MICH-ELLANY. FILM Actor Judd Nelson calls in to shoot 'From th Neo-nerds: more than meets the eye INTERVIEW Peter Case Ex-Plimsouls leader left 'confining' rock environment for the folk circuit Peter Case, one of the performers at tomorrow's 10th Annual Ann Arbor Folk Festival, first made a name for himself as the leader of the Plimsouls, a rock band out of Los Angeles. Since then, he's quit the rock and roll band scene and started to make a name for himself as an old- fashioned troubador accompanying himself on his guitar. Hius most recent release, Peter Case, on Geffen Records, earned him a nod as one of Rolling Stone Magazine's new faces of 1986. He was interviewed by Daily staffer Joseph Kraus. Daily: You seemed to be really on the brink of making it big in rock while you were with the Plimsouls. What made you decide to go solo? Case: I just sort of musically grew away from what I was doing with the Plimsouls. The Plimsouls were together for a long time. Bands like that sort of run their course. During the whole period being in the band, especially during the last years I was with the band, I was getting back into listening to a lot of different music. I started to become really schizophrenic; what I was playing and what I was listening to at home started to grow away from what I was doing with the band. D: What sorts of things were you listening to then? C: A lot of blues players and a lot of folk musicians. I was listening to jazz and a lot of different stuff. What happened with The Plimsouls is finally I just got fed up with it. The whole rock band thing, not just musically but also socially, it's an environment... It just got very confining. It seemed like every song would have to have the same sort of lineup or the same sort of thing. I felt my songs weren't coming across either. Part of that's just the volume that bands tend to play at. I found that I would write songs and they would be completely misunderstood by the audience that was out there... besides the fact that you're always playing big, loud-sound music at these big party-bash situations. It just wasn't what I was interested in. I'm more interested in writing about some sort of mystery, some sort of excitement about life and it just doesn't fit into that rock and roll format. Plus it's just been done so many times in so many different ways. I just felt like I'd exhausted it. D: I understand you spent some time travelling around the country after you left the band. C: During the period after The Plimsouls broke up I spent a couple of years trying to get my songwriting together and to get around a bit and to get out of the environment of the rock and roll band. A lot of the rock and roll thing tends to promote a narrow view of the world. I felt like I was a victim of that. A self-victim of that. I found I would go to visit my family and would be sitting there talking about Hollywood and Los Angeles and all that sort of stuff. Everybody would get bored really quick because it wasn't real life. It was just a lot of nonsense. So I spent a Continued on Page 9 LAST WEEK, THE DAILY printed an Associated Press story about a young entrepreneur who at first glance seems to have hit upon the proverbial million-dollar idea. Mike MacDonald, a Chicago-area computer programmer, started a service called Rent-A-Nerd on January 5. He got the idea last Halloween after creating a classic nerd character, Hornby K. Fletcher, replete with taped, horn-rimmed glasses, clashing plaids, and a shirttail peeking out from his fly. The service has been surprisingly popular, and Mac- Donald is now appearing on talk shows, and charging $65 to $75 an hour to accompany people at parties and geek it up. When I read the article I was immediately struck by the rage that overwhelms you when something you could have thought up has already been thought up, and you don't dare steal the idea, because, who knows? it might be copyrighted. And I was amazed at the amount of money MacDonald was making. "Hell," I thought, "I'd do that for thirty bucks an hour, and no way would I pay that much just to have a nerd around!" Then it hit me. OFF THE WALL Today's sex lacks creativity. (in reply) SO DOES TODAY'S GRAFFITI.. -Graduate Library There's no place like home. There's no place like home. There's no place like home. How come it doesn't work? -Mason Hall Coke is God's way of saying you have too much money. -Graduate Library THEY CLEAN THESE DESKS TO STRIKE MY PEN BUT THE DESKTOP POET STRIKES AGAIN (in reply) Hey desktop Poet, I call your bluff! I'm challenging you, Show your stuff! (in reply) WITH VERSES URBANE AND STYLE FLUIDIC I APPEAR ON THE SCENE: THE DESKTOP CRITIC! -Mason Hall If Stop-N-Go is open 24 hours a day, then why do they have locks on the doors? -Graduate Library $75 an hour is too much for a simple impersonation. What we have here, ladies and gentlemen, is a diabolically clever, thinly-veiled escort service! MacDonald, sneaky reprobate that he is, has hit upon the perfect come-on for these uncertain times. It appalls me now that I was fooled at first. It's all there, the "accidentally" protruding shirttail, now you tell me we don't all know what that means! MacDonald figured out that nerds are the sex objects of the '90s. It makes sense, doesn't it? The greatest concern among sexually active singles today is the risk of contracting sexually transmitted diseases. Thus, sexually active people have turned their booties to the singles bars, leaving them with sex lives that used to be found in seminaries. After all, every time you sleep with someone, you're sleeping with everyone they've ever slept with, disease-wise. But for a mere $75, one can purchase the apparent security of Hornby K. Fletcher, a person so socially inappropriate that it seems certain he has never slept with anyone. Swinging, experienced Casanovas are out. They can't hold a candle to the projected purity of Homby. What's more, would a nerd use intravenous drugs? No way! Nerds faint at the sight of needles! Moreover, in a society that still paradoxically encourages males to be experienced and dominant while promoting female chastity and passivity, there are probably some women out there who appreciate the opportunity to "deflower" Hornby. If Hornby is true to his act, he will protest advances upon his person, claiming that he's saving himself for marriage. Alternately, Hornby might play the nerd who always wanted to, but never found anyone who wanted to with him. In an' endearing, clumsy fashion, Hornby would fumble along, until his more experienced customer showed him the ropes. Women who have fantasized about playing the Mrs. Robinson role in a relationship Continued on Page 9 Hello? Judd? What are these other people doing on the phone line? By Kurt Serbus THIS IS MY INTERVIEW with Judd Nelson, who called me up on my very own home phone last Saturday. There were two other reporters on the line, one from Washington and one from Texas, but I cut them out because it's my article and I felt like it. They can cut me out of their articles if they want; I don't care. Suits me just fine. Judd: Hello? Me: Hello. Judd: Hello, is this Kurt? Me: Yeah, right here. Judd: Hi, this is Judd. Me: Hey, how you doin', Judd? Judd: How are you doing? Me: Oh, okay. Judd: So this is great, so I'm ac- tually talking to Michigan, Wash- ington, and Texas at the same time? Me (awed by the wonder of modern technology): The wonder of modern technology... Judd: Alexander Graham Bell would be proud. Me (agreeing): This is true. Judd: Maybe he'd be sick, I don't know. Me (asking about the weather): You're in L.A.? How's the weather? Judd:It's actually really cold. See NELSON, Page 9 t r S r C sl r c IT V aj la a c p fi l PRINT FROM THE PAST r Nelson (left) and John Hurt star in the film press material describes as "a sophisticated social comedy." I I ____ - DAILY FILE PHOTO Except for new storefronts, State Street's nineteenth century architecture remains essentially intact. This late 1800s view of the unpaved avenue looks south from just below Liberty St. THE DAILY ALMANAC Read the Gargoyle! 208 S. First, Ann Arbor 996-8555 JANUARY BANDS 23-24 TRACY LEE & THE LEONARDS 28 THE LIARS 29 JEANNIE & THE DREAMS Drink Specials Every MON $1 SHOTS TUE $3 BEER PITCHERS WED $2 MARGARITA MUGS THU $1 WATERMELONS WARSAW SINFONIA YEHUDI MENUHIN Bach: A-minor Violin Concerto; Wagner: Siegfried Idyll; Rossini: La Scala di Setd Overture; Bacewicz: Concerto for Strings; Mendelssohn: Symphony No. 4 ("Italian"). Tickets: $22, 21, 16, 12, 10. Tuesday, Feb. 3 at 8pm, Hill Auditorium. KIRI TE KA "One of the world's most lu voices; superbly focused, ac agile, beautifully musical." The Washington Post. Tickets: $22, 21, 16, 12, Tuesday, Feb. 10 at 8pm, Hill Audi 10 years ago -- January 30, 1977: "We are not going to drink that coffee. Put that cup down," shouted Couzens RA Jeff Weinfeld from a cafeteria tabletop. He was helping to lead a student boycott of coffee to protest recent drastic price increases. But 'the action did little to inspire others, leading Weinfeld to lament the new state of student activism. "Students accept things they wouldn't have bcfore," he noted. In the same edition of The Daily, newly elected U.S. Rep. Carl Pursell, clad in a turtleneck shirt, declared, "I don't like to wear a suit and tie. I hate. ties. I think they're the worst invention man ever made." 4MM JNrIrIrMrlMrllr Irfli i lU1 M/ i r $5.00 RUSH TICKETS sold Tues., Feb. 3 at Burton Memorial Tower from 9:00 to 4:30. Limit of two per person; seating at the discretion of the Musical Society. Availability limited to 200; Choral Union series concerts only. $5.00 RUSH TICKETS sold Tues from 9:00 to 4:30. Limit of two pei Musical Society. Availability limit only. O PAGE 8 WEEKEND/JANUARY 30, 1987 WEEKEND/JANUARY 30, 1987