- As of 10 AM today, tickets for “Zack And Miri Make a Porno” at the Toronto Film Festival are now on sale!. According to the online order page, the screening will take place Tuesday afternoon, September 9th, at 3:00 PM, new information contrary to what we had heard before. This will be the world premiere of the film. The last time we went up to Toronto, it was to screen “Dogma”, which turned into a MAJOR EVENT with most of the cast on hand. We’re thinking we might see a lot of the same go down for this one.
Premium tickets, which get you into a gala screening such as this one, cost $37.38 and are well worth it — They can be ordered online, by phone at 416-968-FILM or toll-free at 1-877-968-FILM or in person at the TIFFG Box Office at Manulife Centre right now.
We expect this screening to sell out, quite possibly even by the time some of you have read this (it pays to be a weekend News Askew reader or feed subscriber, see?). Good luck — We’re hoping a lot of News Askew fans can end up in the audience for what is sure to be a fantastic screening. Get those tix right now, don’t delay! More news coming up later today. We just wanted to get this out there ASAP.
Your search for the word(s) "feed" turned up this stuff:
News Of The “Zack And Miri” Appeal Crosses The Web…
- The fantastic news of the “Zack & Miri” R-rating spread across the web like wildfire this week. Much thanks to VideoETA and Aint It Cool for the shout-outs.
The fantastic G4 TV Feed caught wind of the news as well and used it in their daily wrap up segment yesterday.Definitely cool to see the AP story we ran picked up by Variety as well, where it was a top item in their daily e-mailing.
Just to clarify, while we stated that there were no FURTHER cuts, it was never implied that the earlier cuts made were for ratings reasons. Kevin typically makes time-related cuts to his films after watching them with an audience, and this was no exception. The first and only rating the film received when submitted was an NC-17, but this was after Kevin had already trimmed the film on his own. There were NO CUTS made in an effort to reduce the rating, so the “R” rated film we’ll see will be the same that Kevin intended, and the same one that was originally hit with that NC-17. Hope that makes sense.
View Askew NewsBites
ViewAskew Newsbites
- We’ve been talking a lot about that Best Buy Mooby Clerks II box set that’s showing up in a few select locations — We’ve just learned that Stash West/Laser Blazer has some in stock in the store! Pick them up while ya can, as this is a fantastic item to bring with you for Kevin to autograph at the big signing event later this month.
- Kevin once again made insanely popular quiz show “Jeopardy!” late this week, as an $800 answer in a category called ‘Mere Smiths’:
This director of “Clerks” played Warlock in “Live Free or Die Hard”.
Returning champ Aaron got it right, answering of course, “Who is Kevin Smith?”. - Rotten Tomatoes list a familiar duo in their list of “The 10 Best Superhero Hookups” :
10. Bluntman & Chronic
As seen in: Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back (2001)
Like their “real-life” counterparts Jay (Jason Mewes) and Silent Bob (Kevin Smith), these superhero buddies live by their own version of the force: a shared love for Mary Jane. Wielding their bluntsabers side by side, Bluntman and his loyal sidekick Chronic spring from the pages of Banky and Holden’s comic in Kevin Smith’s Chasing Amy, then get the Hollywood treatment in their film-within-a-film in Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back. With A-list schmucks Jason Biggs and James Van Der Beek set to ruin the duo’s good name, Jay and Silent Bob arrive just in time to film a pivotal fight against the evil Cocknocker (Mark Hamill) with a cry of “Snootchie bootchies!” Just remember, they’re not gay; they’re (super) hetero life partners. Man love can be a beautiful thing. - Just a bit more info on that Spike panel in San Diego later this month — We mentioned the time change of 4:45 to 5:45 on Thursday the 24th, but not the bigger room. That’s gonna be Ballroom 20. As always, check with the Con when you arrive to be certain. Kevin will be a participant in Spike TV’s “Scream Like a Girl” panel.
- Finally today, blogger James Hibbard expresses his jealousy over Kevin’s hosting the upcoming “Battlestar Galactica” panel at the San Diego Con, writing: “This could push the typically packed venue into fire marshal-shutdown level of geek engagement.”. You’re not kidding. Between an in-person stint with “Spaced” geniuses Edgar Wright, Simon Pegg, and Jessica Hynes, followed by a sit-down panel with stars and creators of the best show on televsion right now, we’re insanely jealous ourselves. It’s gonna be some July. If you’re on the west coast, or plan to be there soon, the end of a July sure is a good time to be there. More on Kevin’s stint for “Galactica” via Galactica Sitrep
Carlin Tributes From HBO, NBC…
- For those of you with HBO at home, be sure to tune in tonight, as they’re continuing their 2 night marathon of George Carlin HBO specials on their HBO2 channel. 11 of his famous stand-up specials will air. On Friday night, HBO will show George’s final HBO special. You can’t miss with a Carlin special, and his were always major events when they premiered on the channel. Tune in for some of the best comedy ever recorded. If you’re on the east coast and reading this late, you’ll likely still find it on the west coast feed where available. We’ll keep our eye on HBO for future Carlin airings, as we don’t think this will be the last we see of these specials — Perhaps they’ll add them to the “On Demand” library for a while, as well.
On Saturday night, NBC will offer up their own tribute to the man, airing the classic first ever episode of Saturday Night Live — Yes, Geroge Carlin was the host. SNL normally does not run entire episodes from the archives like this on NBC, so it’s a rare treat and absolutely worth tuning in or setting the DVRs for. The premiere is a fun watch, whether you’ve seen it before or not.
Aint It Cool News has a few more details.
View Askew NewsBites™
- One of our favorite all-time View Askew comic references arrives in Madman #9 today — Look at the Secret Stash’s glorious appearance in this two page center spread. The book also features appearances of a Graphitti Designs storefront and Graphitti’s own Bob Chapman. Full details on the book over at the Image Comics site. Kudos to Mike Allred for another fantastic book and for working in those wonderful homages. Just photos for now, if anyone has clearer scans, send ’em on!
- We’re loving this Youtube short for “Jay & Seth vs. The Apocalypse”. In the newly announced feature film version, Seth Rogen will star opposite his onscreen ‘Knocked Up’ pal Jay Baruchel. It’s being called an “action comedy”. E! Online has a bit more detail, revealing that the film should start shooting sometime in 2009 (the film linked above was a short made last year, which became inspiration for the full-length project). So far, we love what we’re seeing.
- One of our scoopers caught an early screening of “The Happening” (in theaters tomorrow, Friday the 13th) and has a few more details of our pal Brian O’Halloran’s role:
…I did notice Brian O’Halloran was in the movie and thought you guys should know since I haven’t seen any reference to it anywhere on View Askew related sites.
He plays a Jeep driver and it’s like Clerks for a moment where he is acting through expressions on the rear view mirror to the other actors in the car. Needless to say none of them recited a story about their cousin Walter breaking his neck.
I won’t give away any plot details as the less you know the better.
The film has been getting mixed and negative reviews thus far. Judge it for yourself in theaters this weekend. Congrats to Brian on the role; always good to see the guy onscreen.
SModcast Has Returned!!
- All rejoice, as the sting of Monday morning hurts a little less this morning, as the great SModcast has returned. For our new viewers, SModcast is an entertaining, free-flowing unscripted podcast from Kevin Smith and Scott Mosier. This episode is the first since completing filming on “Zack And Miri Make a Porno”. After recording a show early on after the first week on the set, the guys got so swamped with work (typically putting in around 20 hour) days, so recording the show became impossible. Now, that downtime is over, and the guys are back to form with another hilarious episode:
SModcast 45: The End of the SMod-fastIn which our heroes finally appease the hunger with chatter about where they’ve been, what they’d do if they were “Lost”, and how they ride their mellow.
Don’t miss the return of SModcast, available for immediate, free download exclusively at Quick Stop Entertainment.Also, a sidenote – For those of you who traditionally got the feed automatically via iTunes, that feed will no longer update until Friday. This is to allow faster downloading for those of you who want the show right away, and less slowage on Monday mornings when everyone was doing a direct download AND an iTunes download at the same time. Makes sense, right? Welcome back, Scott & Kevin!
More From The Man On “Zack And Miri”!
- Once again, Kevin took some time out of his busy day to head into cyberspace to answer a bunch more questions about the film, leading into some discussions on Banks’ new role, the next movie (“Red State”?), the possibilities of Z&M swag, and lots more. Also, he’s got some news regarding a new running time for the flick, thanks to some recent cuts :
As of this writing, I was able to chop out an additional twelve minutes. Current running time is 1:48. I think that’ll be it ’til after the screening – which is now looking to be late April, as we wanna have Jim (Venable) do a few score cues (rather than temp-track in music from some other flick).We’re already looking forward to not only the movie, but seeing all this deleted stuff on the DVD! And now, today’s round of Q&A:
ZACK AND MIRI MAKE A PORNOAny ounce of possibility that Z&M could feed into another flick (sequel or related “world” in the View Askewniverse vein)?
Kevin said: “None.”
I’m just wondering what it’s been like for you, as Jay’s friend, his director, and his co-star, to watch him progress from the energetic but nervous kid in Clerks to the scene-stealing dialogue-machine that is Jay in Dogma and J&SBSB?
Kevin said: “It’s been great. I feel like a proud parent.”
How do you feel he’s progressed from Clerks 2 to Z&M?
Kevin said: “He’s a real, live actor now (contrary to what Neil Patrick Harris may feel). I don’t have to rehearse him to death to get his tone/inflection right anymore; he just gets it now.”
Aside from Rogen and Banks, who gets the most screen time in Z&M?
Kevin said: “Craig.”
It’s pretty excellent news that Elizabeth has been cast as W’s wife isn’t it? Did you know during filming Z & M that she was up for the role?
Kevin said: “The day I got back to L.A., she texted me to say she’d gotten the part. I’m ecstatic for her, as I (mostly) love Stone.”
Do show your friends the entire movie every time you do edits, or just those certain scenes?
Kevin said: “It depends. Mos is the only one who watches the flick with any regularity, but since he’s watched it from end-to-end recently, he’ll just look at stuff I cut down or re-cut now.”
Have you approached any artists yet to put their music in the flick?
Kevin said: “Not yet.”
I was just wondering when we may see some Z&M merchandise available?
Kevin said: “I dunno, but don’t expect a shit-ton.”
Would there be any chance of footage being shown at ComiCon in Hall H?
Kevin said: “Probably a scene or two.”
Were you conciously not trying to include many actors from your previous films as this is a movie set outside the J&SB universe?
Kevin said: “Yes.”
How big of a part does Tom Savini have in the film? And how was it to work with him?
Kevin said: “One scene. It was cool. He’s a nice guy.”
Do you plan to show any other filmmakers the movie for outside professional feedback, like you did Rob Rod and Quentin?
Kevin said: “Edgar [Wright] and Richard [Kelly] would probably be up first, I’d imagine.”
Did you shoot alternate coverage for an alternative PG/non-cable version of the movie?
Kevin said: “Nope.”
Are all of the character names accurate on the IMDB page?
Kevin said: “There is no “Mall Maniac.” And the guy listed as playing him isn’t familiar to me at all, either.”
Is it significant that Jason’s and Traci’s are “unknown”?
Kevin said: “Not really. They just haven’t gotten out yet, I guess.”
Does this early buzz encourage you to step further away from the your past films and open you up to more possibilities for the future?
Kevin said: “The Askewniverse films are done, sir. I’ve no choice at this point but to step away. Next flick’s a big, big step away.”
RED STATE
Did working on this movie give you any ideas for Red State? Maybe cast/crew members, locations, etc. that might work for that movie?
Kevin said: “Kenny, our effects guy, told me that Iowa was instating a 50% tax rebate.”
So, there ya have it! A View Askew production possibly coming to IOWA? Plus, a low swag count for the new flick seeming to go along with Kevin’s credo of taking a different road as far as promotions this time. We’ll be back with more news as it breaks — Kudos to the fans for their continued great questions, and to Kevin for the insightful, spoiler-free answers.
“Zack & Miri” Production Site: Now LIVE!
- News Askew is proud to present the beginnings of the biggest “Zack & Miri Make a Porno” resource on the web – Our production subsection, dedicated 100% to the new film from Kevin Smith and Scott Mosier, starring Seth Rogen and Elizabeth Banks.
This time ’round, we’re doing something a bit different. As this is our first production site under our new database system, we’re using that very database to drive BOTH sites. So, while you’ll still see all the latest news on the front page and in our RSS feed, folks looking to track ONLY the latest news on “Zack and Miri Make A Porno” will get it all at the production site. You won’t, however, need to check BOTH sites to get the latest news. That would just be making things tough on you.
As before, we will offer a few exclusive features only available at the production site. We’ve already got an up to date cast list, which will change as each confirmed member is announced. We’ll also be collecting a nice set of links and scans taking you to all the press on the film, from production through release and beyond. Finally, as muiltimedia offerings start to appear (photos, videos, ads, tv appearances, etc), those will also be archived in one simple place.
While we’re just getting underway, take a moment to pop over to our “Zack & Miri Make a Porno” production site – As always, we promise the most complete, one stop location for all the news on the new movie. Miss a previous production site? Our Dogma, J&SBSB, Jersey Girl, and Clerks II sites are still around for historical purposes.
Graves Review: Betty Aberlin
- Chris Graves celebrates a milestone here with his 20th review for us here at News Askew – This one’s with writer/actress Betty Aberlin. Betty’s first experience with View Askew was almost ten years ago, appear as the nun who interacted with Matt Damon at the airport in the beginning of “Dogma”. She returned to the Askew screen as little Gertie’s school teacher in “Jersey Girl”. Her first claim to fame was playing Lady Aberlin on “Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood” for many years. She also wrote the upcoming book, ‘The Diary of an Old Soul & The White Page Poems’.

AN INTERVIEW WITH BETTY ABERLINBY CHRIS GRAVES
CHRIS GRAVES: For those who do not know, what is your background and how were you introduced to the world of View Askew and Kevin Smith?
BETTY ABERLIN: I’ve got a resume out:
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0008640/resume
That kind of shows you, acting-wise. I started out during the McCarthy years in a ‘folk-opera’ about Sandhogs, when I was ten. Studied ballet and modern jazz dance, got into Performing Arts for drama and Music and Art for art; always read, wrote, sang, thought life was going to be like musical theater. I studied acting with Jeremy Piven’s father, the wonderful Byrne Piven, and toured with his straw hat summer New England circuit of West Side Story as Anybodys (got to dance with the boys!) when I was sixteen. Went to Bennington College, thesis in short stories, and acted in plays at Williams College. Played in the NYC satirical revues (with Madeline Kahn) that preceeded the Laugh-In & SNL shows. Studied Improv, and other fine acting teachers were Harold Clurman in LA and Vivian Nathan of Actors’ Studio.
That’s a great question: because I can’t remember how I found CLERKS, but when I saw it I was like: YES!!!!!!!!!!! I have loved to make people laugh; tend to nod and say ‘that’s funny’ when something is really, really funny. Kevin’s writing made me laugh out loud. Most rare. (I would completely have bought his original ending for Clerks 1, btw.) His fusion of wit & pathos are EXACTLY my cup of tea. His courage.
CG: Can you describe your Dogma experience? How was it acting opposite Matt Damon?
BA: I loved the script – loved it. In my mind, I had already cast Ben Affleck as Loki and Matt Damon as Bartleby, so I was preparing to do my scene with Affleck, and until the call sheet for my shooting day slid under the hotel door, I did not know I’d be working with Matt. I owed both of them tremendous gratitude because of a line (‘It’s not your fault!’) repeated in GOOD WILL HUNTING, which echoed initials (‘i.n.y.f.’)I had been writing on all correspondence to my nephew (the so-called ‘savior child’, whose charge upon birth was taking care forevermore of his older brother, born with every damage conceivable. Because of the family anguish, he was continually apologizing, as though the family strife, and his brother’s handicaps, were somehow his fault. And I took pains to remind him so often of i.n.y.f. – that his at-war parents got together long enough to forbid my reminders. When he had gone to see Good Will Hunting, the message had broken through again despite these prohibitions.) Now picture Matt with a truckload of lines before him in the long walk down the airport corridor, not knowing me from Eve, as I took my place beside him and poured out my incoherent and heartfelt gratitudes, as quickly as I could. He was totally gracious. I had asked him to please slap me if he caught me acting. And off we went. In our sit-down scene, Matt threw me a great curve which cracked my nervousness about ‘doing well’, so I owe him for it. My little nun in the background of the moving elevator scene was supposed to drink beer with a lighted cigarette in her mouth, and since I don’t drink and have asthma, I thought sure that Kevin would never use me again, when I begged to be allowed to do something else. I rediscovered joy itself in DOGMA – and realized by contrast how for-real confining and constrained the unremitting child-development disciplines and prohibitions had been in the t.v. work I had been committed to for so long. Joy. Fun. Comedic freedom. Being part of something both profound and funny.
CG: What was your reaction to the film’s controversy?
BA: Every action has an equal and opposite reaction. The enemy is doing push-ups and Pilates in the next room. Great progress, great opposition. I don’t think Kevin in any way courts it – if he wrote dead-in-the-shallow-water movies, there would be no opposition. He is an original – this is threatening to group=think, whether the thoughtforms of ‘Orthodoxy’ or the buck$-stop-here audience surveys of The Suits.
Too bad the Catholic League was instrumental in cutting out Bethany’s Boo-Hoo scene (see Extras), for me the secret heart of hearts: I have held that the best way to watch DOGMA is with a pregnant teenager to one’s right, and a veteran of abortion to one’s left. Or vice versa. And bring the Kleenex. Kevin’s idea of a God merciful beyond comprehension…..! Oh yes! And the Alanis song: ‘Still’. Heavenly ditto.
CG: Jersey Girl was a fantastic film that got some negative publicity due to the real life romance between Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez. How was the environment like on that set? What did you think of the finished film and how it was treated?
BA: You really want to hear Betty’s Little Conspiracy Theory? All That? I did my homework, I watched Gigli – because short of Heaven’s Gate, I had never ever seen such lavish excoriation of a film, and I marveled at the venom of it. How bad could it be? Was Lopez’s beauty and strength, and Affleck’s gentle character THAT threatening to the audience? Was it the fluidity of sexual identity that threatened? What? P.S. I thought Lanie Kazan and Christopher Walken were especially funny in it, and in hindsight, the scene of Lopez & Affleck in bed – the tenderness of it – was, to me, beautiful. This love, by the time of JERSEY GIRL’s shoot was a palpable spirit of joy and union that permeated the shoot, certainly in my brief time there. The perfection of the casting and the beautiful nature and talents of Raquel Castro – their imaginary child – was part of the magic. Offscreen Ben and Jennifer were damned if they did and damned if they didn’t – whether they flaunted their union, or sought a morsel of privacy within the circus. Ben had spoken of political aspirations, and I thought: WOW! What a team they would make! What power to unite us in the direction of all good things – a for-real rather than the spun-myth of Kennedy/Camelot! I think, apart from Gigli, the idea of their potential power, the sheer moxie of a woman who had been with Puff Daddy and was now flaunting her happy confidence with a white Boston guy who was at once handsome and smart/funny – was a red flag, and the media assassination velocity stepped up, and the beauty of their work in JG was eclipsed times three. By the ill and extraneous linking of JG with their previous movie together, by their zenith ‘hot’ factor (set them up to knock them down), and by a simmering anti-JLo & let’s raise Matt and mock Ben current.
I read the original script of JG. I did not know whether I was laughing through my tears, or crying through my belly-laughs. I know how good it is, and I have seen the director’s cut – even though my cluelessness – I had to ask Kevin ‘what does T.L.F mean?’ – might have made for an unnecessary change (mea culpa) in the message painted in the new home of Ollie & Gert, in the savagely cut Part One of JG. When test audiences responded to the survey questions (I saw the questionaire – it really ought to be posted on viewaskew!) I believe that there was such tremendous anti-JLo & Ben feeling at the time that the first half of the film was bloody sacrificed to focus on the second half. It is how I got to be in the first scene, however.
Furthermore the NYTimes reviewer is not to put it mildly a family man, and trashed every woman in the film, and was the expressly dead wrong person to write on it. I am a fatherless one. I stop in the street when I see little girls with their fathers. Every widower and every child who has not been given to know her parent – would have found goodness in this film. Word will get around. Affleck’s comedic chops and his wonderful scenes with Raquel were completely ignored. That does not mean they are not there. The-side-by-side scene with Will Smith speaks of the nature of fatherhood itself. The love that Bennifer had for each other within the media circus is there, if ‘only’ on film. It is there. It can be felt. When the People magazines are being used to light firewood, if the grid itself doesn’t go down, the love will be there to see.
Aren’t you glad you asked that question? Ask me what time it is – I’ll tell you how to make a swiss watch. Apologies.
CG: You played Lady Aberlin on Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood for many years. How did you get involved with that show and what did you learn from working with Fred Rogers?
BA: Followed a funny song (‘Boy From’) written for THE MAD SHOW under a pseudonym by Stephen Sondheim (only I didn’t know that – just HAD to sing it) – to Pittsburgh, where I met Fred Rogers and began to talk to Daniel Striped Tiger at the first Public TV station there. His Lady Judy Knaiz had just left Pittsburgh for New York, and I had made the opposite trip, and he needed a ‘Lady’ character, having dropped Josie Carey, the woman with whom he had first created The Children’s Corner (but I didn’t know about her either.) Don Francks (see one of the boxcar hobos in ‘I’m Not There’, see FINIAN’S RAINBOW, film version) had sung two wonderful songs in his Village club act, and I had asked about them, and they were by Fred Rogers – Don had played Mister Anybodys in the Canadian beginning of what was to become Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood. But I digress.
I learned, in the Mel Brooks phrase, that ‘it’s good to be the King.’ I learned that the very rich are not like you and me. I learned the power of television for good and for intimacy. I learned to focus on one thing at a time. I learned that you can introduce a lot of good ideas as long as you don’t need to take credit for them. I learned that people by and large underestimate the skills and intelligence both of children and of so-called ‘children’s performers’. I learned that I might be typecast for life. I learned the power of faith and the discipline of commitment to an ideal. I learned how blessed I was to be working with others, I learned the dangers of believing in one’s own finite identity, and I learned over and over and over again to answer the question ‘What’s Fred Rogers really like?’
CG: Did you ever interact with a young Michael Keaton? I heard he got his start on that show.
BA: Michael ran the trolley for a while, and was also a member of the Flying Zookini (sp?) Brothers, the funniest members of which were actually on the floor crew of the Neighborhood (the unsung Niki The Frog Prince may be on Zack & Miri, for all I know – these were the guys that would wedge newspaper in Fred’s shoes while he was trying to locate his loafers and sing the Tomorrow song inside the final time crunch). Michael went to LA – where I played with him in an improv class taught by Betty Thomas (Hill St. Blues, directed the Howard Stern movie Private Parts) an alumni of Second Ciuty, Chi. Her idea of putting a cap on a scene was to get naked upside down in a folding chair.
A shorter answer to your questions would have been: yes & yes.
CG: What was your reaction when Michael became Batman?
BA: Glad for him, glad for the ‘son of Pittsburgh makes good’ angle. Pondered for a split-second the distance it might put between him and his former buddies, as ‘success’ often does. Kevin’s m.o. is most remarkable in this respect. Of course, Captain Marvel (‘SHAZAM!’), not Batman, was my fave. And Wonder Woman. I did form the idea that a Betty would usually lose to a Veronica…. Our mother had forbidden us comics, so we had to sneak off to read them at a friend’s house.
CG: Can you tell me about your new book, ‘The Diary of an Old Soul & The White Page Poems’? When and where will it be available?
BA: It’s two books in one. The idea of it is to read his, read mine, and to write yours. I believe it’ll be out first of 2008. There is a description of the book here…
It’s been a kind of 5 year detour/meditation. George MacDonald (check out a ‘children’s’ book called THE LIGHT PRINCESS) was C.S. Lewis’ spiritual mentor. In 1880 he self-published a book called ‘A Book of Strife in the form of The Diary of an Old Soul’ – a poem for every day of the year. On the opposite side of his poems, he set a blank white page, and the following Dedication invitation:
‘Sweet friends, receive my offering. You will find Against each worded page a white page set: – This is the mirror of each friendly mind Reflecting that. In this book we are met. Make it, dear hearts, of worth to you indeed: – Let your white page be ground, my print be seed, Growing to golden ears, that faith and hope shall feed.’
The dedication was only ever printed in this first edition. At the tail end of 2002 a member of the Wingfold cyber-group posted the original, and I began to answer a poem a day, for a year & 5 months. This is that book. Published strictly by grace.
CG: How easy a transition was it working for years on a children’s television show to the more adult oriented world of View Askew? Did some of the dialogue take getting used to?
BA: Bliss. It was like going from a cardboard playhouse that had gotten a little smaller every year – into the realm described in the song ‘I Believe I Can Fly’ – Viewaskew is the home I was born a tad too early to avail myself of, but by – what’s the term for the special loophole in DOGMA? – again, grace, I although relatively elder, get to be here. Here, where absolutely everything can be talked about – here, where the humor and language is commensurate in power with the incomprehensible state of ‘Reality’ we are asked in these times to attempt to absorb. It’s tonic.
CG: Do you have any new projects coming up?
BA: (prayerful silence)
CG: What is your favorite View Askew / Kevin Smith flick (Dogma / Jersey Girl excluded)?
BA: Red State. [ed. note – Interesting, as we hadn’t known she had read it — Will she potentially appear?]
CG: And finally, do you still keep in contact with anyone from View Askew?
BA: Sometimes, when the burden of gratitude gets just too heavy to bear, I’ll send a little e-mail in the direction of Holy Moobydom, and, between us? – the Buddy Christ and I are ‘like that’.
Thanks so much to Betty for her very insightful, detailed answers, and congrats to Chris on logging #20! More exclusive interviews from Chris are on the way to News Askew in 2008.





