Boredom Pays

Boredom Pays

Spokesgirl for the “whatever” generation hits the big screen.

To kick off 2006, I thought I’d part with the usual inspirational New Year interview and look for someone unlikely to ever make, much less keep, a resolution. Luckily, the East Bay is home to Emily the Strange, one of the cartoon world’s rising stars and bad attitude poster girl. Created in the early ’90s as a sullen T-shirt character for a Santa Cruz skateboard company, Emily’s got a line of apparel, three best-selling books published by Chronicle Books, and a major motion picture in the works. Worldwide sales of items adorned with Emily’s bored little visage are expected to reach $6 million this year. Not bad for a Goth waif with a posse of cats. With help from her “father,” Rob Reger of Oakland-based Cosmic Debris, I quizzed Emily for a glimpse of life as a 13-year-old, one-dimensional celebrity.

Paul Kilduff: If you were left alone in a white room with no windows, what would you do first?

Emily the Strange: Try to get out of the restraints they put me in.

PK: Who are your greatest influences?

ES: The Damned: aesthetics; Dr. Seuss: imagination; Ozzy: religion.

PK: What do you think of hippies?

ES: They are always making a big stink about something. That could be good, could be bad, and both good and bad could be good.

PK: Hmm. Let me chew on that one. Is the world divided into dog and cat people?

ES: Only if you want to see it like that. I prefer to divide the world into living things and dead things.

PK: That pretty much covers it. What do you think of that guy in Green Day with the running mascara?

ES: I think he better catch it before it runs away!

PK: Are you now, or have you ever been, a vegan?

ES: I like killing things about as much as I like being labeled.

PK: I’ll try not to do that. Do girls rule or do they rock?

ES: Girls that rock, rule!

PK: Do you ever wear lavender?

ES: Only in my nightmares.

PK: Seems like pink would work well on you. Do you ever wear it?

ES: Not as much as you do.

PK: This is getting a little too revealing. If you reincarnated, what or who would you come back as?

ES: Myself all over again.

PK: If your house caught on fire, what would you grab first?

ES: My posse of kitties, but since they would probably be helping me get out, my magic 8-ball would be next in line. And I’d ask it what to grab next.

PK: You got your start on a skateboard in Santa Cruz. What’s the connection between Goth girls and skater dudes?

ES: They both go to high school.

PK: Do you ever say, “It’s a Goth thing. You just wouldn’t understand.”

ES: I can’t believe you just asked me that. Those may be the most embarrassing words ever spoken, ever.

PK: How about recycling? Are you fervent about it?

ES: I use what I need and don’t use what I don’t need. When I’m done with something I put it back, and when I’m not done I don’t put it back.

PK: What about composting?

ES: It’s a perfect place to raise worms and flies and mud.

PK: And, if you’re not careful you’ll also attract vermin. Could Madonna reinvent herself to the point that the mainstream media doesn’t care what she’s doing?

ES: The media would be lost without her.

PK: Are you ever going to come out with an exercise video like Jane Fonda?

ES: You mean exercises for the middle finger?

PK: How about this equation: Miserable adolescence equals enormous-ly successful adult career. True?

ES: I’ll let you know when I’m dead.

PK: Don’t do me any favors. Are people, just by their nature, innately good?

ES: Huh? Check again.

PK: What about cutting in line?

ES: There is a time and place for most everything.

PK: How’s your ping-pong?

ES: Needs improvement. My yin yang is getting better.

PK: Is there any cause you care about deeply, like feeding feral cats?

ES: I feel deeply about knife wounds.

PK: How do you deal with your fans? Disdain?

ES: I don’t let them bother me.

PK: Do you worry about becoming so popular that you attract loathsome male groupies with missing teeth?

ES: No. They’re the best. They make great lab assistants.

PK: How does it feel to be on a sticker?

ES: It guarantees I’ll stick around.

PK: Adhesion does immortalize one doesn’t it? If Britney Spears were to all of a sudden become a huge fan would that be a source of concern?

ES: No way. She is so unpredictable! I watch her all the time to see what she’ll do next! She is a modern-day punk-rock chameleon, like David Bowie, Johnny Rotten, and Siouxsie all rolled into one. She is truly a major talent that will be around for generations. One of my favorites for sure!

PK: I’m detecting just a touch of sarcasm, but I digress. How about the comparisons to Edward Gorey–are you getting a little tired of that?

ES: Tired? Well yes, he has some great bedtime stories.

PK: You’ve got a movie coming out–is that keeping you up at night worrying?

ES: A movie? I knew there was something I was supposed to be working on.

Suggestions? E-mail Paul Kilduff at pkilduff@sbcglobal.net.

Faces of the East Bay

In the Philanthropic Swim

In the Philanthropic Swim

Rockridge residents John Bliss and Kim Thompson may live far removed the gritty flats of East and West Oakland. But this philanthropic couple see themselves as one with the citizens of Oakland, particularly those who are struggling financially, and they’re leading a campaign to get their “financially blessed” peers to invest in the community like they have by funding city programs to teach kids how to swim.