March 1, 2004
David Rees, Cartoonist
The Basics
Age and occupation. How long have you lived here, where did you come from, and where do you live now?
I am a 31-year-old cartoonist. I live in Sunset Park, Brooklyn with my wife. Before Sunset Park we lived in Park Slope for two years. Before Park Slope, Gowanus for a year. Before Gowanus, Boston for six years. Before Boston, Oberlin College for four years. Before Oberlin College, Chapel Hill (NC) for eighteen years.
Threefer Madness
1. What's the real message of "My New Fighting Technique Is Unstoppable"? Is it that office drones can find liberation through PowerPoint and clip art?
The real message of "My New Fighting Technique is Unstoppable" is that everyone has a reason to be scared and most things in life are out of your control. You just have to talk yourself into staying strong, express your feelings, and always remember how crazy life can be.
2. How much more anarchy-filled would the world in fact be if taxpayers could photocopy and laminate for free? Wouldn't we be mercilessly subjected to reams of fan fiction starring David Duchovny in compromising positions?
There would probably be zine anarchy and for a while there would probably be an overabundance of personal zines and fan fiction. But after a while most people would get bored with their publications and only the people who were really dedicated to their projects would continue. Then we would have a national collection of hard-core content that reflected American devotion.
3. At one point you were a fact checker for Maxim. Did this involve any hands-on work, with, say, Carmen Elektra?
I never got to meet any famous babes at Maxim. The most famous person I spoke to was ex-arms inspector Scott Ritter while I was fact-checking an article about Uday and Qusay Hussein. Once I was fact-checking a fashion spread and I called a designer's company to confirm the price of some belt buckle or something, and they actually just handed the phone to the designer, but I don't remember who it was. Also, once we all went to Jamaica and Drew Carey came and gave us a motivational speech.
Proust-Krucoff Questionnaire
Time travel question: What era, day or event in New York's history would you like to re-live?
I don't know much about NYC history. But I think it would be cool to live in Manhattan in the early 60s, so I could spy on my parents as they met and started dating.
9pm, Wednesday night - what are you doing?
Whining about how we don't have any plans for the weekend and wondering who will be fired on "The Apprentice" in 24 hours.
What's your New York motto?
"ATMG: Always too much garbage."
Best celebrity sighting in New York, or personal experience with one if you're that type.
I was waiting for someone in Union Square and I noticed an enormous white SUV idling at the corner. The woman in the passenger seat looked just like Missy Elliott. The driver glanced at me and I mouthed the words, "IS THAT MISSY ELLIOTT?" and he just rolled his eyes before looking away. Then I noticed her "Timbaland" sweatshirt and realized it actually WAS Missy Elliott! So I walked up to the truck and knocked on the window and she rolled down the window and I asked her, "Are you Missy Elliott?" And she laughed and said yes and I went into total fan mode. I said, "Well, I just want you to know that I love your music and how creative you and Timbaland are. Can I have your autograph?" She said, "I'm sorry but we're supposed to go to a party and we're already late." At that moment a middle-aged woman in a FULL-LENGTH FUR COAT climbed into the SUV and they pulled away. I stood there for a second and then remembered I was holding a bag of "My Fighting Technique is Unstoppable"s that I was about to drop off at Forbidden Planet (this was back when I was selling the book myself). I decided I should try to give her a copy of the book because maybe then she would fall in love with it and decide to make a musical version of it and I could meet Timbaland and live with them in Virginia... so I bolted down the street after the SUV, but it had disappeared into the NYC evening. Also, once I saw Coolio hanging around with some guys on the hood of a car around 17th Street. Also, once I went to a play and sat behind Hillary Swank. And I saw Henry Kissinger at the airport once.
Describe that low, low moment when you thought you just might have to leave NYC for good.
Oh, my wife and I are definitely leaving New York. She works in foster homes for teenagers in Flatbush and Bed-Stuy and has a really, really, long commute each day. It's grinding, depressing, and dirty. We want a vegetable garden so we're thinking of moving to the midwest in a couple years. Our first apartment was infested with mice and our second apartment always smelled like sewage. The genius landlord told us to spray Lysol in the bathroom. Then, two days before we moved out, I saw him walking down the street covered in grime and he said he had been fixing a broken sewage pipe. So I said, "Ah-ha! You see, it WAS sewage we smelled all this time!" And he said, "No, this pipe is on the other side of the hall--no way you would have smelled it." In my mind, I was like, "Goodbye, New York."
Just after midnight on a Saturday - what are you doing?
Watching Saturday Night Live yet again and HATING MY LIFE.
What's the most expensive thing in your wardrobe?
I bought a seersucker suit for about $320.
Finish one of the four following sentences:
3) "I hate computers for replacing the card catalog in the New York Public Library and I hate the way..."
tourists WILL ACTUALLY LITTER while they're in New York.
Who do you consider to be the greatest New Yorker of all-time? (Name up to three if you must.)
Jackie the Jokeman, Batman, and Aquaman
What was your best dining experience in NYC?
I used to live across the street from a Peruvian restaurant called Coco Roco in Park Slope and I used to order their sandwiches all the time. They cost $5.99 and they were delicious.
Just how much do you really love New York?
I like it OK. I'll probably appreciate it more once I've moved.
What happened the last time you went to L.A.?
I hung out with my childhood hero Mike Watt and it was AWESOME. Other than that, I'm not really crazy about LA.
Of all the movies made about (or highly associated with) New York, what role would you have liked to be cast in?
I would like to play the role of "Will Ferrell's drummer" in "Elf: Drum n Bass Remix."
If you could change one thing about New York, what would it be?
Fire the litterbugs, fund social services better, and also fire Leonard Lopate and Maureen Dowd.
The End of The World is finally happening. What are you going to do with your last 24 hours in NYC?
Hang out with my wife, order chorizo burritos, and watch DVDs
Check out David's website here. His latest book, "My New Filing Technique is Unstoppable," will be out soon.




after september 11th, mnftiu was the first thing that really made me laugh out loud. it's been consistently funny for the last few years- david is a genius.
MNFTIU, Drew Carey giving motivational speeches, getting dissed by Missy Elliot - this interview has it all1
i wonder if david takes commissions- i'd love to buy a strip of me and jen IMing idiotic comments back and forth all day.
What's your beef with Lenny Lopate. Other than that, this was a way funny interview.
MEDIA RELEASE / FOR IMMEDIATE USE
A non-fiction book of interviews, documentation
and investigative journalism, titled:
"Hello My Big Big Honey!"
Love Letters to Bangkok Bar Girls
and Their Revealing Interviews
has been published in San Francisco and
is available in any bookshop and Amazon.com
"...an intimate portrait...does love conquer
poverty, cultural barriers and the fear of AIDS?
Sometimes..."
-- TIME magazine
A "masterwork" of "feminist research"
-- The British Library's Oriental and
India Office Collections, London
"A Freudian whirlpool of sexual fantasies and
frustration, of damaged egos and haunting
super-egos, of dreams of pure love and acts of
cold calculation, and a milieu of cross-cultural
mayhem"
-- Far Eastern Economic Review magazine
This book appeared at Columbia University's
Graduate School of Journalism *Book Fair 2002*
252 pages, illustrated with 25 color
photographs. ISBN: 0867194731
free: 20 pages of text and six photos, online at:
http://www.geocities.com/glossograph
Lonely Planet's *Guide to Thailand* and Lonely
Planet's *Guide to Bangkok* both recommend this
book in their *Culture and Society* section.
"A number of themes run through the book:
prostitution, love, family, cultural stereotypes,
AIDS. The most prominent, however, and
perhaps the most interesting, is money. 'Hello
My Big Big Honey!' is interesting and readable,
surprising and engaging... intriguing...
worthwhile."
-- The Bangkok Post
"...a collective scream of longing, loneliness,
despair and delusion...For many men, these
dangerous Thai liaisons are no laughing matter.
They become obsessed and cannot let go."
-- The South China Morning Post
"This book is essential reading for anybody who
wants to try and understand the attraction Asian
women have..."
-- Budapest Week
"Besotted...passion can make men lose their grip
on reality...What's love got to do with it, when
Bangkok bar girls offer 'hospitality'...these
intimate letters reveal true feeling between
Western men and their Eastern girls. Bangkok's
notorious girly bars attract businessmen and
lager louts alike, to live out their sexual fantasies
with hostesses with the mostest...Thai women
seem passive, but are capable of fighting
back...wives back home are rarely
understanding."
-- London's News of the World Sunday
Magazine
"A study of the bar girls"
-- Le Monde newspaper, France
"'Honey!' is an obsessive look at romantic and
financial need...The letters from these men to
their paid companions are sometimes
delusional and sometimes quite practical...it's
better to have cared briefly than never to have
cared at all. (And that might even be the
moral of this book.)"
-- Tracy Quan, Diary of a Manhattan Call Girl
Researched in Bangkok -- and now published in
San Francisco -- this documentary book contains
verbatim love letters written by American,
European, Australian and other foreign men to
bar girls in Bangkok.
The foreign men's letters explain their emotions,
demands, dreams and fears as they try to
convince Thai women of their feelings.
The book also includes extensive "Q and A"
interviews with Thai bar girls about their
relationships with foreign customers.
The Thai women also express their personal
views on the problems of AIDS, poverty, abuse,
tradition and the search for true love in red-lit
streets and rented rooms.
Interviews with three blunt bar owners --
American, British and Thai -- and others probe
the harsh depths of Bangkok's commercial sex
industry.
This book has been acquired by the British
Library's Oriental and India Office Collections as a
manuscript of unusual romantic relationships
between East and West.
Columbia University's Graduate School of
Journalism in New York City offers this book to its
journalism students and others through the
Lehman Social Science Library.
The University of California Berkeley's Main Doe
Library also presents this book for professors,
students and the public interested in
women's studies and related subjects.
252 pages, illustrated with 25 color
photographs. ISBN: 0867194731
free: 20 pages of text and six photos, online at:
http://www.geocities.com/glossograph
Bookshops / Universities / Distribution
Publishers Group West, the book's Berkeley-
based distributor, offers this book for U.S. and
international distribution.
Publishers Group West also provides "Hello My
Big Big Honey!" as a university-level textbook for
teachers and students focusing on Women
Studies, Travel, Society, Third World issues and
related topics.
To read 20 pages of free excerpts, view six of
the 25 color photos, see all of the book reviews,
and examine readers' responses and university
thesis papers which reference this book,
simply click on the book's website:
http://www.geocities.com/glossograph
This website includes links to the book's San
Francisco publisher, Berkeley distributor,
Amazon.com and other booksellers' sites
throughout the world -- plus information on
how this book was written.
This book has also been translated into French,
titled:
"Bonjour ma Grande Grande Cherie!"
Lettres d'Amour aux Filles des Bars de Bangkok
et Interviews Revelatrices
(In addition to reading the website's excerpts
and viewing the photographs, please feel free
to link the book's homepage to your website
and display/distribute the free 20 pages of
excerpts, six photos and this media release)
David Reese Rocks. It's the most intelligent stuff out there hands down. The problem is when the interviewer tries to be funnnier than the interviewee.
Hey guys,
I was just reading this new mens entertainment magazine called Giant (which is really good by the way, check it out when you can it talks about music, Playstation, movies, all that stuff we love, anyway I digress) but they review Get Your War On II and then to top it off they have a whole spread on comics (political and non-political). The book seems really interesting. If you're interested in this stuff then check out the magazine.