He’s so excited, he just can’t hide it.
To see more of Avalanche Theatre Company members dancing, donate to http://kck.st/ULb8iX
He’s so excited, he just can’t hide it.
To see more of Avalanche Theatre Company members dancing, donate to http://kck.st/ULb8iX
I’m playing a witch in Kathleen Akerley’s redux of Voodoo Macbeth. Super stoked, the cast is all actors I know/ know of and highly respect, and the concept is really thrilling. I’m honored just to be in the room.
Our big pitch for tonight started with the idea of creating a belief based on some parameters. I chose my relationship to ‘what came before.’ And, as a philosophy hobbyist with friends of many faiths and lack thereof, I really enjoy the idea of pain as a basis for religion rather than a counterpoint to it. So, I figured I’d make a belief based on pain.
I figured, what if I am the pain of the thing that came before? What if the ‘nothingness before everything’ felt that existence was a cancer – what if the void could feel and was being oppressed by existence? This was kind of my starting ground. One of the issues was that, whatever the relationship, we had to somehow glorify that ‘thing before’, etc, and create a method of worship. So I had to simultaneously find a way to celebrate the thing I was, by existing, causing pain. This lead to a huge philosophical game of point-counterpoint, of easily foreseeable schisms and sects within the belief, and… well, over all, I’m also a hobby gamer who plays Dark Eldar and Call of Cthulu, and really, it was a fun way to play off of those religious mechanics as well.
So. Yeah. Great first rehearsal. Looking forward to the rest.
Overall it really reminded me of the excellent imersiveness of the artistic process, and why I am so stoked to be working with Avalanche Theatre this coming year. To help us out, check out my donate! page, or just follow this link here: http://kck.st/ULb8iX
Just to make your donation life easier!
I’ve put up a donate! page on my site as well.
Thank you all for your help. You are the best!
A great kickstarter deserves a great donate page. It’s live over at www.avalanchetheatre.com/donate. You can also just go direct to our kickstarter and help us make 30% of our target goal today – WE are SO close!
… But not that close.
Get it.
GET IT?
Because that’s Glen Close.
-K
Okay,
And photoblogs!
http://thejellyfishblog.tumblr.com/

For some sick tweetage tomorrow at 2:01! Jon Jon, Liz and I are kicking back for our kickstarter backers and tweeting the poop out of ‘The Room.’ Which, really, means we’ll be fighting a daring uphill battle against the forces of epic poo that the film contains.
For more on poo and its nutritional value, follow this link tomorrow at 2:01 to keep up with us as we scale large steaming piles of cinematic excrement in single tweets!
The link for the video is http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bp6g11A36xA
Our three twits are:
@ravenstreak, @DCJonJon, and @keeganmonstuh.
if you can watch, all the better. if you can’t, count yourselves lucky and just follow along on your devices/ work computer (whaaat)
WE’RE AT IT AGAIN!
Tweetening, that is, a certain film. Our Kickstarter Donors reached the $1000 hallmark a couple weeks past, and now everyone gets to reap the fruits of their labor.
The fruit in question is all of us at Avalanche live tweeting during a recording of ‘The Room’ tomorrow at 2. If you’re at work, follow us along at @ravenstreak (liz), @DCJonJon (Jon Jon), and Me, @Keeganmonstuh, and see if you can’t guess where we are in the movie. If you’re not, (or if you’re just slacking by watching Horrendous Movies), then pop in your favorite (and hopefully ONLY) copy of ‘The Room’ and follow along with us, or heck, counter-tweet our tweets, as we livetweet the tweet out of this tweetable, tweetable movie.

Let’s tear Tommy Wiseau apart.
Like Lisa.
But with tweets.
-K

Now that I’m back online, I am going to be all about getting some kicking started. At least for Avalanche Theatre Company. Check out the kickstarter page here – as of right now we are 17% funded, with 42 days left to go! Very excited for our upcoming season.
Okay. You got me, internet people. I posted a $1000 fundraiser challenge for THIS WEEK at 5am this morning, and now we’re $57 bucks short of that goal. Fine. FIIINE.
I now throw down the gauntlet of a $2000 fundraising challenge by the end of the week. That’s 1/4 of the way through our Kickstarter goal, and 1/5 of the way through our overall reach goal.
You may also know book 3 of GoT as “The One That’s just getting to be on TV.”
I won’t lie to you, dear readers, I kind of changed my strategy with book 3. After Books 1 and 2, I posted steady and concise reviews for each book.

But then I got the GoT Bundle for my Kindle App… which I then put on all my devices.
So I sort of read ALL THE REST in one fell swoop. Thankfully, it’s kind of easy to distinguish between books 3, 4, and 5 in my memory, just due to the narrative structure. More on that in my review of Books 4 and 5.
A Storm of Swords
Wherein Everyone Dies. (Kidding!) Actually, what I found is that Storm of Swords, or SoS, really ties together and builds upon a lot of great arcs that were building in books 1 and 2.
Essentially, SoS takes all of your favorite characters and makes sh** hit the fan for them. Everyone’s plans go awry, every major character becomes a fish out of water in some way. Some get what they’ve always wanted, some fight uphill battles, some are betrayed, and some die.
Fleshing Out Secondary Characters
My favorite arcs throughout this novel are still Jon Snow and Arya, with Bran as a definite third. You know what, I’ll even throw in Samwell Tarly.
However, the third novel finds a novel way to make Sansa interesting. Even if she herself is still a very limited character, she’s learned a lot from ‘Clash of Kings,’ and she gives us the closest perspective to Peter Baelysh (who is an incredible character IMHO).
As for Catelyn Stark, if you love her or hate her, she has a fascinating arc in this book, which introduces us to such wonderful characters as Brienne of Tarth, who will become an amazing foil for the Twins Lannister. Without giving away too much, let us simply say that Freys are dicks. That’s all. In fact, that’s huge. That’s kind of the one big moral point of the book.
Speaking of Lannisters, we see Tyrion kind of out of his element in this one, which is great. Tyrion is Martin’s mouthpiece, as far as I’ve deduced, and really takes on an interesting arc after his shining hour in Clash of Kings. Basically, no-one likes Tyrion. Everyone picks on Tyrion. It stinks to be a dwarf in a court ruled by your own jerk family. And, as ever, the Lannisters seem to get more and more powerful while still being ABSOLUTE JERKS.
One great side character with which Tyrion becomes enmeshed is Varys, the Spider. Like Baelysh, he’s one of the most interesting characters that doesn’t get a first person POV.
Tyrion’s perspective also gives us some insight to The Mountain that Rides (Gregor Clegane) and the Red Viper of Dorne, amongst others. We still learn to really really hate Joffrey, entertain a playful dislike of Cersei, and despise but respect the crap out of Tywin. That guy runs Westeros like it’s Casterly Rock, if you know what I’m sayin’.
The Brothers Clegane both get some excellent examination in this book, and we start to get more and more influences from the greater world of the narrative.
While we’ve seen many sides to the Hound in the first three books, we get to see the Mountain through both Tyrion’s eyes (as mentioned above) and through the eyes of Arya. This gives us a Mountain-at-Court and a Mountain-at-large perspective. That said, much of the Mountain is still defined outside of the man, through the actions and reactions of others.
Sam and Jon send us North. Martin likes to expand his narrative boundaries, so he just full on sends his boys beyond the Wall in this one, to a world of Wildlings and walking dead. The rangers are ragged, weak, and made of mixed men. To be fair, so are the wildlings, just… there’s a lot more of them, and the north is their home. But Winter is coming, and the wildlings are heading to the wall, led by a great secondary character by the name of Mance Rayder.
Looking back on the third book, I kind of forget what’s happened with Daenerys, just because her arc continues so smoothly through books 3, 4, and 5. SHE IS MUAD DIB.
Basically. That said, she’s still very much in her own world in Book 3, where, as previously mentioned, things hit fans at high velocities (but mostly in Westeros).
Overall, Book 3 takes the general arc of the Lannisters being on top and watches what they do with that power in the faces of enemies that just won’t stay defeated. Jon and Arya round out our world view by covering the Wall and all the little areas in between things, respectively.
Compelling Characters without Goals:
A note. Arya Stark is such a compelling character in that she literally has no real goal, no definite place she wants to be, no real nemesis, but by God, Martin gives her some of his best writing. She basically covers some of the largest geographic scope without having any definite accomplishments and is still the characters whose chapters I enjoy reading the most.
A Different Take on Characters
Whereas I feel that most fantasy literature focuses on the moral imperative of its characters, I feel like Martin really examines more closely the strategic elements thereof. I like this approach because it lets Martin play with living, dying, succeeding and failing not in terms of who is the ‘best person’ but who is the most likely to survive, and in what context. It also allows Martin the freedom to dangle the lives of the characters on their own choices, versus what ‘should’ happen in a properly moral setting.
This means that even the most morally reprehensible characters still act as interesting characters because whether or not they are wholly evil, they’re still players in the Game of Thrones. It also means that characters deal with real-world incentives with their environments, and that street smarts and knowledge come in handy far more often than ideals.
Overall
Without spoiling everything, I will say that SoS was an excellent build on Books 1 and 2. It ties together and expands all the arcs that were built up previously, has a strong pace, and is possibly my favorite book of the five book ser