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 Tuesday, August 26, 2008
Choose Your Own Commenting Adventure
When I was a wee lad of middle school angst years, I enjoyed those Choose Your Own Adventure books, mostly because I felt like I had control of the pending situation, even if I could never figure out to keep from shaking the branch to retrieve Carlos's backpack whilst the Abominable Snowman lurked around. With that said and because it is the week before the Day of Labor, which means this blog will be labor intensive, I am trying something new here, giving you a taste of a writing exercise that you may or may not choose to do, enjoy, or utilize. I will start off a story and then pass it along to the comment section. You can continue the story in the comments (writing up to 4 sentences or just a single line or whatever you want really) but always leaving the last sentence partially done, so that someone can come in and pick up where you left off... you'll see what I mean. Anyway, this just means that you have to look and see what was written by the person who commented previously. There is potential for this to be a disaster, or a masterpiece, or whatever, but I always liked doing these things in writing workshops, and if I like it, doesn't that mean that everyone else has to like it as well? Anyways, this is a beta version of something like this, so just have fun with it, be as ridiculous as you want to be, and--if it's good-- I will copy and paste this into a word doc, claim I wrote the whole thing and submit it to the Paris Review. Here we go: "Casey didn't see her coming. He'd just arrived at the Our House for his blind date with Melinda and was running over the check list of things he wanted to talk about (her work, hobbies, whether or not she enjoyed scary movies or better yet Scary Movie, and anything that would lead back to him talking about bench pressing) when he felt someone sneak up behind him and squeeze his sides. He turned around and..." Yeah, so the first person to comment start by finishing this stellar sentence and then go on for a few, and leave it hanging for the next person... and we'll keep going until we figure out just what got real with Casey's blind date adventure. I'm literally nervous (for Case). Songs of 1996 ensue. Give me one, reason Tracy Chapman
Tuesday, August 26, 2008 3:25:24 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Tuesday, August 19, 2008
On Dream Jobs, Doing TV, and Pickpocketing Hippies
Last week I did some TV stuff for the Boston news show Chronicle, in which I brought them around to some "insidery gems" in the city and talked about what made the places cool and what I saw as trends in Boston style for men. This is hilarious on several levels, the first being that I actually am considered some sort of expert on anything, but the shoot was fun, and I probably used the words "authentic" and vintage-esque at least eleven times per scene on camera. Also, for your own future benefit--should you find yourself unexpectedly on a news show-- do NOT eat a Sour Apple Blow Pop right before you're supposed to go on camera. Multi-colored tongues are not "in" right now. Anyway, I am on a severe and utterly close deadline for Boston Magazine right now. The story is there waiting for me to nail it, but I keep being occupied by small tangential pieces of said story, and only seem to be able to work between the hours of 2-4 AM, which used to be fine, but now makes it impossible for me to do my day job without falling asleep in Espresso Royale and leaving myself vulnerable to pickpocketing by some of the less chill, more nefarious looking hippies. It also is taking me awhile to get back into writing in the long form after spending the last three or four months exclusively writing and editing pieces that fall in the 200 word realm. Freedom of (word) expression is a mixed bag, friends. You always complain about wanting to "write the way you want" and "in your voice" and truly make something "completely original" but then, when you're finally given that chance, most likely you just sit there reading old issues of Esquire and praying that some sort of writerly osmosis will transfer their skills into your work while you watch Weeds. With most of that said, I have a request. I want to know about dream jobs. The one writing job that you wish you could have. The more specific the better (don't just say you want to write for Tiger Beat, say you want to be the senior editor, etc, etc, etc) and how you imagine that someone would get that job. I'll reveal mine in the Commenting portion of the show and tell. Luv to Luv, to Luv Ya.
Timbaland and Magoo
Tuesday, August 19, 2008 2:36:41 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Tuesday, August 12, 2008
A Book You Should Read Right Now
Buying In: The Secret Dialogue Between What We Buy and Who We Are by Rob Walker
Normally my book recommendations fall heavily into the writing, words, fiction-esque category (Richard Price) or the magazine writer anthology category (David Samuels), which makes sense, because those are the things I do, friends. And you are what you read/eat. But I am adding another type of book to that list. And it's on--gasp-- murketing? Rob Walker--the Consumed columnist for NYTimes magazine-- wrote a book that takes some of the major ideas of his articles and columns over the last few years and brings them together to help try and understand how consumer culture, trends, and marketing have changed over the last decade or so. And the book is kind of awesome. Now, this is more than just a passing interest of mine. I need to know about trends. I want to know about trends. I read RSS feeds about trends. I wear distressed jeans and tees made of ringspun cotton and write about wallets from Singapore (Property Of!) and bags made out of truck tarp and bike inner tubes by Swiss dudes (Freitag!). I'm kind of a tool. But even if you're not in this mix, the book does an incredible job of defining and naming what is going on with (the more clever) marketing and advertising schemes of nowadays and why-- despite our feelings that we are smart enough to no longer be tricked by companies-- we still get tricked by companies (into buying their bejeweled Ipod holders, etc). The books rocks that Malcolm Gladwell Tipping Point story style--the "here is a random, yet interesting anecdote lede that'll hook you in, but won't let you figure out where I'm going, which'll further hook you in"-- and recounts stories of why the iPod sold even though it wasn't the first with the technology or even with the types of improvements that it made on that existing technology, why Timberland boots sell in the urban markets despite being marketed for scrappy dudes who work outside, how Pabst Blue Ribbon re-made themselves by accident, mostly thanks to bike messengers in Portland, Oregon, why Red Bull would spend $100 million dollars on non-advertised kite surfing trips to Cuba and Scion cars (by Toyota) would have parties where the guests of honor were from edgy artsy small, small mags like Art Prostitute, etc. The main idea centers around this "murketing" term that Walker coined to mean murky marketing that's blurred the line so that we can't really tell we're being marketed to... and also drops a ridiculous chapter about word-of-mouth marketers... people hired to read a book on a subway and start small talk about it, or bring chicken sausage to a neighborhood BBQ and casually talk it up, and a bunch of other semi-creepy things that'll have you questioning your sister's next recommendation for Shake N Bake... is she actually being paid by the Shake N Bake company? Does Shake N Bake even exist anymore? Will it make a nostalgic resurgence, not unlike the shoe brand British Knights?
Regardless of the paranoia that may ensue post-reading, the book makes you think hard and long about what and why you consume what you do, and at least lets you feel kind of smart about it, even as you walk down the supermarket aisle in a trance, searching for the Shake N Bake for no good reason. Oh yeah, and the Olympics are on... like all the time on MSNBC... and I can't stop (won't stop?) watching. Speaking of which, I need to go... China vs Poland, women's volleyball is on right now and it's the crucial third game. If there are any comments, speak now or forever write your piece. Black Hole, Sun
Soundgarden
Tuesday, August 12, 2008 10:21:23 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Tuesday, August 05, 2008
The Things That I've Learned
I've now spent a LOT of time away from the city of Brotherly Hub, which has made me reflective, which is the proper mindframe to either a) create a sappy (but totes cute!) collage of Saved By the Bell and Party of Five heartthrobs for your best high school girlfriend or b) think about some lessons that you've learned in your extensive and averagely-traveled writing career. And since I didn't have any hot pink posterboard on hand, I decided to opt for the latter (Sorry Kristin!). So here they are, in no particular order: 1. Write. The stupidest, most obvious one is actually the hardest to consistently follow. You can't get better without doing what you're doing, so keep doing it. More than you do now. 20% more. It's amazing what an extra half hour can add to your skill level. I wouldn't know, of course, but I've heard. From, like, other blogs. 2. Read. The only thing almost as good as writing. Reading is to being a writer as ingesting a ton of protein and eating Powerbars, and those little kind of nasty cans of tuna is to powerlifting. It gives you the base of knowledge to improve the writing. So read anything and everything you can. Absorb it. Ingest it. But not literally, that'd be gross. 3. A little bit of research goes a long way. You'd be surprised how many people blindly pitch things, hoping that the sheer quantity of mail they're sending will somehow cause something to stick. Take the time to read, skim, or at least Google whatever places you're interested in, narrow your list to a realistic portion and tailor everything to each individual magazine/lit journal/agent/pub house. Yeah it takes longer, but so does actually getting things accepted, and that's kind of the point right? 4. If you've established a relationship, check in. I can't emphasize how important it is to periodically check in with editors. Like parents, they get busy and forget about you, so you sending them an email or giving them a call (only after you've established a relationship/written for them before, etc... only very lonely talkative people like cold calls) just to check in is a great way to get back on their radar. Do this once or twice a month and you will double your assignments not guaranteed! Unless, of course, they hate you and your work. Then this is probably a bad idea. 5. Figure out who runs what. The published writing world is small circle filled with connections that resemble shorter versions of Seven Degrees of Kevin Bacon. If you're interested in getting into that world, figure out the genre you'd like to crack, and then go about getting closer to people in that arena through non- stalkerish means. So if you're interested in writing mystery novels; see if anyone in your town/city/province actually does what you're interested in, and pitch the idea of profiling them for a newsletter or paper or something small. This gives you the chance to meet them, which could lead to figuring out who their agent is, other people they write with, publish with, etc, giving you a clear picture of their publishing tree, how to climb it, and potentially setting you up to marry them and eventually ghostwrite their books. 6. Enjoy it. Because that's why you're doing it, right? It's not for the riches or the semi-exclusive parties at Hampton beach resorts, or the way that people double-take when you walk by them and then realize that you aren't the dude from Can't Hardly Wait... because none of that matters, or maybe even exists. So remember: you do this because you love it and because it's fun to make original semi-clever declarative phrases, not because of the wealth and the fame. Now if you'll excuse me, I have to be going: My butler just pulled the unicorn up to take me to a deep tissue massage. In sign off news, Eddie Vedder continues his musical onslaught. Comment at your own peril. Long, Road
Pearl Jam
Tuesday, August 05, 2008 1:43:10 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Tuesday, July 29, 2008
Blog: The Changing of the Venue
Lake Tahoe, friends. That's the spot that hep people call the bee's knees. The place looks like Lake George on steroids--all muscular mountain peaks, blue-green lakes, and people seemingly unaffected by my acquisition of a (white!) iPhone. There is something about beautiful spaces, about nature really stepping up its game, that makes me want to write in a philosophic and pseudo-moralistic way, even if I only stayed there for 26 hours. I have no doubt that--if I lived in Tahoe-- I would exclusively write fuzzy, confusing short(ish) poems about the need to recycle cars. Something to this effect: Judgment will rain Down from The green heavens on Your SUV, especially Because It only Takes Premium Gas. No, I know I'm in an Audi (but it's a sedan) Can you believe I just came up with that poem right here, sitting in a car, driving through a city I want to call Sacramento? But honestly, the more I think about this, the more I think I'm onto something. Do you think that your writing style is reflective of your habitat? For example, do you think that I write in a pseudo-snarked, semi-cynical sarcastic tone because I live in a city that has no spring and lots of people wearing skinny jeans? Or do you think I write like that because I am just afraid that earnestness will make me vulnerable to well-timed verbal snipes via my Facebook wall? My opinion is that everyone has a certain style that they feel most comfortable in, but that the place where you express that style influences your tone in subtle ways. Let me put it another way: if the same writer, same talent, same style, same ideas, etc, lived in San Diego and Fargo, ND, would he/she write differently? And how do you think things would change? ... Is this too general to be applied in any relevant manner? Maybe. But that is why you are here, friends. You take my questions, turn them into answers, and we then, in turn, make those into writing world laws. That is why the Internets are so powerful. Anyway, the world awaits your dropping of knowledge, friends. I will check in as a move all over the Pacific NW, and fill you in on all the hip fads those Near-Canadians utilize. Life is, A Highway Tom Cochrane
Tuesday, July 29, 2008 2:46:17 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Tuesday, July 22, 2008
West Coast Swing
In keeping with my tradition of leaving the muggy heat of a Boston summer, I am going on a West Coast trip later this week, which will surprisingly not feature me begging my father for money, sleeping quarters, and "walking around money" in the SoCal. No sir. This trip is to the Northern parts of the West Coast and will include two places I've only seen in episodes of Grey's Anatomy and live from-the- set color commentary from the movie Elektra; Seattle and Vancouver. I will be up in Seattle for something called Sea Fair, which according to my friends, amounts to a huge party on boats in Lake Washington. Knowing nothing about lakes, Washington, or Fairs via the sea, I am cautiously optimistic that this won't downgrade into large scale bumper boats. Assuming I survive said Sea Fair, I will also do other stuff in the city that may or may not involve the Space Needle, which I understand involves neither needles nor Space, but does have 25 lightning rods on its roof. And I have been excited to visit Vancouver ever since my junior year of college in which I ended up seated next to a friend's date (who was from that city) at our frat's Winter Formal dinner and we had this conversation: Me: So...where are you from? Her: Vancouver. Me: Oh wow, Vancouver is beautiful. Her, slightly more interested: You've been there? Me: No. Her, giving me a strange look: Oh. Me, attempting to recover: But... I've seen tons of pictures. Her, eyes down at the menu: Mmmm-hmmm. Me, desperate: Um, yeah, tons... (85 seconds of silence) Me:...you guys have whales right? Her: Yep. Me, self-satisfied: Nice. Anyway, this trip is not entirely about re-living semi-unpleasant college memories. There will be writing as well. I will still be working, although I'm trying to get at least a week ahead so I can do less work, but I am also trying to start/finish a magazine story for Boston Mag, and re-work this *&^$ part of my book that is frustrating me to no discernible end. I don't want to get into it, but it involves most of Chapter 3 and the urge to delete nearly everything in it. What-- I wonder now-- was I doing when I wrote Chapter 3? Was I on hallucinogenics? Trying to write in couplets? Did I let my 15 year old self ghost-write? Frankly, friends, I am embarrassed. Promise me--if you happen to accidentally stumble upon my computer after I've been knocked overboard during the Fair of Seas-- that you won't judge me. Needless to say, I am hoping that a short story arises from the ashes of this trip. As I envision it now, it will probably be called "Don't Grunge At the Ball," and be loosely based upon the rise and fall and rise of Eddie Vedder's baseball career. I smell a Pushcart nomination. State of, Love and Trust
Pearl Jam
Tuesday, July 22, 2008 7:20:58 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Tuesday, July 15, 2008
Motivation, Work, And Other Things that Make You Go Hmmm
I hope your weekend was restful and untainted by several waits in line for iPhones that you didn't end up getting because you've just been paying your mom for all cell phone charges for the last five years rather than taking forty five seconds to go to the Verizon store and sign over the phone to your name. Because something like that would've sucked. Today we are keeping things short, sweet and intensely focused as I have a workload this week that would make the average person stand up and say, "That seems like a pretty normal amount of work," but--for me, at least-- seems next to (mission?) impossible. See, friends, I am trying to do two-non-main-job things this week. The first is my official announcement to myself that I am starting another in my series of Boston Mag articles analyzing and commenting on the social values of people in the 27-37 age bracket. I will not say how this is going to go forward (it's a secret!) but I will say that involves me going pseudo-undercover, not unlike Johnny Depp in 21 Jumpstreet or Drew Barrymore in Never Been Kissed, except in my story, most of the people are not hanging out with David Arquette. The second agenda item involves jumping back on the re-write train for my book. It has been awhile since I stared at the one or two chapters that need to be pruned (deleted!) and, this weekend, I was watching VH1 Soul, which was playing a documentary about hip-hop that I've seen at least eleven times, and there was so much talk of creative interaction and artists and the creation of said art that I started to feel guilty that I was sitting watching it rather than taking part in the art party. Also, my dad asked me twice about it while I was using his swimming pool for (nearly flawless!) pencil dives and the consumption of that Gatorade with Tiger Woods on it. Guilt--such an amazing motivator! Anyway, I have some topics to discuss or not discuss in the Section Formerly Known As Comments. What sort of things/events/motivational speakers get you back on the writing train when you've fallen off? Reading good writing? Hearing about other people's success? Watching hip hop documentaries while eating Peach Cobbler Ice Cream? I await your motivations with a curiosity that knows several bounds and Billy Corgan. 19, 79
Smashing Pumpkins
Tuesday, July 15, 2008 3:38:27 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Tuesday, July 08, 2008
And Then I Got A Job
Hello friends. I hope everyone celebrated the birth of our nation in a timely, safe, and socio-economically green manner. I sat in 40 min of post-fireworks traffic driving back from Wood's Hole (Cape Cod!) to Falmouth (Cape Cod!) on Friday night, which would've almost completely sucked if not for the intrepid lyrical hegemony of Hall and Oates, Steve Winwood, and Michael Jackson's "Dirty Diana" Also, we had Cheez-its. Anyway, as promised via the Comments section (before a large chunk of that section disappeared into the darkness of the Interweb), I'm relaying the fact that I'm gainfully employed. Here is a short, not- entirely syntax clean version of that story: during the madness of the thesis get a call from founder of a website saying I was recommended to him through a friend of a friend for an editorial position, he relays the details, they sound promising, I check it out, and then--in the midst of the thesis insanity-- I apply for said job. Interviews, resumes, and reference calls happen, writing tests happen, background checks check out, and miraculously, as soon as I have left the world of higher education, I actually have a job. Needless to say, my dad thought/thinks I'm lying. "A website?" "Yeah." "That will pay you?" "Yeah. Pay is the new free, Dad." "I'm hanging up." So, I am the Boston Editor of Thrillist.com, which launched here two weeks ago. Thrillist is a free (city-specific) lifestyle guide and daily newsletter, which finds cool "under-the-radar-assuming-the- radar-is-other-Boston-based-publications" bars, restaurants, clothes, sneakers, inflatable rafts you can play drinking games on, websites, candy, animals, gadgets, magic, etc. If you know what Daily Candy is, it's a lot like that, except slanted more towards dudes. Its got around 320,000 subscribers nationwide with city-specific editions in NYC, LA, SF, Chi-town, Vegas, and now Boston. My job is to find all of that stuff I mentioned, write the editorial content, take the pictures, hire freelancers, and yell quixotically at the interns I haven't hired yet. If that still doesn't answer your question, here is a Boston Globe article about the launch of the site, which includes several terrible quotes I gave to the reporter while extremely sick and extremely sleeping. Part of my job involves walking all the different neighborhoods of Boston to see what has changed and what might be new, reading all of the free weeklies including the ones I severely dislike to make sure I haven't missed something, keeping up relationships with PR people that rep retail/bars/restaurants, owners of boutiques, buyers for stores, etc, to encourage them to dial me in whenever they get new stuff, and to spend an inordinate amount of time using my Google Reader to read trend blogs that discuss hep new sneakers. This--as you can imagine-- is cool, yet time-consuming stuff. As part of my agreement with the site, I'm allowed to keep my freelance gigs, which is nice of them, but it does make it harder and harder for me to find the time to fit everything into my schedule. The woe is upon me. Anyway, the good news is I now have a grown-up's salary and health benefits (?!), which allows me to pick and choose only the freelance stories I want to work on, which is amazing. Plus I'm writing and editing for a living AND I have business cards. The bad news is I now have about 45 less hours a week in which to pursue those stories, or re-writes to my book or short story about dating reality stars in Zurich, Switzerland. But, friends, if I truly want to get these things done, they will get done(ish). So it just means I have to work harder, better, faster, stronger. Ok. There's that story. Now you know what I'm doing betwixt the hours of 9-6 when I'm not taking tv timeouts to peruse the philosophical gems embedded in the View. The Comment section is open to the public. Emoticon away;) One More, Time
Daft Punk
Tuesday, July 08, 2008 1:48:02 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Tuesday, July 01, 2008
A Taste of Pre-Nation Celebration Customer Service
While perusing the Interweb, I realized that a lot of successful webhomes use surveys to conduct user feedback to finely tune their content and figure out how many old "Threes Company" clips to post. And since we--like the Web-- are an ever-changing, ever-adapting server of you, our reader, we want to get in on the quiz taking action. So--for customer service benefits-- I've composed a 5 question quiz to gauge interest, air concerns, and continue talking. If you would be kind enough to take the quiz, I will be kind of enough to provide it. And that, friends, is how we kill the customer service industry (with kindness!). Directions: Read, pick, read, pick, read, pick, read...pick, read, pick, write. 1. I come on the site to: A) Talk about writing. B) Learn what Kevin is up to. C) See if I can acquire Kevin's email address so I can solicit him to purchase very cheap tech stocks that are just going to go up, up, up! D) Watch old music videos. E) I accidentally came to this site and accidentally read this quiz. 2. Entries I find most useful are: A) The ones in which Kevin starts talking about something relatively important, gets wildly off topic, regains his footing in the last paragraph and then quickly signs off with a semi-forgotten vid pic from a year that makes him nostalgic. B) Are there any other kinds of entries? C) Seriously. See B. There shouldn't be any more choices. D) "Useful" is a complicated word, especially in this context. E) Please. Can I just get this over with? 3. Something I wish Kevin would do more was: A) Write about fiction/books/short stories (writing it, reading it, dreaming about it, improving it, etc). B) Write about non-fiction/magazine work (see parenthesis above and embrace its content). C) Compose poorly worded (yet hilarious!) poems. D) Respond to comments. E) Work on his glutes and abdominals. 4. Something I wish Kevin would do less was: A) Get off topic. B) Stay on topic. C) Talk about television/pop culture. D) Complain. E) Make us take quizzes. F) Watch Zach Braff films. 5. Do you want more music from the: A) Late 80s B) Early 90s C) Mid to Late 90s D) Just Play That Funky Music, White(ish) Boy E) I have regrets involving taking this quiz. And that's it. We don't have anonymity's interests at hand, so feel free to leave your name, answers and anything else in the comment depository. I will not judge. Other people will not judge. We will remain judge free. Enjoy your pre-Birth of the Nation shortish week and remember: Below SPF 15 doesn't really even count as sunscreen. Now check out Coolio's amazingly Zach Morris iPhone. He's got something brand new for your (rear end). 1, 2, 3, 4 (Sumpin New)
Coolio
Tuesday, July 01, 2008 1:46:34 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Tuesday, June 24, 2008
On Mad Men: The Greatest Show for Writers Since, Well, You Know
Generally speaking, this blog is about the writing world, and the writing world is a large entity not just made up of books, magazines, and creepily specific dream journals. Within the confines of said blog, I try and talk about anything in that whole new world associated, connected to or living with good writing and sometimes those things involve television. To be fair, I don't actually watch much TV. I watch most shows on DVR, and yes, occasionally dabble in the live action of The View...and my roommate and I tend to leave the MTV JAMS continuous stream of music videos involving Beyonce on when we've been overserved, but all in all, TV isn't one of my huge vices. But when I find something on the television to be passionate about (The Wire!), I feel the need to express my gratitude. And, friends, gratitude needs to be expressed via a show called Mad Men. Now the reason I'm writing this currently--the time hook, if you will--is because NY Times Mag just ran a cover story about the show, before the start of the second season, and I've realized that I need to get on the record about it before saying that you like Mad Men becomes synonymous with saying you like candy, rainbows or babies--in other words, just something that everyone takes for granted. I came across this show when the Soprano's was ending and I knew that one of their writers-- a genius named Matt Weiner-- had got his gig with Soprano's essentially by showing David Chase the pilot he wrote for Mad Men, a show that HBO eventually passed on. The show is about the NYC ad world in 1960-- a place filled with white dudes drinking martini's and whiskey at lunch and making vaguely to explicitly offensive remarks about anyone who is not in their highly self-prized social bubble. The beauty of the show is the slice of history you absorb watching it--you feel like you're watching a documentary from a time that feels just as dated as when Paul Giamatti is dressed in a wig on John Adams--and that definitely makes it cool, but the best part of it--as always-- is writing characters that feel so, so real. There is a slimy Sales Rep from an old NY scion of power fam always trying to make moves, a 50s style beauty-queen wife who realizes she's married a man strictly for his paper resume and doesn't have any idea what she actually wants and a main character--Don Draper-- so elaborately complicated as to be possibly be the human version of a Rubrik's Cube. I watched the first season with a thirsty abandon I haven't felt since, ahem, The Wire, and I encourage you to. But like anything I write about here, I think ultimately watching this show helps me become a better, more visual, more complex writer. And here are two excerpts from the NYTimes mag article, the first with Weiner discussing his process of writing and the second a cute section about the importance of his wife's opinion when writing: “I have a very good memory for dialogue and for conversation,” he said, “and if you tell me a personal detail about yourself I will never forget it and probably steal it. So a lot of me working out the story is me telling the story. My favorite people to tell the story to are my wife and Scott Hornbacher.” He is Weiner’s co-executive producer and creative partner. “If I can see their reaction, I can see what works and what doesn’t,” Weiner said. “That was not something I did on ‘The Sopranos,’ because it was so secretive, and I couldn’t bring in a stranger and dictate to them. But when I wrote the ‘Mad Men’ pilot seven years ago, I dictated it to Robin Veith, who is now a writer here. I wanted someone to be there so I would have to show up. I can write a huge amount that way if I have a good outline. Then I rewrite. That’s when I sit at the computer.” Weiner married Linda Brettler, an architect, after he graduated from U.S.C. They have four sons. She supported him when he was broke, and she is now his most-important sounding board. “Every single script goes through my wife,” he said. “She inevitably says, ‘What is it about?’ We talk about it and I’m always angry when she’s talking.” He didn’t look angry, he looked glad, as he always does when he talks about his wife. “She’s chewing gum and taking her time,” he continued. “She went to Harvard, she’s really smart and I just stand there literally with my hands out like — ‘What?’ I argue with her, and I always swear I’m not going to show it to her again because I’m so defensive. I mean, my writers come up with lots of good ideas, but she is really something." Anyway, I guess my point is this: watch the first season, embrace and absorb the characters, their arcs, fears, and most importantly the way they talk, etc, read the article-- especially the quote about Weiner not believing in bad guys--“Everybody has a reason for doing what they’re doing," and then move on to the second portion of the play, which involves relaying your favorite bits of dialogue from books, mag stories, tv shows, anywhere you feel necessitates a shout-out. I want me some good dialogue. Dialogue--after all-- is hep stuff. Please leave these items in the Comment deposit box. A gift receipt can be made available upon request. Now sit back as Jewel decides who is going to help you out with your soul issues. Who Will, Save Your Soul
Jewel
Tuesday, June 24, 2008 2:03:08 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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