Author Archives: Jonathan Williams

Wyatt Cenac brings “Brooklyn” Netflix special to live audiences

Photo by Eric Michael Pearson.

Photo by Eric Michael Pearson.

 

 

In his new Netflix special Wyatt Cenac: Brooklyn, Wyatt Cenac‘s observations of somewhat strange things that take place in his neighborhood are familiarly funny to the Union Hall audience. But when he takes these stories to other towns on the Wyatt Cenac Live in Brooklyn in ___(insert city name here)___ tour, audiences will likely agree that odd things happen pretty much anywhere. It just takes a certain type of perspective to find the humor in it all, which is what Cenac has provided as a writer for King of the Hill and The Daily Show with Jon Stewart. The tour runs Nov. 13-23, but first Cenac talks to Wrestling with Pop Culture about his special and how it might relate to people outside of Brooklyn.

Your recent Netflix special features stories and observations that are very specific to your home town. On this tour, will you be telling similar stories that are specific to each town in which you’re performing?

Yeah, it’s about Brooklyn. But I would argue that a lot of the things are relatable in any city that you live in. Just a weird experience [such as] seeing somebody bring a kid into a bar, I don’t think that’s a particularly Brooklyn thing. For me, part of doing the special is just talking about, yes, this is the place that I live. But I also think some of the shit in it is sort of relatable to any major city that has an artsy part of town where you see weird shit. As far as this tour, I’m just telling jokes about things from my life and things that I’ve seen.

I enjoyed the puppetry aspect of the special. Is that something you incorporate into your live shows?

No. That took a team of very talented people and it would be very expensive to try to take on the road. That was really more just for the visuals while watching the special. Watching a special on TV, you’re kind of seeing the most watered down version of it. The best version of seeing standup is actually being there. The second best is just listening to it. Seeing it on your TV, at any time you can check your email or do anything else and you’re just listening to it. So I felt like adding those elements with the puppets was a way to add some visual jokes that would keep you visually engaged with the special.

The Barclays Center comes up in your special. WWE held its TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs event there shortly after the arena opened in 2012, and has since returned there. Any chance you’ve attended any WWE events there?

No. I haven’t been to a pro wrestling event in a long time. I think the last time I went to one was when I was living in California because I had an agent at the time who was a big wrestling fan.

Do you happen to have any wrestling jokes or stories you can share with me?

When I was younger I watched a lot more wrestling, but I don’t watch it as much now. Every now and again I’ll get a few tweets directed my way whenever John Cena and Bray Wyatt are in wrestling matches against each other. The hashtag #WyattCena will come up and it’s a very strange thing because I’ll see tweets directed at me that will say things like, “Why is #WyattCenac trending? Oh, it’s not him. It’s a wrestling match.” That’s the one connection I have to it at this point in my life. One of the highlights of my time at The Daily Show was getting to meet Mick Foley. He’s a very nice guy.

A very nice guy who also now does standup. What was that experience like? Have you ever considered doing a comedy tour with him?

Wyatt Cenac Live in Brooklyn in ___(insert city name here)___We met twice and didn’t really get to spend a ton of time together. Once he came in right before we were shooting and we talked him trough what we were doing. He was happy to help out and was really nice. The next time I saw him, The Daily Show went to D.C. for the Rally to Restore Sanity and he was there. We never really chatted too much beyond that and I’ve never had a chance to see him do standup. He was entertaining the idea when I met him, but it was after my experiences with him that he started doing the tours.

In addition to The Daily Show, you also worked on King of the Hill. What were those experiences like for you and how does working for a TV show compare to doing standup?

They were both great. They’re both very different in that it takes about nine months to make one episode of King of the Hill versus The Daily Show, which takes about nine hours. So I learned two very different ways of making something: a fast one and a much more drawn out process with animation, which I’ve always been a fan of. They differ from standup because standup is my own thing, it’s my ideas that I can take out and see how they work. Working on someone else’s show, it’s their show, so you have to be able to write for somebody else. To do things for yourself is a little more satisfying creatively.

Tell me about the film you worked on with David Cross.

I shot a film that David Cross directed called Hits. I’m not sure when it’s getting released, but it went to Sundance this year and got a lot of good attention. So hopefully it will be out soon. And I’m doing these tour dates for the new special, and we’ll see what the New Year brings.

New Medicine prescribes a celebratory dose of rock ‘n’ roll with “Breaking the Model”

Photo by Wade Spencer.

Photo by Wade Spencer.

On it’s recently-released second album Breaking the Model, New Medicine offers a dose of rock ‘n’ roll attitude and swagger that is otherwise largely missing from today’s music scene. Celebratory songs like “One Too Many,” “World Class Fuck Up” and “Fire Up the Night” are unapologetic and debauched anthems that remind the listener just how fun rock music can be. After recent dates on the Uproar Festival, a performance at the Aftershock festival and opening for Pop Evil, the band hits the road once again with Halestorm Nov. 11-Dec. 9 before a hometown holiday show in Minneapolis on Dec. 20. First, front man Jake Scherer talks to Wrestling with Pop Culture about the new album, Brock Lesnar and more.

You’ve toured with Halestorm previously, including the inaugural Uproar Festival in 2010. 

Yeah. We toured with them on Uproar and we did their headlining tour before Uproar. Their first headlining tour ever, we did with them, which was cool. Then we did Uproar with them and we’ve also done Carnival of Madness with them [in 2012]. So we’ve done a ton of shows with them. They actually live in Nashville near us, so we hang all the time. They were in the studio while we were working on our record and we were down there while they were writing. They’re recording their record, like, a mile from our house. We’re just good friends and we’ve toured so much together and grown up in the scene together, so it’s really cool to be back on the road with them.

Have you guys ever done any writing or recording with Halestorm?

They all came to the studio and sang all the backup gang vocals on Breaking the Model, then we played them the record and they were all stoked. Me and Lzzy [Hale] have always talked about writing some stuff together. We actually are going to do some writing together on the bus on this tour and just see what comes out. We’re fans of each other, we respect each other musically and I think vocally she’s incredible. We’ve always talked about it, but it hasn’t officially happened yet. I have a couple of songs in my head that I think she would sound great on. So we’ll see what happens on this tour.

The name of your new album, as well as the attitude that is prevalent from one song to the next, seems to be a sarcastic approach to the current state of rock music. Was that the intention of this record?

Breaking the ModelAbsolutely. You’re totally right. Breaking the Model is a mission statement about us and how we feel like we fit in the scene. We don’t feel like we fit into any scene. We’ve always done our own thing and on this record we really did our own thing. We literally made our record with no outside influence aside from ourselves, our fans and our producer. It’s very honest and brave. We were just making this straight-up rock record, not making it to format to any radio station or anything. It’s just for us and the fans. At this point in the music industry there are just formulas that are like beating a dead horse. We’re done with the formulaic songs and, “You should write it for this format or this or that.” We’re not interested in that. We wanted to just break all the chains of creative constriction and just make a record that we’re proud of, has attitude and is brave creatively and sonically. I think we came out with a great record.

It’s a lot of fun to listen to. I especially like the electronic elements. Was your producer responsible for all that or is that something you guys planned on adding?

I’ve always been a huge Nine Inch Nails fan, and you hear a lot of electronic stuff in a Rob Zombie record. I like electronic music in general. When we first started recording, I had some ideas and would be like, “It would be cool if we threw a drum machine or a synth part in here.” As we started working with that, it all started growing together with those elements and it also made it feel like it had way more depth to the sound. These days everybody’s got their headphones in. You have this opportunity with all these new sounds you can put on records and the way people listen to music, it’s so high quality and we can add in some sonic things that make it an interesting record without using technology as a crutch. The meat and potatoes are there. It’s a rock band, but we’re using it as a tool to expand the sound.

Right. It’s definitely still a rock record and has an old school rock attitude, especially in the lyrics. It sounds like you guys are having a lot of fun, which is kind of a rare thing in rock music these days.

We don’t want to be one dimensional. This record’s got a lot of depth, it’s got a lot of dimensions to it. There’s something for everybody on this record. Like you said, we tried to have fun with it. We want you to enjoy listening to it. That’s what rock’s about. You don’t want to be formulaic and predictable.

I understand you’re also a wrestling fan.

You know what? I grew up watching wrestling and I wrestled in school. When I was a kid, the University of Minnesota had one of the best wrestling programs in the country. When I was 8, 9 years old, lo and behold, guess who was wrestling for the Gophers but Brock Lesnar. I got to go to this clinic when I was a kid and I met Brock Lesnar before he was a pro wrestler. But he was still huge, he was a heavyweight. I have this picture of him where he’s holding me and my brother up in the palms of his hands with no problem. I always loved seeing The Rock and stuff like that, but meeting Brock Lesnar and then seeing where his career has gone was so cool. I always try to follow all of it as much as possible.

Of course now he’s the WWE World Heavyweight Champion.

Photo by Wade Spencer.

Photo by Wade Spencer.

Yeah. It’s funny because he trains a lot in Hamel, which is this small podunk town in Minnesota and he goes to this cafe a lot. There’s a picture of him signed on the wall there. So this little dive breakfast place that I’d go to is where he goes to eat. It’s cool to see. He’s done UFC and he’s done wrestling and he’s won at everything he’s done. When I’m on the road I don’t get to watch it as much, but I try to keep up with it as much as possible.

WWE tends to favor bands similar to yours when it comes to entrance music, pay-per-view theme songs and things like that. Has your music ever been used by WWE for any reason?

No. But we have a song on our new record, “Desire Into Gold,” and that was the inspiration for me when writing it. When I used to wrestle, I would think about that. You’re just pumping yourself up for that one moment and I wrote that song all about that. We’ve been talking to them about letting them license that song because it’s a perfect match for them and it’s an audience we think would enjoy our music.

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