I should start by saying this event was easily among the top Weird Al related events I've been to. Concerts and record signings are great but the chance to get to sit in on an 90-minute interview with Al, and an interview in which Al was taking it seriously and the interviewer was very well prepared, was such a great opportunity and I could never express enough gratitude to Al and the Grammy Museum for making this happen.
I thought I wasn't going to be able to get into this event since I didn't have an American Express card, and after realizing the museum wasn't going to offer any more tickets I was planning to just go down and see what I could pull off. As it turned out, I checked Craaaaiiigssliiiissst at just the right time because a guy had two tickets available and sold me one of them. The guy and his wife were very nice, as was the woman who bought his other ticket. I told all of them to join WOWAY so if any of you are reading this,

.
The four of us got our tickets and new copies of Alpocalypse (I just gave away my extra copy, so now I have another one to get rid of...) and went inside the theater. It was very small, maybe 150-200 seats. Immediately upon walking in, I saw Tony and sat with him in the third row for the rest of the evening.
After a little while the event started with a video that spliced together nearly all of Al's videos. As Tony mentioned, it was basically the entire Ultimate Video Collection in order plus the two live action videos since then. I think the only missing video was Christmas At Ground Zero. It was definitely way too long. Did anyone in the room benefit from seeing This Is The Life, for instance? And also, I must say, it was a very poorly edited compilation. There were multiple jump cuts and awkward fades. And why oh why didn't the person de-interlace the footage???? Sorry, editing vent...
Finally, Bob Santinelli took the stage and introduced Al to a standing ovation. Al was dressed very nicely, in a full suit with a patterned blue dress shirt. The stage was dressed with blue and red lights throwing a nice pattern onto the rear curtains and an accordion conspicuously placed directly behind Al and Bob as a nice setpiece for the video. Oh yeah by the way: this entire Q&A was filmed by the Grammy Museum and will now be in its archive, so any time you come to LA and visit the Grammy Museum you will be able to watch the entire event.
The questions asked were mostly along the lines of what you would expect. They covered all of the usual bases, but they were asked in a very well researched way, and by someone intelligent enough to ask follow-up questions and really milk every topic. The segment on the Gaga Saga, for example, allowed Al to tell this oft-repeated story with more detail than I had heard him elaborate on before, even more so than the blog. There wasn't much in terms of hard news broken, but it was great to hear Al elaborate on many stories as much as he wanted to, as opposed to trying to fit it into a five minute TV piece.
Bob really got into the "early years" questions, asking him to elaborate on his earliest musical and comedy influences. A great question was: Which came first for you- music or comedy? I believe Al said they both came at such a young age it was hard to say. He talked at great length about Dr. Demento and who he was before he came to meet Al, as well as how Al met Dr Demento and what it was like working at the station. He also discussed his time at Cal Poly, his parents' influence, going from novelty-playing DJ to guy with a record contract, and his early affinity for MAD Magazine.
Another frequent topic was the creative process. Bob asked him a lot about how he writes for each album, how he comes up with ideas for both parodies and originals, whether he conceives of the video ideas as he's writing or if that's a later process, and how he came to direct all of his own videos. It was also revealed at this event that, after five days in the edit bay, the new live concert video is completely edited and color corrected, ready to go.
The audience also asked a lot of excellent questions, many of which Bob and Tony already mentioned. One of my favorite questions from the audience was from a young boy, probably around 10 or 11, who asked Al why The Weird Al Show was canceled. After Al's answer, the boy responded, "Oh because when I first got The Weird Al Show on DVD I saw there were three discs and I was like wow there must be so many episodes and then I was like oh wow there's only thirteen." So funny... There was also a good question about the origins of the Yoda Chant. Al said he had originally heard some other band doing "ya din din da" at a show and asked them about it and then the band decided it would be a funny thing to memorize and throw into the show and then it just kept on expanding. Al also told the full story about how he met Suzanne and their early dates.
I got to ask Al a question that I think has been on the minds of many forum members here. I was called on immediately after Tony, and said "You tried a couple of interesting experiments with the release of this album. First was the Internet Leaks with songs being released gradually over the course of a few months. Then was the idea to do an animated video for every single track on the album. Based on the feedback you've seen, what do you think the chances are for continuing either of those experiments for future releases?" Al explained that he feels strongly that there should be some kind of visual representation for every track on his album so they can get more exposure. He said that the days of multiple live action videos for each album are behind him, and further explained that if you took the cost of doing 11 animated videos this time around and then doubled it, it would still be cheaper than shooting a second video. Al then conspicuously did not answer the part of my question about Internet Leaks but I think he just forgot about the other half of the question rather than intentionally not talking about the future of Internet Leaks. I hope Al decides to address this in a blog post sometime because I am still eager to learn the answer. As Tony mentioned, Al alerted the authorities during the program that Tony and I were not actually AmEx card holders. That got a good laugh from the crowd as Tony and I awkwardly looked around and pretended to duck for cover.
After the event ended, as has now been said twice, I met up with Tony, Bob, and a music journalist named Diana, and we went out for a late dinner. We all had a nice time talking about being Weird Al fans. (When asked if she was a real Weird Al fan, Diana was quick to whip out her cassette copy of the debut album.)
Overall, this was a truly awesome experience. I would take this over ten concerts any time. I hope Al seizes the opportunity to do as many public Q&A events as possible. I've gone to several events like this since I've lived in Los Angeles for filmmakers, writers, actors, directors, etc. and they are always fun to attend, especially when the person being interviewed is someone I have so very many questions for. So again, thank you to Al and the Grammy Museum for doing this event!
I couldn't tell a dirt clod from a plate of caviar.