Posts Tagged ‘projects’

Germinating well

Monday, February 16th, 2009

My casual game has been germinating well. It’s about ready for playtesting, so if anyone’s interested then send me your iPhone’s serial number (it’s in iTunes on the iPhone’s summary screen when you plug it in), and I’ll send you a build. It’s a tile-based word game, in the same vein as Scrabble, but faster-paced and more twitchy. I think it’s turning out to be pretty fun!

One of the downsides is that it’s requiring more art than I’d initially planned, which means I’m spending a lot of time in Photoshop just trying to draw things that are remotely passable as squirrels, alligators and spiders. Not easy when I’m so used to working with professional video-game artists.

This weekend is the Seattle Festival of Improv, and I’ll be taking a few workshops there, as well as hopefully checking out some of the shows.

My network hard drive broke. For the most part I was only using it for backup purposes, but I’m not 100% sure of what’s on there. I may crack it open and see if I can’t salvage its contents somehow. Still… annoying.

Not much else going on at the moment… more news when it happens!

Dan.

Reek of delish

Wednesday, February 4th, 2009

People seem to still be downloading iProv, which is cool. The Seattle Festival of Improv Theater is coming up, and I may try to promote it there. I’ve started work on a casual game in the meantime… it’s coming along well.

I’d been away from Unexpected a couple of weeks, and when I came back to play this past weekend I was amused to find a certain photo printed out on the managing director’s desk, with the caption “UP alum Joel McHale gives Dan Posluns a noogie”. It never takes much of an absence for me to feel the nostalgia when I return.

My washer finally got repaired today, nearly two weeks after I first set out to have it fixed. The repairman missed our first appointment because he was sick and I was never notified. He came two days later and identified the problem, but it required ordering a replacement part. He was supposed to come back with it on Monday, but phoned and told me it had arrived busted and they were going to have to order another one. Finally, today, I was able to do laundry again and stop smelling like a hobo.

In the end the affair cost me nearly three hundred dollars, with about half of that just for a new dial control. Admittedly cheaper than buying a new washer, but not enough to keep me from feeling really jilted if anything else goes wrong with it.

The Superbowl was this past weekend, and for someone who’s normally not very entertained by football, I found it enthralling. In fact, the game was probably more interesting than the commercials, which were an unusually paltry crop this year. Some were worse than others, but the one that angered up the blood most was the one that was criminally ignorant of some of the most fundamentally basic geometry:

Someone at the party was following Wil Wheaton on Twitter and I think he summed it up best: “It’s like a million geometry nerds cried out in terror and were suddenly silenced.”

My parents sent me a very excellent birthday gift I meant to blog about some time ago. One part of it was a bottle of the jalapeno vodka my grandmother’s brother brought with him in his most recent (and in all likelihood final) visit from Russia. Unlike normal vodka (which is normally pretty flavourless and used mainly as a mixer), this stuff has a really nice, mild taste to it that makes it great for shots. Plus the jalapeno sitting at the bottom of the bottle is all kinds of awesome.

The other, far more valuable part was a package of slices of the salami obtained from the St. Jacob’s Farmer’s Market, which is more than an hour’s drive west of Toronto. This is an aged, all-beef Mennonite salami that is unlike anything else – I need to keep it shut up in a cupboard or my entire condo will reek of delish. I’ve been rationing it carefully but I’m already more than a quarter of a way through the stuff. My parents had to sneak it across the border (beef is prohibited) when they drove down to Florida for their vacation and shipped it out from there. It took nearly a month to arrive, and I had assumed that it had been confiscated by the post office (since it had a Canadian return address on it), but it was a very pleasant surprise the day when it turned up.

I could use more pleasant surprises! Get on that, blogosphere.

Dan.

Virtual shelves

Thursday, January 22nd, 2009

My first application that I’ve written for the iPhone has hit virtual shelves! Say hello to iProv, a handy reference tool for improvisers that catalogues and displays over 250 improv games and handles, organizes them by tags, lets you search, track your recently-viewed and favourites, etc. and even choose a random entry by shaking the iPhone!

I wrote it as a feet-getting-wet project for the iPhone, which is part of the reason it’s free (the other main reason being that it’s based on free material). In addition to writing the program itself, I’ve set up (and most significantly, written documentation for) an infrastructure to allow the improv community to help collaborate on the program’s contents, and that’s over at http://iprov.sourceforge.net.

If you own an iPhone, please check it out even if you aren’t an improviser, as I’d appreciate both the stats on the iTunes website and the feedback from you.

Otherwise, life plods along, with a couple minor detours. I’ve been having trouble sleeping, which wasn’t helped one night when I was called at 4 AM to liberate an intoxicated friend from the police station (I was sleepy and there was a ton of reverb where he was calling from, so when he first called I thought it was from beyond the grave). It was a DUI and thankfully nobody was hurt, but it’s the first time I’ve ever been called into that sort of service so that seemed noteworthy. I also went to a cool fundraiser/cocktail party for a friend’s dance troupe… I normally find any sort of dancing pretty intimidating so it wasn’t until the bar had received a significant donation from me that I would even consider sharing the floor with the room full of “professionals”.

I’m annoyed by things that are breaking in my world. Ever since the chains on my tires snapped during the recent snowpocalypse, my right-front tire has been making a quiet grinding noise against a piece of metal that won’t stay put. I’ll get it looked at the next time I’m in for service, but for now it’s just troublesome. And now my washer has apparently broken… it quits half-way through the rinse cycle, leaving my clothes soaked and still a bit soapy. I have better things to be spending my money on… although most of it is sitting in savings anyway, waiting for the spectre of the assessment that’s supposed to happen on my condo to actually materialize.

Just the other day I opened a money-market account at the suggestion of a helpful bank teller (who also scored a nice referral fee). It apparently has all the liquidity of a savings account (so long as I don’t withdraw more than 5 times a month, which is fine, seeing as I have yet to withdraw from that account even once), but with a rate that floats about a percentage point higher. I feel stupid for not knowing about this kind of thing already.

Dan.

Into my life’s history

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

Well, Rocky came to its bittersweet conclusion this past weekend. I had somehow talked myself into the responsibility of making gifts for everyone who had been helping out on the show, and this proved to be a fairly monumental task, as there were no less than 17 people helping out at every single performance, plus five others we wanted to suitably honour: the director, producer, stage manager, music director and costumer. My initial plan called for a cast photo to be taken, which would be turned into photo-greeting-cards that we could sign and distribute to everyone. I was then going to find five inexpensive collage-frames for the others and load them up with photos of the show.

I ordered the greeting cards online and they arrived on Wednesday, but were printed at about a quarter of the resolution of the original file I sent in and looked horrible, so without sufficient time to place another order I wound up spending an evening designing them myself, going to Kinko’s and getting them printed and cut there. Meanwhile I was unable to find suitable collage frames in the budget I’d requested from the cast, so at one person’s suggestion I undertook the task of making the collages myself and fitting them into generic 16×20 inch frames, which was of course a much larger project than I’d originally signed on for or imagined.

In addition to these, in a stroke of luck/genius I’d come across mad scientist alphabet blocks which seemed like a perfect cast gift, but in order to give everyone blocks with meaningful letters on them I would have to order several sets. In a quick correspondence with the business, however, I found out that not only for a small price increase per block I could select individual blocks, but for a slightly greater increase they would let me pick all six sides for each block, which meant I could custom-tailor a block for each cast member. So for a smaller price than ordering multiple sets I was able to get each cast member their own customized mad scientist alphabet block with letters that I found meaningful to them. Sweet.

On top of this, I wanted to give the cast members a framed cast photo, so I had to get that taken care of as well. So last week was pretty much spent embroiled in getting all that together, and my condo looks like an arts-and-crafts tornado ran through it as a result.

Emotions ran pretty high for closing weekend. All three shows had sold out early in the week, so we knew we’d have good audiences. It was a long run and a good run and of course the only alternative to ending it while still wanting to do more would be to end it once we were sick of it, so there’s no option but to grieve and move on. My only frustration was that after many months of pristine health that was nothing short of miraculous I finally succumbed to a cold on our closing weekend, which of course had to be when they decided to make a video recording of the show. Boo. Fortunately the cold hasn’t affected my throat much, but it hit my lung capacity pretty badly, which wreaked havoc on my solos. The various meds I put myself on also impacted my acting in general, I think. Oh well.

I’ve added some more photos of the production to my gallery, including a whole slew that were taken when we went to see the movie version at the Admiral Theatre, and a couple of the cast with our most famous guest narrator, United States Congressman Jim McDermott:

McDermott 1

Some newspaper came and snapped photos of the event as well, but I haven’t heard anything yet about the article.

As sad as I am to see Rocky pass on from my living world and into my life’s history, I finally made it back to an ensemble workshop at Unexpected yesterday and was startled at how much I missed my life there and doing improv. As much as I love doing scripted work, there is a naked honesty that improv provides that other forms of theatre cannot, and the people over there are so excellent that it pains me retroactively to have been removed from them for so long.

I suffered from the usual I’ve-been-away-I-sure-hope-I-remember-how-to-do-this syndrome, but I managed a couple of really decent scenes (and one spectacularly terrible one, but that’s how the improv cookie crumbles) and once I got into it and the feeling of it started flooding back to me, I was almost shaking from how much I missed doing it. I really look forward to sinking my teeth back in over there.

Dan.

The stuff of legends

Saturday, October 4th, 2008

Tuesday our condo board had the meeting about the impending assessment. Unsurprisingly, when you try to cram both debate and vote into less than three hours over what, for most people, will be the most important financial decision they make in a 5-year timeframe, things get a little hectic. In spite of that, I truly expected the measure to pass and the project to get approval. I was more than a little stunned the next day when I heard that it hadn’t, with the yes-votes only managing 48.2% and 22 people abstaining (which is really unfortunate).

As much as the assessment is a bitter pill to swallow, I had actually hoped it would pass, as it gets the problem taken care of and out of the way. Now it may be another few months before we can get some kind of alternative project started, and while the board frankly did a terrible job of involving the homeowners and really manipulated the circumstances to force this particular solution down their throats (and I think this is the main reason they voted against the project), we really don’t have a lot of choice: either we do something, or our homes continue to depreciate until they are condemned.

Our situation and the outcome of the vote bears an uncanny resemblance to what recently happened with the failed attempt to pass a $700 billion congressional bailout of Wall Street. Since then, a slightly revised (mainly pork-ified) version has passed. Hopefully we will follow a similar path, minus the pork, and with a greater expectation of return on our investment.

Of course, I cannot let the impending assessment halt my spending entirely. Every now and then I get a flash of inspiration for cast gifts, and this time it came in the form of lips and underwear… specifically the lips from the movie’s logo in the form of an embroidered patch which I proceeded to iron onto sexy briefs for the guys and very sexy v-strings for the ladies (the black version). It was a bigger project than it perhaps sounds (it took a couple of weeks to research and obtain all of the necessary pieces), and was well-received by all and as sound an investment as any I have made as of late.

The show continues to go well in our second weekend, although we are still plagued with microphone troubles. I’m really trying to get over myself and my own feelings of inadequacy enough to properly enjoy some of these stage moments, which I know full well I am unlikely to ever see again once this month passes. When the band strikes up and I get to hear myself over the speaker system uttering quite possibly the most famous words from the show: “It’s astounding… time is fleeting… madness takes it toll…” there is a kind of excitement and tension I’ve never experienced in another production. For many people, this is the stuff of legends… and I am delivering it for them. It’s a responsibility that gnaws at me, but I’m also discovering the joy of owning those moments.

Tonight after the show we are going to the Admiral Theatre in west Seattle, where a local shadow cast known as The Zen Room performs the show in front of the movie, as tradition dictates. I’ve negotiated between the two parties of them and our theatre company so that we are able to attend in our show costumes and makeup, and they’re going to give us a nod and allow us to hand out fliers/coupons for our own production. I am excited that I’ve been able to facilitate a fun group outing that will allow us to directly market to potentially upwards of 400 people who are the very literal definition of our target demographic.

I need to take a moment to expound upon how much I love this cast, and how much fun they are. Between the group I had for Urinetown, the folks down at Unexpected, and now this, I am both blessed and spoiled. I adore the Rocky Horror cast and love every moment we get to hang out after or between shows. I’m not going to say “this is why I do theatre” because I do theatre for plenty of reasons, but if I didn’t have any of those other reasons then people like them would still make it worth my while.

Dan.