Category Archives: Pop Culture Ponderings

Monstrosity Championship Wrestling at Chambers of Horror

Monstrosity Championship Wrestling at Chambers of HorrorWrestling with Pop Culture presents Monstrosity Championship Wrestling at Chambers of Horror! After teaming up to take down the Kentucky WolfmanChattanooga Wolfman, Pappy Wolfman and Rev. John Beeman, Chambers of Horror and Atlanta Zombie Apocalypse join forces once again to bring MCW to those waiting to enter TORTUREco’s facility. In addition to Dr. Dieter von Splechter’s creations and Professor Morté‘s monstrosities, you’ll see MCW favorites such as MCW Champion “The Lethal Dose” Stryknyn, the face of MCW Dragula, “The Leatherback of Notre Dame” End Zone, “Violence Artist” Trever AeonPapa Marko and the Wolfmen in action. But who knows what sort of competitors will emerge from the depths of TORTUREco to do battle inside the MCW ring? Be there to find out! Action starts at 9 p.m. Oct. 15. Use promo code MCW2014 at Xorbia Tickets or at the door for $3 off admission to see MCW and go through Chambers of Horror! And go to the Facebook invitation to let us know you’ll be there. 

 

The Belligerent Monkey finds a comfortable habitat at Monstrosity Championship Wrestling

Belligerent MonkeyWrestling with Pop Culture always loves a good pop culture parody. So when I was introduced to the work of the Belligerent Monkey (aka Jay Hornsby) by Needless Things‘ Phantom Troublemaker, I became an instant fan. From unlikely mashups of Guns N’ Roses and Super Mario Bros. and Pabst Blue Ribbon and various sci-fi franchises to the zombification of Gone with the Wind, this Monkey not only has my nerdy interests in mind, but also an oddly entertaining sense of humor. The Belligerent Monkey’s work was recently on display at the Drive-Invasion and has a permanent home at the Village Theatre. For those attending the Monstrosity Championship Wrestling event on Sept. 12, the Belligerent Monkey will not only be one of the vendors, but will also have items in the MCW raffle. And over the next few weeks he will be involved with some of Atlanta’s best fall festivals and will even take the the Village Theatre stage himself on Sept. 19. Here, Wrestling with Pop Culture sits down with the Monkey for a quick discussion about his work and upcoming events.

First of all, explain the name the Belligerent Monkey.

We bought a house about ten years ago and in the basement was a floor-to-ceiling wraparound tiki bar that was in pretty rough shape. After we moved in, we spent the first year or so fixing it up. We decided we had to to give the bar a name and we came up with the Belligerent Monkey. So originally it was the name of our basement bar. Then I had a chance to share a booth with some friends at the East Atlanta Strut festival, probably around 2004 or 2005. I had already been doing paintings on the side and some friends asked if I wanted to split a booth and join them at the festival. I said, “Sure.” I was going to Vegas the next weekend, so I figured if I sold one painting I’d have a little extra cash for the trip. I brought some paintings, but I needed a name. I couldn’t think of a new one right off the top, so I just used the bar’s name and it’s stuck ever since.

So you’ve been doing this for a little while then?

Belligerent MonkeyYeah. I’ve been doing it for a while. The more you do it, the more you learn. I look back on the first few tries and I was woefully unprepared. Luckily I had some friends that helped out. Like I said, the first one was right before I went to Vegas and I ended up selling almost everything I brought. That was the point that the light bulb went off and I realized I could paint something and someone would pay for it. So I’ve been doing it ever since.

Was it always the same sort of pop culture parody stuff or has it changed over the years?

Oh, it’s definitely changed. I do different series of paintings. I’ll get into something and do three, four, ten paintings in a similar style or similar subject. Then I’ll get a little bored with that and move on to something else. So I can kind of look at my prints and see, “Oh, yeah. That was the zombie series” or “That was the PBR takeoffs of classic ads series,” or whatever it may be. I kind of bounce around a little bit.

What have you been working on most recently?

Belligerent MonkeyMost recently I’ve been doing really high contrast with pictures with logos or words behind it. It’s hard do describe, but it’s basically taking photos and doing a really high contrast version of it to where it’s black and white. Then, in all the negative white space, I’m filling in with logos, symbols or words.

Is that mostly what you will have at the MCW show?

I’ll have a little bit of everything. A long time ago I started doing prints, so I always have prints of my older work. I have a magnet press, so I hand press all my magnets. Once I do a painting, typically I will make a print and magnet of it. So if I no longer have the actual painting itself, I still have the image either as a print or a magnet. At MCW I’ll have a mix of stuff. Probably a lot of monster and zombie type stuff, a lot of sci-fi and pop culture type stuff, a lot of Star Wars and that sort of thing.

When I ran into you at Drive-Invasion you mentioned that your work has a permanent home at the Village Theatre, right?

Yeah. Those guys have been super supportive of me. I’ve known a lot of them from before they started the Village Theatre. Right before they opened they basically gave me a wall in the theatre and said it was mine to hang whatever I wanted. So I’ve been in both locations; the old location underneath Lenny’s and now the new location in the Pencil Factory Flats. Those guys are super great, super funny and super supportive of me.

I understand you will also be performing in one of their improv shows next weekend.

Belligerent MonkeyA week after the MCW show they’ve got me on their weekly Friday Armando show. Every Friday they have someone come in to tell stories and they take those stories and act them out. Hopefully they’ll make them a lot funnier than I tell them. It’s improv comedy, but they have standup there as well. The have different themes on different nights. But Friday is their Armando show where they have new guests come in every week and they take suggestions from the crowd and the guests will have to tell a story from their life based on one of the suggestions. Based on that story, the actors will do improv.

Is your work on display anywhere else?

Right now I still have a few things at Criminal Records. I’ve been a Dakota Blue for the last couple of years, but they just switched things out. So right now I’m at Village Theatre and Criminal Records. Also, HomeGrown in Decatur has some of my stuff. So I’ll be at MCW Sept. 12, the Village Theatre Sept. 19 and on Sept. 27 I’ll be at the East Atlanta Strut. On Oct. 18 is the Little 5 Points Halloween Festival & Parade. I’ve been doing that for the last five or six years. For those who don’t know, there really is an artist market. It’s kind of hidden back behind everything on Euclid.

www.belligerentmonkey.com

Jett Bryant leaves his footprint with Drive-Invasion poster and Bigfoot performance

Photo by Jeff Shipman.

Photo by Jeff Shipman.

For the past 15 years, one rambunctious event has signaled the end of summer for many Atlantans. This year the Drive-Invasion moves from the Starlight Six Drive-In Theatre to Turner Field, scales back from its usual two days to a one-day event and takes place the weekend after Labor Day instead of Labor Day weekend. Despite all these changes (as well as some new features such as Jim Stacy’s Food Truck Midway), this year’s Drive-Invasion will maintain a lot of sights and sounds from previous years. I can’t remember a Drive-Invasion that hasn’t included Dear God No! star Jett Bryant, a tattoo artist at Memorial Tattoo, keyboard player for AM Gold and front man for outlaw country outfit The Scragglers. This year his heavy Southern rock band Bigfoot will once again be stomping around on one of two music stages. Bryant also designed one of this year’s event posters, which will be available as a limited edition print at the Drive-Invasion Artist Market. The week leading up to Drive-Invasion is “the calm before the storm” for Bryant. So it wasn’t difficult to get Bryant to talk to Wrestling with Pop Culture about Drive-Invasion for a few minutes (though cheap beer and Tater Tots didn’t hurt).

Bigfoot is a difficult band to track down for an interview.

I make sure that I keep two days a week specifically for drinking and nothing else. It’s a little me time and you fit right in on that.

How many Drive-Invasions have you performed at?

I don’t even know, man. Between Monster Bash and Drive-Invasion, they kind of all blend together. Between Bigfoot and Rock City Dropouts, I think I’ve played almost all of them. I didn’t start going to them until the third or fourth one, but I know Bigfoot’s played at least four, if not more. I don’t know if I’m counting Monster Bash in that.

My understanding is that this year’s Drive-Invasion focuses on bands that have played at previous Drive-Invasions.

I think they were just trying to keep it local this year and get people to come down and perform that are good at it. And it’s a one-day thing this year, which I’m going to have to get used to. I’ll show up that morning and have to leave that night. You can’t show up the morning before and leave the morning after like I’m used to doing.

Tell me about the poster you did for this year’s Drive-Invasion.

Drive-Invasion poster by Jett BryantI did the monster from The Horror of Party Beach drinking a tiki drink. I wanted something that would catch the eye and did a little nod to a buddy of mine with the orange tiki glass and the pink straw. When Jimmy [Bickert, Drive-Invasion organizer] asked me to do it I was originally going to do Jaws. Then I realized if I did Jaws it would just look like a Panama City Beach T-shirt. So I went with the other monster instead and it looks good.  I like it. It’s awesome. And we’ll be selling them at the show.

What time is Bigfoot performing?

I think we go on at 2:45. Don’t quote me on that. I think we go on early enough that I can continue to get hammered for the rest of the day. We’re maybe the third band, fourth band. I’m not quite sure. Early enough that I can get a buzz on before we play and continue to get hammered and probably end up in a hotel. That’s going to be the plan.

I’m assuming there’s not a Braves game at Turner Field that night.

There’s no Braves game, but there is a [Great Atlanta Beer Fest] in the next parking lot. So we might have some overflow from that, I hope. The more, the merrier. A bunch more drunks.

I’d imagine they might have some people from Drive-Invasion trying to sneak in for the beer.

They might. But they don’t have all the cool bands over there.

It’s been a while since Bigfoot released a CD, but I know you have some newer stuff recorded. What’s Bigfoot been up to?

We are elusive like the namesake. We don’t do anything. We come out of hiding to play these events, then we don’t see each other again for months. Except for my drummer is now my neighbor, so I see him all the time. But he’s more of my neighbor than he is my drummer. I’ve got most of his lawn equipment at my house.

We’ve got a lot of stuff recorded, but Jimmy Hall’s always out of town and he’s kind of like the lifeblood of the band. We can perform without him, but he’s the blood that runs through the veins when it comes to writing new stuff. He does guitar teching for Sugarland, so he’s always on the road.

Aside from performing and getting wasted, what else are you looking forward to at this year’s Drive-Invasion?

Photo by Jeff Shipman.

Photo by Jeff Shipman.

I’m looking forward to the [Silverscreen and Gasoline Car and Bike Show], as always. I’ll be honest with you, I know I love the movies but I never remember seeing them at the Drive-Invasion. I know the draw is going to see the drive-in movies. The bands are just an accessory to the event. But rarely do I remember seeing a movie at Drive-Invasion. I’m awake, I’m just drunk and talking shit somewhere. I want to make sure this is on the record. There’s been an ongoing event at the Drive-Invasion for years called Last Man Standing. It is exactly what it entails: who is the last man standing? It’s gone back and forth over the years, but last year I got the title of Last Man Standing. That means if we can’t do an all-nighter again I am the last champion. I want that on the record.

Do you have a trophy or anything to commemorate that?

There’s no trophy. It’s all here, man. It’s all in the heart. I know I won. But it’s going to suck not to compete again. It’s just about time, though. I’m too old for that shit.

Aside from changing to a one-day format, how do you think the Drive-Invasion will be received now that it’s not at the Starlight?

I think it’s going to be pretty good, man. I’m excited about it. A lot of people were kind of bummed out at first that it wasn’t going to be at the drive-in. But I’d say Jimmy [Bickert], Lisa [Williams] and Dusty [Booze] and all them have done a great job trying to keep it alive. I live for this weekend. My whole year revolves around going to Drive-Invasion.

www.drive-invasion.com