NEWSLETTER



DOS & DON'TS

Spanish crusties are everywhere in London at the moment and they’re looking FABULOUS. At the Insect Warfare show at the Old Blue Last we had dogs on strings sitting on bar stools, ordering pints. The rest of the crowd looked like this, from late 20s 7s with Anti Cimex shirts to amazing dykes with Punisher throat tattoos. Comments/Enlarge | See all


Going to Europe and seeing people under 30 who don’t look like they’re wearing drugstore GG Allin costumes is such an ocular relief it’s like shooting valium into your eyes. Comments/Enlarge | See all






RELATED ARTICLES

ELECTRIC INDEPENDENCE
We first encountered Teenage Bad Girl in ...
GIANT HAYSTACKS
Let's Wrestle Have a Silly Name
MY LITTLE DEAD DICK
My Little Dead Dick is the visual ...
TIDBITS
A Monthly Look At Things We Love - The Mu...



FROM THIS ISSUE

CELEBRITY LETTERS
Okay, now on to a whole new and exciting ...
GAMES
Metroid Prime & The Two Towers
LITERARY
Book Reviews - The Happiness Issue
NO MORE WAR
The God Helmet Proves He's Not Worth Figh...



ALSO BY LESLEY ARFIN

DEAR DIARY
Entry: November 1994
DEAR DIARY
Entry: January 16, 1991
DEAR DIARY
Entry: 1990
DEAR DIARY
Entry: February 1993

See all articles by this contributor




HEY YOU, I SEE YOU

Staring Problems Aren't Angry, They're Just Pointing



Photo by Natasha Papadopoulou.
Stills courtesy of the filmmakers.

Once upon a time, a couple of kids were bored in a bar. Since all they were doing was looking at each other, they decided to have a staring contest. Sound familiar? It should. Staring contests have been around since March of 1832. However, 169 years later (i.e. a couple years ago), two Pensacola, Florida, geniuses pumped staring up to the next level. And thus, Staremaster 2000 was born.

Today (171 years later), Staremaster has become more than just a drunken pastime between friends. “We had an idea to get a bunch of people together to exploit boredom. We wanted to turn boredom against itself to create fun,” says Sean Linezo, cocreator of Staremaster along with James Miller. So these two dudes started to spread the word at local coffeehouses and bars and the occasional art gallery. “Hardcore Multi-Mediated Eye to Eye Combat,” the fliers said, and although totally retarded in retrospect, people showed up. Lots of them.

Here’s how it works: two people sit at a table facing one another with a judge on either side. Accompanied by trippy lighting, loud music, and a computer- generated MC who sort of sounds like “Let’s get ready to rumble… foooooorrrr safety!” but ten octaves lower, the “Ultimate Showdown Round One” starts. And they stare. And stare. Then they stare some more. Nothing else happens. After two minutes, the “Dry-Eye Death Phase” begins, which means no blinking (longest recorded time of no blinking is seventeen minutes). If you blink first or look away, you lose. And that’s Staremaster.

Linezo and Miller’s new documentary, Staremaster 2000, sums it up. As Linezo puts it at the beginning of the tape, “We’re taking ‘nothing’ very seriously. Staremaster is seriously about nothing.”

Staremaster 2000 gets a little redundant, a little long, and yes, even a little boring. “It’s too long,” says Linezo to me about three days ago, “It’s uncomfortable. You start thinking ‘what the hell am I doing here? This is weird.’ And then you notice that the whole room is involved, including you. And then you realize that it is both fun and funny as hell. And then you realize staring is not a problem. It’s a solution.”

LESLEY ARFIN

See all articles by this contributor

< PREV

Comments


POST A COMMENT [SIGN IN]
Hi, in case you haven't heard, you can now sign up to become a "member" of Viceland.com, which entitles you to all sorts of amazing benefits like pictures and a nickname. Click here to make your own profile. You can still comment if you don't, but you gotta do it all 'nonymously.

Name:
Comment: