Some links before getting started. Norma wrote about various issues. Yesterday having had been a Friday, Parsnip had a Square Dog Friday. Eve had some news. Shelly had an installment of an online novel. And Ivy asked what you would eat.
Onto today's mischief, bringing back a familiar fellow entirely in love with himself.
Director Announces
Latest Overblown Project; Reporters Make Unanimous Eye Roll
Los Angeles (CP) Reporters were summoned to the office
headquarters of Digital Domain for an announcement by director Michael Bay, who
has a long standing habit of making over the top explosion filled pointless
popcorn films like Pearl Harbor,
Armageddon, and the Transformers franchise.
The quite egomaniacal director, who is in the midst of multiple projects, had
yet another new idea for an upcoming film. Real reporters were filed in with
the fawning entertainment reporters, those halfwits and buffoons who have no
idea how stupid they are. This reporter found himself wondering what he could
have done to merit such punishment from his tyrannical editor (editor: damn you, enough with your
complaining asides! You ran over my foot with your car!).
This reporter sighed with dismay, knowing that his
tyrannical editor might not be able to fire him (thank you so much, iron clad
contract), but still had the power to send him out on pointless garbage
assignments like covering the press conference of a hack director so in love
with himself that he had full length mirrors out on stage for every single
press conference. And sure enough, as this reporter came into the auditorium
with other reporters (real and entertainment reporters alike), there was the
standard mirror set up right by the podium.
An aide announced her boss, and lo and behold, there he
came. Michael Bay, in his standard appearance, stepped out on stage. The
slightly dishevelled hair, the day or two of stubble, the jeans, sports jacket,
and shirt without a tie look that he favoured. He walked out with that big,
vacant looking grin, waved to the reporters, seemed entirely oblivious to the
raised middle fingers coming from the real reporters, and walked to the podium.
And true to form, he looked himself in the mirror, smiled again, and faced the
crowd. This reporter felt the seventh eye roll of the day start to take form
beneath his eyelids (editor: does that
mean your eyes were closed? Were you sleeping during a press conference? Answer
the question!)
Despite the tyrannical editor not having the self awareness
to actually grasp that this reporter was not asleep (editor: stop insulting me!), this reporter was indeed paying
attention, and glancing at his watch, wondering when this latest exercise in
Michael Bay self glorification would end. Bay spoke up. “It’s great to see you all out here today! Of
course you had to come, because I’m Michael Bay, and everyone wants to know what Michael Bay is up to! You know, it’s
not exaggeration when I say I’m the greatest
director of all time. I don’t know why the Oscars don’t see it that way, but
I’m pretty sure that all of my upcoming films are going to rectify that in a
big way. And that’s why I’m here today. I have a big announcement about a new
film that I’ll be directing down the line.” He paused, smiling again in that
same vacant way that made one wonder just how many squirrels were running
around in between his ears.
And then he continued. “A friend of mine up north of the
border told me a story. Of a heroic character who was misunderstood. A bright
and polite and capable man, always handy, always there for you. And yet there
were many who felt a deep and overwhelming hostility
to this man. They found the politeness to be... grating. This man spent many
years doing commercials, and over time the hostility grew to the point that the
company realized they had to pull the ad campaign. I am speaking, of course,
about The Canadian Tire Guy.”
There was a murmuring among some of the reporters. This
reporter, being Canadian, knew the infernal demonic Canadian Tire Guy all too
well. For eight years until 2006, Ted Simonett had played the overly helpful
neighbour in a series of commercials infesting the television airwaves. His
fingernails-on-the-blackboard cheerful neighbourhood busybody was known for
turning up in the garages and yards of literally everyone within five
kilometres of his home and going on and on about whatever piece of crap he had
just bought from Canadian Tire. The Canadian Tire Guy was, essentially, Ned
Flanders without the religious pompousness and speech impediments.
Bay continued on. “I thought there was a real story here. A
misunderstood hero who had garnered the distrust of his community by trying to
be helpful but who, in a terrible turn of events, could be the one person they
could count on. And that’s the kind
of film I wanted to make. I thought of calling the film The Canadian Tire Guy, but as we all know, that title won’t fly in
big parts of the Flyover part of America, where they think a mile high wall of permanent
snow starts the moment you reach the Canadian border. So the film I’ll be
telling is going to be set in a fictional town. It could be Canada, it could be
America, who knows, and who cares? The point is the hero of the story, and a
man cast out by his community for being too helpful and too much into everyone
else’s business. We’re talking about an epic disaster film for the ages, a film
with blizzards, snownadoes, explosions, more explosions, and avalanches, and
only one very resourceful hardware store loving guy able to save the day. If he can persuade his neighbours that
he’s there to help.”
This reporter actually heard the eye rolls of every other
real reporter as he rolled his eyes. An egomaniacal director like Michael Bay
was actually using a commercial campaign as inspiration for a feature film? Bay
seemed to ignore the eye rolls. “I thought of having the original Canadian Tire
Guy, Ted Simonett, come out and play, well... himself. I mean, he’s an actor,
after all. I was told though that he’s living under an assumed name after lots
of hate mail, pies in the face, death threats, and vows of eternal vendettas
came his way while that ad campaign kept going on and on and on and on. So he
declined. So I went in another direction for casting, and slightly changed the
name. Ladies and gentlemen, starting out our cast...”
“Let me guess. Shia LaBeouf?” this reporter asked.
“No, but he is in the cast, no thank you for interrupting,”
Bay replied, and flashed his usual dimwitted grin yet again. “Ladies and gentlemen,
playing the central role of Theodore Sedgwick, I give you Mister Nicolas Cage!"
Cage came out on stage, waving and drinking from a bottle of
Scotch. His hair weave was even stranger than usual, and he was sporting a few
days of stubble. “Hello there!” he said,
a bit unsteady on his feet. “It’s going to be a whole lot of fun playing this
character, the hero, the main man, daddy-o!” This reporter wondered how drunk
Cage was, let alone if he had learned a single thing from playing the lead role
of an alcoholic in Leaving Las Vegas.
Bay grinned as Cage stood by him. “And of course in a film
like this, we have to have a love interest. Only they don’t start out that way.
See, she finds Theodore to be just as grating as everyone else in town, but
when he steps up and plays the hero, she starts thinking differently. Ladies
and gentlemen, in a casting coup reuniting Nic with his leading lady from Leaving Las Vegas, playing the local
mayor Alison Parker, I give you Elisabeth Shue!”
The actress stepped out on stage, looking a bit wary. “Hi,
um, I sort of got roped into this whole film without really thinking things
through. Please don’t think less of
me.”
Bay laughed. “What a sense of humour! Now then, we’ve got a
father and son dynamic in this film. It seems the two Sedgwick men don’t see
eye to eye on much these days. Young Brad Sedgwick just wishes his dad was less
of a busybody. Theodore wants his son to show more interest in hardware goods.
Playing Brad, I give you Shia LaBeouf!”
Shia LaBeouf came out on stage, waving in that vacant way
suggesting very little was going on in his head. “Hello! Shia is pleased to be
part of this film project! Shia needs the money to pay off some fines and his
lawyers after some legal troubles! Shia shrugs off legal troubles!” He took his
place by the others. This reporter sighed with dismay, and contemplated banging
his head against a wall.
Bay grinned again, and said, “And playing the part of the
easily annoyed next door neighbour Larry O’Neill, I chose someone else I
haven’t worked with before. Ladies and gentlemen, I give you Tim Allen!”
The comedian, once the star of Home Improvement, and really only capable of playing himself, came
out on stage, smiling in that goofy and baffled way. He waved to the crowd.
“Hi! You know, I could have played the lead in this, but really, I’ve already
kind of played the annoying tool obsessed guy once, so that would be
typecasting myself. Instead I get to play the guy on the other side of the
fence. Only as I recall, Wilson wasn’t so easily annoyed by me. I mean, Tim.
The guy I played. Right. Because as we all know, stand-up comedians can’t
respond to any name but their own
when they actually act.”
Bay looked dazed for a moment, as if like a deer caught in
the headlights. “Note to self: rename the Larry O’Neill character to Tim
O’Neill,” he muttered to himself and continued.
“And playing the film’s paranoid survivalist villain Dirk Van Zandt, I
give you one of my favourite actors, my go-to guy, the one, the only... Steve
Buscemi!”
Buscemi walked out on stage, a mix of his usual creepiness
and a bit of shame in his face. “Someone please
break me out of my contract to work for this guy. The man’s a hack!”
“Steve, you’re such a kidder!” Bay said with a laugh. “Ladies and gentlemen, the main cast for Snowpocalypse Now, soon to go into
production. Francis Ford Coppola can kiss my ass if he thinks he can prevent me
from using that title.”
With that, Bay left the stage with his actors. This reporter
shared mutual grumbles and sighs of dismay with other real reporters.
Entertainment reporters, meanwhile, could be heard uttering phrases like “film
of the century” and “wow, did you see that cast?” like the blithering idiots
they are. This reporter wondered how long he would continue to be in
journalistic purgatory (editor: I hate
you. Your next assignment is going to involve you getting infected with the
Ebola virus).
That long, huh?
Good tips on dealing with annoying neighbors!
ReplyDeleteBay certainly is productive, isn't he? Seems like just a few weeks ago you posted about him making a film with some other weird people like Shia LaBoeuf. And a few months ago seems like there was another post about him making a movie with LaBoeuf and some other weird people...
ReplyDeleteI wish I had that cannon--those pesky ball playing brats in my neighborhood would be out of sight and out of mind for good!
ReplyDeleteI would do an eyeroll and ask what Bay might do next, but you already told me, so....
When I saw the cannon I thought of you Norma and the sweet little kiddies that bang their ball against your door ! It is summertime. Yea you !
ReplyDeleteBay and LaBoeuf together again, just gag me with a spoon.
cheers, parsnip
I do love the Transformer movies. I could listen to Optimus Prime talk all day. I love his voice. Bumblebee is awesome too. I can't hold those movies against him.
ReplyDelete@Lynn: thank you!
ReplyDelete@Cheryl: Bay is a very useful subject for blogs.
@Norma: yes, you've got a hint of the next one!
@Parsnip: they're both atrocious!
@Kelly: but they're awful movies!
Can I borrow the heavy artillery? I have some neighbors I'd like to get rid of. LOL
ReplyDelete