"Hey
ya'll, Jazzologist Miles Eleventhaur reporting to you live from one of
my favorite places on the grid - Virtual Harlem. You know a lot of people love their fantasies
in these virtual worlds. You can live in
space, underwater, you name it! Still, every now and then it's nice to see a
little reality from time to time. So
when actual reality gets to be too much for you, with all the craziest going on
in the world, nowadays...it's cool to have
a virtual place to come to that is not as crazy but still isn't too far from
home." - A Great Day in Virtual
Harlem, October 23, 2011.
Don't let
him fool you! Miles is part of the "crazy" scene in Second Life - when it comes to a good laugh, Miles is ready to roll
film. Heck, he's in front of the camera.
He loves the spotlight - and it loves
him! He's got a great sense of humor - and perfect timing. Just like the music loves, he's got the rhythm in him. It comes out during his DJing and his machinima, and among close friends. He is a natural in front of a camera and audience. Any other time, he's a gentlemen, quite reserved at times. You would never know at first glance, this suave guy is a natural entertainer. He's got some business sense, of course, for he does well on the grid, as one of the top DJS. Just there's something else about him - something that you cannot bottle or box in any world, let alone Second Life.
He's on - always - ready to take
the stage at jazz clubs spinning tunes, on the streets chatting up local
history, and just hanging with good friends, talking about music, movies and
any virtual mayhem he can conjure up for his next skit. He's been on the grid for a few years now,
thanks to some of his comedic mentors;
he notes Phaylen Fairchild (DiVAS) and Pooky Amsterdam (Shrink Wrapped) as influencing him.
I remember first seeing him in 2010 at the MaMachinima
International Film Festival (MMIF), and Lowe Runo and I agreed that his first machinima was as good as
many of the professionals exhibited that day.
He turned heads then, and he continues to do so - and ears too.
Miles Eleventhaur
has done it all - just about every form of machinima, some "on the scene"
reporting to music parodies and presidential impersonations to just about
whatever he gets the bug to film. He's
a big city guy, with a bit of funk and sass when needed, but mostly he is
homegrown - just like the music he plays.
He is an original. Machinima just
helps him bring that out. He's the
local virtual celebrity that will tell you what's up on the grid, and that
might be at Virtual Harlem hanging with some good friends, and giving us a
lesson on African-American history, or that might be doing a parody of
President Barak Obama or Michael Jackson.
You never know with Miles - the guy is a jazzologist - and you know jazz
is all about fusion. Miles is wired to
think out of the box, and in fact, there's no category really for Miles - writer, dj, actor, musician, filmmaker, historian, etc.
As part of the on-going series, Masters of
Machinima, I interviewed Miles for the
February 2013 issue (beginning pp. 166) of Best of SL Magazine. The article profiles his SL and touches a bit
on his real life. Miles is centered by
music - his creation of it as well as his love of it. That influences heavily all that he
does. But there is much more to
Miles. He's a funny guy! And he uses machinima to parody music,
politics and pop culture. Miles shows us how machinima can tap into political
and social themes, and do so by still entertaining audiences.
Draxtor
Depres (known for Flufee on a Meshion) used Miles' Obama impersonation in one
of his films. Comedy, if done well, has
a way of bringing us together, letting us examine ourselves and society through
parody. And that is something Miles does
well. Miles tried his hand at stand-up,
once - "I didn't want to screw up
here in New York where people knew me. So I took a train to Philly to do some
comedy competition. I got through it, but that is some scary stuff, man. I've always drawn and written my own comedy.
I just went from cartoons to machinima."
His
influences are the early cartoons, comics and graphic novels, and he can name a
long list of comedic influences, namely
Mel Blanc, Mel Brooks, Carl Reiner, Stan Freburg, Jerry Lewis ("a
real life cartoon and I loved the bits he did with Count Basie's music"),
Carol Burnett and Tim Conway, Bill Cosby ("Fat Albert" series), The
Beatles ("Yellow Submarine"), Chuck Jones, and Tex Avery.
It's
about storytelling! "I feel my
ideas have gotten me around some major technical problems and equipment
limitations. As far as content I'm doing now what I've been doing since I
started drawing Snoopy and The Flintstones as a kid: spoofs and parodies. Machinima has allowed me to put all of my
interests together - writing, editing, music scoring, and voices."
Miles muses, "Musicians are naturally very funny people. At least the ones that I grew up around. I
haven't met one that doesn't love Bugs Bunny. And there's kind of a a Queens, New York thing that has a comic rhythm in our basic conversation."
Here's to Miles - and Miles more of laughs to come, we hope!
Some Links to his work:
***
The Professional Machinima Artist Guild
and Lowe Runo Productions graciously host Magnum: The Machinima Review. Sonicity Fitzroy (SL), author of Second Life, Machinima and the Other
Society (Peter Lang, 2010), and Machinima: The Art and Practice of Virtual
Filmmaking (with SL's Lowe Runo, McFarland, 2012).
Amazon.com. See, author's page:
http://www.amazon.com/Phylis-Johnson/e/B001HOW4U2/ref=sr_tc_2_0?qid=1354606175&sr=1-2-ent
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