Improv Level 1

So, I’ve now completed Improv Level 1 and we had our graduation show. Scarier to think about than to actually do, I really enjoyed it.

Working a bit backwards, the name “Hot Air Cosmonauts” – given to the group because, well, all troupes have a collective name and you sort of get gifted it as you go. It came out of two moments, one where me and another performer were supposed to be two characters working a hot air balloon only to find when you get up and do it you literally know nothing about hot air balloons. Gas, we figured out gas eventually. But not before the idea that maybe it ran on coal came up. It was fun. And later, surrounded by people twenty years my junior you discover not everyone knows what a cosmonaut is. And so, on the day of the performance we find out we’re called Hot Air Cosmonauts. I don’t hate it. But suspect that name might not stick.

Some things I’ve learned about improv are that it very much is something you have to watch live, some short forms can be made to work recorded, but with an audience, but really you need an audience to be following you along with the run of the thing for it to work and be funny. It’s fascinating to see scenes (prior to doing improv I’d’ve called them sketches) just not working, but then a second swing at the same scene and… still doesn’t work, audience shift, another go and this time, uproar, as whatever wasn’t working before suddenly works because of a slight tweak in some part of the scene. And if you isolate any three of those scenes on their own they just wouldn’t play. Not even the one that eventually worked, because part of the reason it worked is because it was built on the bones of the previous two attempts.

Saw that happen more than once, and the lesson I think as a performer is that it doesn’t matter if it goes wrong, you’re not the entire meal you’re one part of the stew.

I’ve really enjoyed hanging out with the others from my class, Paul Mone who runs the thing is very good at making the space very safe, and it has to be because you really need to be able to trust the rest of the performers if you’re going to get up on stage with and be vulnerable – no prelearnt lines, just making stuff up.

I expected to enjoy the entire thing, I felt like this is very much for me – even before seeing improv live and before taking any classes (my 16 year old son, on hearing me describe the thing “you’ve found your people”). I used to watch whose line is it any way and have day dream about doing some of those games in front of an audience. if I have any regrets it’s that I didn’t do something like this 30 years ago.

Oddly, I am slightly jealous of the other people in the class who had no idea of if they’d like it, but they did it for fun and discovered they loved it. That little road to damascus must be great.

I’ve settled in for another course, 8 weeks level two, which pretty much all but a couple of people from the year one are also taking. At the end of that I’ll be looking for opportunities to perform (as well as workshops and other things) and taking it from there.

There are photos, but without context (and the context being, you’d really need to have been there) it’s a little odd posting them, so my cartoon memories is about all you’ll get I’m afraid.

It’s nice to find a new thing to love. One fun thing is, just before going to improv my wife (who I’ve always known wasn’t a fan of improv) had tickets to see me perform because she wanted to support me, and honestly, I appreciate it, but at the same time I thought she won’t like this. Plus I’ll be standing knowing she won’t like it and that’ll be playing on my mind as I get on stage. Eventually we agreed she’d stay home instead, much to both of our relief (even though we both denied we were relieved). The next day I sent her some photos and her single line response “I would have hated that”

So look I won’t think any less of you if it’s not for you, because it really isn’t for everyone, but I’ll tell you what – it’s very much for me.

One year on…

Ok, all anniversaries are abitrary, but I stumbled across this blog post of mine from about a year ago (actually 13th February 2024):

And I thought, that’s interesting, stuff has moved on and it’d be interesting to just go over some of that stuff.

“My twitter experience is starting to reach the point where … well, it has no point.”

A year ago I disabled my twitter account, with the intent of letting it die. Well, my use of it did die. Didn’t take instantly, for a long time I had a burner account (useful because people would post links to a twitter post and you couldn’t read it without having a twitter account). The big worry is someone could nab your name to impersonate you, well, that’s been true of every digital domain ever – but no-one is sitting worrying about someone cybersquatting their myspace account.

In that time Bluesky has really taken the place of twitter for me. My follower count is way lower – 6k rather than the former twitter height of 15k, but happily there’s many of the old twitter accounts I follow now on bluesky, so it’s become my new dopamine hit. I do think at scale (once people are following many thousands of people) algorithmic timelines have their uses (say even a simple one where you always see people you interact with even if they’re posting in a timezone utterly outside your own) but they are the devils temptation for companies to think “oh wait, why don’t we charge for exposure” – so blueskys like of main algo feed is good.

Last year I also posted:

“I’ve been trying to get out and walk a bit lately, as you’ll be unsurprised to find out my physical fitness is just dreadful.”

Well, me and my mate Jim eventually went from walks where my legs were aching and me looking to burn a modest 250kcalories, to couch to 5k, and actually completing it, to running my first 5k and then sort of sliding a bit, we now do every few days a 5k walk/run, combo. Look, it’s better than where I was before! and it’s sustainable. Did the park run for a little while, but usually we’ll go for a run(run/walk) monday, wednesday, and friday. Typically burning 453kcal (though my target is 500kcal)

Really long term if that is my exercise regime, that’s pretty good (I’m 55! if I wasn’t going to be a runner in my twenties it’s unlikely now!)

“I’m wondering if we’ve finally reached peak enshiffication yet?”

No, no we hadn’t – in fact, I’d argue, now Trump is in charge of the States and Musk has been given full reign to turn the US government into a digital project we’ve barely scratched the surface, an entire country is about the be enshittified, and from there the entire world. So grim.

“It’s coming time to update my passport, and genuinely I’m considering getting an Irish one. “

Ah, circumstances forced my hand, youngest son and wife were going to Disneyland paris and my wife took a dizzy spell, leading to vertigo for a few weeks and my passport had expired, so I ended up getting an emergency UK one. BUT she’s now got an Irish passport, and at some point possibly this year, I’ll end up doing the same (though it’s better if the two passports don’t overlap in time, because this stuff is expensive!)

“Tomorrow, in my old man is falling apart adventure, emergency dentist appointment”

And that marked the last time I had an NHS dentist, my dentist went private and gave me an offer I couldn’t refuse (“go private or go without”)

Hate. Hate it. Now I pay monthly fee so I can see them and if I need work done it will cost a fortune, and given I’m the generation of sweet treats and free dentistry, I’m largely expecting this to cost me a LOT of money before I eventually succumb to the sweet embrace of toothless death.

Anyway. A better year lies ahead, I guess.

Coming at you at the speed of comics

(I have no idea what to title blogposts any more)

Anyway, work of mine coming up in print, and why you should read it!

As mentioned previously, DARK PYRAMID by me and Paul Tobin., Final Order cut off date for that is 17th of Feb, that means if you’d like your comic shop to get a copy for you YOU MUST ORDER BEFORE THAT DATE! Do not assume you’ll be able to wander in to the shop to buy a copy, sadly that’s not how comics work for anything other than DC and Marvel. Sure there MIGHT be stock in some comic shop somewhere, but almost certainly if you’d like a copy you’re gonna wanna preorder it!

Here’s what a reviewer thought:

Comiccon

Dark Pyramid is a brilliant mix of looming horror balanced with the very honest reflection of what social media does to the people who consume it. The story feels like its timely and honest, rather than using the day to day trappings of our modern life as tools to move the plot along. Where Dark Pyramid really shines is the grounding authenticity of human behavior. It’s captured so perfectly that it makes the whole story feel even more lived in and real. That, as far as storytelling goes, counts for a lot for me.

Overall 10/10

And if you like you can read a preview of it here!

Also out at the moment, I’ve a short in Oni’s EC’s Cruel Kingdom #2, written by Chris Condon.

Here’s a short review:

“A Rare Immunity” effectively delivers both action and horror with striking, gruesome visuals.

And here’s a preview!

Not the end of the line for me and EC Comics though! Next time, working with my Pal John McCrea — in … THE HONKING!

More to come, stay tooooned!

Outside of comics, Improv classes drawing to a close – will be doing a show Sunday Week – this is our graduation show, so first time performing in front of other human beings (Look, I’m not gonna tell you to come or not to it, but I’ll say it’s on in Lavery’s in Belfast, and even if I’m rubbish other people will be good). I’m batting an average of two funny things for every three rubbish things, so let’s hope that average improves. Slightly astonished at just how many safeguards and pretty sensible rules there are for improv (and terms… so many terms! montages! french braid! ground water! object work!). It’s largely all games with good smart rules for making things work, and well stated boundaries established early and the closest thing I can think of is when I did a lot of acting in my 20s and we’d often do warm up games, but in those days the idea of boundaries would’ve been alien and warm up games were often chaos. Probably a good job that has changed.

I’ve enjoyed it immensely, and have signed up for Improv Level 2 starting in March.

That’s it, see you all on bluesky probably.