Podcast Review: <i>WTF – Remembering Harris Wittels</i>

Host Marc Maron had the late Harris Wittels as a guest in “the garage” for episode 424 of WTF less than two years ago, back in September of 2013. The day after Wittels was found dead, Maron reposted that interview.

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“This is what we do here on WTF, in respect for people who have passed away,” Maron says by way of introduction.

Most of us aren’t used to someone as young as Wittels, who was just 30 years old, as having demons. Even in retrospect it’s hard to say that we can even glimpse them here.

Starting out as a Jewish kid from Oklahoma, Wittels talked to Maron about recreational drug use starting in his early teens. At one point in the conversation, he says that he had done so many hallucinogens like acid and ecstasy at concerts that, by the age of 25, he’d stopped using them because he didn’t find the effects all that interesting.

Apart from bouncing between being clean and using, the main picture that emerges is more about a young man who discovered comedy, and his facility for it, beginning around the age of 18 and how that changed his life. Seeing acts such as Doug Stanhope and opening for the likes of Bobby Slayton at The Improv in Houston were formative experiences, Wittels shared with Maron.

In pursuit of standup, he found himself drawn to Hollywood, doing sets and working as a grunt at Comedy Central, where “I’d answer phones and watch South Park episodes in the vault,” said Wittels. Nine years ago, at 21, Sarah Silverman saw his standup set and invited him to submit writing samples for The Sarah Silverman Show. He got the gig and was a staff writer through 2010. From there he got on staff in the second season of Parks and Recreation, working his way to an executive producer title while also appearing on the show.

He revealed to Maron that he considered himself a bit of “a fraud” given his rapid rise once he got to Los Angeles. “I didn’t even have to eat that much shit when I got out here,” he laughingly said.

As Wittels talked about his life, still in high gear as this interview was laid down that, there’s really no hint that, just two years later, it would come to such a tragic end.

This review originally posted as part of This Week In Comedy Podcasts on Splitsider.com.

Lonnie Johnson, the rocket scientist and Super Soaker inventor

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Ciao! Baby Portable High Chair Is Flippin Genius

If you are a parent of young children, and willing to go out with
your children, you have done two things: changed your baby on a floor
because there was not a changing station available, and you have
reluctantly held your baby while trying to enjoy a meal out because the
one high chair in the restaurant was being occupied—or that one high
chair was grosser than the dirty diaper you changed on the floor. The
Ciao! Baby portable high chair solves one of these problems. And it’s
flippin genius.

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This Tiny Toolbox Transforms Into an Entire Woodshop

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If Groucho Were Alive Today, He'd Probably Be Working at Seattle's Teatro ZinZanni

Last week I attended Teatro Zinzanni’s new show The Hot Spot, and I was – as always – delightfully entertained. I’ve always considered Seattle’s Teatro ZinZanni a unique treasure that seems like a Disneyland for adults, and the new show is no exception.

Key among the character players was Frank Ferranti in his classic role as Chef Caesar (a.k.a. The Caesar), a character he has portrayed there since 2001. The first time I saw Ferranti in that role at least a decade ago, I couldn’t help but notice an uncanny resemblance between what he was doing and the way Groucho Marx used to toy with contestants on You Bet Your Life. Only later did I learn that Ferranti is, in fact, a huge Groucho fan who performs a one-man Groucho show at venues around the world – including Seattle’s ACT Theatre for the past three summers.
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Since that first realization, I’ve seen his Groucho show, An Evening With Groucho, several times and his Teatro ZinZanni Caesar performance a few times as well, and with each performance I can’t help but think he’s doing much more than acting. Ferranti seems to be channeling the spirit of Groucho (or perhaps Sid Caesar). And the same is true of many of the cast members who are continually interacting with individuals in the audience in a way that makes even the people sitting in the farthest reaches of the spiegeltent feel like they could be the next “victim.”

In truth, there is no place to hide in the intimate circular tent filled with only 300 people. Still, people sitting on the outside edges may think that they can avoid contact with the cast of zany characters until one of the cast starts climbing over the patrons at a particular table, as was true of the table next to ours.

And when the show was over, I couldn’t help but feel a certain urge to “run away with the circus.” In speaking with friends, I was surprised that my reaction was not uncommon. There is something in most adults that sees this highly skilled form of play as appealing.

Still, I doubt that I could ever come close to Frank Ferranti in his amazing nightly recreation of witty banter with whichever audience member becomes his next victim. May everyone have at least one opportunity to be “victimized” with such humor, kindness and style.

The Rugby-Loving U.S. Consul in St. Étienne

This is the second of a short series highlighting the personal experiences of the U.S. diplomatic community in France in 1914. Read Part One, “A Rendez-Vous With History.”

William Henry Hunt, president of Racing Club Stéphanois, bid adieu to his rugby players as they departed St. Étienne for the battlefields of northern France a century ago. He did not see most of them again as so many perished in the Great War’s carnage. The esteemed president did, however, help their families and others through his leadership and position as U.S. Consul. As a result, Hunt’s standing reached new heights during the war. His influence served to cement rugby’s place amongst the Stéphanois.

Hunt was the rare African American consul in Europe when war broke out in 1914. Since 1844, when William Leidesdorff was appointed Vice Consul at Yerba Buena (today’s San Francisco), African Americans served at consular posts overseas. Strides towards expanding their opportunities and presence were made during the McKinley, Roosevelt, and Taft presidencies. Between 1880 and 1920, there were 50 African American consuls. The majority were assigned to posts in the Global South, particularly within the French Empire. Yet, a few served in France, such as Yale-trained doctor George H. Jackson (La Rochelle 1898-1908; Cognac 1908-1914), where attitudes about race were more welcoming than other parts of Europe and the United States.

Hunt benefitted from this period of promotion. First appointed Vice Consul at Tamatave, Madagascar, in 1899, he succeeded his future father-in-law Mifflin Wistar Gibbs as U.S. Consul there in 1901. The island was remote, but Hunt developed a close personal relationship with Madagascar’s then-governor, General Joseph Gallieni. This steadfast friendship deepened after Hunt was posted to France. Gallieni sent a warm welcoming post card shortly after the consul’s January 1907 arrival at 5, Place de l’Hôtel de Ville in St. Étienne.

The American quickly became a pillar of Stéphanois society. He gave speeches and lectures in fluent French, and joined several clubs. He easily blended in, perhaps aided by his appearance. While labelled “colored” in Department of State records of the era, Hunt was light enough to “pass,” a result of his white, black, and Native American ancestry. According to his biographer, Adele Logan Alexander, Hunt was an athletic man — tall and good-looking — who didn’t outwardly fit into any one identifying category other than “American.”

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William Henry Hunt, 1911
Credit: William H. Hunt, Official Personnel Folders-Department of State; Record Group 146: Records of the U.S. Civil Service Commission; National Archives, St. Louis, MO

Hunt led in other ways. He became involved in Racing Club Stéphanois shortly after his arrival. The consul was a self-styled sportsman and avid horseman rumored to have taught the Malagasy Queen how to ride. This was an era that idealized “muscular Christianity,” the Protestant belief that sports developed character and leadership traits as epitomized by Theodore Roosevelt. Hunt was thus very much a byproduct of the movement.

Rugby held a privileged place in France at the time. It was esteemed by the elites as a true gentleman’s game and regarded as “modern” thanks to its English roots. Moreover, the sport had a strong presence in the pre-war Loire region. Thus, it made sense that Hunt grew involved. When Racing fused with another local club, Stade Forézien, in 1915, Hunt was made president of the new team, which was eventually renamed Stade Forézien Universitaire (SFU).

Hunt used his presidency to benefit the community throughout the war. On March 26, 1916, he presided over a journée sportive at the Hippodrome de Villars. The day’s athletic competitions and entertainment raised much-needed funds for soldiers’ families. The American helped in other ways. He visited relatives of the war’s casualties and tried to ease their pain. The consul obtained information about loved ones missing in action behind enemy lines through the International Red Cross network. Accordingly, Hunt’s influence and popularity amongst the Stéphanois skyrocketed.

Such measures were conducted alongside his normal consular duties. Hunt helped evacuate U.S. citizens during the war’s first weeks, issued emergency consular passports, and contended with left-behind luggage. He remained in frequent contact with the U.S. Embassy in Paris, and visited several times while Gallieni was charged with the capitol’s September 1914 defense. As a representative of a neutral nation, Hunt acquired responsibility for German, Austro-Hungarian, and Turkish subjects. Thus, he visited and inspected internment and prisoner-of-war camps within the St. Etienne district. Hunt also facilitated trade between U.S. manufacturers and French consumers.

After the war, the American consul used his high stature to help heal and mend the community through rugby. His standing and sponsorship drew more fans to SFU’s matches, where the communal experience of cheering the team helped renew bonds. The local press noted that Hunt cemented the game into the city’s social fabric through his sportsmanship, authority, kindness, and devotion.

In the spring of 1927, as Hunt’s departure for his onward assignment in Guadeloupe neared, SFU held a series of going-away celebrations. The long-serving president’s farewell fête was held at Brasserie Januel on Saturday, April 23. Numerous toasts extolled Hunt’s virtues and recalled how he helped St. Étienne during the war’s darkest hours. Many diners noted the American’s success in reinforcing rugby’s stature, which as one local paper wrote, would be his lasting glory. A plaque to commemorate Stade Forézin’s 32 war dead was laid at Stade Geoffroy-Guichard in 1931. In some ways, perhaps it was also testament to the efforts and influence of one American consul during and after the war.

To learn more, we invite you to read “Views From the Embassy” and visit U.S. Embassy Paris’ World War One Centenary page.