Sunday, July 8, 2012

Operagasm: La Bohème, Act III

Previous installments: Act I, Act II

Act III: The Barrière d'Enfer, a toll-gate on the outskirts of Paris. There's also a tavern because everyone in this opera is always drunk. It's some time around the ass-crack of dawn.

Street Sweepers: OPEN THE GATE WE'RE FREEZING OUR NUTS OFF

Toll-Gate Guy: Calm your tits, I'll be there in a minute.

Women in the Tavern: SOMETHING SOMETHING LOVE SONG

Musetta: HEY DO YOU GUYS RECOGNIZE THIS MELODY

The Audience: Yeah, it's your aria from Act II. Do you want a medal or something?

Men in the Tavern: SOMETHING SOMETHING DRINKING SONG

The Audience: So, wait. It's already Act III and no one's dead yet? What the hell kind of opera is this?

Milkmaids: Hey girl haaaaaaaaay

Toll-Gate Guy: Oh I am so sick of these bitches.

[Toll-Gate Guy checks the contents of everyone's baskets as they come through the gate.]

Milkmaids: CHICKEN AND EGGS

The Audience: Yes Puccini thank you for this little slice of life NOW CAN SOMETHING INTERESTING HAPPEN

The Orchestra: MI CHIAMANO MIIIIMIIIIIIIIIII

The Audience: Finally.

[Mimi enters, looking sickly, and approaches the Other Toll-Gate Guy.]

Mimi: Hey, I'm looking for a tavern where a painter works. Little help?

Other Toll-Gate Guy: This is Paris, you dumb slut. Literally every tavern in the city has at least one painter.

Mimi: This one's named Marcello.

Other Toll-Gate Guy: Not ringing any bells.

Mimi: Studly baritone? Hangs out with a dominatrix?

Other Toll-Gate Guy: Oh, that Marcello. Yeah, he's in the tavern upstage left. 

The Audience: That was convenient.

Mimi: Hey, random woman -- could you go into that tavern and find a painter named Marcello? I really need to talk to him.

Random Woman: Yeah sure whatever. Wanna give me a couple francs to make it worth my while?

Mimi: I'm broke as fuck, so probably not.

Random Woman: grumble grumble grumble

[Random Woman goes into the tavern, and Marcello emerges shortly thereafter.]

Marcello: Oh hey, Mimi. I'm guessing you were the cheapskate bitch who needed to talk to me?

Mimi: Yuuuuup.

Marcello: What's so damn important that we have to talk outside? It's fucking freezing out here, and I'm sure that can't be good for that completely harmless cough you've had for a while now.

Mimi: Is Rodolfo inside?

Marcello: Yeah, why?

Mimi: Wellllllll I'm about to bitch about him, so the tavern isn't really the best option. Better get used to the cold, wuss.

Marcello: Go to hell. So what's the problem?

Mimi: The problem is that Rodolfo's a fucking nutcase.

The Audience: FINALLY SOMEONE REALIZES THIS

Marcello: Ooookay... care to elaborate on that?

Mimi: He's always suspicious and he yells at me and tells me I'm a terrible girlfriend and also HE STARES AT ME WHILE I SLEEP LIKE HE'S TRYING TO READ MY MIND.

Twilight Fans in the Audience: Wait, I don't get it. Is that supposed to be a bad thing?

The Rest of the Audience: WHO THE HELL LET YOU PEOPLE INTO THE THEATER

Marcello: You two dumb bitches wouldn't know a healthy relationship if it bent you over the table and sodomized you with a giant pink strap-on.

The Audience: That was... oddly phrased. And also weirdly specific.

Marcello: And speaking of which, Musetta and I are doing great!

Mimi: Oh. Oh god. That was a mental image I didn't even remotely need.

Marcello: I'm not gonna lie, though; I'm pretty sore. Sometimes the friction gets so bad that I just -- 

Mimi: YES OKAY SHUT UP

Marcello: Long story short, Musetta and I are the model of a healthy relationship.

Mimi: Uh-huh. You know, you're dumber than you look.

Marcello: What's that supposed to mean?

Mimi: Nothing, sweetie. OH SHIT RODOLFO'S COMING I THINK I'LL HIDE

Marcello: That seems like a perfectly normal reaction.

[Mimi conceals herself just as Rodolfo enters from the tavern.]

Rodolfo: There you are. What the hell are you doing out here in the cold?

Marcello: DEFINITELY NOT LISTENING TO YOUR GIRLFRIEND TALK SHIT ABOUT YOU

Rodolfo: Wait, what?

Marcello: I mean... just getting some fresh air. Like you do.

Rodolfo: Whatever. Anyway, I think I'm probably going to break up with Mimi.

Marcello: Because you're a little bitch?

Rodolfo: 'Cause she's a ho.

Marcello: ... really.

Rodolfo: To be more specific, she's a ho fo' sho'.

Marcello: Yeah, I don't think that's actually true.

Rodolfo: OKAY FINE IT'S BECAUSE SHE'S DYING OF CONSUMPTION BUT SHE DOESN'T KNOW YET SO YOU CAN'T TELL HER

Mimi: [still hiding] ... son of a BITCH.

Marcello: Okay, I have a couple questions. First of all, how in the actual fuck do you know about her debilitating illness when she apparently doesn't?

Rodolfo: Um...

Marcello: Because last time I checked, coughing up bloody chunks of your own respiratory system was pretty fucking hard to miss.

Rodolfo: Huh. That really doesn't make any goddamn sense, does it.

The Audience: Nnnnnnnope.

Puccini: Fuck all y'all haters. You can just deal with it.

Marcello: Second, are you telling me that Mimi is literally dying and -- instead of doing anything to help -- you decided the best course of action would be to start verbally and emotionally abusing her?

Rodolfo: Apparently. Also, I'm pretty sure that making her live in my tiny, dirty, frigid apartment is only exacerbating her condition.

Marcello: Wow. I think you might be the worst human being I've ever met.

The Audience: Wasn't this opera supposed to be romantic?

Mimi: [starts coughing up a lung]

Rodolfo: OH SHIT IT'S MIMI

Marcello: Yeah, I'm pretty sure she heard everything. Have a fun breakup, bro.

Mimi: WHAT THE FUCK WHY WOULDN'T YOU TELL ME I HAVE TUBERCULOSIS

Rodolfo: I thought it would be better to make your life a living hell until you decided to leave me and my death trap of an apartment! Honest!

Marcello: God, you guys are so fucked up. It's too bad you can't be happy and carefree like Musetta and I are!

[Musetta's laugh is heard from the tavern.]

Marcello: MUSETTA YOU DIRTY WHORE IF YOU'RE FLIRTING WITH SOMEONE ELSE I'M GONNA FLAY YOU ALIVE AND USE YOUR SKIN AS A CANVAS

The Audience: Holy shit. Is anyone in this opera not a complete fucking psychopath?

[Marcello rushes offstage with murder on the brain.]

Mimi: Sooooo yeah. We're pretty much done here.

Rodolfo: But I love youuuuuu

Mimi: I mean... I still love you for some reason, but I also love being alive and not being in an abusive relationship. Soooo I'm gonna send someone to pick up my things, but you can keep that bonnet you bought me.

Rodolfo: So I can treasure the memory of our time together?

Mimi: No, mostly because I just realized it's garish as fuck.

Rodolfo: Oh. Well, I guess now would be a good time to reminisce about all my favorite parts of the relationship!

Mimi: And I will dwell on everything negative!

The Men in the Audience: Sounds pretty accurate.

Mimi: Goodbye to jealousy and suspicion!

Rodolfo: Goodbye to all that great sex we had!

Mimi: Goodbye to the constant fighting!

Rodolfo: And also great sex!

Mimi: But you know what sucks? Being single in the winter. It's just, like... super depressing.

Rodolfo: Totally. It would be so much better if we could wait to break up until spring.

Both: Hmmmmmm....

The Audience: NO NO NO YOU FUCKING MORONS

[Musetta enters, pursued by an irate Marcello.]

Marcello: WHAT THE FUCK WERE YOU JUST DOING

Musetta: I don't know what you mean.

Marcello: No, really. You're gonna have to explain what I just saw, because I have no fucking idea what that was. There were ropes everywhere and several midgets and a bottle of ranch dressing and... was that a lemur?

Musetta: I was just having some fun. You need to chill out.

Marcello: YOU NEED TO STOP FUCKING EVERYTHING THAT MOVES

Musetta: I DO WHAT I WANT

Marcello: I REFUSE TO BE CUCKOLDED THIS WAY

Musetta: Too late, bitch!

Marcello: SLUT

Musetta: PUSSY

Marcello: SHE-DEVIL

Musetta: MEDIOCRE PAINTER

Marcello: Oh no you didn't.

[Marcello and Musetta exit, screaming profanities at each other.]

Rodolfo: So it's agreed: you'll stay in my drafty-ass apartment during the coldest part of the year, despite my earlier suspicions that living there was literally killing you, and then you'll move out in the spring when it starts getting warm again!

Mimi: My favorite part of this plan is how much sense it makes!

Both: OUR LOVE IS SO BEAUTIFUL

The Audience: ....... what the FUCK.

[End of Act III.]

Next installment: Act IV

Sunday, July 1, 2012

Operagasm: La Bohème, Act II

Previous installments: Act I

Act II: Cafe Momus, the hang-out of choice for douchey Parisian hipsters. Still Christmas Eve.

The Chorus: WE'RE DRUNK

Street Urchins: WE'RE OBNOXIOUS

Vendors: GET SOME HOT COCOA, BITCHES

[Enter Marcello, Schaunard, and Colline. Schaunard makes a beeline for the music vendor.]

Schaunard: Hey, this trumpet is super out of tune. I'll take it!

The Audience: For the love of -- WHY DO YOU ALL SUCK AT WHAT YOU DO

Colline: I LOVE MY COAT

Anyone Who Cares About Colline: [does not appear in this scene]

[Enter Mimi and Rodolfo. Their psychotically codependent relationship has gotten exponentially worse since we saw them five minutes ago.]

Rodolfo: I love you!

Mimi: I love you more!

Rodolfo: No, I love you more!

Mimi: Well, I love you most.

The Audience: [vomits everywhere]

Marcello: Hello, ladies. Look at your man. Now back to me. Now back to your man. Now back to me. ... Wanna fuck?

Prune Vendor: WHO WANTS PRUNES

Marcello: Y'all better get ready, 'cause I'm into some weird shit.

Prune Vendor: I'M NOT FUCKING KIDDING YOU ASSHOLES BETTER BUY SOME GODDAMN PRUNES

Marcello: Anyone? Aaaaanyone? ... Bueller?

Colline: I ALSO LOVE BOOKS

Schaunard: Yeah, no one cares.

Marcello: Well, no one's agreed to have sex with me yet. Let's just get a table.

Mimi: Oh. My. God. Look at this adorable bonnet!

The Audience: Wow. That's... really pink. And frilly.

Rodolfo: Ohmigod it's perfect for you and it brings out your eyes sooooo well!

Mimi: I know, right?

The Audience: It looks like a unicorn vomited.

Mimi: Buy it for me!

Rodolfo: Anything for you, baby.

Mimi: That necklace is pretty cool too...

Rodolfo: BITCH DO YOU THINK I'M MADE OF MONEY

The Chorus: OH BY THE WAY WE'RE STILL HERE

Rodolfo: WHO WERE YOU LOOKING AT JUST THEN

Mimi: Really? We've been dating for ten minutes and you're already jealous?

Rodolfo: It's only because I love you SO MUCH that I just want to lock you in my attic and keep you ALL TO MYSELF

Mimi: Awww, that's so romantic.

The Audience: [uncomfortable silence]

Schaunard: Waiter! Bring us ALL THE FOOD

Parpignol: I'M SUPER CREEPY AND I HAVE LOTS OF TOYS

[Rodolfo and Mimi finally join the others.]

Rodolfo: Oh hey, guys. This is Mimi and she's my soul mate! Our group kinda sucked before, but now that she's here EVERYTHING WILL BE AWESOME FOREVER

Marcello: Yeah, good luck with that.

Colline: Pretentious Latin saying!

Schaunard: Witty retort!

Colline: It wasn't actually that witty.

Schaunard: Eat a dick.

Parpignol: WHAT'S UP BITCHES I'M BACK

Colline: SOMEONE BRING ME SOME SALAMI

Street Urchins: AAAAAHHHH IT'S PARPIGNOL AAAHHHHHH

The Audience: Goddammit. We came to the opera to get away from our kids.

Mothers: CHILDREN GET AWAY FROM THAT MAN HE'S PROBABLY SOME SORT OF PEDERAST

Parpignol: I also have some candy in my pocket, but you'll have to reach in there to get it.

Street Urchins: YAAAAAY CANDY

[And then he leads all the children away like the Pied Piper and for some reason no one onstage seems to have a problem with it.]

The Audience: Wait, what in the actual fuck just happened?

Puccini: It's a metaphor or something. Stop asking questions.

Marcello: Aaaaaand let's never speak of that again. So what did Rodolfo buy you, Mimi?

Mimi: It's this cute pink bonnet that I really wanted and he knew that I wanted it because we're in love and he can read my heart's deepest desires!

The Audience: Either that or you just told him you wanted one.

Mimi: SHUT UP I LIKE MY VERSION BETTER

Marcello: Whatever, dumbasses. Love is totally overrated.

Mimi: What crawled up his ass?

Rodolfo: He's just pissed 'cause his hot girlfriend left him for a geriatric sugar daddy.

Schaunard: LET'S CHANGE THE SUBJECT

Colline: MORE BOOZE

Marcello: I solemnly swear that I will never think about Musetta again!

[Musetta's laugh is heard.]

Marcello: GodDAMN it.

The Audience: Well, that was predictable.

[Musetta enters, followed shortly thereafter by Alcindoro, the previously mentioned geriatric sugar daddy.]

The Chorus: OH HEY IT'S MUSETTA DAAAAAMN SHE LOOK FINE

Alcindoro: ... so tired ... my brittle old bones ...

Musetta: GET YOUR ASS OVER HERE, LULU

The Audience: ... did she just call him "Lulu?"

Musetta: Yuuuuuup.

The Audience: Why would you call him that?

Musetta: I DO WHAT I WANT

The Audience: Ooooookay.

Alcindoro: Could you maybe not call me that in public?

Musetta: Excuse me, was I talking to you?

Alcindoro: ... no. Sorry.

Musetta: Sorry WHAT?

Alcindoro: Sorry, mistress.

Musetta: That's better. Now sit there and shut the fuck up while I order everything on the menu.

Alcindoro: Yes, mistress.

Mimi: Soooo is someone gonna tell me who that crazy bitch is?

Marcello: That's Musetta. She's pure evil and she mates with men and devours their hearts and also she has cooties and is a big stupid stupidhead.

Mimi: It's good to know you're handling the breakup so well.

Musetta: HEY MARCELLO OVER HERE LOOK AT ME

Marcello: [drinks a handle of vodka]

Musetta: MARCELLOOOOOOO

Marcello: [throws up]

Musetta: How to get his attention... HEY WAITER THIS PLATE SMELLS FUNNY

[She starts throwing dishes everywhere because she's insane.]

Colline: Wow, this is great food.

Schaunard: I know, right?

Musetta: COME ON PAY ATTENTION TO ME YOU ASSHOLES

Alcindoro: Hey, mistress... do you think that maybe we could keep the volume and/or property damage to a minimum?

Musetta: Sounds like someone wants to spend another night in the cage.

Alcindoro: [whimpers]

Musetta: Good boy. Time for Plan B!

Alcindoro: What's Plan B?

Musetta: It's where I sing an aria to seduce my ex and then totally abandon you for him.

Alcindoro: Oh.

Musetta: Yeah, when I walk on by
Boys be lookin' like "Damn, she fly!
Something something something
WIGGLE WIGGLE WIGGLE YEAH
I'm sexy and I knooooow iiiiiiiit

Alcindoro: [weeps softly for his lost dignity]

Marcello: God help me I want to tap that ass so hard

Schaunard: Five bucks says Marcello gets back with Crazy-Face over there.

Colline: Meh. She's not my type.

Schaunard: What are you, gay?

Colline: As a matter of fact...

[Schaunard and Colline lock eyes. Time slows to a standstill, and then they start making out like WHOA.]

Musetta: It's still not working. Time for Plan C!

Alcindoro: I really don't want to know what that is, do I.

Musetta: OH GOD WHAT IS THIS SEARING PAIN IN MY FOOT

Alcindoro: Something tells me your foot doesn't actually hurt.

Musetta: IT MUST BE MY SHOE

Alcindoro: You know, you could just break up with me like a normal person.

Musetta: GO GET ME A DIFFERENT PAIR

Alcindoro: I think we should see other people. Mostly because you're a sociopath.

[Alcindoro leaves.]

Marcello: Maybe it's the foot fetish talking, but I am so hot for you right now.

Musetta: Shut up and put on this ball-gag, bitch.

Marcello: I thought you'd never ask.

[Schaunard and Colline come up for air long enough to notice that the waiter has delivered their bill.]

Schaunard: Well, fuck. This is super expensive.

Rodolfo: I barely ate anything. Can Mimi and I be on a separate check?

Colline: Oh, come on. Let's just split it evenly.

Rodolfo: I don't want to pay for your giant salami, you asshole. You wouldn't even share!

Schaunard: I've got your giant salami riiiiiiiight here.

Everyone: SHUT UP, SCHAUNARD

Schaunard: Fuck you guys. Oh, and can somebody spot me for dinner? All that cash I had in Act I has mysteriously disappeared.

Mimi: So, wait. Is the tip included, or should we leave something on the table?

Colline: I still don't understand why we can't just divide it five ways.

Rodolfo: Because you ate twice as much as everyone else!

Musetta: EVERYONE CALM YOUR TITS WE CAN JUST PUT YOUR FOOD ON ALCINDORO'S TAB

Marcello: That's my girl!

Musetta: Did I say you were allowed to talk?

The Chorus: OH HEY THERE'S A PARADE OR SOMETHING

Everyone: LOVE IS WONDERFUL AND NOTHING BAD WILL EVER HAPPEN TO US AGAIN

The Audience: [facepalm]

[End of Act II.]

Next installment: Act III

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Operagasm: La Bohème, Act I

Act I: A shitty attic in the shittiest part of Paris. Christmas Eve.

Marcello: I'M A FUCKING TERRIBLE PAINTER

Rodolfo: I'M A FUCKING TERRIBLE WRITER

Both: Boy, it sure sucks to be poor, freezing, and starving.

The Audience: THEN GET A GODDAMN JOB

Marcello: Whatever. We're not that desperate.

Rodolfo: Hey, soooo it's the middle of winter and we have no more fuel for our stove. Do you think this might be a problem?

Marcello: Definitely. It's colder in here than in that bitch Musetta's heart.

Rodolfo: Solid exposition, bro.

Marcello: Totes. Bros before hoes?

Rodolfo: You know it. But seriously, though, we might freeze to death.

Marcello: LET'S SET THE CHAIR ON FIRE

Rodolfo: You're a moron. Our art will keep us warm!

The Audience: grumble grumble hipsters grumble grumble

Marcello: LET'S SET MY PAINTING ON FIRE

Rodolfo: No, that would make too much smoke. After all, few things are more important than a healthy respiratory system. Let's burn my play instead!

Marcello: You mean the play you've been working on non-stop for the past six months?

Rodolfo: Yuuuuup.

Marcello: And you want to throw all of that away for a few minutes of warmth?

Rodolfo: I fail to see the problem.

The Audience: Aaaaaand this is why you're broke, jackasses.

[Marcello and Rodolfo feed the play into the stove. Enter Colline, a pretentious philosopher with an admittedly kickass coat.]

Colline: Verily, it's cold as balls in here.

Rodolfo: Fuck yourself.

[Colline joins the others at the fire, which quickly burns out. Marcello and Rodolfo consider slitting Colline open like a tauntaun and huddling inside his carcass for warmth. Enter Schaunard with food, booze, firewood, and money; he's the musician of the group, so of course he's the most successful.]

The Musicians in the Audience: HA HA OH YEAH THAT'S DEFINITELY HOW THE WORLD WORKS

Everyone Else: Isn't he the drag queen in Rent?

Schaunard: Oh man you guys so this old British asshole hired me to play for him until this other guy's parrot died so then I played for a while and then I was all like "fuck this" and I broke into the parrot guy's apartment and banged the chambermaid because I'm TOTALLY NOT GAY and then I murdered the parrot and the British guy paid me and it was LEGEN -- wait for it --

Marcello: Cool story, bro.

Rodolfo: Yeah, it's riveting. Pass the turkey?

Colline: om nom nom nom nom

Schaunard: -- DARY. LEGENDARY.

Crickets: chirp chirp

Schaunard: Oh, you can all go to hell. And stop eating all my food!

No One: [pays any attention to Schaunard]

Schaunard: But guuuuuuuys, it's Christmas Eeeeeeeve and I wanna go oooouuut

Marcello: Fine, we'll go out, but only if you SHUT UP.

Schaunard: Yaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay

[There's a knock on the door.]

Benoit: Sooooo hey, you guys, you haven't paid any rent in several months and it's beginning to piss me off.

Colline: NO ONE'S HOME

Benoit: Yeah that's not actually gonna work.

Marcello: ALSO WE HAVE LOCKED THE DOOR

Benoit: I have a spare key and can let myself into your apartment literally any time I want. You guys really haven't thought this through, have you.

Marcello: ...fuck.

[They let him in.]

Benoit: But seriously, give me my fucking money before I'm forced to cut you in the face like a Cockney whore.

Marcello: Hey, man, be cool. Captain ADHD over there just got paid --

Schaunard: Rude.

Marcello: -- so we've got all the money we owe you right here. Care for a drink?

Benoit: Don't mind if I do!

[Sixteen measures later:]

Benoit: HOLY SHIT YOU GUYS I'M SO DRUNK

Marcello: Sooooooo is there any incriminating personal information you'd like to share with us?

Benoit: Well, now that you mention it, I love me some fat chicks.

Rodolfo: Go on...

Benoit: Yeah, they're dynamite in the sack because they have no self-respect. Skinny bitches be trippin' balls, though. Like my wife!

Everyone: SOMETHING SOMETHING MORAL OUTRAGE

Benoit: Wait, what?

Everyone: GTFO

Benoit: But I thought we were broooooooooos

[They throw him the hell out.]

Marcello: So now that we've blackmailed our landlord, we never have to pay rent again!

Everyone: WOOOOOO

The Audience: [starts considering blackmail as as a viable solution to financial problems]

Schaunard: Now let's go get hammered!

Rodolfo: You guys go ahead; I have to finish an article for some newsletter you've never heard of.

Marcello: Sure you do. There's lotion and Kleenex in the cabinet; don't take too long.

Rodolfo: I hate you so much.

[Marcello, Schaunard, and Colline leave the apartment and promptly fall down the stairs.]

Rodolfo: KARMA, BITCHES

Colline: ...my spleen...

[There's yet another knock at the door.]

Rodolfo: Oh, for fuck's sake. Who is it now?

Mimi: Hey, it's your hot and totally single downstairs neighbor. My candle just went out -- got a light?

Rodolfo: You only have one candle? And no matches?

Mimi: You don't understand how this whole "flirting" thing works, do you.

Rodolfo: Nnnnnnnope.

The Audience: [facepalm]

Mimi: [falls over]

Rodolfo: OH NO ARE YOU OKAY

Mimi: Yeah, I'm just tired out from the stairs. There's nothing wrong with my health, though. Nothing at all.

Puccini: DID YOU GUYS GET MY FORESHADOWING

99% of the Audience: YES WE GET IT SHUT UP

The Other 1%: I think those two crazy kids are gonna be alllll right!

Rodolfo: So I lit your candle and stuff. Why are you still here?

Mimi: Jesus Christ, I have to do everything myself. OH NO I DROPPED MY KEY AND IT WAS TOTALLY AN ACCIDENT

Rodolfo: Oh no!

Mimi: AND MY CANDLE HAS GONE OUT AGAIN

Rodolfo: [finally realizes what's going on] Ohhhhhhhhh.

The Audience: Christ, you're a moron.

Rodolfo: AND NOW MY CANDLE HAS ALSO GONE OUT

Mimi: WE'RE ALONE IN THE DARK TOGETHER

Rodolfo: WHATEVER SHALL WE DO

The Audience: OH JUST BONE ALREADY

Rodolfo: Oh hey, your hand is super cold. I know just how to warm you up: an aria!

Mimi: Oh joy.

Rodolfo: I'm a poet and I'm broke as fuck
But if I had a million dollars
I'd buy your loooove
'Cause hey baby you so fine
You so fine you blow my mind
And when I get that feelin'
I want sexual healin'
Oh and by the way, what's your name?

Mimi: Wellllll my name's Lucia but everyone calls me Mimi because why the fuck not. Mostly I just sit alone in my apartment and wish I had a studly poet to have sex with. And also I embroider flowers sometimes and CAN WE MAKE OUT YET

Marcello, Schaunard, and Colline: [outside in the street] NNNNOPE

Mimi: ...goddammit.

Marcello: COME ON RODOLFO AREN'T YOU DONE JERKING IT YET

Rodolfo: SHUT UP GUYS I HAVE A LADY OVER

Schaunard: BLOW-UP DOLLS DON'T COUNT

Rodolfo: WILL YOU ASSHOLES GO AWAY AND STOP COCKBLOCKING ME

Marcello, Schaunard, and Colline: Fiiiiiiine.

[They leave.]

Rodolfo: So, where were we?

Mimi: Wellllll I've been throwing myself at you for the past ten minutes, but now I think I'm just gonna be super coy.

Rodolfo: But I wanna get laaaaaaaid

Mimi: Nope. We're gonna go out with your friends instead.

Rodolfo: And then we can make the sex when we get back?

Mimi: Yeah sure whatever.

Rodolfo: Say you love me!

The Audience: Whoa there, crazy. Slow your roll.

Mimi: I love you SO MUCH

The Audience: Wait, what? Did he just hypnotize her or something?

Rodolfo and Mimi: WE WILL LOVE EACH OTHER FOREVER

The Audience: YOU'VE KNOWN EACH OTHER FOR FIFTEEN MINUTES WHAT THE HELL IS WRONG WITH YOU PEOPLE

[End of Act I.]

Next installment: Act II

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

The Dreaded Friend Zone

Unless you've been spending most of your time in seclusion at a Tibetan monastery, chances are you've heard about the movie adaptation of The Hunger Games and how it made obscenely large piles of money at the box office. The lady-friend and I contributed to its massive success on opening day, and we agreed that it was a surprisingly good adaptation – it remained very true to the spirit of the book, but it didn't cripple itself by trying to be a carbon copy. It changed a few things and dropped a few others, but most of the changes actually made the story work better by putting it into a wider perspective. In fact, the only negative reviews I've heard so far were from people who hadn't read the book at all, which is understandable: the movie basically takes it for granted that you've read the book and understand what's going on, so it doesn't necessarily work well as a stand-alone film. That being said, it's probably going to make a lot of people go out and buy the novel, so Suzanne Collins is pretty much making out like a bandit on this one.

In any case, The Hunger Games is aimed primarily at an audience of adolescent females, so it's required by law to have a romantic subplot in which two eligible young men throw themselves at the leading lady. Furthermore, the fact that it's a trilogy instead of a single novel means that the protagonist won't decide with whom to swap bodily fluids until the last possible moment – meaning that fans on “Team Peeta” and “Team Gale” (sorry, Team Haymitch; yours is a love that can never exist outside of badly-written fanfiction) will be cockteased with kisses, lingering looks, and conflicted feelings for three whole books before Katniss finally makes up her goddamn mind.

The Fans: KAAAATNISSSSSS WE WANT YOU TO BE WITH [STUDLY BACHELOR X]!

Katniss: Do you mind? I kinda have more important things to worry about right now.

The Fans: BUT KAAAATNIIIISSSSSSSSSSS

Katniss: WILL YOU BITCHES SHUT UP I AM BUSY HUNTING THE MOST DANGEROUS GAME OF ALL

The Fans: woooooow she a bitch. [Long pause.] GALE x PEETA OTP 4EVA

Suzanne Collins: … goddammit.

And this is why we can't have nice things.

In any case, Katniss does eventually choose one of the boys (SPOILER ALERT I'm not actually going to say who it is but it's pretty obvious), which means that everyone on Team Reject is all like “GOD Katniss is such a heartless bitch for not choosing [Reject] when they have such a meaningful friendship” and everyone who hears their whining feels the sudden urge to commit wanton acts of violence.

Aaaaaaand this brings me to my rant of the day: people need to shut the hell up about the Friend Zone.

What is the Friend Zone, you might ask? For the answer, let us turn to Rod Serling, one of Binghamton's only claims to fame except carousels:

Imagine, if you will, a young man. He is neither handsome nor athletic, but – like all men – he craves the attention of the fairer sex. For years, this young man has been drawn to a certain young woman: beautiful, popular, and practically perfect in every way. He would do anything to prove his love for her, but she doesn't think of him that way. He can only be a pal, a study buddy, and occasionally a shoulder to cry on – but never a lover. This young man is forever doomed to love a girl who will never love him back, eternally trapped in a twilight world of chaste hugs and blue balls: a world known only as... The Friend Zone.

Get the picture?

And just to be specific, this can happen to anyone – male or female, gay or straight. All that's required is a case of unrequited love and a counter-offer of a continuing platonic relationship.

Now, the Friend Zone is all well and good when it's brought up for humorous purposes, but I've heard enough people refer to it in serious discourse that it's starting to get a little disturbing. A lot of people are using the term in a reproachful way, insinuating that they're owed something by the object of their affection, and that's just plain bullshit. If you resent a girl for not feeling the same way about you that you feel about her, you're actually resenting her for A) not being a slave to your emotional whims, and B) not having control over something that people can't really control in the first place. Emotions are tricky sons of bitches – I've been known to fall for people when I'm dead-set on staying single, and I'm willing to bet good money that any number of my ex-girlfriends wish they could have been attracted to someone else instead. You can't control whom you have chemistry with, and you can't just snap your fingers and decide that you have chemistry with someone you've never been attracted to before – that's what alcohol is for, and it would be pretty damn expensive to go through a relationship in a state of constant inebriation.

And also it would probably be damaging to your health or something.

Another common claim about the Friend Zone is that it's the (nearly) exclusive realm of “nice guys.” You know the stereotype: girls always go out with jerks who objectify them and don't really care about them, but never with the sensitive, considerate guy who's always been there for her and would treat her like a princess. But here's the problem: if you're a “nice guy” who thinks that some girl is a bitch because you've been her friend for years and she still hasn't put out, YOU ARE ALSO OBJECTIFYING HER. The only difference between you and the asshole she's dating is that only one of y'all is getting laid.

Protip: If you treat someone like royalty, that someone will probably treat you like a peasant. Fuck that feudal bullshit; grow a spine and treat the object of your affection like a normal human being.

Does it suck to get rejected? Absolutely.

Is “I don't want to jeopardize our friendship” one of the most overused, cop-out-tastic ways to shoot someone down? God yes.

That being said... is there a healthier way to deal with rejection than vilifying the person who rejected you? Yuuuuuup.

Someone can be a bitch or an asshole for many reasons (e.g. “He drowns puppies in his spare time,” or “She pays hobos twenty bucks to fight to the death”), but “She doesn't want to make out with me” isn't one. But hey, if your “ideal partner” is stringing you along, using you as an errand boy, or just plain too busy fucking everything that moves to notice or care about your feelings, then maybe you need to examine your definition of an ideal partner.

Like I said, you can't just flip a switch and change how you feel about someone, so I'm not suggesting that you simply stop being in lust love. But if you know you have no chance with someone – and especially if that someone kinda treats you like crap anyway – then you should take a step back and decide whether or not it's worth it to keep being a lovesick puppy who never gets laid.

Either that, or you could just whine about the Friend Zone like a passive-aggressive douchebag.

Your call.

Monday, March 19, 2012

The Suckrificial Lamb

Two weeks ago, I posted about my undying hatred for Ted Mosby, the main character/narrator of How I Met Your Mother. While I stand by every word of that post, I feel that a certain amount of clarification needs to be made: yes, he's pretentious and insufferable and I want to kill him with fire every time he scrunches up his mouth in that fucking smug smile he has, but his overwhelming shittiness actually serves a greater purpose:

Ted Mosby is HIMYM's Suckrificial Lamb.

For those of you who don't know what that term means (possibly because I just made it up), let me explain. If you've ever read "The Lottery" by Shirley Jackson, you should be familiar with the concept of human sacrifice as a means to secure the greater good of the community. Long story short, some poor bitch gets stoned to death (spoiler alert) so the town can have a good harvest, and then everyone who's still alive does a little happy dance. (See also: The Wicker Man.) In short, one person's sacrifice – whether willing or not – can ensure the stability of a town and its livelihood, though some people claim that killing Nicolas Cage won't bring back your goddamn honey.

In any case, the same principle can apply to fiction. Every story needs to have a certain amount of Suck, which is another highly technical term I just made up to refer to all the negative aspects of said story. Suck isn't necessarily a bad thing in and of itself – it can be used to create character flaws and conflict and generally make the story more interesting, but it can also manifest itself in bad writing and other things which will alienate your audience. So, let's say (for the sake of argument) that you're writing a story, and you've just created a bunch of characters who are all just a little too awesome. There are three possible courses of action:

Option 1: Do nothing. Everyone stays improbably awesome and nothing bad ever happens to them. This is problematic because it's completely unbelievable and also boring as hell. The work drowns in Unintentional Suck.

Option 2: Distribute some Intentional Suck evenly between the cast members. This can result in more human, well-rounded characters, but it's difficult to do really well: not enough Suck and you have the same problem as Option 1; too much Suck and none of your characters are likeable. Tread carefully.

Option 3: Dump the majority of your Intentional Suck on one or two characters and let everyone else stay awesome. The character in question will be almost universally hated, but the others will seem that much better by comparison. Congratulations, you've just created a Suckrificial Lamb!

These types of characters are easily identifiable if you listen for the following conversational pattern: “I really enjoy [movie/show/book X], but [character Y] can [go to hell / eat a bag of dicks / get sodomized to death by rabid howler monkeys]. But everything else about it is great!”

A Brief Field Guide to Suckrificial Lambs

True Blood: Imagine everything bad that could happen to one person. Now imagine reacting to all that stuff in the worst possible way, usually by telling your friends and family to go fuck themselves. Throw in a drinking problem, an upper lip that never stops quivering, and a compulsion to bring up slavery every five seconds, and you've made yourself a heaping plate of Tara Thornton! Bon appetit. (Sookie and Bill tie for second place. I'm getting really sick of their shit.)

Buffy the Vampire Slayer / Angel: I'm more or less convinced that Joss Whedon emerged fully formed from his father's head, because the way that Dawn and Connor are written makes me think that he never actually experienced life as a teenager. Both shows are overflowing with drama of one sort or another, but sweet zombie Jesus those two take the cake for their whiny, obnoxious behavior.

Mad Men: In a show populated almost exclusively by awful human beings, Pete Campbell manages to be the one character that I can almost never bring myself to sympathize with. Interestingly enough, he's played by the same actor who played Connor on Angel. Hmmmmmmmmm.

Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes: Hank motherfucking Pym. I mean, he's already loaded with Suck because one of his main powers is actually talking to ants, but then he decides that the only way to make himself less useful is to become a pacifist and actively sabotage his teammates while they're trying to apprehend some dangerous supervillains. Oh, and then he builds a super-intelligent robot who almost murders them all. Way to go, jackass.

You get the idea.

So, yeah. Ted Mosby... I hate you with a burning passion, but your suckrifice makes the rest of the How I Met Your Mother that much better. I would shake your hand, but I'm afraid your Suck might be contagious.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Operagasm: Dealing With the Uninitiated

Stop me if you've heard this one before (yes I know that you can't stop me and you're not actually hearing anything here but shut up and let me finish): a dashingly handsome young baritone who looks nothing like Harry Potter so shut up already sings an aria of some sort at a concert and is approached afterward by someone who enjoyed his singing but who knows absolutely nothing about classical music. Several moments of polite (if slightly awkward) conversation follow, until the enthusiastic listener goes and says something which makes the singer do a facepalm. As it happens, this joke has a multiple-choice punch-line:

A) “So do you want to sing on Broadway some day?”

B) “How does such a big voice come out of such a little body?”

C) “Has anyone ever told you that you sing like Josh Groban?”*

*Other possible singers include Andrea Bocelli, Michael Bolton, Charlotte Church, Sarah Brightman, etc. You get the idea.

We've all been there – and by “we” and “all,” I am of course only referring to other people who do exactly what I do. But it's unavoidable: sooner or later, every performer will have to interact with fans who mean well but have no idea what they're talking about. In such situations, you basically have two options:

  1. Be an asshole.

  2. Be a decent human being.

Now, the first option might be tempting at times, but it's important to remember that people who say these things to you are trying to pay you a compliment. There are a lot of people who know nothing about opera, because they're poor and opera is pretty much only for rich people, mob bosses, and evil geniuses. So be polite, be gracious, and under no circumstances should you respond to their questions like this:

So do you want to sing on Broadway some day?”

  1. You know, I'd love to be in Rent. I don't think anyone's ever written a show about starving artists falling in love in a big city and then getting horrible illnesses before!”

  2. Absolutely. And while we're talking about wasting talent, I think Stephen Hawking would have been an awesome high school science teacher.”

  3. Fuck yourself.

How does such a big voice come out of such a little body?”

  1. Whenever I defeat another baritone in single combat, I behead him and absorb his voice powers.”

  2. Well, you're built like a brick shithouse. Why isn't your voice bigger, fatass?”

  3. Fuck yourself.

Has anyone ever told you that you sing like Josh Groban?”

  1. Fuck yourself.

  2. [See first response.]

  3. [See first response again.]

Today's really a multiple-choice day, isn't it.

In any case, I'd be lying if I said that some of those responses didn't flit through my head whenever someone asked me one of those questions, but my standard response is just to smile and nod and say thank you. It's not that I don't want to sing on Broadway (I would in a heartbeat because I'm a musical prostitute and will whore my talents to the highest bidder) or that I think I'm a better singer than some random popera star; it's just that the comparison between styles is a little on the “apples to oranges” side. It can be a little obnoxious, but when you get right down to it, it's still meant as a compliment and it should be taken as such.

No one's going to come see you perform if you get a reputation for being an asshole to your audience, and maybe, just maybe, your performance will be the gateway drug that creates a new opera addict. Anything's possible, after all.

But seriously, don't tell me I sing like Josh Groban or I'll cut you.

Monday, March 5, 2012

How I Murdered Your Protagonist

As most of you have undoubtedly already discovered, Netflix's selection of movies and TV shows is kinda like heroin. You start out and everything is awesome and you're just like “Holy shit Mad Men and Doctor Who and Sherlock and all this other shiny stuff” but then you turn into a hopeless junkie who takes advantage of every free half hour to squeeze in some more Supernatural. Best case scenario, you manage to control the habit before it takes over your life, but it's much more likely that you'll: A) overdose and need someone to inject pure adrenaline into your heart, or B) you'll end up fighting a bunch of strangers in an alley because you think the rotting corpse of a stray cat is actually your dead daughter.

Actually, that last one is pretty unlikely unless you're absolutely godawful at writing comic books. But I digress.

In any case, one of the side effects of my Acute Netfliculitis was that I started watching How I Met Your Mother a few months back, and I pretty much loved it. The cast had good chemistry, the humor was surprisingly risque, and it had a fun tendency to mess around with over-used sitcom tropes. (Also, I'm more or less behaviorally conditioned to like anything with Neil Patrick Harris in it.)

In short, everything seemed great.

Somewhere along the line, though, things started to change. I noticed a flaw in the early episodes, but I was willing to overlook it because the rest of the show was so fun. I hoped it would get better, but it really, really didn't. In fact, I just finished the fourth season, and my mild annoyance has swelled into irrational antipathy.

I hate Ted Mosby.

He's obnoxious and pretentious and passive-aggressive and is always a bitch when the situation doesn't even remotely call for it.

I hate him and I want him to die.

Of course, I know this is impossible: Ted is the show's narrator, and the whole point of the show is that it's a story he's telling his children (a story that involves WAY too much sex with random women to be appropriate for sharing with one's own offspring). Barring the possibility that Ted pulls a Swayze at some point in the show's future and is actually contacting his children from beyond the grave (I guess Bob Saget would be a medium?), I'm sure he's going to survive until the show ends.

Le sigh.

The inherent problem with HIMYM is that the event which brings about Future!Ted's happy life is also the event which will end the show. It's How I Met Your Mother, not How I Met and Courted Your Mother and We Had Some Rough Patches but Everything Turned Out Okay in the End. There is a theoretical end-point for this show, but it's going to get dragged out for as long as humanly possible because it's a popular sitcom and popular sitcoms always hang around for a few seasons too long. The show has to keep going, so Ted also has to keep being an obnoxiously, consciously naïve wet blanket who's waiting around for The One to show up on a silver platter.

In short, the show is suffering from what I like to call the Incredible Hulk Dilemma.

You see, all Bruce Banner wants to do is settle down, live a normal life, have the government stop chasing him, and never turn into a giant green smashing machine again. That's all well and good, and maybe it'll actually happen some day – but the day Bruce Banner achieves lasting peace is the day that his story ends. No one cares about some scrawny irradiated scientist; they read those comics because they want to see HULK SMASH. If the unstoppable, rage-fueled monster gets to be happy, the story ceases to have any point.

The same phenomenon is at work in HIMYM, but it achieves the opposite effect: the plot point that's keeping the story going is actually the one I care about the least. That being said, I would probably care about Ted's love life more if he occasionally turned green, tripled in size, and went on a rampage through downtown Manhattan.

Oh well. The show has already surprised me several times, so I'm holding out for a major plot twist at the end: those kids we keep seeing aren't actually Ted's children; he's just gone crazy and kidnapped them and is telling them this big long story to try and make the Stockholm Syndrome set in faster.

Here's hoping.