The Michigan Daily - Weekend etc. - Thursday, September 29, 1994 - 7 'M11outh 2 Mouth' revives fanzines for Generation Y By KIRK MILLER I had a wonderful idea to compare various teen magazines of today with the classics of our youth (i.e. "Tiger Beat"), but I discovered the general Ann Arbor area had given up on this market. There was nothing greater than hanging out in a drug store and wondering if Johnny Depp was really so innocent, or if River Phoenix was 0st a "regular guy who liked to hang The Magazine Column out." The current lack of good glossy , nzines might be a sad comment on e more sophisticated tastes of the so-called Generation Y. Youth marketing has shifted dra- matically, trying to incorporate ev- erything from alternative music to gender neutral readerships in an ef- fort to capture a multibillion dollar industry. Almost every month a new teen magazine comes along and fails badly, because it treats its audience *ke morons. However, the September/October issue of the Time/Warner ownqd "Mouth 2 Mouth" ($1.95, bimonthly) appears to be one of the first success- ful magazine marketed for both girls and boys; there is fashion, music, celebrity interviews and many beau- tiful models interwoven into one col- orful, fast read. Whe high point (of 'Mouth 2 Mouth') is photo layout, five supermodels posing with large artwork renditions of famous Marvel superheroes. The high point, is photo layout, five supermodels posing with large artwork renditions of famous Marvel superheroes; the always captivating Claudia Schiffer climbs city walls on the back of Spider-Man, while Elle MacPherson strikes a sexy pose with the X-Men in a two-page spread. It's any 14-year-old boy's wet dream come to life. OK, even at 22 it's my antasy come to life; this is by far the most erotic layout ever created. Trying to strike a delicate balance with girls and boys is tough, and their excited vow to "Slip inside Steven Tyler's pants!" as a contest reward is more of a turnoff to all genders and sexual preferences than an enticement for kids. If you can get past this and some awful attempts to identify with *e younger generation (an excerpt from the cheerily titled "Prozac Na- tion"), there are some wonderful sur- prises, the most notable being Nicolas Cage's talk with underground artist Robert Williams, and a quick review ofDarwinism by Bad Religion's Greg Graffin. Unlike other painfully self-con- scious attempts at alternative market- g, "Mouth 2 Mouth" fills doesn't onfine its focus to the latest bands getting time on 96.3; there are several good reviews of lesser known bands, and sections for movies, comics and TV. This is one teen magazine I would actually consider buying again. Unfortunately, other attempts to be hip and on the edge are failures. There's "Sassy," ($2.00, monthly) the best-titled magazine in the world and till going strong; I guess you couldn't have a magazine called "Despondent" or "Malaise" and expect a large audi- ence. As a letter in the beginning puts it it's an "oh-so-hip" magazine for young women, so I expected a certain brashness to match the title. Unfortunately "Sassy" is just as bad of a guide for figuring out teenage girls as "Cosmopolitan" is for exam- ig the life of the modern woman. 'How realistic is 'Models, Inc.'?" is one of several fluff pieces. There is something seriously wrong with a trendy magazine that still publishes a horoscope and crammed its pages full of only white people. It's the'90s, the trend is sutnosed to be diversitv. At Stir-fry stirs stomach, not taste buds "ongolian Barbecue 200 S. Main Street (at Washington) 913-0999 Hours: Mon-Thurs 5-11, Fri 5-12, Sat 4-12, Sun 4-10 (Lunch beginning Oct. 3) Price: Includes all you can eat salad, soup and stir fry Adult $10.95, 12/under $4.95, Tots $1.95 Notes: Vegetarian friendly (but tell them) All non-smoking, except large bar area Visa, MC, (AmEx soon) Carry out available all day Handicap accessible Dress: Casual Rating: MIR By MELANIE SCHUMAN Strolling down Main Street, you will find an enticing variety of food and fanfare. The latest addition to this family, The Mongolian Barbeque, born and raised in Royal Oak, invites Ann Arborites to try yet another eth- nic cuisine - mongolian stir fry. But the only thing that stirred was my stomach, as I left hungry and upset. The menu is given by the friendly hostess staff, but pay attention to your server who will guide you along this buffet-like meal. He/she will provide directions, suggestions and enthusi- asm. In fact, throughout the meal, the wait staff (at last count numbered in the hundreds) and hosts continually checked to make sure everything was satisfactory. Unfortunately, they could not do anything about the cuisine. For$10.95, you have aplethoraof options at this all-you-can-eat, cre- ate-your-own dinner, complimented by an extensive beverage list. Wine, non-alcoholic concotions, 23 interna- tional beers and the usual soft drink are all available. Let me forewarn you. If you have a weak stomach you may want to pass on this nouveau routine. As I ap- proached, I don't think I believed what I was seeing. Vats of raw poul- try, beef, turkey, seafood (shrimp, calamari or "fish") and tofu welcome you before proceeding onto a more pleasant assortment of fresh veg- etables such as bok-choy and sugar- snap peas. All of this is a help-your- self portion placed into an inadequate, small bowl. I did not like the raw meat juices dripping onto the counter, nor did the appearance increase my appe- tite. You are instructed to use two ladles of sauces, mostly oil-based, like the spicy black bean, barbecue, and to- mato-N-herb. Also, they suggest a ladle of oil (olive or garlic flavored) and a dip into a variety of spices including ginger, garlic (both a disap- pointing powder rather than fresh), rosemary and cajun spice. Then it's onto the 650-degree cir- cular grill. One of three chefs, who a bowl of steamed white rice and a plate of flour tortillas. 016! No wait, that's not Mongolian, but only a poor substitute for oriental pancakes. Con- fused, I left the table for greener pas- tures - the salad bar. Yet another medley of fresh salad greens and trimmings awaited, ac- bowl. This time I tried one of their recipes - Matt's Cajun Inferno. In- stead of turkey, I substituted the prawns and then mixed in the veggies, two ladles of bbq, I ladle of tomato- N-herb, 1 ladle of olive oil, 2 spoons of cajun and finally one spoon of cayenne. Call the fire department! Admittingly I had skipped the oil the first time around, but hoped it would make for a more edible treat. As I watched them cook my food - that's the entertainment value of the Mongolian Barbeque - I became upset seeing the same wooden sticks that had just grinded beef into the grill, carry the remnants into my pot- pourri. That was probably the most irksome experience of this evening. The decor is a bit juxtaposed, with mirrored pillars accentuating the lo- cal flair of flags (appealing to Big Ten, Eastern Michigan and Ann Ar- bor Pioneer fans alike). As customer- friendly as they are, they clash with the wooden tables, cream walls, and navy ceiling drapes which hang above. Don't mind them though; I dismiss it as an attempt to absorb the sound from this spacious restaurant. This is not a designated date-place or group gathering site for anyone who thinks they might enjoy a casual night of fun. Although, there is some variety and freedom in the menu, be- tween the servers and customers scur- rying around, it's likely to cause a traffic jam on a weekend night. Be- sides, if you have a date, chances are an inherent awkwardness will ensue as you wait for one another to get his/ her food. Looking for a good meal? Look- ing for a well-priced evening out? How aboutjust some grub to cure that insatiable appetite? Well, don't go to The Mongolian Barbeque. JOSH KOLEVZON/Daily The Mongolian Barbeque may look enticing from the outside, but beware. informed me they have no previous experience, will cook the melange you've created. Each cook makes about three bowls at a time, while one tries to scrape down remnants of past concotions. (You do get a fresh bowl once your meal is cooked). My first try resulted in an overcooked, stringy- chicken-and-flavorless veggie dish. The waitress brought to our table companied by a selection of regular, low-fat and fat-free dressings. The soup changes frequently and on that trip it was steak and mushroom. This was frightening to me, but at that point I was willing to try it. Eyes closed, it tasted like any other cream of mushroom soup. Knowing the food does cook down, I tried yet again to fill this It's sick, it's twisted, and it's invading the Michigan Theater ANIMATION Continued from page 1. ganza. This year's festival features 22 shorts, 20 of which are new to the annual festival. The returning shorts, billed as Spike & Mike favorites' are Eric Fogel's "Mutilator H" and Mike Judge's "Frog Baseball," featuring Beavis 'n' Butt-Head. The remainder of the new offer- ings include old festival favorite like No Neck Joe, the audience participa- tion short which traditionally kicks of the evening's festivities and sets the crowd in motion and Gregory Ecklund's continuing the adventures of Lloyd in the premieres of both "Lloyd loses his Lunch" and "Lloyd's Lunch Box." In a slightly odder and decidedly not in the Spike & Mike tradition bit of scheduling this year's festival includes a video from that clown prince of music, "Weird Al" Yankovic. The video, "Jurassic Park," is included because of its claymation work. The festival een has a tinge of the cosmopolitan this year including a British short, "Beastly Behavior" and, from Holland, "Safe Sex." With titles such as "Hole in One," "Better than Grass," and "Dr. Animalus on the Cutting Edge," a lot of the content is self-explanatory and all of it wallows in the extreme. Spike & Mike aren't pussyfootin' around in living up to their festival's claims. No subject is too taboo and no image too grotesque. Because of the extremism, the shows - which usually run at 9:30 and Midnight but do slightly alter - are limited to adults only, so bring your I.D. If you can't seem to get enough of Spike & Mike or animation in gen- eral there will be a table in the lobby hocking T-shirts and videos ranging from collections of past Oscar Award winning animation to a T-shirt fea- turing past festival short, "Dog Pile." As the festival continues, the body fluids spill and the flatulence flies as each short seems to attempt to top the preceding one in pure grotesqueness. If the vomit isn't limited to the screen Spike and Mike are kind enough to provide free barf bags with admis- sion. This animation festival, and oth- ers like it, continue to be both suc- cessful and enjoyable because they are animation, rather than in spite of it. It adds an odd twist to the humor when it is presented in a format which normally presents smurfs or care bears. In fact, animation has developed so quickly into a large-scale sensa- tion because it has shook off these preconceptions as kiddie fare allow- ing its versatility to be examined. The potential of animation is quite simply unlimited. As long as the human race has paper and ink (or mouse and screen), anything can be drawn and seemingly anything can be said. Animation has realized its power to satire society or parody culture. As a result, Montgomery Burns, Homer Simpson's boss can pine for his child- hood teddy bear Bobo in a "Citizen Kane" send-up or Butt-Head can queure whether or nor an Amy Grant video is a pimple commercial. Because cartoons, unlike live-ac- tion, are virtually universally recog- nized as fictional, containing non- existent characters, they can get away with things that live-action cannot. "Spike & Mike's" is the quintessen- tial example combining elements which cannot physically be filmed with humor which in live-action (and probably more widely distributed) would come under fire. A television program such as "The Simpsons" is exponentially more ca- pable of being a true source of intelli- gent comment on our lives than all of the "Seinfeld"s and "Saturday Night Live"s put together. Unlimited by time and place, coupled with the ability to have an entire town full of supporting characters without the hefty cost of flying reoccurring characters in and out of town, "The Simpsons" has de- veloped from a program about a dys- functional family into TV's most con- sistently amusing half-hour. Guests as themselves notwith- standing, anyone from Colonel Klink to Henry Kissinger to Adolf Hitler can and have "appeared" (OK, so its not that sweeping a range, they're all originally from Germany, but you get the point). Drawing celebrities into cartoons isn't an entirely new thing of course. Old Warner Brothers cartoons used to have characters either based on film actors or had the actors on them- selves. Edward G. Robinson, Humphrey Bogart, Peter Lorre and others would often share a stage so to speak with Bugs Bunny. This was, of course, simple self-promotion on Warner Brothers part however high- lighting their contracted actors. Prob- ably justifiable promotion because the cartoon shorts were exhibited in a movie house along with the full prod- uct. Bugs even pushed war bonds during the Second World War while lambasting Hitler. Peter Lorre inci- dentally would eventually be the in- spiration for the high-strung and nuerotic Ren (Stimpy being based on Burl Ives). Ren's trademark drawn- out snap "You Ediot!" has its inspira- tion in a Lorre tirade to Sydney Greenstreet in "The Maltese Falcon." Parodying real life, whether on "The Simpsons," "Beavis 'n' Butt- Head" or in "Spike and Mike's," has probably speeded the new trend to- wards attempting to "un"-fictionalize animation and silence it. Because Beavis mixes in with actual people or could be an actual human individual himself (as opposed to Inspector Gad- get or Huckleberry Hound for ex- ample) it is seen as a poor influence to not only children, but society. Most animated characters are animals or superheroes, blatantly fictional. When .."' a 'aO I i a Beavis 'n' Butt-Head are back at the Animation Fest with "Frog Baseball." who either can't do likewise or need to use television as examples for the electorate to either pay attention or just plain understand what they're talking about. "Spike & Mike's Sick and Twisted Animation Festival" will certainly not be the first example of animation people see this year in the theater. When all the box-office receipts are counted this year's four highest-gross- ing films may all be at least partly animated. Of course "The Lion King," the fourth installment in Disney's newest money whore marketing bo- nanza, the "adult musical cartoon" series is one. The others? No, "Thumbellina" or "We're Back! A Dinosaur's Story" didn't do that well. The answers: "Forrest Gump," "True Lies," and "The Mask." Computer animated all. The newest trend in filmmaking (well, not really filmaking; there is no film involved, in fact, no camera) is the touching up or creating sequences at George Lucas' Industial Light and Magic factory. The ILM, a marvelous creator of special effects is now creat- ing some not so special ones. Inspired by the gimmickry of combining live- action and animation of "Who Framed Roger Rabbit?" or "Cool World" di- rectors are now using these techniques to draw sets, props and backgrounds, passing it off as inspired staging in an exercise in just plain laziness. Pretty amazing how they got that little white feather to float and dance around to open "Forrest Gump," huh? They didn't. (Just as amazing is the peace rally at which Gump and Jenny em- of animation's subject and style be- fore your very eyes in two hours. A perfect breather from the increasingly hectic school subject and the eventu- ally cooling weather (unless all that ozone crap we were fed really is true) "Spike & Mike's" is a welcome dose of the eclectic and the outlandish. It is a welcome dose of animation that you don't have to set the alarm Saturday morning to enjoy. Sick & Twisted Animation Festival All shows are at the Michigan Theater Friday, Sept. 30 Saturday, Oct. 1 Sunday, Oct. 2 Friday, Oct. 7 Saturday, Oct. 8 9:30 p.m. & Midnight NO SHOW 9:30 p.m. (Student Discount Night) 9:30 p.m. & Midnight Midnight I