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Book the Jam, tonight 10/7/08

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Book the Jam, tonight 10/7/08

Post by Roy Janik »

Tom Booker returns to lead the jam tonight! He says he real excited about it, and you should be too.

Come one, come all. 7PM at the Hideout!
PGraph plays every Thursday at 8pm! https://www.hideouttheatre.com/shows/pgraph/

Re: Book the Jam, tonight 10/7/08

Post by Justin D. »

Roy Janik wrote:Tom Booker returns to lead the jam tonight! He says he real excited about it, and you should be too.

Come one, come all. 7PM at the Hideout!
I'll be there tonight.

Re: Book the Jam, tonight 10/7/08

Post by Andreas Fabis »

Wheeeeeee!

Post by Justin D. »

That was fun. There were roughly 30 people there at one point. Booker did a good job of trying to get people to let go and commit.

I forgot how infectious the energy and enthusiasm in a Jam can be. Got some fun ideas for Maestro out of it too.

Post by Andreas Fabis »

Wheeee! That was awesome energy. Yay!

And thanks Justin, for co-hosting.
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Post by Jon Bolden »

Press conference game was a success after we figured it out. Great idea, Justin!
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Post by Roy Janik »

Jon Bolden wrote:Press conference game was a success after we figured it out. Great idea, Justin!
Was that the exercise from the Bill Arnett workshop?
PGraph plays every Thursday at 8pm! https://www.hideouttheatre.com/shows/pgraph/

Post by Justin D. »

Roy Janik wrote:
Jon Bolden wrote:Press conference game was a success after we figured it out. Great idea, Justin!
Was that the exercise from the Bill Arnett workshop?
Yep. Had fun playing it and wanted to do something with a lot of people, so I directed that in the Jam. The first time we did it was fun, but everyone really drove it home the second time. Michael Thomas was sadly and infuriatingly unable to explain why there weren't part-time work benefits for Jews, why Nike hated them, and why he was denying the Holocaust.

I gave it a five.
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Post by BriHo »

That was seriously fun stuff. Tom and Justin made a pretty great team; it was weird seeing and playing with 30 people maintaining energy for that long. I had a lot of fun and definitely will try to make this a regular thing.


Also, Tom and Spaz should definitely Cagematch together. It might just be a winner.
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Post by Marc Majcher »

Justin Davis wrote:
Roy Janik wrote:
Jon Bolden wrote:Press conference game was a success after we figured it out. Great idea, Justin!
Was that the exercise from the Bill Arnett workshop?
Yep.
I sincerely wish to see that game show up in a Maestro sometime. Soon.
The Bastard
Improv For Evil
"new goal: be quoted in Marc's signature." - Jordan T. Maxwell
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Post by kbadr »

majcher wrote:I sincerely wish to see that game show up in a Maestro sometime. Soon.
Provided the players know how it's played, I think it'd make be a really fun first round game.

You work your life away and what do they give?
You're only killing yourself to live

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Post by HerrHerr »

kbadr wrote:
majcher wrote:I sincerely wish to see that game show up in a Maestro sometime. Soon.
Provided the players know how it's played, I think it'd make be a really fun first round game.
Someone break down this game for me, please.
Sometimes it's a form of love just to talk to somebody that you have nothing in common with and still be fascinated by their presence.
--David Byrne

Post by Justin D. »

majcher wrote:
Justin Davis wrote:
Roy Janik wrote: Was that the exercise from the Bill Arnett workshop?
Yep.
I sincerely wish to see that game show up in a Maestro sometime. Soon.
Gee, I wonder who's directing Maestro this week? Hmmm.
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Post by kbadr »

HerrHerr wrote:Someone break down this game for me, please.
Simple group game, both in the traditional sense and Chicago-style improv sense.

One person is giving a presentation/press conference on a random subject. A line of 4 or 5 people act as the press, asking questions and intentionally mis-hearing and misinterpreting details. They heighten what they mishear and frustrate the person giving the presentation, who tries to fix things by correcting the mis-heard details the interviewers heard. This only provides more details for the interviewers to latch on to and mis-hear. Heighten, heighten, build until the presenter goes insane. Pretty simple, yet fun, game.

You work your life away and what do they give?
You're only killing yourself to live

Post by Justin D. »

kbadr wrote:
HerrHerr wrote:Someone break down this game for me, please.
Simple group game, both in the traditional sense and Chicago-style improv sense.

One person is giving a presentation/press conference on a random subject. A line of 4 or 5 people act as the press, asking questions and intentionally mis-hearing and misinterpreting details. They heighten what they mishear and frustrate the person giving the presentation, who tries to fix things by correcting the mis-heard details the interviewers heard. This only provides more details for the interviewers to latch on to and mis-hear. Heighten, heighten, build until the presenter goes insane. Pretty simple, yet fun, game.
About as apt a description as can be given. Watching the presenter lose his or her mind while trying to stay calm enough to refute the ridiculous questions is fun. Then again, the questions themselves are often good on their own.

I've seen this before Arnett's class. Really surprised I haven't seen it in a Maestro before.
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