TFC: Was SOCIAL LIFE your concept?
CM: Yeah. I had an idea, or a plot for an idea, or an idea for a plot of an idea! I knew what I wanted to achieve. Now that idea has developed into a family, a group of people all working towards a shared goal. Ricky Dunlop, Jeremiah Rosenthal, Shawn Kent, Mindy Cooper, Alex Kantor, Jeffery Saver, John Miceli, Stephanie Klapper, CJ La Roche, and Iris Gordon-Rossi are my creative family.
This is our fourth year in development, it has been and continues to be a labour of love. Everybody has heart in this project and we are being guided by some very good forces.
TFC: Is the protaganist in the story you?
CM: Its definitely a take on my life but social media didn't really appear until later. I was in the middle of a record deal with Sony when Facebook and social media started to take hold.
TFC: So, from Sony to Broadway?
CM: There wasn't any creative freedom in the boy band which is what propelled me to write the show. It was a way for me to present my creative mind in a medium that no one would expect. So, I came to NY and in three years built an amazing team and an amazing show.
TFC: Going back to the ideas surrounding SOCIAL LIFE.....
In the show the grandmother asks the son why he puts all his information out there. It reminded me of the documentary "Generation Like", did you see it?
CM: I didn't
TFC: There's a girl in the film who devotes all her time to building armies of followers, hours and hours of time spent in isolation gathering virtual friends just to be rewarded with virtual gifts.
CM: Let's send her a Furbie!!
CM: The concept of having followers and/or likes and making that our focus seems crazy to me. In the show we play with this idea, an army of people behind you but they are all ghosts.
TFC: There's something very sinister about the machinery that is creating these armies of uber-fans, enticing them to do all their free promotion, Preying, if you will, on our addiction to celebrity and the promise of basking for a moment in that glow.
CM: The day will come when we'll need rehab for people who can't disconnect.
Imagine if we all used that time to create something instead...
TFC: The idea that there is no substance behind fame and no concrete foundation for it is crazy, How do we sustain that?
CM: Welcome to my first experience with fame. I was 19 years old, touring in a boy band. It was exciting but I was surrounded all the time. Fans mean well but they just take whatever they can get without knowing why they want it. It's impossible to explain what that does to you as an artist. I appreciated the support but in the end I just didn't like people knowing that much about me.
TFC: Sounds like the exception to the rule. The fact that you knew yourself well enough at 19 to know that wasn't real and wasn't enough. It's a refreshing change.
But, knowing you for a short while and hearing the material for the show it's clear that you will enjoy success with this, and fame no doubt, how will you handle it now?
CM: Focusing on the work, staying one step ahead, never becoming complacent, always learning, always reaching, always creating
There's also a clear philanthropic vision behind the show and wall.oo, I want to create artistic opportunities for other people, that's the goal.
This life journey is an arc and you can ride the arc for a very long time. Decisions I made years ago are still playing themselves out. I choose ascension, There's no one involved with anything I'm doing that doesn't elevate me in some way. We lift each other up.
I've never done Broadway before, never written a show before but I've attracted the right people and recognise that this is a sacred process.
TFC: So how does Wall.oo come into it?
CM: wall.oo came along in a moment of pure inspiration. It's about finding ambassadors, connecting dots, finding like minded creatives and putting art out there with a positive message and enjoying the process. It's about not getting lost in the glow, recognizing what's really important.
Wall.oo is the physical manifestation of the show, it's all related, all tied together, by the concept and a desire to inspire change.
It's about creating something beautiful and surprising. Using all the most modern tools available to me to shift current paradigms.
After all The Struggle is Real.