Joel Keller Freelance Writer

27Sep/072

Links and another TV appearance… via webcam!

Joel Keller's Facebook profileA few notes:

  • I wrote an article about Newark's new arena, the Prudential Center, for the October issue of New Jersey Monthly. Here's the link to the story.
  • I'll be on G4's Attack of the Show again tonight, on a segment called "Blog Watch." I'll be talking a little about the new fall season, concentrating on the shows G4's audience loves. Here's the interesting part: instead of schlepping into New York to do the interview from a satellite studio, I'll be doing it via webcam from my New Jersey hidey-hole. It should be on between 7:30 - 8 PM ET.
  • I've decided to dip another toe into the 21st century by creating a Facebook profile. Click on the badge to the left and you will see it. Hey, throw me a friend invite if you feel like it. Just don't poke me; that term creeps me out to no end. Next stop on the train from Ludditeville: an iPod! I've heard those things are cool.
  • I interviewed Rob McElhenney, creator and co-star of It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, for TV Squad. This time, we decided to embed the audio and list highlights rather than transcribe the whole thing. Rob gave a pretty informative and funny interview. Definitely check it out if you're a fan of the show.
10Sep/075

TV Squad mourns the loss of a friend

Folks, I encourage you to go over to my "main gig", TV Squad, today. We're paying tribute to Adam Finley, one of the biggest contributors to the site; he died Thursday morning after he was hit by a school bus while riding his bike. No one found out until Saturday; Adam didn't have any ID on him, and the medical examiner's office finally identified him via the serial number off his iPod. He was only 30.

We're foregoing news today and just posting our favorite posts from Adam, who had a love of animation, Amy Sedaris, and had a really wicked sense of humor. In my assistant editor's role at TVS, I sometimes clashed with Adam over the obscurity of what he posted. But I always enjoyed what he wrote, especially when he created fictional conversations between two people, or himself and God, or himself and a can. Yes, he's "talked" to God and a can.

You'll be missed, Adam.

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29Aug/075

Two burning questions for a late August day…

1) Both Hilly Kristal (founder of CBGB) and Richard Jewell (hero, then suspect in the bombing at the 1996 Olympics) died today. That leads me to this question: do obscure semi-celebrities die in threes? If so, who's next?

2) Doesn't new Yankee phenom Joba Chamberlain look like he's Ricky Gervais' younger brother?

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3Aug/070

Here’s a link that’s less than six years old

I just realized that the link that I posted for Andy Breckman's radio show, Seven Second Delay, hasn't been updated since 2001. So, here's some more up-to-date links: the show's blog (which happens to have a link to my article at the top... don't worry, there's no quid pro quo deal or anything like that), and a list of archived shows.

By the way, if anyone can tell me what the Robin Williams quote I discussed yesterday actually means, let me know in the comments. I've been hearing that damn quote for 20 years now (I even had the soundtrack, which had all of Williams' bits as Adrian Cronauer interspersed between the oldies), and to this day I have no idea what it means.

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2Aug/073

“Basically, it’s hotter than a snake’s ass in a wagon rut.”

ThermometerI just came back from a dance lesson (yes, I'm taking dance lessons... more on that later), and the one block walk from the dance studio -- it's over Hennessey's bar! -- to my apartment was just a murky mess. I've finally stopped sweating, about 30 minutes after coming back to my AC-bathed home (and that's a victory in and of itself, considering how poorly the AC has worked in my building over the last few summers).

Anyway, my Andy Breckman profile has finally been posted at New Jersey Monthly's web site, complete with the sidebar about Breckman's writing staff at Monk (which was completely rewritten, save for the quotes I got. But the larger article is 95% how I wrote it, which is pretty satisfying to me, considering how long it is). It was a fun article to do, as I followed Breckman around for two days, from the show's offices to the studios of WFMU, where he does a weekly radio show, to his home. The writers' room experience was interesting, especially seeing how Andy and his crew break down the story of an episode into acts and scenes within those acts. And that's before the script is even written.

Oh, and being in the writers' room led me to another story lead, which I can't talk about right now. But it's an exciting one.

By the way, the line in the post's title is from Good Morning, Vietnam. No, I don't know what it means, either. But it was probably the last live-action movie where Robin Williams' random improvised humor was actually funny. Unfortunately, it also led other filmmakers to make movies where Robin "winged it," leading to pretty ugly results.

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23Jul/071

Premiere.com and NJ Monthly

Ahh... it's always good to announce new stuff of mine that pops up throughout the publishing universe. Why? Well, ego for one thing... I like seeing my name in print. But it also makes me feel good because I know a check with numbers and a dollar sign on it will soon be arriving in the mail. And, as much as I love writing, I love getting paid to write even more.

So, allow me to announce two new pieces:

1) With The Simpsons Movie coming out, I wrote a piece for Premiere.com that examines five other movies that came out while the TV shows they were based on were still running.

2) I will also have a huge profile of Monk creator Andy Breckman coming out in the August issue of New Jersey Monthly. No link yet, but I just wanted to mention it in case you wanted to run right out and get the magazine (which would be hard, since it's not quite out yet. Should be any day, though).

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18Jul/071

Get out of my head, New York Observer!

Arghh. It's amazing how when you get an idea to write an article about some band or actor, a major publication gets the idea at the same time and ends up doing an article on them.

For instance, right as I was gathering contacts in order to pitch an article about Future 86 somewhere (see the Jul. 11 post I did about them), this week's New York Observer has a big story about them. Crap. That pretty much blows any chance I have of pitching a story about them to a local New York publication, at least for the time being.

This is the second time in a month that the Observer has crawled into my head: just when I thought it would be nice to do an article about Phil Donahue's new documentary, I click onto the paper's site and saw this. Double arghh.

Anyway, I will have some good stuff coming up on an interweb and newsstand near you, so stay tuned...

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11Jul/073

That band… from that ad… with the cute singer… you know the one…

Future86Right now, I'm watching this 1-800-OK-CABLE ad playing during the noon news. In it is a band called Future86, singing a ska-lite tune extolling the virtues of various cable providers' "Triple Play" service. The singer is this adorable young woman wearing a spangly dress and knee-high boots. She seems to have a decent voice, but I was more interested in... uh, other things.

Anyway, every time I've seen this commercial, I think the same thing: "That can't be a real band." They just seemed too slick to me, like what an ad agency's idea of a struggling pop-rock band from, say, Long Island would look like. Maybe they were dressed to nicely to seem like a real band; where are the too-small, ironic t-shirts? The hair in the eyes? The so-retro-it's-hip aviator glasses? The dirty Chuck Taylors? This group looked like a nice bunch of IT guys and a cute suburban chick who wouldn't look out of place wandering the tony Short Hills Mall (oops, I'm sorry, it's "The Mall at Short Hills").

But out of sheer boredom and journalistic curiosity, I decided to Google the band's name the other day. Turns out they're a real band, based out of Queens. The song used on the cable ad, "I Want It All," is adapted from a song the band released three years ago (you'll hear it as soon as you pop onto their MySpace page).

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25Jun/070

Updates to the mothership

JKcom titleFor those who come to this blog via direct links, you may not know that this is a sub-site of JoelKeller.com, a marketing site that I use to show my writing work to editors and other curious on-lookers.

Every few months, I update the site with new clips, many of which I've already listed here, but some of which I haven't, mainly because the articles were print-only and I had to scan them in before putting them up on the site. But here my favorite recent additions, if you need a good bathroom read (All are in PDF files unless otherwise indicated):

Profile of noted jazz pianist Bill Charlap

Profile of local theater director Barbara Krajkowski and her daughter, Jane Krakowski of 30 Rock

Profile of Edel Rodriguez, an award-winning illustrator who immigrated here from Cuba as a boy

Profile of former New York Giants center Bart Oates

Profile of Shaun Mehtani and his new Morristown restaurants (he was a hoot to interview, so I'm including the article here)

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22Jun/07Off

Something I’ve been wondering about…

midsectionYou know those stock shots of fat people's mid-sections that you usually see on the local news whenever they do a story on obesity?

I wonder if I've ever been in one of those shots.

I mean, the odds are pretty good, I'd reckon. I walk around a lot. I have a gut. It seems inevitable.

Maybe one day I saw one of those stock shots of headless obese people and shook my head, not realizing that one of those beer bellies was mine.

I wonder if the local Y is offering membership discounts...

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18Jun/070

A true brain blurp

BlurpEver think you've got the perfect subject for an essay or blog post, then when you actually get down to writing the thing, it comes out all wrong? That just happened to me tonight.

I was going to make some funny observations on how models are the best salespeople because they make even the boring clothes from Land's End and Eddie Bauer look good (especially the women... the dresses they sell at those places look like potato sacks). But the more I tried to write, the more the blog entry sounded a) more like a true gripe than a humor essay, and b) made me sound like a nerdier version of Mr. Blackwell.

I guess that's the reason why I started that blog; to have a place where I can work out the "clever" ideas that pop into my head and see if they'll actually work on paper. In this case, I was able to see my folly before hitting the "Publish" button. But I still think there's something there, humor-wise (hopefully in a way where I can incorporate the name "Bea Arthur" somewhere in the essay). Maybe you fine folks can help me find the funny in this one; it's still on the site as a draft if I ever want to go back to it.

P.S. Like the new favicon? I added it on Friday night. It took me a couple of hours to get that bugger done and uploaded, but now it's there for all to enjoy. Man oh man, I need to go out more...

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13Jun/073

I’ve been slacking

I've heard that in order for your blog to have a realistic chance of being taken "seriously," that you need to add at least three entries per week. As you can tell, I'm kind of falling behind in that regard. What can I say? I'm not really in a bloggery state of mind.

Final SopranosSo, about this Sopranos mishegas...

From what I'm seeing, the percentage of people who were satisfied with how the show ended seems to be right up there with President Bush's approval rating, and I can understand why. You watch a show for eight years, put up with its ins and outs, wait eons between seasons, and when the show finally reaches the conclusion everyone's been waiting to see for almost three years, all they see is the screen go to black. Tony doesn't get whacked, and we have no idea what actually happened. On top of it all, the show concludes with a cliched song from the second most boring band of all time (after Rush). So I can see how people would get frustrated on many levels.

But, as a writer, I could see where David Chase was going with that ending.

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5Jun/077

Quick question for you veteran bloggers

Anyone know of a good way to block comment sp*m? I seem to be getting at least one of them per day, and it's starting to annoy me. Maybe there's a WordPress plug-in that'll help me with this....

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30May/078

36 years ago today…

TV Guide May 29, 1971Thirty-six years ago today, my mother gave birth to me after what I'm sure was seventy-two straight hours of painful labor (I haven't heard the story in years, but I'm sure the number of hours goes up every time she tells someone).

One thing I've noticed is that the more birthdays I have, the less I realize that the actual day is upon me, which is strange, since I used to like getting attention on my "big day" when I was younger. Maybe it's because the years go faster as I get older, or maybe it's because I've been busy keeping my writing career going, but the last couple of birthdays have come upon me suddenly, to the point where I tend to let the day pass just like any other day.

I'm not one of those people who throws themselves a birthday party or gathering; to me, turning another year older isn't anything special. But every few years, I like to do something memorable -- at least to me -- on May 30, like when I saw my friend Tom's (now defunct) band play an acoustic gig in Hoboken on my 30th birthday. It was such a nice, peaceful way to spend a day whose arrival I had been freaking out about in the months that led up to it (that's a story for whatever memoir I happen to write).

Anyway, instead of prattling on about my birthday, I will utilize the power of Google and link to stories about events that happened on May 30, 1971. Those links will be after the jump.

(By the way, the pic is the cover of TV Guide from the week I was born. It seems perfectly fitting that it was of All In The Family, the hot new show of that television season.)

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25May/07Off

Lawyers will sue anybody, won’t they?

Josh HancockI just read that the family of St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Josh Hancock, who was killed last month when his SUV crashed into the back of a tow truck, is suing just about everyone involved in the incident, despite the fact that Hancock was driving drunk at the time of the accident.

To quickly recap: Hancock had been drinking at Mike Shannon's restaurant in St. Louis after an afternoon game. Despite having a blood alcohol level that was twice the legal limit, he got in his SUV. It was reported that not only was Hancock intoxicated, but he was also talking on his cell phone at the time he hit the tow truck. Oh, and he also wasn't wearing a seatbelt.

As tragic as the situation is to his family, mostly everyone has to agree that Hancock was fully responsible for his own death. Everyone, that is, but Hancock's family and the lawyers they hired. Not only are they suing the restaurant that served him those drinks, but they're also suing the tow truck company, the tow truck driver and the driver of the stalled car that the tow truck was trying to remove.

Apparently, according to the suit, not getting your car out of the way after it stalls is now an actionable offense. Cripes. Leave it to the law profession to figure out new ways to screw innocent people. I mean, really; so what if the guy whose car broke down could have moved it to the side of the road? And the tow truck driver was just trying to do his job; apparently, he had just arrived a minute or two before Hancock crashed into the back of his truck. Hancock drank too much, he talked on a cell phone while driving drunk, and he wasn't wearing his seatbelt.

I know the Hancock family is upset, and they think this might give them some closure on the matter. But why spread your misery to others who weren't involved? Hopefully, they'll come to their senses once their grief subsides a little bit and drop the suit. Either that or a judge will make them pay for the legal fees of at least the tow truck company and driver and the driver of the stalled car. They don't deserve this nightmare.

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