The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Friday, February 19, 2010 - 5 Underwhelming'Boss' Basement Arts's production will stay true to both the Internet series's script and the theater medium. 'Dr. H1orrible' is stealing the show By CAROLYN KLARECKI SeniorArtsEditor It's no secret by now that this country has seen better times. The gap between the haves and have-nots has never been so visible, W big company UnderCOVer bailouts are being handed BOSS out like free Sundays at T-shirts at a Sudysa sporting event 9p.m. and every- CBS one jumps at the opportunity to point fingers. Because we have economic cri- sis on our minds, it makes per- fect sense to have it on our TV sets as well. CBS's latest series "Undercover Boss" tries to tug at heartstrings and give America a shoulder to cry on, but our gen- eration's stone-cold cynicism can see right through the fagade. In a time when people attri- bute the widening economic gap to those on the rich end of the spectrum, "Undercover Boss" gives the CEOs of major corpo- rations the chance to display their hearts of gold on national TV and to prove they're really good guys after all. In the pre- miere, the President and COO of Waste Management Larry O'Donnell assumes the identity of Randy Lawrence, a new recruit and subject of a documentary on entry-level jobs in the waste dis- posal industry, which explains the camera crew. O'Donnell says he's going undercover to see where the company can be more efficient, but it's painfully obvi- ous he's going to learn much more along the way. "Undercover Boss" shoves the best parts of the show in your face with an overabundant use of recaps. Before each commercial break there's a preview of what's coming next and after each com- mercial break, a review of what just happened. Supposedly this is to create excitement and give information to those just tuning in, but it completely ruins the ele- ment of surprise and dilutes all the changes of heart and stunning revelations that are supposed to be the core of the show. Those stunning revelations and changes of heart are cute, but nothing more. O'Donnell seems like a nice enough guy, and it's easy to believe he didn't know how bad some of the conditions that come with working at his company were - his female garbage truck drivers have to pee in cans because there isn't time on the route schedule allotted for a bathroom break. He seems genuinely concerned, but in the culmination of the episode when he gives his big reveal, he doesn't do much to resolve all he saw.Sureheholds a meeting(com- plete with close-ups of other cor- porate bosses furiously scribbling notes) and before the credits roll, there's a nice little segment with the employees he worked with that illustrates how much better their lives are now. But somehow, it's just not that convincing. So he promoted a . few people and relaxed some productivity targets, but as far as we know, he didn't raise any wages and hasn't made any drastic changes to improve working con- ditions. Perhaps now, O'Donnell is making corporate decisions remembering what it's like on the other side, but his appearance on "Undercover Boss" seems more like good publicity for him and less CEOs go undercover for publicity, not perspective. likely to make the company more employee friendly. While "Undercover Boss" had its moments - which can be attributed to the employees, who were really the stars in their genuine gratitude of recognition - it's not the grand life-changing series it hoped to be. It tries to be "Extreme Makeover: Home Edi- tion," but the honesty rings false. Basement Arts takes on Joss Whedon's internet sensation By MOLLY MCGUIRE Daily Arts Writer Many distinguished Ph.D.s come to the University to speak on their areas of expertise. But Dr. Honible's this weekend, University stu- dents have the Blog opportunity to T hear from a new kind of scholar: p.m., tomorrow an antihero who at 4& 7 p.m. boasts a "Ph.D. Walgreen in horribleness." Dramb Center Thanks to the Free student-run theater group Basement Arts, the Internet phenomenon "Dr. Hor- rible's Sing-Along Blog" is being brought to the University stage. Joss Whedon, the brains behind "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" and "Firefly," created this Web origi- nal in the midst of the 2008 writ- er's strike. In that lean time for TV, Whedon, his brothers Jed and Zack and Jed's wife, actress Mau- rissa Tancharoen, helped fill the void by presenting this musical for a new age. A postmodern tale of superheroes and super villains, love triangles and new media, "Dr. Horrible" has become a cult sensa- tion. Originally presented for free in serial format to a stampede of Internet fanatics, the musical was a favorite of critics. To the delight of its cult following, there is currently a sequel in the works. Starring Neil Patrick Harris ("How I Met Your Mother"), the miniseries follows the struggles of the surprisingly likeable, aspiring evil mastermind Dr. Horrible on his failing attempts at world domina- tion. It's a twist on the superhero cliche, as viewers find themselves rooting for the villain to defeat the celebrated hero-slash-bully Captain Hammer (Nathan Fillion, "Castle") and win the heart of his laundro- mat crush, Penny (Felicia Day, You- Tube's "The Guild"). "It's a great story which is sort of making super villains and superheroes very much real," said director Corey Lubowicz, School of Music, Theatre & Dance junior. "But it's not really so much about being superheroes as it is about people. It's about this guy who has feelings for this girl and how he struggles through what he really wants. And that's the story I really fell in love with." Unlike other stage adaptations of "Dr. Horrible," Basement Arts's production sticks to the script and does not add a musical number for Dr. Horrible's soggy sidekick Moist. But because it cannot really replicate the rapid camera cuts of the film medium, some changes are necessary. "We want the spirit of what we loved about the video and the film and its story, but we're not really try- ing to reproduce the video on stage," Lubowicz said. "We're tryingto take the story and bring it to life ina com- pletely different medium." To ease the transition from Web- only.content to the stage, Basement Arts's adaptation makes use of pro- jections and comic book motifs. The quick shifts and multiple locations of the film medium are replaced by series of images projected on screens like comic book pages, giv- ing a stylized feel to the setting. The beefy and cheesy superhero Cap- tain Hammer won't be singing and flexing his muscles on the top of a moving van like in the film, but the creative theater team will be using technical tricks to create the same sensation. "It really has had to be its own beast,' said School of Music, The- atre & Dance sophomore Kris Reilly, who plays Dr. Horrible. "If we tried to copy what they put on the Internet, we would never come quite close to the amazing nuance and brilliance of what they accom- plished on film. And it wouldn't really have a life of its own." While the production keeps the iconic parts of "Dr. Horrible" that fans know and love, Lubowicz stresses that it will not be some "sad imitation." The characters will still be there, but maybe in some differ- ent outfits. And he encouraged the actors to create their own believable and unique characters instead of impersonating the originals. "I'm not Neil Patrick Harris," Reilly stressed. "The angle that I bring to the character really has to be based on my own life and my own understanding of human beings. That's the only way he can really be real and what I hope will be an engaging character for the audience to watch go through these things." The cultural products of Joss Whedon seem to have this unique tendency to inspire rabid devo- tion and fanaticism. It's the kind of fanaticism that might not be easily sated by a new version; however, the team behind the Basement Arts pro- duction stresses its devotion to the original. "We all love it, so we're here to tell the story as best we can," Lubowicz said. "I think the fans are going to reallyenjoy seeing the story brought to life in a different way, while still having the familiar elements we all really love." Worst Hooters waitress disguise ever. Music white people like By SHARON JACOBS AssistantArtsEditor What's the deal with continental European bands having more creative names than their Anglophone counterparts? The Go Find, an indie-electronica venture created by Belgian musician Dieter Ser- meus, follows in the footsteps of The Go Find France's Phoenix - but in coolname only. Musically, the five-piece Flem- Everybody ish group is far calmer and sweeter Knows It's than its creatively titled friends. Gonna Originally conceived as a solo , Happen Only project, the group's sound could be Not Tonight described as Owl City minus the Morr Music musical Prozac overdose. Or maybe it's Belle & Sebastian channeling later Pavement - and did Sermeus pick up some ear- wormingtips from the Wallflowers? On Everybody Knows It's Gonna Happen Only Not Tonight, The Go Find brings to mind countless bands of the "stuff white people like" persuasion. Yet the album's poppy electro-tweedom is focused, addictive and ultimately doesn't sound like any other single group. Thirty-eight minutes of swaying side to side. The Go Find succeeds because it nevertries to tack- le more than it can in a song. "It's Automatic" uses a repetitive and simple melody to entrench itself in the listener's head - there's nothing remarkable here, but there's nothing to fault either. The track is an auto- piloted radio-friendly hit, and when playful synths bounce in near the end, it's automatically endearing. Nearing five-and-a-half minutes, the gentle title track is a veritable epic compared to the other songs. Sermeus's murmured yearning "Let me take you back /to the'90s/when we were teens" is about as straight- forward as lyrics can get. But the track saunters along like a pleasant, rambling walk in the park on a drizzly Lightspeed makes life sweeter By JASMINE ZHU would-be rabble-rousers, (here's DailyArts Writer looking at you, The Kooks, Razor- light, et al.). Lightspeed Champion's Devonti "Smooth Day (at the Library)" Hynes was that emo kid from high showcases Hynes at the pinnacle of school who had his (post-)adolescent despair. Hynes too many feel- * compares himself to a dusty book ings for his own on a shelf, patiently waiting to be good - a crazy, L hspeed checked out. "Please take me down mixed-up teen- again, my love," he endearingly ager with nothing n implores, while the trickling sound to lose. And on Life is Sweet! of bells as a sparse backdrop add an his new album, Nice to air of nostalgia. It's actually really Life is Sweet! Nice Meet You adorable rather than annoying. to Meet You, he . With all Hynes's penchant for takes the liberty angst, it makes sense that he worked of emoting to all with Saddle Creek producer Mike of his gloomy little heart's content. Mogis on his debut album, Falling Hynes's angst is self-referential off the Lavendar Bridge, which is to the point that listeners realize reflected in the tone of his newest he's being ironic - as if the exag- release. Hynes's unfettered anguish geratedly wailing violins weren't is reminiscentofSaddle Creek's own already enough of a dead give- crown prince of darkness, Conor away. At the ripe old age of 25, the Oberst. But while Oberst revels in Where Dr. Suess goes rock climbing. day as a jazzy sax adds color to the scene. Whether on purpose or not, Sermeus's voice tends to emulate Pavement frontman Stephen Malkmus's simple and unexpectedly sweet tone. "Cherry Pie" is the most obvious exapple, but dainty bells and basic harmonies place the song squarely out of the reach of the messy '90s. Instead, The Go Find settles com- fortably into cutesy kiddie pop with this story of an always-second-fiddle boy who's "sweet as cherry pie." The Go Find's synthesized musings are concise enough to stay interesting despite the group's lack of innovation. Everybody Knows is classier and more mature than its twee influences would suggest. And since the album peters out at 38 minutes, it's hardly a challenging listen. The tracks often feel formulaic - slow guitar strums here, some electronic ornamentation there, verse-chorus-verse-chorus-fade. But then again, The Go Find isn't pushing for a revolution. The group makes gently swaying music to listen to while drinking a mug of hot chocolate and gazing out a window at the February snow. It's the epitome of "not bad" - and that's pretty good. Even though no enve- lopes were pushed in the making of this album, Every- body Knows delivers a pleasant romp through The Go Find's unique, if rather unexciting, repertoire. ARTS IN BRIEF England-bred Hynes is making a return to his formative teenage years in a coming-of-age album rife with disillusionment, despon- dency and all those other quint- essential adolescent insecurities. And he doesn't hold back, either. His inflected Brit-pop vocals are often tremulous, wavering on lines such as, "I know you're happy / And that's lovely / But it won't keep me company," from opening track "Dead Head Blues." He's pouty and bitchy and sullen and wistful. It's the last attribute that proves to be Hynes's major asset, and it clearly separates him from the hordes of whiny Brit-pop Teen angst channeled in a (post) coming-of- age album. his own wallowing, Hynes has a dif- ferent type of bright-eyed eagerness -there's asense things will only get better from here. It's a tragedy you can dance to. "Marlene," an album standout, Steve Urkel's hipster phase. is an upbeat, funky fresh tune that's almost satirically comi- cal - pairing jaunty tambourines against goofily depressive lyrics like: "Everybody knows you want a baby / And God knows every- body wants one, too." OnLife isSweet!Nice toMeet You, Hynes accomplishes the remark- able task of being sweet without becoming saccharine in the pro- cess. The kid's all right - his corny lyrics are deliberately overdone and meta enough so that listeners don't feel like awkward losers for being able to relate to them. So feel free to pull on your skinniest pair of jeans, don a black hoodie and get your teenage kicks on again. Some- times it's fun to be sad. CONCERT PREVIEW Swedish Radio Choir comes to'U' Swedish Radio Choir Sunday at 4 p.m. Hill Auditorium Tickets from $10 The University Musical Society is known for presenting widely acclaimed music, dance and the- ater performances from all over the globe. The latest act to hit the stage is one of the world's foremost a cappella choirs - the, Swedish Radio Choir. Founded in 1925, the Swedish Radio Choir didn't find its footing until 1952, when it bloomed under the inspired direction of choirmas- ter and conductor Eric Ericson. Ericson developed the choir into a finely tuned entity that grew to perform even the most advanced choral works, including those by famed composers Richard Strauss and MaxReger. In fact, whenSwiss composer Arthur Honegger heard the choir sing his own music for the first time, he became an avid admirer, proclaiming the choir could sing just about anything that was handed to them. Since then, the Swedish Radio Choir has developed into an international sensation, having collaborated with renowned con- ductors like Riccardo Muti, Clau- dio Abbado and Valery Gergiev. it is currently under the guidance of Ragnar Bohlin, the award-win- ning director of the San Francisco Symphony Chorus. Made up of 32 talented vocal- ists, the Swedish Radio Choir can be recognized by its exqui- site blending of harmonies. The choir tackles all kinds of musi- cal arrangements from Johann Sebastian Bach to Giovanni Pier- luigi da Palestrina, as well as numerous modern composers. With their expansive repertoire and international acclaim, the Swedish Radio Choir is a fitting addition to the UMS roster. ANUARUMUGAM