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Riki Lindhome: As Happy/Busy As She Can Be

Photo by Robyn Von Swank

Riki Lindhome is most commonly known for her partnership with Kate Micucci in the comedy/folk/pop/indie group Garfunkel & Oates. Her acting credits span film, television and the world wide web. She’s recently started her own podcast, too. She has a love for comedy, is intelligent and not difficult to look at. She is easily every nerdy guy’s perfect girl – you can probably include non-nerds as well. Riki’s most recent project is a solo album titled Yell at Me From Your Car – a personal glimpse at how she views herself and the world around her.

I Skyped up a proverbial storm with the talented lady recently and covered all the aforementioned talking points along with some unexpected  yet delightful anecdotes.


CR:  You and Kate are working on a new CD and I’ve noticed you’ve been tweeting late at night from the studio.

RL:  Yeah, it’s pretty crazy. It makes you nuts, you know? Being there so late. You just feel the need to tweet about it.

Is a lot of it happening when you guys lay something down and then wait for it to get produced or polished?

Not really. I’m essentially a producer on the album. I’m there every second and it’s like a total partnership between me and the engineer. My only downtime is when Kate is in the booth.

And that’s when the late night tweeting happens.

Yeah, exactly. Or if something is rendering.

Your new album, Yell at Me From Your Car, seems a lot more vulnerable than songs we’ve heard from you and Garfunkel & Oates.

Totally. I just found out, thank God for Twitter, there was a problem in the transfer and two of the songs had major skips in them. I was like, “Oh my god.” They were totally perfect on the master and so now I’m trying to fix that but I’m waiting on the mastering guy who hasn’t gotten back to me. So I’m just going to give it away for free on my website after I get the revised tracks. It’s a bummer.

I just purchased Louis CK’s new show.

Me too, that was awesome.

I loved it. HD, fantastic. But I downloaded it and my computer would screw up, I’d pause it and start over. But you only get two downloads when you pay for it. I almost bought it 3 times – which I would totally do – it’s worth it. I guess that’s the rub when providing online content.

It inspired me. I was like, “should we do that?”

Totally do that.

Yeah, I’ve looked into this. I don’t know. I think it could be cool. We’d need some help with the financing. But now that Louis has done it, maybe we can get some investors who get their money back first. That kind of thing.

Photo by M. Berru

I’m getting the impression from this CD – and this takes me back to its vulnerability – I think it still has your voice, but you’ve knocked down that protective comedic wall. It’s snarky still but also reveals how you feel about yourself.

Yeah, its very different. Except for the last song on the CD, I wrote those songs a couple years ago, so it’s how I used to feel about myself – not so much now. I just never had the time to record them because I was doing so much Garfunkel & Oates stuff. I finally just took about a month to do it. I was so busy producing our albums and working on our stuff that I never had a chance to do this.

It’s probably the reason why Kate and I don’t both work on them because these songs just don’t apply to her. Our songs kind of apply to both of us and mine are just so clearly about me that it doesn’t make sense to sing it from two people. If Kate wanted to, then we’d totally do those songs. We do sing the song Self Esteem sometimes though.

When you go back to buffalo, you should not feel like you’re only pretty when you’re there like your song [Only Pretty in Buffalo] suggests.

The thing is, I’m a character actor here. I only play the friend and not the pretty girl. Which is fine. It was an interesting observation because it was pilot season and I had tested for two things and the feedback for both of them was that I wasn’t pretty enough. So that was the reason I didn’t get two big parts in one week. Then I went back to Buffalo to meet my nephew and everyone was like, “What the heck!” It was just a weird juxtaposition that made me want to write that song. The songs are really just a snap shot of how felt in just one moment.

How do you deal with that level of rejection. The audition process seems like it can be very rewarding but mostly the rejection sounds so brutal. What do you do to cope with that?

Write songs about it. The thing about being an actor is that there’s always another opportunity and now you can always make your own stuff. So it kind of lessons that blow. I think it was harder in the beginning when I wasn’t making anything on my own and I was completely dependent on the auditions for years and years and years. I feel like that’s the tougher position to be in mentally because you don’t have any control. But now, I haven’t had any auditions this week but I could have gotten rejected yesterday and then last night go and do an amazing show with Weird Al Yankovic. That lessens the blow. We got to play in this amazing lineup. It was my comedy dream. Like, we went after Patton Oswalt – are you kidding me?! Having that in my life really lessons the blow when I don’t get other stuff.

Filming a movie is a really neat experience but I get to have these other really neat experiences. It really balances out. Where as before, I would go get rejected from an audition and then have to go and be a waitress. It was a lot more damaging to my soul.

Photo by Liezl Estipona

That’s a great way of looking at it. Is there anything creatively that you haven’t been able to do that would like to?

Yeah, it’s weird because G&O is such a do-it-yourself kind of thing that it takes so much more time that you can even imagine. Because of that you don’t have much time to do other stuff.  Like Kate always wishes she were painting more and I always wish I was writing more. [phones chimes] That’s probably Kate. Oh my God, it is! I have this weird thing where the second I say someone’s name, they text me. She’s coming to pick me up in like 2 minutes. Sorry, I had to reply. What were talking about?

I don’t know, your psychic premonition ability threw me off. We were talking about writing.

Right. Like, I want to write a movie but I only have so much creative energy and it’s tough. I would like to carve out 2 months to write a movie but right now we’re touring, I’m auditioning, we’re making videos, an album – it’s hard to spend 5 hours a day writing something.

You and Kate are extremely busy. A new CD, countless shows at Largo and UCB, an HBO show in development–

Kate and I have no personal lives.

That’s a bummer.

I don’t know how we would. I don’t think it’s really possible. You know, it’s a trade off. I like what I’m doing.

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Behind The Scenes: Who Charted? Live In Seattle

Coming in at number one. . .Who Charted? live in Seattle!

The breezy night air was crisp and a light rain fell from a multitude of directions as we stood on my birthday outside Chop Suey amongst a growing line of Seattle hipsters. Eager to just get in from the rain, my wife stood close to me draped in my coat for extra warmth and asked me to explain exactly what it was we were about to see. Daunting as the task may be, I tried to explain podcasts to her (a person who hasn’t ever listened to a podcast) and then attempted to translate that into what we would see live on stage. In all, I had to admit, it was a confusing way to experience a podcast for the first time. We were wet, cold, and she was frustrated but the line started to inch forward. Soon, we would be baring witness to comedy podcasting history. The first ever live presentation of Who Charted?! and I wouldn’t have wanted to spend my birthday any other way.

Who Charted? Live In Seattle Available at the Earwolf Store!

Kulap Vilaysack, Barry Blankenship, Howard Kremer

This was my first time being to Chop Suey and my initial impression was I had entered a truly swank, raw performance venue that had  every bit as much charisma as it had various Chinese decorative items. The small, mostly black room had an entry way draped with Bruce Lee prints and a  Dragon hanging from the ceiling that led all the way from the entrance way, between the stage and red lit bar, to the end of the room. I felt about a hundred times more hip than I really am just standing in Chop Suey. My wife’s first thought however after getting inside was something along the line of “where are supposed to sit?” OKAY. If I have to pick a bone with this show, I’ll do it up front. The maximum capacity for Chop Suey is 247. It seats about 10. If you are not at the front of the line, plan on standing. Similar venues often warn when you purchase tickets that it is standing room only or very limited seating. I wouldn’t normally have been bothered by standing in any way, but since my wife definitely was, I was bummed out vicariously through her.

The crowd was given the usual rundown on how not to behave during a show, but most importantly for that night as it was being recorded for a podcast to be enjoyed by countless fans. The Who Charted? intro pumped through the speakers as Howard Kremer and Kulap Vilaysack took the stage. The co-hosts looked just as anxious and excited to the see this crowd of fans who have shown up as we were to see them both in Seattle. Howard let us all know right at the top that during any given recording he is easily distracted, the live audience and ambiance of the venue then should prove to be a major source of deficit for his attention. Kulap on the other hand was clearly going to thrive off the energy of this group of fans. Her vibrant enthusiasm as “Keeper of the Charts” was palpable.

The third wheel on this tricycle of entertainment was special guest, Sir Mix-a-Lot. Mix was the saving grace of that night out with my wife because she was at least more than familiar with his work and needless to say – a fan. I never would have thought Sir Mix-a-Lot would be a guest on ANY of the podcasts I listen to, but the chart topping, Seattle native, rap star brought a completely different perspective to the show. His humor elicited laughs from the crowd as well as any other comedian I’ve seen and should I really be surprised coming from an artist who’s biggest hit has a music video featuring huge assed women dancing on top of enormous butt statues? A favorite Mix-a-Lot moment for me was hearing Kulap teach the rapper what a “spank bank” was and Howard then letting her know that he stopped including her in his own bank after their eighth week together.

Howard’s questions for Mix (as is the case with any guest) were seemingly drawn from thin air based solely off any minute detail pulled from the most random bit of trivia related to the chart clip that was played. Whether this interview style is derived from careful comedic crafting or a comedian with improv chops who is resting on his laurels, the effect on the crowd was fantastic. Howard’s questions are a perfect balance of honest curiosity and awkward fumbling that make me laugh every time I hear one. At one point Howard asked if Mix feels he received better treatment from fans in the U.K. on account of him being knighted. Comedy gold.

Not even Sir Mix-a-Lot beating a paper mache Justin Bieber in a round of Chart Pinata can top the public reveal of a time honored Who Charted? tradition. As we’ve been told many times before, during each Music Chart clip, Kulap totally gets her groove on. That night did not disappoint. She even threw in a special “baby bump” dance move for a Beyonce clip in honor of her pregnancy. I’m no dance expert, but that has to be the greatest thing to ever happen to dance right?

By the end of the night, my wife had forgotten all about the cold, wet line standing we did or the more standing during the show and genuinely had a great time. To me, there could be no greater measure of success for that show. In summation, nobody likes standing in lines, wives like to sit during podcasts, Sir Mix-a-Lot is hilarious, and seeing a live presentation of Who Charted? easily tops my chart of Best Things I’ve Ever Done on My Birthday.


Chase Roper is a writer and podcaster. You can follow him on Twitter (@ChaseRoper) and listen to his podcast.

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T is for Tompkins, Tantrum & more Tompkins

Would you like to see a short horror film starring Paul F. and Janie Haddad Tompkins? How about if said flick was part of a larger project called The ABC’s of Horror? Now stop answering! T is for Tantrum directed by Jack Perez is a fantastic horror short starring the aforementioned Tompkins among others and needs our help.

Drafthouse Films, Timpson Films and Magnet Releasing have assembled 25 top genre directors for ABC’s of Death – a “twenty-six chapter anthology feature that showcases death, letter by letter.” The last directing spot will be selected by Internet vote and included in the final product. We alone (along with the rest of the Internet) have the power to vote T is for Tantrum onto the winners pedestal. If you’d like to lend your support, visit http://26th.theabcsofdeath.com/t-is-for-tantrum/ and vote!

T IS FOR TANTRUM from Some Guy Who Kills People on Vimeo.

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