Weird Paul's World: Movies, Music and Memories of a Lo-Fi Life

in #interview7 years ago (edited)

The following is an interview I originally published October 14, 2015 on blogspot. I've added some updated information to some of the answers provided. I hope you enjoy reading it.

The Original Vlogger


photo by Weird Paul (CC BY-SA 3.0) (edited: text added)

Whether you call him off the wall or just plain weird, it doesn't matter to Paul Petroskey. The lo-fi musician from the Pittsburgh area has also become known as "The Original Vlogger", thanks to his hours of VHS home movies he has uploaded to his YouTube channel. 

 "... I had a home video from 1984 of me reviewing a McDonald's Breakfast  that I had uploaded to YouTube. It was (maybe still is) the oldest food review on YouTube ..."  Weird Paul 

One video in particular cemented that title when Petroskey uploaded a video of himself from 1984, reviewing his McDonald's breakfast. He did this without a built-in audience that many young YouTubers take for granted. He would have to wait years until YouTube was invented to tell the world that his breakfast tasted like a "bird turd."

McDonald's Breakfast Review (1984)

Since then, he has uploaded countless more entertaining videos. Some are about his daily life, growing up at home with his parents, two sisters and a brother, while others are homemade movies or music videos.

Speaking of music, Paul has written and recorded over 800 songs and has released practically all of them on cassettes, CDs or vinyl records.

He's also an avid movie watcher as you'll find out. 

Weird Paul Interview


Movie Vigilante: You recently mentioned that you've seen 8000 movies in the last 25  years. What do you use to keep track of what movies you've watched? 

Weird Paul: I use a notebook. I started using it in 1989 and  eventually started another notebook in 1992.  When I got a computer in 2005, I digitized the whole list, typing it in by hand. But I still use the notebook as well. 

[editor's note] Since this interview, Paul has also created a Letterboxd account to keep track of the films he's watched. Follow him on there if you're looking for recommendations of some weird movies to watch. The video below will give you an idea of the types of movies that interests Paul.

Weird Paul's Movie Bucket List

MV:  Have you seen any of them at a drive-in theater? 

WP: I think I only saw two movies at a drive-in. One was probably the first movie I ever saw, The Apple Dumpling Gang. That would have likely been in 1975 when I was four. The other one was The Hangover II, which I saw in 2011.

The Apple Dumpling Gang

[editor's note] Speaking of drive-ins, I thought it would be fun to create a video of vintage soda pop drive-in ads and that Paul's song "Cold Drinks" would be the perfect theme song. With his permission, I included it in this retro tribute to refreshing drinks. Enjoy!

Clips are public domain, including scenes from Teenagers Battle the Thing.

Cold Drinks

MV: How do you watch most of the movies you see nowadays? Is it mostly  in theaters and cable TV or are there still video stores in your area?

WP: There are still a couple video stores in my area, but they  only stock newer commercial releases. I rarely watch anything like that, the few I do want to see, I check out of my local library. I  watch a lot of movies on YouTube. These are very rare movies that for the most part are not available on DVD, but that someone has taken the time to digitize and upload. I occasionally watch some movies on TV,  but not many on cable, I watch them on over the air digital stations like THIS TV and GET TV.  

I don't go to the theater very much, I can't  afford it! I do have a large collection of DVDs and VHS tapes, including many movies I still have not seen.

MV: Watching your homemade horror movies reminds me a lot of The Blair Witch Project. Have you seen that movie and have you stopped to think that you were ahead of the curve in the shaky cam genre?

WP: I did see The Blair Witch Project when it came out. At the time I thought the gimmick was already a used idea (same as Cannibal Holocaust)  but I did like it. Of course, my shaky camera was due to not using a  tripod. This was not done by choice, I just didn't have a tripod!

Cannibal Holocaust 

MV: There's a great documentary called Beauty Day  that reminds me in some ways of what you do. It's about a guy who, like  you, videotaped himself doing crazy antics for his local public access  TV show in Canada. Some people thought he was strange but he didn't  care. Have you heard of it or seen it? 

WP: I have seen the trailer...I think it was actually you that pointed me to it! It looks  fascinating. 

[editor's note] I confess that it was indeed I that had mentioned it to Paul. He has a good memory.

MV: What was it about the movie Squirm that inspired you to record an entire album in its honour called Worm In My Egg Cream?

WP: It was definitely the scene with the worm coming out of the  guy's spilled egg cream. That scene left a big impression on me. I  couldn't get it out of my head.

SQUIRM

MV: Your song The Thing With Two Heads is basically a synopsis of the movie of the same name . I always get that one confused with The Incredible 2 Headed Transplant . If you've seen it, which one do you think is better?

WP: I have seen both of them and I think that The Incredible 2-Headed Transplant is the better of the two. The main reason is that even though both movies are really amazing and ridiculous (in other words, entertaining),  The Thing With Two Heads suffers from a somewhat boring  middle-section. The beginning and end are great, but the middle is  pretty repetitive and gets tiresome. 

The Thing with Two Heads

 

MV: You wrote a song called Human Eye in which a significant  other has only one eye and can't watch a movie in 3D. What do you think  of the technological progress they've made with 3D in movies?

WP: I've seen a few movies at the theater in 3-D (the one that comes to mind at the moment is My Bloody Valentine ). The new 3-D is a whole new ballgame compared with the old 3-D (I actually watched Creature From the Black Lagoon on TV in 3-D around 1982 or so!) You can get yourself immersed in the world that the movie takes place in now, before it was just stuff  randomly coming towards you from the screen.

Creature from the Black Lagoon 

MV: Speaking of eyes, have you ever seen X: The Man with the X-Ray Eyes?

WP: I love X: The Man With the X-Ray Eyes. I own it on DVD. I also saw the band Pere Ubu perform their own soundtrack to it, live. It was a real experience.

X: The Man With the X-Ray Eyes

MV: Your song "Robot Armor" on your album Medically Necessary is a great rock song . Which robots really rock in movies? (favourite movie robots)

WP: I've always liked Robby the Robot from Forbidden Planet. I have the poster above my desk. Another one of my favorite robots is Gog from the 1954 movie of the same name. And The Colossus of New York.  Although, technically he would be a cyborg since he has a human brain.

Forbidden Planet 

[editor's note] Not long ago, I asked Paul if it would be O.K. for me to create a music video using his song "Robot Armor". He generously granted permission and I worked for the next two weeks compiling and editing clips, trying to match them to the song's lyrics. I was pleased how it turned out and fortunately, so was Paul. So much so, he said it could be considered the official music video, at least until he makes his own.

The clips feature "Robot John" from the public domain movie Voyage to the Prehistoric Planet.

Robot Armor (featuring Robot John)

MV: In 1985, you made The Killer Hula Hoop  , which you describe as the worst horror movie of all time. If I didn't  know better, I would think that this was the inspiration for Rubber, about a killer car tire named Robert. Have you seen this movie and if so, what did you think of it?

WP:  I have not seen "Rubber". I have heard of it. I never made the connection before, but you're right, it's does seem like a similar horror idea.

Rubber

MV: You wrote a fun song called Please Don't Break My Atari. Many customers were sorry they bought Atari's E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial video game. Do you own it or have you ever played it? 

WP: We got ET for Christmas in 1982, like lots of other  families. I played it quite a bit, and I think I remember having some kind of guide (that I would have gotten from Atari) that walked you through how to win it. 

MV: Have you seen the documentary Atari: Game Over, which chronicled its rise and fall in addition to the excavation of thousands of Atari game cartridges (many of them E.T.) that were dumped by Atari at a landfill?

WP: I didn't know about the documentary GAME OVER until you mentioned it in this interview. So I did watch it on YouTube and I enjoyed it very much. Back when E.T. came out, normal consumers like us had no idea they had rushed to get the game out or that a video game "crash" was on the way.

Atari: Game Over

 

MV: What is your favourite Atari game based on a movie?

WP: This one is easy. ALIEN is definitely my favorite Atari 2600 game based on a movie. Very addictive game. I've played it for hours.

MV: Not only did you write a song called We Love Computers, you recorded a couple of videos about Commodore 64 including one about a Star Wars game. Assuming you've seen all the Star Wars movies, is there one that you prefer overall. Is there one you hate? Are you looking forward to The Force Awakens?

WP: I actually have not seen Attack of the Clones. I was in the room while it was on, but I did not fully pay attention to it. Most people I mention this to have said that it's probably the worst Star Wars movie, so I don't feel so bad. Return of the Jedi is my favorite and the first one I saw in the theater. I feel like  that was the apex of the movies, because it was the best "effects" movie, better than the first two and it was the last one without all  that CGI, which I'm not a fan of. I am really looking forward to The Force Awakens. I'll definitely go see it, hopefully with my son.

We Love Computers

MV: Weird Paul: A Lo Fidelity Documentary played at two festivals. Were you happy with the finished product and how it was received?

WP: I was very happy with the Weird Paul documentary, although I felt at the time that certain aspects of my life had to be  kind of glossed over due to things I was going through then. Now, so  much has changed in the last 10+ years - part of which probably has to  do with the movie being made in the first place. The night it premiered here in Pittsburgh was great, I had a long line of people waiting to  meet me!

Weird Paul: A Lo Fidelity Documentary

[editor's note] Since this interview, a second documentary movie about Paul has finished filming and will be released some time in 2018. It's called Will Work for Views: The Lo-Fi Life of Weird Paul and will focus on his YouTube career. When the first documentary of his life was made, YouTube didn't even exist back then. 

I was happy to contribute to the second movie's Kickstarter campaign.

Will Work for Views: The Lo-Fi Life of Weird Paul

MV: Would you say "I Got Drunk at Chuck E. Cheese" is your biggest hit?

WP: I used to say that "I Got Drunk at Chuck E. Cheese" was my biggest hit. But earlier this year, my song "Pot of Macaroni" went viral on Vine - almost 4 million loops! So I think by default (and the fact that kids tell me that they and their friends sing it in  school (!), that it is now my biggest hit.

Pot of Macaroni

MV: You interviewed your dad once in which he gave a passionate review of 12 Angry Men.  Ironically, you've angered him in some of your classic videos. Did his review convince you to watch the movie and do you still anger him  occasionally? 

WP: His review is very influential, I have heard from people who watched it after seeing him talk about it.  I still have not seen it. One of the recent times I made him angry was when I was supposed to  watch the back of his van as he was backing it up to the front of his  house to unload a couch. My point of view was bad and he cracked his  tail light on the mailbox! 

12 Angry Men

MV: In 1985 your homemade movie All You Zombies put its own spin on the genre. Being from Pittsburgh, were you influenced at all by Night of the Living Dead, seeing as that movie was filmed in that area?

WP: When I made "All You Zombies" in 1985, I still had not  seen any of Romero's zombie movies (of course I have seen most of them  by now). I was very aware of them though, I had seen ads in the paper for "Day of the Dead" and double and triple features of them. I also had heard kids in school talking about different zombie movies, so I was indirectly influenced, you could say.

All You Zombies

MV: Your recreation of "Strange Brew" with your little sister as "Dougette" is hilarious. Were you a big fan of that movie?

WP: I was a HUGE fan of Strange Brew. I had seen the previews for it on movie review shows like Siskel and Ebert's. As soon as it came out on VHS, we rented it and I watched it more times than I can count. I still quote it all the time. Then I found out about SCTV on reruns and started watching every episode the characters appeared on. I would love to see Bob & Doug McKenzie's 2-4 Anniversary, but the DVD is now rare and more than I can afford!

Strange Brew 

 

 MV: "Still Going Strong" is one of your best albums. What's the inspiration for the song "Delusions of Grandeur"? 

WP: Here's how "Delusions of Grandeur" was inspired. I had a home video from 1984 of me reviewing a McDonald's Breakfast  that I had uploaded to YouTube. It was (maybe still is) the oldest food review on YouTube, so it caused a little bit of a sensation when  the online community found it. 

I started getting all kinds of wild ideas, which basically culminated with me telling my friends that someday I would have my own TV show. A couple weeks later when the  excitement died down, I felt really foolish about how I'd acted.  So  writing the song was a response to that.  Of course, a few years later, now I DO have my own TV show, even if it's only locally here in Pittsburgh!

Delusions of Grandeur

MV: "Peanut Butter Recall" has garnered quite a good response  on YouTube. Were you surprised at its success and do you think it could  one day surpass your McDonald's Breakfast Review in views?

WP: "Peanut Butter Recall" started out like this. I had  the idea to write a song with that title, about remembering kinds of  peanut butter. Then I'd make a YouTube video, get it to be the top result for the search of that title and wait for there to be an actual  peanut butter recall. Then people would Google "peanut butter recall" and my video would come up.  

There hasn't been a major peanut butter recall yet, but my video IS the top search result. I'm never sure what the response will be to anything I do, but I was happy to see it really  take off. All we need now is a big peanut butter recall, and yeah, maybe it will pass the McDonald's Breakfast video in views.

Peanut Butter Recall 

MV: You've just released a new album with Ben Blanchard and the video for the song "Maybe You'll Find Some in The Garbage" is your most creative yet. Can you tell us who did the video effects and how long it took to shoot it?

WP: "Maybe You'll Find Some in the Garbage" was produced by ZAV, the same producer that puts together the new Weird Paul TV show and that made the "Peanut Butter Recall" video. I usually go in with some rough storyboards and let him take over from there. We shot "Peanut Butter Recall" all in one afternoon. "Garbage" took three separate days to film.

Maybe You'll Find Some in the Garbage

MV: I'm not a musician but that red guitar you have is awesome. What kind is it and how long have you had it.

WP: It's a B.C. Rich Warlock and is one of the significant "pointy heavy metal" guitars. Lita Ford is one of the famous guitarists known for playing it. I've had it since 1987 - I thought it was really cool to have a heavy metal style guitar, now it seems more ironic when people see me come out onstage with it. It's been kind of my trademark.

Weird Paul gets his B.C. Rich Warlock Guitar (1987) 

MV: How many songs do you have written that are waiting to be recorded for another album?

WP: I actually don't have any songs written that are ready to be  recorded. I have tapes full of ideas and when I decide I'm ready to make a new album, I put those ideas together. I often write the songs either just before or during the recording of them.

[editor's note] Weird Paul recently announced that he has been working on a new album and intends to release it in 2018. I assume the album's release date will coincide with that of his new documentary movie, Will Work for Views.

I think I read that one of the songs that will be included on the new album is "Hello Kitty Necklace" which you can hear briefly at the end of the video below.

Weird Paul's Vine Videos

In the meantime, you might want to ask Weird Paul if he has any of his recently-released vinyl records for sale still in stock.

They come on orange and red vinyl and feature the songs "Peanut Butter Recall", "Turn my Brain Off", "If You Don't Get Naked" and "Look Before You Leap."

Weird Paul Coloured Vinyl Records

Thanks, Paul, for taking the time to do this interview!

I'll leave readers with this. It's the intro to The Weird Paul Variety Show  which he mentioned in his answer to question #21. The TV show can be  seen on COZI TV, Thursdays at 7:30pm Pittsburgh (59.1 through the rabbit  ears) and on Verizon Fios channel 463.

[editor's note]  As previously noted, The Weird Paul Variety Show is no longer airing on TV.

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The Weird Paul Variety Show Intro

 

Weird Paul's Links

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weirdpaul Weird Paul Petroskey tweeted @ 09 Nov 2017 - 05:40 UTC

@MovieVigilante Unfortunately, the channel that my show aired on went off the air forever a couple weeks ago. But… twitter.com/i/web/status/9…

weirdpaul Weird Paul Petroskey tweeted @ 08 May 2015 - 03:52 UTC

Journal entry from this day in 1990:
"I've seen 415 movies!"
(which means I've seen over 8,000 movies in the last 25 years)

Disclaimer: I am just a bot trying to be helpful.

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