Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Vancouver's Crane Ballet

The city scape along the False Creek seawall surrounds you with its constant evolution and the resulting vistas will surprise you with their growth unless you show up there every once in a while to check it out.

And that's what we did - we checked it out and so here are a few more pics from the Yaletown waterfront. Looking across False Creek and the Cambie bridge, a dozen or so construction cranes swing around, high over the ground, piecing together a part of the inner city which stood fairly barren as an industrial zone for decades. Soon, it'll be the athletes village during the 2010 winter olympics here in Vancouver.

P.S. 10 points if you can guess where the decent pics from Danny's camera ended, and the crappy ones from my camera phone started...

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Write on Vancouver

So my little impromptu photo essay continues today with some seemingly random and not just English words weaved and welded into the handrail between the water and the walkway along False Creek.


Maybe a picture really is worth a thousand words ... or, about 7 words as seen above.

Saturday, April 19, 2008

Vancouver Makes Me See Red

Me and Danny were hanging out on the seawall near Yaletown and luckily he had his camera so I borrowed it and got these images of part of Vancouver's evolving False Creek waterfront.











Sunday, April 6, 2008

Vancouver Odd-iences

Thanks to Vancouver's filing-cabinet-grey skies and the wretched current season of Madtv, I've laughed a lot less this weekend than last. That might also have something to do with the fact that last weekend I was part of the two local audiences that welcomed two lmao comics -- Sarah Silverman and Margaret Cho -- for their first respective visits in years.


Friday night at Queen Elizabeth Theatre, Margaret Cho brought her latest comedy tour "Beautiful" to Vancouver . It took me awhile (ie. years) to appreciate her enough to want to see her perform live. But I did and she was hilarious and the crowd loved her.


I wanted to put up a photo here from that show, but trying to use my cameraphone in the darkness of the Q-E was like trying to get a seat by the fireplace at JJ Bean on Main street. So, thanks to Zooglia's public photos on flickr, you can view a shot of Cho performing in Vancouver.

Cho's opening act was a well-chosen complement to her own shtick, and clearly appealed to the demographics in the packed house. The act was Liam Sullivan, better known as "Kelly" to millions of YouTube users. You might recall Kelly's video "Shoes" won the 2007 People's Choice Award for favourite user-generated video.


The show ended, but the weekend's hilarity sure didn't. The next night, me and the gang hit the 'burbs to see Sarah Silverman at River Rock Casino in Richmond. Unlike Margaret Cho, I fell fast and hard for Sarah Silverman from the first moment I saw her. She's funny like the Canucks are done for the season - there just ain't no way around it.


As much as I dig the Silverman, it was the audience at her show that really threw me. Mostly, she got huge laughs as her crude and blunt monologue slapped everyone in the face. But the problem with seeing shows at River Rock is that a noticeable number of people in this town can't manage a beer (or two or three) while out in public.


Sure, all comedians have hecklers. But hopefully the hecklers are smart enough to challenge the comedian enough for her/him to stay at the top of her/his game and wring some comedy out of the heckle. Or, the heckler isn't smart enough to do that and is effortlessly trounced by the comedians' comeback. But in the case of the audience at River Rock, the hecklers were too drunk to even catch her drifts or realize their own comments were complete nonsense and gave her nothing to work with. It was just embarrassing, really.


It got to the point where Silverman actually imitated one of her hecklers, presumably to illustrate just exactly what she was up against for anyone in the audience who perhaps couldn't clearly hear the heckler. And her imitation was simply that of a sober person mimicking a drunk person trying to speak. Yeah… it went like that. Nice.

Sarah Silverman also commented on how weird it would be if the whole situation "turned ugly". It seems to me that when a performer reaches the point of saying something like that to the audience, things are nearly out of control.


Fortunately, she handled it well and got some extra laughs out of it. But until some folks in this town learn how handle their liquor, River Rock would be remiss not to re-think allowing those dumb-arses into the show. This is the third comedy show in a year where I've witnessed this kind of thing at that venue. It appears, unfortunately, to be not an isolated occurrence.


Getting back to the laughs though, go to YouTube and search "sarah silverman vancouver" for a good chuckle. But before you do that check out this video of Margaret Cho's opening act, "Kelly", arriving in Vancouver for their show: