MorganWasAPussy's blog

I'll Update You Sexy Fuckers ...

Okay everyone,

Goes like this. I have some new show dates up and coming involving both "The Highland Ballroom" as well as "The Funny Farm," so check this out:

Jan 5 2009 9:00P
Star Bar - Open Mic Atlanta GA
Jan 8 2009 9:00P
"Comedy Gold" @ The Warren City Club Atlanta GA
Jan 12 2009 9:00P
Star Bar - Open Mic Atlanta GA
Jan 13 2009 8:00P
"Crash Test Comedy" @ The Highland Ballroom Lounge Atlanta GA
Jan 15 2009 9:00P
"Comedy Gold" @ The Warren City Club Atlanta GA
Feb 11 2009 8:00P
Funny Farm "Green To Gold" Open Mic Roswell GA

New videos have also been posted recently. I also have my first 13 minute performance available for anyone who wants it, just drop me a polite line.

"Getting Caught" Live @ Comedy Gold

So ... Comedy ... Me ... Stand-Up ... Yeah ...

To bring you all up to speed. Now when not being injured on the set of the latest digitribe short or feature* I have been performing as a stand up comic.

In Chronological Order:

My first open mic:

My First Open Mic

A little geeky & other humor:

Star Bar - 11/24/2008

"Tramp Stamp" Live @ Comedy Gold

"Charlie Bartlett" - Film Review

“Ferris Bueller” and “Rushmore” with repercussions ...

First and foremost, I went into this movie looking to extend my knowledge of the work of Robert Downey Jr. another volume (Which I did. He was fantastic.) What I found was Anton Yelchin. Who is by far the most talented young actor to come out of the film circuit in quite some time. And words be marked, we will see more and more of this guy as he grows into his talent.

Charlie is a movie about a kid just trying to fit in, but aren’t all other stereotypical teenage films? Unlike other films about teenagers fumbling through the wasteland of high school and early college without a net, Charlie has some backup. His wealthy mother provides an on call Psychiatrist, who Charlie gets to vent to when things get a little out of control. And Charlie is known to get a little out of control. After getting kicked out of private school after private school, Charlie is grounded to a high school (sound familiar?) Immediately Charlie is looking for a new way to fit in. He finds it ... by being the school psychiatrist - prescriptions and all. There’s one small hitch, the girl that he likes just so happens to be the principal (RDJ)s daughter.

Charlie listens good and hard to these kids and tries one by one to solve their problems and help people. And one person at a time, he achieves his popularity. The entire school soon backs Charlie and the administration don’t look too kindly on that handsome devil.

Yelchin is stellar from the moment he steps on screen, so much that he seems to share the same type of natural talent as RDJ. His quick bursts of outlandishness and his frankness in serious conversation make him utterly believable. Downey plays a father in this movie which is something of a switch, and an authority figure. But he’s honest and he’s vulnerable - making him (as always) worth watching.

Nude ... Holy Shit ...

Brain is crumbling over the sight of this ...



Big Ideas (Don't get any) from 1030 on Vimeo.

"Hannah Takes The Stairs" - Review

It’s like “The Office,” only with no takes to the camera and both male and female full frontal nudity. And I mean that in a good way.

“Hannah Takes The Stairs” was my first foray into the genre now known and made sub-popular as mumblecore. Mumblecore is defined in wikipedia as: “An American Independent film movement that arose in the early 2000’s. It is primarily characterized by ultra-low budget production (often employing digital video cameras), focus on personal relationships between twenty-somethings, improvised scripts, and non-professional actors.”

“Hannah” happens to fit that very definition. As it turns out, the film was apparently directed without a script by one of mumblecore’s pioneers - Joe Swanberg. The film is the epitome of honest and at times unbearably uncomfortable because of how real it feels. The characters feel less like characters in this dramedy and more like the people you eavesdrop on at your favorite restaurant or grocery store.

Greta Gerwig stars as Hannah, a twenty-something that just can’t seem to make up her mind about what she wants and who she wants to be with. We witness her clumsiness as she tries to figure out how to break up with a guy she doesn’t really like anymore and then land head first in the middle of an office love triangle. At heart she hast the best of intentions, but as mentioned before - she just can’t seem to make up her mind.

"The Fall" - Review

Art imitating film.

There were six of them - The Indian, The Explosives Expert, The Former Slave, The Mystic, Charles Darwin, and The Masked Bandit. They had nothing in common except for one thing, they all sought revenge against the evil Governor Odious.

It’s rare to find a film like this one. Every once in a while a director will release something that is truly a visual masterpiece to it’s viewers. Tarsem (director of “The Cell” and REM’s “Losing My Religion” music video), found the perfect vanity project to unleash his inner creativity. He found an epic and sweeping children's story told by a suicidal actor. With it he paints one hell of a picture.

“The Fall” is the story of little Alexandria, a young foreign girl stuck in a hospital with a broken arm after suffering a fall in a California orange grove. This precocious little youngster does her best to satiate her boredom by wandering the hospital as her arm heals. In one of the recovery rooms, she comes across and befriends a mysterious stranger named Roy, willing to tell her an epic adventure story - for a price. As the story unfolds Alexandria’s already active imagination takes flight, and gives us some of the most beautiful imagery that we have seen on film. But as the story progresses - so does the storytellers sadness. Alexandria must confront her storyteller in order to save the story she has grown to love.

First thing’s first, Alexandria is PERFECT, played by newcomer Catinca Untaru. Her every moment on screen is just as humorous and heartfelt as the one before it. What could have easily been an overacted children’s performance is an adorable and sincere girl that we can’t take our eyes off of. She gets some of the best laughs in the film, and your heart breaks for her as the story reaches it’s climax.

Edge Of The World ... Part IV

*** Normally my "Edge Of The World" posts happen to be social commentary on relationships and men and women. There are no direct references to my life, just basic opinions on the matter. But I suppose this is just a story that needs to be told. In the long run I guess this is social commentary, just specifically about you know who. ***

Somewhere in my strange existence thus far, I had yet to experience something that was "a right of passage" for most young men - that is to say until recently. When I told my friends and even certain family members that I was the ripe old age of twenty-five and had yet to enter a strip club, jaws dropped and sympathy was given. Apparently I give off a serious strip club vibe. I was told that this is something that people do when they are twenty-one (and some even eighteen.) Weirdly enough I never seemed to find the attraction. It was something I suppose I could have done, but never found the urge to do. Somewhere in my junior adulthood I was supposed to encounter a friends birthday or bachelor party that would end with me wasting away a stack of ones in a questionable joint with an equally questionable name. This event happened to find me years later - on just a regular Sunday night.

(The story that you are about to read is rather disastrous/hilarious if I don’t mind saying so myself. It is a little vulgar at times and quite Not Safe For Work - but I surely do hope that if you are reading this at work you aren’t doing it aloud.)

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