1) Invocation, led by Grand Imperial Wizard of the KKK.

2) Festivities kicked off with Lynchburg Lemonade toast.

3) That drunk Ted Kennedy not around to pinch granddaughters’ ass and make a fool of himself trying to pick up female wait staff.

4) Guide dogs banned, but tracking dogs ready for post-service rousting of local minorities. (Both of them.)

5) Cover band to perform, “The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down.”

6) Dinner. Coal-fired BBQ, served by burning-crosslight.

7) Posthumous award of James Earl Ray medal for outstanding service.

8) Hat-tip to racial diversity video: Salute to Darkies! (approx. 09 seconds.)

9) Interment down by the Ol’ Hangin’ Tree.

10) Close of ceremonies: performance of ‘Dueling Banjos’ from Deliverance.

11) Fireworks display, huge pork barrels rolled down grassy hillside.

12) Bonus! Extra sheets in every hotel room…

Comic fans, be on the lookout-or back a book

Had a good long talk the other day with comic book artist and buddy Andrew
Mangum, and he had some kick-ass news to share. For one thing, he has a
couple of new projects in the works, including a cover, and new books. But
biggest of the big news was that he’s *the* guy on the new DC title,
Star-Spangled War Stories. Huh? Star-Spangled War Stories, you say? You
mean, like the old Star-Spangled War Stories? Yep, DC is reviving the title,
along with Wierd War Tales and several other combat-related books you old
fogy’s like me oughta remember from when you were growing up and were into
comics more than Penthouse. And, guess what? Not only is Andrew slinging the
inks on this baby, but old friend Bill Tucci (SHI), is writing it. Pretty
damned cool, finding that out. Know what else was a blast-from-the-past?
That Tom Derenick is pencilling (along with Justiniano). Tom’s an old CFD
contrib, having done the mini-series Scimidar for us back in the day, and
illustrating my story from the Subtle Violents series that imploded after a
single ish. Amazing how many guys I know or who I got to work with who are
still tearing it up in comics.

Here’s the solicitation info, and the link to the DC page. Oh, and Brian
Bolland, who I’m pretty sure I interviewed for Fred Greenberg ages ago,
provides the cover. Go check it out, and then get to your local comic book
shop and order a copy. Or two. Or five.


STAR-SPANGLED WAR STORIES

Written by WILLIAM TUCCI

. Art by JUSTINIANO and TOM DERENICK & ANDREW MANGUM

. Cover by BRIAN BOLLAND

There aren’t many French Resistance soldiers more beautiful than Mademoiselle Marie –
and there are none more deadly! When Marie is put in charge of some critical cargo,
she’ll have to keep her enemies very close, indeed. But she might not be keeping
a close-enough eye on her friends!
.32pgs.
.Color
.$3.99 US
On Sale September 29, 2010


http://www.dccomics.com/dcu/comics/?cm=15539

Okay, there you have it on the goings-on over at DC. But like I said, Andrew’s got
several projects in the works, and here’s the other one that sounds like my kinda book.

Blood and Bones

See the Trailer on Kickstarter

http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/christianberanek/blood-and-bones-a-military-horror-comic-by-christi-0

Hit the link, and tell me that the title alone doesn’t make you want to kick in
to ensure it happens. From what Andrew’s shared with me, this book is Grade-A gory.
I mean really violent. I think we spent a good twenty minutes just talking guys’
heads getting blown off and eviscerations and splatter and intestines flying like
unspooling fishing line on a rod gone out of control. But, hell, who’d expect different
with a title like Blood and Bones? Anyway, get together a couple of bucks, scrape
out the change from your couch, and get behind this one. Especially if you’re one
of the comic readers who regularly laments, “Mainstream comics suck.” Yeah, yeah,
I was hearing the same back in ‘89 when I was just getting into the biz, and I know,
while the big 3 and some companies with cash can occasionally put out good stuff,
everybody always bitches about the same thing. Then, they bitch about the independents
having to print in black and white, or charging the same four bucks for a b/w book that
Marvel or Image would be putting out in color. Hey, that’s the nature of the beast.
Sure, if you’re paying out of pocket, yeah, you can publish a book with wall-to-wall
gore and naked chicks with great racks who curse like truck stop whores who’ve done
a little prison time. But usually, the indie guys can’t front a book that looks like IDW ran it,
on the best paper, in color, with cardstock covers and Alex Ross providing painted cover art.
So…you gotta take what you can get, and from the sounds of it, Blood and Bones is the
kinda book you ain’t gonna be getting out of Marvel any time soon. Like, in your lifetime.

So, that’s the skinny on some good stuff getting cranked up from both sides of the
publishing fence. The haves over at DC, and the have balls from Christian and Andrew.

Listen, I’m not gonna bullshit you. I wouldn’t recommend an issue of, say, Iron Man
no matter who was working on it. Probably because it’d suck, and I don’t give a damn
about Iron Man and never did. Or Power Man and Iron Fist, or whoever it is they might
be trying to revive or turn into a franchiseable movie character. But a one-shot war
book and a book drenched in chaos and death and squishy internal organs? Yeah,
*that* I can get behind. Hope you feel the same way about these two.

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Currently listening to: Chemical Imbalance by Skatenigs