Category: jococruisecrazy

JoCoCruiseCrazy Log: Our Cruise Pretending Cuba Doesn’t Exist (PART 2)

Too much happened during our cruise all the way around Cuba as if it didn’t exist. Even after explaining everything and realizing there was too much, my attempt to sum it up began to grow exponentially.  Here then are the highlights and favorite memories from the actual cruise portion of the trip.

The opening bar night at the Crow’s nest as we pulled away to sea. In addition to trying some wonderful fruity rum drinks (something I normally shy away from) it was my first exposure to the Seamonkeys, as the attendees of the cruise were called.  Every single one of them was practically aglow with excitement, I became proud to call myself one of them.  And I got my pencil sharpened. That is not a euphemism.  David Rees, Artisan Pencil Sharpener, sharpened my JoCoCruiseCrazy pencil.  It was his first sharpening at sea, and I later used my 001 JoCoCruiseCrazy pencil to autograph one of my books for him.

My JoCoCruiseCrazy commemorative Pencil, which is about to get an Artisan Sharpening (there is such a thing!) From master David Rees.MY PENCIL IS GETTING SHARPENED! 

I also got to meet Wil Wheaton’s sons Nolan and Ryan.  I had met his wonderful wife Anne before at w00tstocks and various PAX events, but getting to meet their sons was a real treat.  Wil might not think of them this way because he probably can’t yet, but they were men, particularly, of all geek seasons. Both of age, they acted like many a young adult, which is as it should be.  But in conversation and bearing, even in their sometimes exasperated reactions to their parents, Ryan and Nolan were full on adults that I really enjoyed the company of. In addition to Wil’s family we got to meet the spouses and families of Bill Corbett and Kevin Murphy, Paul and Storm, Peter Sagal, and everyone else.  That was a wonderful thing, not just being on board with a lot of performers that I look up to, but also meeting their families and children and being completely charmed by them.

Our first day on shore ended up being one of my favorite days ever.  Our plan was to wake up a little late, having hung out with everyone the night before, then go horseback riding in the sea, followed by snorkeling. The snorkeling was great for my first time.  But the horseback riding?  I’M ON A HORSE:

And yes I am making this my facebook picture when I get home.

Rochelle was also on a horse and her picture turned out better:

I vote Rochelle makes this her new Facebook image, who's with me!?!?!?

You can’t easily tell, but when we were in the water the horses were running in the water at full gallop. Both our pictures were taken at the end when we had to rein them in to come out. All we had was a small pad to sit on, the reins, and a loop to hold onto for balance.  Once they started running it was probably the most exciting and exhilarating thing I have done.  The ocean was shockingly cold, and you gripped the horse with your knees and swung your feet back to the back hip point and held on for dear life. Two seconds into it I was whooping and leaning into the run and thinking to myself that if this is how this cruise starts, I understand why no one ever wants to leave. 

I came out of the water and my horse was a little skittish.  Two other horses positioned themselves in front of him and he couldn’t get clear of their back legs.  He began to jerk his head and make noise like he was going to buck.  Out of nowhere Mike Phirman arrived and touched his neck while whispering to him and calming him down. The horse trainers came running but Mike waved them off, pulling a couple of sugar cubes from his pocket and speaking softly. 

“I learned horse whispering at a ranch in Montana during the sixties,” he explained to me, “Duke’s ok now, you can ride him up the beach.” 

“How did you know his name?” I asked.  Mike winked and smiled, “He told me.”

The first night’s concert was Paul and Storm together with Wil Wheaton. The theater was actually gorgeous, with two levels and a couple of really amazing balconies that looked just like Senate pods from the Star Wars prequels. It sat around 900 people and the attendees were about half that, so everyone pretty much always got a great seat to see the show.  Being in the performance group I got in for sound check.

CIMG0956

I don’t care how many times I see it, I love watching Paul and Storm perform.  I know their cadence and laugh lines well, but it was a special bonus to see Wil’s set with them. Having performed at enough w00tstocks I know Paul and Storm have been serving as a musical bonus to Wil reading from his books.  But this was the first time I actually got to see all of the readings they have done with him, and…well.  This simple 30 second clip probably sums it up better than anything.

It was so much fun watching that first show But I confess my favorite part wasn’t actually the concert.  Instead, one of my favorite moments from that first concert was this. It was hysterical because the light and sound guys had never seen a show like ours, they were used to the show the boat itself put on.  So every night when we opened with Cee-Low’s “Fuck You” or “On a Boat” they put on a great light show for us. But I still belted out as loud as I could “Purple Princess, welcome home again my dear” during Frogger: The Frogger Musical, and tried my best to help prolong The Captain’s Wife’s Lament. 

Finally to cap off the evening we had the Paul F. Tompkins Mustache Formal, to which I have no words to describe, just a picture of me and Dammit Liz dancing and wearing mustaches.
 
5322514665_ffd8e3451e_b
(Photo Courtesy Paul and Storm)

Tuesday was a “Day at Sea”.  No stops, just rockin’ and rollin’ on the open sea, with a large island off to the side we weren’t supposed to talk about.

9am started off with a Q&A with Jonathan that turned into a Q&A with all the performers. My proudest moment up on stage with so many amazing people was a quick ad lib I did.  During the Q&A John Hodgman had inserted himself, hilariously, into several questions that had nothing to do with him.  Wil’s son Ryan injected a *totally anonymous* question to Wil asking him to describe in painful detail how awesome his son Ryan was and I gestured next to me to Jonathan to hand me his mic and said “I think John Hodgman should answer this question.” That got a good laugh and was probably the first moment that I was able to stamp down the voice of doubt that had begun to plague me over my role as a performer. When the Q&A was over I felt ready.  For the first time all cruise I calmed down about my actual role and realized it would be what it was.

For Tuesday, Rochelle and I had booked spa treatments at the on-board place on the boat.  For her, a full body massage treatment.  For me?  A straight razor shave and facial massage and treatment.

Now, I am all about the straight razor shave and hot towel treatment. But I had not done the whole “facial massage and treatment” thing that all the chicks dig so much.

Converted=me. 

It started off with a hot towel wrap.  The soothing voice explained the heat was opening up my pores for the shave but I didn’t care.  It felt fantastic, heated towels wrapped under my chin, over my face and head.  The heat was relaxing, and I was sad to feel them being taken off as a voice said “Just keep your eyes closed.” I could feel the cool texture of the shaving lather as it was spread all over the sides of my face.  I had decided to keep the goatee and not get my head shaved, but whatever shaving cream they were using felt amazing.  With a few quick swipes the straight razor made short work of my 48 hour old whiskers I had cultivated for the process (you know, just to get my money’s worth).  After a relaxing scalp massage I was treated to a new layer of shaving oil and a second shave against the grain with an old fashioned heavy metal triple blade razor.  Christ, I thought, whoever designed this knew what they were doing. The ship was at sea, but only barely rolling as sure hands cleaned me up and told me to open my eyes.

Mike Phirman’s smiling face greeted me as he pulled the chair upright. Seeing my look of shock he explained, “I studied for the past two years at the Belmont in Chicago. Relax for a minute, I have to go help the Chef with tonight’s amuse bouche.”

I sat there in an incredibly comfortable chair looking out over the ocean, seeing an island we had to pretend didn’t exist in the distance.  I heard my name just over my shoulder and swiveled around to see Wil Wheaton’s awesome wife Anne relaxing in the mani/pedi area.  I briefly felt incredibly silly for knowing the abbreviation for manicure/pedicure when she asked, “Stepto are you here for hair extensions?”  In that one brief shining moment, anything -including that- seemed possible.

The concert that night was Jonathan and John Hodgman.  Once again I took some sound check photos.

 CIMG0951CIMG0964

While Jonathan put on a great show, including new songs from his upcoming album,  I didn’t get to hear Space Doggity. But that was perfectly fine, because he played everything else I wanted to hear, and I was glad he put in some new stuff too because what I have heard is great. I also got to meet the great John Hodgman for the first time, who graciously shook my hand and said “Hello Stepto, nice to meet you.” The idea of the show was that Jonathan would play a bit, then John would hold forth as a judge on the high seas, solving disputes amongst the sea monkeys.  Here’s video of one such judgment.  As you can see, court at sea is SERIOUS BUSINESS.  I don’t have to tell you it was funny.  That’s an a priori fact.  Then Jonathan finished up the set in fine form.  I sat in my seat, a day in Jamaica just a few hours away and thought hard.  My show was two days away and already the bar had been set high.  But I wasn’t nervous or anxious.  As I mentioned during the Q&A, I was relaxed.  This was a group I could fail for.  While a lot of my material was new that I had written for the cruise, I was struggling between playing it safe doing a reading from my book that I had done before, or doing something completely unrehearsed and just winging it. The next day, Wil and Rochelle would settle it for me.

 

(To be continued)

JoCoCruiseCrazy Log: Our Cruise Pretending Cuba Doesn’t Exist (PART 2)

Too much happened during our cruise all the way around Cuba as if it didn’t exist. Even after explaining everything and realizing there was too much, my attempt to sum it up began to grow exponentially.  Here then are the highlights and favorite memories from the actual cruise portion of the trip.

The opening bar night at the Crow’s nest as we pulled away to sea. In addition to trying some wonderful fruity rum drinks (something I normally shy away from) it was my first exposure to the Seamonkeys, as the attendees of the cruise were called.  Every single one of them was practically aglow with excitement, I became proud to call myself one of them.  And I got my pencil sharpened. That is not a euphemism.  David Rees, Artisan Pencil Sharpener, sharpened my JoCoCruiseCrazy pencil.  It was his first sharpening at sea, and I later used my 001 JoCoCruiseCrazy pencil to autograph one of my books for him.

My JoCoCruiseCrazy commemorative Pencil, which is about to get an Artisan Sharpening (there is such a thing!) From master David Rees.MY PENCIL IS GETTING SHARPENED! 

I also got to meet Wil Wheaton’s sons Nolan and Ryan.  I had met his wonderful wife Anne before at w00tstocks and various PAX events, but getting to meet their sons was a real treat.  Wil might not think of them this way because he probably can’t yet, but they were men, particularly, of all geek seasons. Both of age, they acted like many a young adult, which is as it should be.  But in conversation and bearing, even in their sometimes exasperated reactions to their parents, Ryan and Nolan were full on adults that I really enjoyed the company of. In addition to Wil’s family we got to meet the spouses and families of Bill Corbett and Kevin Murphy, Paul and Storm, Peter Sagal, and everyone else.  That was a wonderful thing, not just being on board with a lot of performers that I look up to, but also meeting their families and children and being completely charmed by them.

Our first day on shore ended up being one of my favorite days ever.  Our plan was to wake up a little late, having hung out with everyone the night before, then go horseback riding in the sea, followed by snorkeling. The snorkeling was great for my first time.  But the horseback riding?  I’M ON A HORSE:

And yes I am making this my facebook picture when I get home.

Rochelle was also on a horse and her picture turned out better:

I vote Rochelle makes this her new Facebook image, who's with me!?!?!?

You can’t easily tell, but when we were in the water the horses were running in the water at full gallop. Both our pictures were taken at the end when we had to rein them in to come out. All we had was a small pad to sit on, the reins, and a loop to hold onto for balance.  Once they started running it was probably the most exciting and exhilarating thing I have done.  The ocean was shockingly cold, and you gripped the horse with your knees and swung your feet back to the back hip point and held on for dear life. Two seconds into it I was whooping and leaning into the run and thinking to myself that if this is how this cruise starts, I understand why no one ever wants to leave. 

I came out of the water and my horse was a little skittish.  Two other horses positioned themselves in front of him and he couldn’t get clear of their back legs.  He began to jerk his head and make noise like he was going to buck.  Out of nowhere Mike Phirman arrived and touched his neck while whispering to him and calming him down. The horse trainers came running but Mike waved them off, pulling a couple of sugar cubes from his pocket and speaking softly. 

“I learned horse whispering at a ranch in Montana during the sixties,” he explained to me, “Duke’s ok now, you can ride him up the beach.” 

“How did you know his name?” I asked.  Mike winked and smiled, “He told me.”

The first night’s concert was Paul and Storm together with Wil Wheaton. The theater was actually gorgeous, with two levels and a couple of really amazing balconies that looked just like Senate pods from the Star Wars prequels. It sat around 900 people and the attendees were about half that, so everyone pretty much always got a great seat to see the show.  Being in the performance group I got in for sound check.

CIMG0956

I don’t care how many times I see it, I love watching Paul and Storm perform.  I know their cadence and laugh lines well, but it was a special bonus to see Wil’s set with them. Having performed at enough w00tstocks I know Paul and Storm have been serving as a musical bonus to Wil reading from his books.  But this was the first time I actually got to see all of the readings they have done with him, and…well.  This simple 30 second clip probably sums it up better than anything.

It was so much fun watching that first show But I confess my favorite part wasn’t actually the concert.  Instead, one of my favorite moments from that first concert was this. It was hysterical because the light and sound guys had never seen a show like ours, they were used to the show the boat itself put on.  So every night when we opened with Cee-Low’s “Fuck You” or “On a Boat” they put on a great light show for us. But I still belted out as loud as I could “Purple Princess, welcome home again my dear” during Frogger: The Frogger Musical, and tried my best to help prolong The Captain’s Wife’s Lament. 

Finally to cap off the evening we had the Paul F. Tompkins Mustache Formal, to which I have no words to describe, just a picture of me and Dammit Liz dancing and wearing mustaches.
 
5322514665_ffd8e3451e_b
(Photo Courtesy Paul and Storm)

Tuesday was a “Day at Sea”.  No stops, just rockin’ and rollin’ on the open sea, with a large island off to the side we weren’t supposed to talk about.

9am started off with a Q&A with Jonathan that turned into a Q&A with all the performers. My proudest moment up on stage with so many amazing people was a quick ad lib I did.  During the Q&A John Hodgman had inserted himself, hilariously, into several questions that had nothing to do with him.  Wil’s son Ryan injected a *totally anonymous* question to Wil asking him to describe in painful detail how awesome his son Ryan was and I gestured next to me to Jonathan to hand me his mic and said “I think John Hodgman should answer this question.” That got a good laugh and was probably the first moment that I was able to stamp down the voice of doubt that had begun to plague me over my role as a performer. When the Q&A was over I felt ready.  For the first time all cruise I calmed down about my actual role and realized it would be what it was.

For Tuesday, Rochelle and I had booked spa treatments at the on-board place on the boat.  For her, a full body massage treatment.  For me?  A straight razor shave and facial massage and treatment.

Now, I am all about the straight razor shave and hot towel treatment. But I had not done the whole “facial massage and treatment” thing that all the chicks dig so much.

Converted=me. 

It started off with a hot towel wrap.  The soothing voice explained the heat was opening up my pores for the shave but I didn’t care.  It felt fantastic, heated towels wrapped under my chin, over my face and head.  The heat was relaxing, and I was sad to feel them being taken off as a voice said “Just keep your eyes closed.” I could feel the cool texture of the shaving lather as it was spread all over the sides of my face.  I had decided to keep the goatee and not get my head shaved, but whatever shaving cream they were using felt amazing.  With a few quick swipes the straight razor made short work of my 48 hour old whiskers I had cultivated for the process (you know, just to get my money’s worth).  After a relaxing scalp massage I was treated to a new layer of shaving oil and a second shave against the grain with an old fashioned heavy metal triple blade razor.  Christ, I thought, whoever designed this knew what they were doing. The ship was at sea, but only barely rolling as sure hands cleaned me up and told me to open my eyes.

Mike Phirman’s smiling face greeted me as he pulled the chair upright. Seeing my look of shock he explained, “I studied for the past two years at the Belmont in Chicago. Relax for a minute, I have to go help the Chef with tonight’s amuse bouche.”

I sat there in an incredibly comfortable chair looking out over the ocean, seeing an island we had to pretend didn’t exist in the distance.  I heard my name just over my shoulder and swiveled around to see Wil Wheaton’s awesome wife Anne relaxing in the mani/pedi area.  I briefly felt incredibly silly for knowing the abbreviation for manicure/pedicure when she asked, “Stepto are you here for hair extensions?”  In that one brief shining moment, anything -including that- seemed possible.

The concert that night was Jonathan and John Hodgman.  Once again I took some sound check photos.

 CIMG0951CIMG0964

While Jonathan put on a great show, including new songs from his upcoming album,  I didn’t get to hear Space Doggity. But that was perfectly fine, because he played everything else I wanted to hear, and I was glad he put in some new stuff too because what I have heard is great. I also got to meet the great John Hodgman for the first time, who graciously shook my hand and said “Hello Stepto, nice to meet you.” The idea of the show was that Jonathan would play a bit, then John would hold forth as a judge on the high seas, solving disputes amongst the sea monkeys.  Here’s video of one such judgment.  As you can see, court at sea is SERIOUS BUSINESS.  I don’t have to tell you it was funny.  That’s an a priori fact.  Then Jonathan finished up the set in fine form.  I sat in my seat, a day in Jamaica just a few hours away and thought hard.  My show was two days away and already the bar had been set high.  But I wasn’t nervous or anxious.  As I mentioned during the Q&A, I was relaxed.  This was a group I could fail for.  While a lot of my material was new that I had written for the cruise, I was struggling between playing it safe doing a reading from my book that I had done before, or doing something completely unrehearsed and just winging it. The next day, Wil and Rochelle would settle it for me.

 

(To be continued)

JoCoCruiseCrazy Log: Our Cruise Pretending Cuba Doesn’t Exist (PART 1)

You know it’s done from the weight of the wallet now in your back pocket.  The jingle of keys you didn’t have to carry the past 6 days.  You stand slightly swaying, to the bemusement of those around you, but the ground is steady and firm and you are not drunk. All the friends old and new are with you, bleary eyed from the final night’s celebration.  At once sad and happy, shuffling lines are formed and last hugs are shared. Maybe happy isn’t quite the right word, because the sadness is pretty strong.  Perhaps “satisfied and thankful” strikes a more accurate note.  All I know after JoCoCruiseCrazy is this, the ramp down off the ship seems so much shorter than the ramp up to the ship a week ago.

When I first learned of JoCoCruiseCrazy I thought it was pretty much the weirdest idea in the sea of weird ideas that is the Internet.  Take a number of w00tstock caliber performers and their fans, and cruise around the blindingly bright and beautiful Caribbean on a luxury cruise ship. Never mind that many of the fans (and performers) had never been on a cruise before, never mind that many of the fans (and performers) either explode or broil in direct sunlight, never mind that Internet access would be sketchy and expensive at best, and never mind that everyone had to not only pay for the cruise but also get all the way out to Florida and back.

And just about 400 people did indeed say: Never mind all that.

I’m trying to focus my thoughts here because anyone reading this, even if you’re not a geek or nerd or would classify yourself as such, would have the time of your life.  It was that amazing.  Spouses of nerds (the nerd adjacents) found themselves falling in love with the performances, the ship, the ports of call, everything. Right around the middle of the cruise I tweeted: “JoCoCruiseCrazy is like if PAX and w00tstock had a baby and put it in a small raft and set it adrift to save it from the Pharaohs”

For the sake of those either on the fence or wonder if they would go to another one if it was offered, I will try and recap the awesomeness.

Arrival in Ft. Lauderdale.

Rochelle and I were always going to be on the cruise.  While I would have said to you quite calmly and with a clear and untrembling voice that I cannot imagine what world could possibly exist that I would go on a Caribbean cruise over, say, an Alaskan one, Jonathan Coulton and Paul and Storm provided that world I could not imagine. So I bought tickets in the late summer as a graduation present for Rochelle, and to push myself well out of my pasty white guy comfort zone.  When Paul F. Thompkins couldn’t make the cruise, I was asked to fill in for part of his segment along with David Rees. I was going to get to perform alongside Jonathan, Paul and Storm, John Hodgman, Molly Lewis, Kevin Murphy & Bill Corbett, Mike Phirman, John Roderick, Peter Sagal, and Wil Wheaton. So now not only was I going to have an amazing vacation, I was going to get to perform alongside my friends and heroes. I believe it is safe to say I was more excited for JoCoCruiseCrazy to start than I was inside my mom awaiting my birth.

Rochelle and I arrived the evening before the cruise.  The rest of the performers except for Molly Lewis and Mike Phirman were out at an early dinner.  Rochelle and I checked in and while she got ready for our own dinner I retired down to the bar.  I spotted Molly and her boyfriend while I was enjoying a martini, and a curious man calmly levitating six inches above the ground. I walked over to say hi to Molly and the sparkly floating gentleman introduced himself.

“I’m Mike Phirman” he said, his voice a melodious tone with a hint of mischief.  He reached out one hand to shake mine while the other absent-mindedly created a working origami Rubick’s Cube out of a hotel napkin.

The rest of the performers caught up with us after dinner, and we shared stories of how excited we were not just about the cruise, but about putting on our performances for the attendees and making them the best we could to make the event really one of a kind.  Late into the night stories and ideas were traded, and we retired to bed looking forward to what was to come.

Embarkation

The EuroDam just before our cruise. Lookie there's Molly Lewis!!

It’s difficult to describe just how big these cruise ships are.  The port of departure in Ft. Lauderdale was filled with them, including the Allure of the Sea, which we learned via John Hodgeman’s iPhone on the bus ride over is the largest passenger ship currently sailing.

“It was a fun ship to help build,” Mike Phirman said, and we discovered that indeed, he was chief welder during the construction of the ship and had invented an entirely new design of rivet that was twice as durable as any other.

We got off the bus at our ship, the Eurodam. Boarding was pretty straightforward, and we were all excited to get on the ship.  We were issued our on-board ship ID cards and sent off to cross the ramp onto the boat. Despite all the warnings I’d been given about cramped quarters, I found the boat far more spacious than I expected and our veranda stateroom was the size of quite a few hotel rooms I have been in. Our balcony overlooked the departure bay, and we unpacked in a hurry to meet the time for muster, which is the mandatory safety briefing.  After that we hit the back deck to meet cruise attendees and watch the departure. The excitement was just below the skin, but a lot of us had never been on a cruise.  So the undercurrent of worry about seasickness, sunburn, and Kraken was keeping people from their full excitement potential.

I stood on the deck, just a half hour away from the official kick off of JoCoCruiseCrazy in the Crow’s Nest Bar.  John Roderick stood next to me and Rochelle as the ship moved. Molly, Bill Corbett and Kevin Murphy and their families were all there taking in the view nearby.

“Well,” I thought, “I’m on a motherfucking boat.”

(to be continued) 

JoCoCruiseCrazy Log: Our Cruise Pretending Cuba Doesn’t Exist (PART 1)

You know it’s done from the weight of the wallet now in your back pocket.  The jingle of keys you didn’t have to carry the past 6 days.  You stand slightly swaying, to the bemusement of those around you, but the ground is steady and firm and you are not drunk. All the friends old and new are with you, bleary eyed from the final night’s celebration.  At once sad and happy, shuffling lines are formed and last hugs are shared. Maybe happy isn’t quite the right word, because the sadness is pretty strong.  Perhaps “satisfied and thankful” strikes a more accurate note.  All I know after JoCoCruiseCrazy is this, the ramp down off the ship seems so much shorter than the ramp up to the ship a week ago.

When I first learned of JoCoCruiseCrazy I thought it was pretty much the weirdest idea in the sea of weird ideas that is the Internet.  Take a number of w00tstock caliber performers and their fans, and cruise around the blindingly bright and beautiful Caribbean on a luxury cruise ship. Never mind that many of the fans (and performers) had never been on a cruise before, never mind that many of the fans (and performers) either explode or broil in direct sunlight, never mind that Internet access would be sketchy and expensive at best, and never mind that everyone had to not only pay for the cruise but also get all the way out to Florida and back.

And just about 400 people did indeed say: Never mind all that.

I’m trying to focus my thoughts here because anyone reading this, even if you’re not a geek or nerd or would classify yourself as such, would have the time of your life.  It was that amazing.  Spouses of nerds (the nerd adjacents) found themselves falling in love with the performances, the ship, the ports of call, everything. Right around the middle of the cruise I tweeted: “JoCoCruiseCrazy is like if PAX and w00tstock had a baby and put it in a small raft and set it adrift to save it from the Pharaohs”

For the sake of those either on the fence or wonder if they would go to another one if it was offered, I will try and recap the awesomeness.

Arrival in Ft. Lauderdale.

Rochelle and I were always going to be on the cruise.  While I would have said to you quite calmly and with a clear and untrembling voice that I cannot imagine what world could possibly exist that I would go on a Caribbean cruise over, say, an Alaskan one, Jonathan Coulton and Paul and Storm provided that world I could not imagine. So I bought tickets in the late summer as a graduation present for Rochelle, and to push myself well out of my pasty white guy comfort zone.  When Paul F. Thompkins couldn’t make the cruise, I was asked to fill in for part of his segment along with David Rees. I was going to get to perform alongside Jonathan, Paul and Storm, John Hodgman, Molly Lewis, Kevin Murphy & Bill Corbett, Mike Phirman, John Roderick, Peter Sagal, and Wil Wheaton. So now not only was I going to have an amazing vacation, I was going to get to perform alongside my friends and heroes. I believe it is safe to say I was more excited for JoCoCruiseCrazy to start than I was inside my mom awaiting my birth.

Rochelle and I arrived the evening before the cruise.  The rest of the performers except for Molly Lewis and Mike Phirman were out at an early dinner.  Rochelle and I checked in and while she got ready for our own dinner I retired down to the bar.  I spotted Molly and her boyfriend while I was enjoying a martini, and a curious man calmly levitating six inches above the ground. I walked over to say hi to Molly and the sparkly floating gentleman introduced himself.

“I’m Mike Phirman” he said, his voice a melodious tone with a hint of mischief.  He reached out one hand to shake mine while the other absent-mindedly created a working origami Rubick’s Cube out of a hotel napkin.

The rest of the performers caught up with us after dinner, and we shared stories of how excited we were not just about the cruise, but about putting on our performances for the attendees and making them the best we could to make the event really one of a kind.  Late into the night stories and ideas were traded, and we retired to bed looking forward to what was to come.

Embarkation

The EuroDam just before our cruise. Lookie there's Molly Lewis!!

It’s difficult to describe just how big these cruise ships are.  The port of departure in Ft. Lauderdale was filled with them, including the Allure of the Sea, which we learned via John Hodgeman’s iPhone on the bus ride over is the largest passenger ship currently sailing.

“It was a fun ship to help build,” Mike Phirman said, and we discovered that indeed, he was chief welder during the construction of the ship and had invented an entirely new design of rivet that was twice as durable as any other.

We got off the bus at our ship, the Eurodam. Boarding was pretty straightforward, and we were all excited to get on the ship.  We were issued our on-board ship ID cards and sent off to cross the ramp onto the boat. Despite all the warnings I’d been given about cramped quarters, I found the boat far more spacious than I expected and our veranda stateroom was the size of quite a few hotel rooms I have been in. Our balcony overlooked the departure bay, and we unpacked in a hurry to meet the time for muster, which is the mandatory safety briefing.  After that we hit the back deck to meet cruise attendees and watch the departure. The excitement was just below the skin, but a lot of us had never been on a cruise.  So the undercurrent of worry about seasickness, sunburn, and Kraken was keeping people from their full excitement potential.

I stood on the deck, just a half hour away from the official kick off of JoCoCruiseCrazy in the Crow’s Nest Bar.  John Roderick stood next to me and Rochelle as the ship moved. Molly, Bill Corbett and Kevin Murphy and their families were all there taking in the view nearby.

“Well,” I thought, “I’m on a motherfucking boat.”

(to be continued) 

Reflection 2010, somewhere beyond the sea

So I’m writing this from the balcony of the Holland America Eurodam, looking out over a vast dark sea.  I have a nice glass of cognac here, the sailing is smooth, and tomorrow I’m going to go horseback riding on the beach at Half Moon Cay and then snorkel, followed by an evening of tabletop gaming, Wil and Paul and Storm’s concert, and Rochelle and I enjoying a nice Italian style dinner.

There really aren’t enough sentiments in the word "lucky" to describe where I am in my life right now.  As I look back on 2010, I got to give presentations at PAX East and PAX Prime, I was invited to perform at w00tstock not once, not twice, but four times.  I’m a performer here on the JoCoCruiseCrazy cruise, and I published a book.  All while getting to do a job every day that I believe is incredibly important, working alongside a team of the most dedicated and awesome team mates anyone could ask to have working for them.

I got here via a lot of hard work and many years paying dues for sure, but there’s no real way to express how much all this can be transient and to be thankful for it all.  I guess I owe a lot of that thanks to anyone reading this.

I wouldn’t have a blog or a twitter or any of the cool awesome things that have happened to me recently if it wasn’t for people interested in my thoughts or jabberings, and wanting to talk about it or discuss it or hear more.

So yes, I’m sitting here right now in a pretty awesome place. But if you’re reading this, in a great part I have you to thank for it.  So thank you very much, and here’s to an amazing 2011 for you.  I hope I can continue to contribute in some small way to making you laugh or keeping your interest.