8B - The Michigan Daily - Wetea, 4e. - Thursday, February 1, 1996 Maron caught between rock'n'roll and an old place By Ted Watts Daily Fine Arts Editor "It's time to become perverse. It's time for white people to start talking about fucking again.". So says comedian Marc Maron. The former host of the now-cancelled Short Attention Span Theater, Maron, also featured in his own HBO special last fall, is coming to Ann Arbor to serve up some scrumdidliumptious comedy nuggets. And will the white people Maron talks about want to hear the comedian discussing the aforementioned sub- ject? "If the crowd is all loosened up and they wanna talk about fucking, I'll talk about it (chuckle) ... I can use fucking in an encouraging way or in a hostile way. So, if they don't like me, I can talk about fucking angrily, but if they do like me, we can all embrace the fucking. "It works either way but I don't rely on it as much as I used to," he contin- ued. "I have enough material that I don't need to talk about it. It depends how I feel, where the set is leading me. I try to experiment as much as Where: Mainstreet s Comedy Showcase When: Tonight, Fri. and Sat. Tickets: $12, $6 students Thurs. and Fri. Call 996-9080 for showtimes. possible. Take the people on a little journey." Maron's own little stroll through this world has taken him through plenty of cities in the past. That's what happens when you're a travel- ing entertainer. His itinerary has even brought him to Ann Arbor. "Last time I was there I had a real good time," he said. "School wasn't even in last time I was there. It was towards the end of the summer, but I still thought it was a good city. "Lot of good stores, lot of good res- taurants. I remember hanging around with a bunch of kids who had nothing to do. Smoking cigarettes out in front of that deli place that's open real late. They were making the rounds, but I sort of stayed in one place. I didn't want to go to the pinball place." Maron knows the slacker high school punks. He knows the city. He's virtually one of our classmates. Perhaps more important to his busi- ness here, Maron also likes the Mainstreet performance space. "That room is real good. It's a good place to see comedy. It's like a great old com- edy room in the sense that it's in a basement and the ceilings are so ... You can find a transcendental joy in the man's inability to express what the ceilings do for him. Imagine what he can do underneath them. Maron finds himself caught be- tween generations - he's not a baby boomer, but he's not a Generation X- tra, either. His comedy is slightly dark, and that's good. What all this is lead- ing to is that he has found himself attached to something dubbed "alter- native comedy." "The alternative comedy idea is some- thing some people started in Los Ange- les, some friends of mine, Janeane Garofalo and Dana Gould. Basically, it's just trying to find audiences that are more like us. The regular comedy audi- ence is, by and large, a lot of working people. None of the kids are coming out, none of the hipstrers are coming out, cuz it'sjust not that. 'There's noth- ing hip about comedy.' Very few people go to comedy clubs between the ages of 25 and 35. Not what you'd call sophis- ticated or current. It's not their trip," Maron said. "So we started to create different venues to get these people out, people more like ourselves," the comedian continued. "We did stretch the comedy a little bit, not having to pander to people who didn't know where the hell we were coming from." The comedian does have an inkling of why alternative comedy became needed, however. "I don't know why people started leaving comedy clubs, but I have a pretty good idea. Comedy started to suck." That statement might strike a nerve in a few comedians working during the past several years. But a hard truth is always better than a soft lie. This general attitude can be found in Maron's act. "I don't know if I'm bitter so much as I am cynical," the comedian said. "People seem to confuse the two, especially in show business. I was talk- Israel & Judaism experience them together! A community oriented study and work program in Tzfat and Jerusalem for Jewish men and women 21.30 with ittle or no Jewish background. Learn about Israel andjudaism in an open, questioning atmosphere, do community service and building projects and hike throughout the land. 3-month sessions: Mar. 10 - May 19; June 9- Aug. 18; & Sept.1 - Nov. 17 3-week sessions: June 9; July 7; & Aug 4 Llvnot U'Lehibanot Contact: 110 East 59th SL.3Sd FL, NYC, NY 10022 Tel: 212-752-2390 Fax: 212.832-2597'e-mail: livnot@jerl.co.il Comedian Marc Maron arrives at the Mainsteet Comedy Showcase this weeken ing to my friend the other night, about if you are a critic of contemporary media culture, people will call you bitter if you are in that business." But it would be an unfair accusa- tion against Marc Maron. He may even have a show in development soon. "The idea I have is 'The Late, Late Morning Show.' It's for people who get up around noon. It's a show about doing nothing and shirking your responsibilities." Sounds like a college audiencetome. Ifyou know what's good for you, you'll see Marc Maron while you have a chance. And if you don't know what's good for you, listen to someone who does and let them convince you to go. A Candidate Forbes leaves paper trail to presidency The Washington Post The big news for magazine addicts is that oneoftheirown, aprofessional maga- zine man, is running for president. Imag- ine: a fixture of the glossy pages as the great and powerful editor ofnational life. Since the early 1970s, Steve Forbes has been not only a manager of the family biweekly, but also a regular columnist. Thus, we have an unusually extensive written record of his views on foreign affairs, fiscal policy, health care and fab Manhattan restaurants. Last year he ad- vised anyone dining at Bolo on East 22nd Street to "try gazpacho with large shrimp, and the soft-shell crab with pappardelle." We're talking hundreds of columns in the Steve Forbes archive, perhaps the only record of this sort that we've had on any presidential candidate, ever. Last week, Los Angeles Times writer Ronald Brownstein analyzed Forbes' writings based on a review of 563 columns dat- ing back to 1975. Palpably yearning for a gotcha, Brownstein wrote that "in a handful of instances" the columns show IThe Magazine Column Forbes "reversing long-held positions to align himself with prevailing atti- tudes in the GOP." Despite the foreboding tone, the re- view didn't turn up much newsworthy stuff, policy-wise. "Mostly, however," Brownstein wrote, "the columns dis- play a consistent, coherent and staunchly ideological way oflooking at the world." Supply-side rhapsodist, admirer of Reagan, vaguely libertarian, etc. But a column that's been running that long can't help but tell us a lot about what's in the writer's head and heart. Just looking at Forbes, one can see he is no self-contradicting vessel of complexity, no gonzo man of appetites. His wildman father, the late Malcolm, was more of that species. During the long period when they were writing side-by-side columns, they presented a total reversal of the clas- sic magnate-scion dichotomy. Dad was a rakish voluptuary, while Junior was all prudence and restraint, his passions strictly above the neck. THIS TIME NEXT YEAR BE STUDYING AT KCJS in KYOTO, JAPAN!" "M a b 1 year Japanese language minimum requirement (two years preferred). Pick up your KCJS brochure and application at Office of International Programs, G-513 Michigan Union (ask about the $7,500 scholarship) and return your application before the Free billiards. Satellite sports Retro Rock Dance Night w/DJ Chuck Food & drink specials. Drink specials all night. $1 Cover College Night. Contests! $1 Pitchers Ann Arbor's Biggest No cover w/student ID 21+ Modern Rock Dance Parties a " FEB. 9 and the 2nd Friday # " ~of every month. 89X DJ Kelly Brown, 4 contests, giveaways and more! Opn9 a dy 9. &9. xcp Tr. , Fr. & a. 21 PAID ADVERTISEMENT "EXPRESI! MAKE YOUR OPINION COUNT WHO IS THE PERSON MOST UKELY TO PRECIPITATE THE ACTIONS CAUSING DATE R APE? Call 1-900-263-0919 Call to tell us what you think. Results from survey will be tabulated and reported to the Michigan Daily. Caler must be 18+. Touch tone phone required. Coil costs $.99/min with a tall lasting about 1 minute. New question every Wednesday. Presented by E&M Inc., 1170 E. Big Seaver, Troy, MI 48083 In the Feb. 5, 1990, issue, for in- stance, Pops turns in a libidinous recol- lection ofa favorite World War II movie star: "Marlene Dietrich was our sultri- est, stunningly legged, husky-come- hither-voiced, sexiest goddess. ... Mil- lions of us fantasized, her German cent notwithstanding." In the same column he not only praises "Rolling Stone magazine's brilliant cre- ator, Jann Wenner," but also notes: "Wasn't it cool the way 'Columbia'snagged our 1l-ton, near-6- year-old science satellite that was losing altitude and heading for a likely bum-up .?" And cool old Malcolm offers this joyfullittle apothegm: "When dreams are more real than reality, you're alive." "How to Get the Dow to 37,000" is the headline of Steve Forbes' column in the same issue. And below that, this piquant item: "Poland Needs Incen- tives, Not Austerity." Where Malcolm penned his restaurant tips in the first person, Steve's are attributed to "the distilled wisdom of brothers Bob, Kip and Tim" Forbes, as well as othr Frbes staffers. No time to eat out wh o're boning up on Polish econ! But since taking over his father's edi- tor-in-chief column, Steve has cultivated a few of his own passions. Last April,just before plugging that crab dish, he re- vealed a certain yearning for his own Dietrich equivalent: "We can't wait until Maureen Dowd begins her twice-weekly column on the New York Times Op-Ed page this summer," he wrote, referring to the cunning columnist as the "decidedly undowdy Dowd." The same month .k proposed the"dazzling Pamela Haim as a "natural" for secretary of state. Cold shower time, Steve-oh! Still, the most revealing peek into the candidate's hot core has to be these lines from his review last June ofabook by Steve Neal called "Dark Horse: A Biography of Wendell Wilikie": "Fas- cinating story of one of the most im- probable figures in American presiden- tial history. Wendell Willkienwas electric utility CEO at a time when t industry was in ill repute, a Democrat who didn't become a Republican until he decided to seek the GOP presidential nod, and an advocate of an activist foreign policy when most Americans were isolationists. He had no political base. He was distrusted by party regu- lars, and he entered no primaries. Yet, with support of a handful of publishers and the fervent backing of hundreds thousands ofamateurs, Wilikie wont nomination in one of the liveliest, most raucous conventions ever." Just two months after writing those words, Steve Forbes announced his in- tention to run for president. YELLOW CAB OfAiA ('nmmc m Ar,, A,4ww IIIAfl1fl Attention all BLUES TRAVELER fans! JONO MANSON BAND featuring Bob Sheehan & Chan Kinchla of BLUES TRAVELER and Mike Clark February. 5 - door at 9:30 pm Ka Ia K w- n v m- .14..Iu /oa'r Urn nfl -