The other side of the great rock and roll swindler

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Sometime in the 1990s, in the dawning days of my writing career, I interviewed Malcolm McLaren for Ben is Dead magazine. I was accompanied by my then-editor Darby Romeo and another writer whose name currently eludes me. It was a very long, strange and kind of wonderful interview.

McLaren was notorious as a kind of Svengali in the music business, and he was often spoken of as a calculating, rather sinister character. But I found him to be one of the most charming and fascinating people I've ever met. His company was a real delight, and I had the feeling he could've kept feeding us terrific anecdotes for days.

And the ironic thing is, he was really nice, too. Not just charming. Nice. We were a young, rude and raggedy bunch, but McLaren treated us like we were big deal journalist types. He not only answered our endless questions with candor, he stuck around talking to us until he ended up being late for an appointment. Perhaps I'm flattering myself, but I had the feeling that he much preferred our kind of eager but undisciplined approach to music journalism over spending another afternoon playing musical elder statesman for Rolling Stone or whatever. He gabbed about his mom and his bad teeth growing up and whatever crossed his mind, and he didn't just hold court. He wanted a conversation, he asked us questions back. This was a guy who really knew how to talk.

And here's the kicker: hours into this thing, when the interview was winding down and McLaren was glancing wistfully at the door while we dragged out our goodbyes, Darby asked him if she could take a picture of him making a really silly face. She said it was a little side project she was working on; when she interviewed celebrities, she'd take pictures of them making silly faces. I could see McLaren deflate just a bit, perhaps wondering if he would ever be rid of these weird kids from some weird little zine he'd probably never heard of. He was the guy who created the goddamned Sex Pistols, and we were now officially wasting the hell out of his valuable time.

But then he said sure, and as Darby snapped the picture he screwed up his mug into an absolutely priceless, Upper Class Twit of the Year expression. He went all out, it was really something to see. Then we all had a laugh and said our goodbyes for real, and he drove away into a Hollywood Blvd. sunset.

Malcolm McLaren died today. I only knew him for maybe three or four hours, but they were three or four hours very well spent.

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More POTTER possible, Rowling says

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

J.K. Rowling was one of the guests at the White House Easter Egg Roll on Monday, and while there she revealed that she might not be done with the Harry Potter series.

According to the Washington Post, Rowling told a group of kids that she's considering another story in the Potter universe, but if it happens it will be "maybe 10 years from now."

Rowling also said she's working on a non-Potter book.

"I'm quite sure in the not-too-distant future I will bring out another book."

I have my doubts that Rowling is planning another story about Harry Potter himself. After Half-Blood Prince, she seemed like she'd done everything she wanted to do with the character. But the Potter world is a large and colorful place, and there are still a lot of potential stories to tell about other characters. (It would be sort of cheesy if she started a new series about the kids of Harry and company, as they go through their own adventures at Hogwarts. That being said, I'd still read it eagerly!)


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STAR WARS sitcom coming

Sadly, this is not a leftover April Fool's gag. At this point I think we have to accept that George Lucas hasn't merely gone wacky. He is actively working to destroy the once-beloved Star Wars franchise, he won't rest until everybody everywhere can't even think of Star Wars without coughing up bile.

Here's Variety:

Lucasfilm Animation is developing a new animated "Star Wars" TV comedy series.

Daytime Emmy and Gemini Award-winner Jennifer Hill ("The Backyardians") will produce with Todd Grimes ("Back at the Barnyard") directing. Brendan Hay ("The Daily Show") will be among the writers and Seth Green and Matthew Senreich, creators and executive producers of "Robot Chicken," will have "creative involvement."

Project marks the second "Star Wars" skein created by Lucasfilm Animation. The first was "Star Wars: The Clone Wars," which premiered in 2008 on the Cartoon Network. Series is currently in its second season.

No start date or network for the comedy skein have been announced.

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So say we eggs!

Sunday, April 4, 2010


Twitter user Natania Barron brings us these Easter eggs, decorated with the likenesses of Edward James Olmos, Tricia Helfer and other cast members from Battlestar Galactica. First Doctor Who cats. Now Battlestar Galactica eggs. Huh.

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1988 anti-cancer PSA featuring weird TREK/GALACTICA mashup


In 1988, the American Cancer Society created this public service announcement featuring an old guy who appears to be a captain serving in the Wrath of Khan-era Starfleet... Although he says that he's 82 now and he was "young" in the 1980s, so a rough estimate sets this ad sometime around 40-50 years from now. (It's nice to know that by the time I'm an old man, the Federation of Planets will be a reality.) More puzzling still: why is the ship's bridge flooded with smoke? Sure, a low fat, high fiber diet helps prevent cancer, but all of that smoke can't be good for the lungs. And why is the exterior of the ship apparently a Viper from the original Battlestar Galactica? You'd have a hard time fitting a Khan-era Shatner into a Viper cockpit, let alone an entire Federation starship bridge and crew!

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BOOSH boys working on film trilogy, musical... And a new TV series?

It's been a while since we've heard any news from the UK comedy greats The Mighty Boosh, but Noel Fielding tells BBC Newsbeat that he and Boosh partner Julian Barratt are at work on a dizzying variety of new Boosh projects, including a movie trilogy(!), a musical, a music album and another TV series.

"(The movie's) going to be quite an adventure," Fielding said. "I don't know how much money we'll have so we'll have to be a little bit careful.
"In our heads it's like Indiana Jones, it's huge, but obviously it'll probably be more like Moon where we can have an exterior and then lots of models and CGI.

"It's set in the Arctic and we get caught up in an adventure. I'm pretty pleased the way it's going. I'm quite excited. Fingers crossed but I don't want to jinx it. It might be awful."

He added: "We've got another idea for a Rocky Horror-type musical, which is coming along. The album, we've done about 13 tracks, so that should be out soon.

"I'm doing a little bit of stand-up. I'm doing an art show. Just lots of different things really and another TV show hopefully."

By "another TV show," I'm not sure if he means a fourth season of The Mighty Boosh or an all-new series. Fielding and Barratt have previously expressed a certain amount of weariness with the characters of Vince Noir and Howard Moon and they've talked about doing a variety series inspired by The Muppet Show.

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Farewell to the Billy Shire

Saturday, April 3, 2010

I am saddened to report that Billy Shire Fine Arts, perhaps the finest art gallery in all of Los Angeles, has closed its doors. I'll treasure my memories of discovering Elizabeth McGrath, Chris Mars, Dave Cooper and many of my other favorite contemporary artists at Billy Shire. I'm really going to miss that place.

I'm not privy to any inside info, but I get the impression this closing was rather abrupt. A lot of art galleries are really suffering in this brutal economy, so if you have a favorite local gallery, visit them this afternoon and enjoy them while you can. (And if you happen to see some artwork you really like and you can afford it, go ahead and buy it. That's how these places stay in business, after all.)

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A heady experience

Sophie Cave’s installation Floating Heads at the Kelvingrove Museum in Glasgow is some wonderfully spooky stuff. It sort of looks like what would happen if Doctor Manhattan got really drunk.



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About This Blog

"Science fiction plucks from within us our deepest fears and hopes, then shows them to us in rough disguise: the monster and the rocket." - W.H. Auden

Who is he, this one who is called "Greg Stacy"?

Greg Stacy began the MONSTERS AND ROCKETS blog in April of 2009. Prior to that, he was editor of the popular sci-fi/horror news website DARKWOLDS.COM. He has also written for LA WEEKLY, OC WEEKLY, UTNE READER and LOS ANGELES CITYBEAT. He always feels weird writing about himself in the third person.

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