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Feb. 10th, 2006 06:16 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Goodness me, I am chatty today.
Report: White House Knew About Levees. And while we're at it, Ex-FEMA Chief Shifts Katrina Blame to DHS. Of course he does.
A couple of interesting questions on Neil Gaiman's blog--interesting because it involves a skewed way of thinking that I see a lot:
Trust me, I say this as someone who has been writing for more than twenty years (I think my first story was about a bunch of worms trying to escape a bait can. No, I have no idea where I got this from. I was six, and it was about ten sentences), and has written a lot of crap. I mean a lot of crap. Entire novels full of crap; reams of crap revised sixteen times over and diligently printed out and sent to embarrassingly large publishing houses and returned with polite form rejections. I think I just got started a lot earlier than most people, so I got most of my crap out of the way sooner. And I never doubted for one second that I was a writer, because it was all I could think about doing. By the time I was in second, third, fourth grade, I had this thing I liked to do where I'd write out my stories on notebook paper (college rule more closely approximated the look of lines in a real book than wide rule) and insert illustrations on typing paper and put them in a three-brad folder and paste an illustrated sheet of typing paper on the front, like a book cover. The folders with pockets were handy, because you could put the rough drafts in there. Granted, I used a lot of books I read as training wheels--half my stories inevitably sounded a lot like real books, only with the names changed and new! different! adventures. When you're eight and working in crayon, you can do that. And fortunately, I had the good sense, or the shame, or something, to branch further and further away from actual theft as I grew older. And I did write stories that were wholly my own as well. And I never doubted that I was a writer because it's what I did, not something people told me I could or could not be. There are things I have worked on for years upon years that no one's ever seen because I didn't think they were ready yet--they hadn't moved beyond the stage of pleasure-writing yet. And if you're not writing for pleasure, and then releasing the stories that become good enough into the wild, I don't know how you're going to hack the frustrations along the way.
Not that anyone asked me, of course.
Miss out on the imp sale last week?
sunshine95 (who I can vouch for) is having one now. Fly, my pretties!
A few Lost things:
1) Hey, is this the tie-in novel they talked about selling? ("In the spring, Disney-owned Hyperion Books will publish its second Lost book, a novel written by the passenger who got sucked into the engine in the pilot. The passenger, Gary Troupe, had e-mailed a manuscript to his publisher, and another copy will be found on the island, Lindelof said. Who actually wrote the book won't be revealed.")
("Bad Twin"? That's the best they can come up with?)
2) Look at the book in Locke's hand. It's either a big ol' giant clue or a total fakeout. (Damn, Wikipedia has already catalogued its appearance in the entry for the story. And while we're there: has this been referenced on the show yet? Because I have a feeling it will be if it hasn't already.)
3)
justjayj: "There's nothing like scarring your kids' psyches with your own fandom. My boyfriend's sister and her husband have nicknamed their new baby 'Turniphead.' I felt compelled to crochet about it." Now, that is just ridiculously cute.
4) Catch the extended version of the "Addicted to Lost" video that aired in the Super Bowl! Thank you, incredibly enthusiastic ABC email!
Ken and Barbie to get back together.
(Why yes, I would consult for food, thanks for asking.)
Speaking of dolls: Another doll from my favorite repaint artist.
Students' Drinking Reported in Blogs. Coincidentally, my first glimpse of the internet was at a summer internship right after I had graduated high school, which means that I handily escaped ever making an idiot of myself on the intarwebs as a minor.
Another literary sting, as reported by Making Light. A scam literary agency with more heads than a hydra (The Children’s Literary Agency! The New York Literary Agency! The Christian Literary Agency! The Poet’s Literary Agen--STOP LAUGHING!) opens a new branch, the Screenplay Agency. Enter an army of pissed-off screenwriters and their sockpuppets, submitting ringer scripts that no one would accept... and yet, the Screenplay Agency does. (“WHAT HAPPENS WHEN THIRTEEN TWELVE YEAROLDS FIND A RED BIKE AND A MYSTIC CRYSTAL OUTSIDE OF THE SCHOOL DOORS ONE DAY? AN DAVENTURE OF MISTICAL PROPORTIONS!” A positive review, is what. I shit you not.)
Warren Ellis needs a woman's touch for his new comic. Or rather, many, many women's touches. Far more empowering than it sounds.

Report: White House Knew About Levees. And while we're at it, Ex-FEMA Chief Shifts Katrina Blame to DHS. Of course he does.
A couple of interesting questions on Neil Gaiman's blog--interesting because it involves a skewed way of thinking that I see a lot:
1. Hi Neil, I just got rejected from a creative writing class at my college and wanted to know--has this, or anything similar, ever happened to you? I have this rather strong conviction that I am a writer, but if I can't so much as make it into a class, I'm not sure if I've got much hope of ever being published.Here's the thing, the thing that I think a lot of people (including me) often forget in their mad rush towards publication, validation, and hopefully filthy riches: No one can stop you from writing. If you have paper or a keyboard, you are in business. And if you want to write, you should write, and you should write for yourself, the things that you want to read and the stories that you want to tell, no matter what anyone else wants or tells you. Yes, there is a point in the crafting of a narrative where you do have to start taking an audience's needs into account, but if you're not writing for yourself first, because you want to and you need to, I'm not sure what the point is. If you say only, "I want to be a writer," rather than "I want to write," you're very likely doomed. There is no be, as it were--there is only do, and then you are. Getting into a class is only important if you need it for a degree; you can look for constructive criticism elsewhere (although yes, workshop classes can be helpful. But being kept out of one is not a death sentence). If you are not willing to toil in obscurity, to keep writing because you just love words and story that much, it may be time for you to quit anyway. So stop worrying about if you are a writer and who will let you be a writer and just sit down and write. And eventually you will write something that sticks with other people.
2. Anyway, with my writing, it's just seemed like one thing after another, and I have no one to give me input on any of it since I, quite literally, come from a family of engineers, all very concrete thinkers. My question is this: when do you just give up? I don't want to but it seems like the only logical thing to do. I'm so tired and frustrated with being deemed a failure. The one week I was actually able to give up writing was the most miserable week of my life.
Trust me, I say this as someone who has been writing for more than twenty years (I think my first story was about a bunch of worms trying to escape a bait can. No, I have no idea where I got this from. I was six, and it was about ten sentences), and has written a lot of crap. I mean a lot of crap. Entire novels full of crap; reams of crap revised sixteen times over and diligently printed out and sent to embarrassingly large publishing houses and returned with polite form rejections. I think I just got started a lot earlier than most people, so I got most of my crap out of the way sooner. And I never doubted for one second that I was a writer, because it was all I could think about doing. By the time I was in second, third, fourth grade, I had this thing I liked to do where I'd write out my stories on notebook paper (college rule more closely approximated the look of lines in a real book than wide rule) and insert illustrations on typing paper and put them in a three-brad folder and paste an illustrated sheet of typing paper on the front, like a book cover. The folders with pockets were handy, because you could put the rough drafts in there. Granted, I used a lot of books I read as training wheels--half my stories inevitably sounded a lot like real books, only with the names changed and new! different! adventures. When you're eight and working in crayon, you can do that. And fortunately, I had the good sense, or the shame, or something, to branch further and further away from actual theft as I grew older. And I did write stories that were wholly my own as well. And I never doubted that I was a writer because it's what I did, not something people told me I could or could not be. There are things I have worked on for years upon years that no one's ever seen because I didn't think they were ready yet--they hadn't moved beyond the stage of pleasure-writing yet. And if you're not writing for pleasure, and then releasing the stories that become good enough into the wild, I don't know how you're going to hack the frustrations along the way.
Not that anyone asked me, of course.
Miss out on the imp sale last week?
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
A few Lost things:
1) Hey, is this the tie-in novel they talked about selling? ("In the spring, Disney-owned Hyperion Books will publish its second Lost book, a novel written by the passenger who got sucked into the engine in the pilot. The passenger, Gary Troupe, had e-mailed a manuscript to his publisher, and another copy will be found on the island, Lindelof said. Who actually wrote the book won't be revealed.")
("Bad Twin"? That's the best they can come up with?)
2) Look at the book in Locke's hand. It's either a big ol' giant clue or a total fakeout. (Damn, Wikipedia has already catalogued its appearance in the entry for the story. And while we're there: has this been referenced on the show yet? Because I have a feeling it will be if it hasn't already.)
3)
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
4) Catch the extended version of the "Addicted to Lost" video that aired in the Super Bowl! Thank you, incredibly enthusiastic ABC email!
Ken and Barbie to get back together.
Thus the Ken and Barbie drama, which Mattel hopes will reignite interest in the brand. In February 2004, as every 5-year-old knows, Ken and Barbie called it quits. According to Mattel, which says it relies on customer feedback on its Web site to shape the Barbie-Ken narrative, Barbie was wooed away by an Australian surfer named Blaine.Okay, number one: anyone who thought a doll named Blaine was going to do well needs to be fired.
Ken, heartbroken, traveled the world in search of himself, making stops in Europe and the Middle East, dabbling in Buddhism and Catholicism, teaching himself to cook and slowly weaning himself off a beach bum life.Problem number two: when I played with Barbies, I loved to make up my own bizarro soap operas (cotton balls under a doll shirt = instant pregnancy. Crystal, the evil Barbie, would then try to send the good Barbie--I may have called her Kimberly, I'm not sure--and her yellow Corvette hurtling down the stairs. Yeah, that's right. Yellow Corvette. That's how old-school I am. None of that wall-to-wall pink shit for us, hell no). You are forcing way too much pre-written plot on these kids, which leaves them no reason to actually play with the dolls themselves, and moreover, it's not even a kid-friendly plot--it's a world-weary yuppie one.
Gone are Ken's outdated swimming trunks and dull T-shirts. Ken's new wardrobe will include cargo pants, a fitted suit with peak lapels and a motorcycle jacket. A facial resculpting, as Mattel calls it — Ken's first in more than a decade — will give him a more defined nose and a softer mouth.*facepalm* People, you are way behind the times. No one cares about Matthew McConaughey anymore, least of all little girls. Orlando Bloom is at least closer to the mark, and if this were 2003, I'd say you were genius. But it's a cold, cold, post-Elizabethtown world, and you're not. Seriously, you need to go focus-group a bunch of little girls and ask them who they think is cute. I mean, do with that information what you will--use it, trash it--but for God's sake, Matthew McConaughey? At least if you'd said "Justin Timberlake," you'd be in the right age group and I could accuse you of living in 2004.
"It's Matthew McConaughey meets Orlando Bloom," [new Barbie stylist Philip] Bloch said in an interview.
(Why yes, I would consult for food, thanks for asking.)
Speaking of dolls: Another doll from my favorite repaint artist.
Students' Drinking Reported in Blogs. Coincidentally, my first glimpse of the internet was at a summer internship right after I had graduated high school, which means that I handily escaped ever making an idiot of myself on the intarwebs as a minor.
Another literary sting, as reported by Making Light. A scam literary agency with more heads than a hydra (The Children’s Literary Agency! The New York Literary Agency! The Christian Literary Agency! The Poet’s Literary Agen--STOP LAUGHING!) opens a new branch, the Screenplay Agency. Enter an army of pissed-off screenwriters and their sockpuppets, submitting ringer scripts that no one would accept... and yet, the Screenplay Agency does. (“WHAT HAPPENS WHEN THIRTEEN TWELVE YEAROLDS FIND A RED BIKE AND A MYSTIC CRYSTAL OUTSIDE OF THE SCHOOL DOORS ONE DAY? AN DAVENTURE OF MISTICAL PROPORTIONS!” A positive review, is what. I shit you not.)
Warren Ellis needs a woman's touch for his new comic. Or rather, many, many women's touches. Far more empowering than it sounds.



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Date: 2006-02-11 12:26 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-02-11 12:41 am (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2006-02-11 12:35 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-02-11 12:35 am (UTC)I still don't understand how they can break up dolls. I used to make Barbie cheat on Ken with the generic Dollar Store Ken named "Dan" that only came with one outfit and pop-offable arms, I can't imagine these kids today playing dolls and some little Susie is going to have Ken and Barbie go out on a picnic, only to remember that they are no longer seeing each other. I honestly doubt kids actually bought the Blaine doll too.
All we need know is for "Home Pregnancy Test Barbie" to come out so that she discovers she's pregnant with Blaine's child and the drama will commence once again.
The Trunk
Date: 2006-02-11 12:41 am (UTC)Exactly. Hearken, writers! It was an article of faith at my publishing house that every author must produce a trunkful of bad writing before beginning to produce good stuff. Sometimes we'd get a submission from a new hopeful, and reject it politely -- but the internal comment was "This one hasn't filled up his trunk yet."
So stop worrying about if you are a writer and who will let you be a writer and just sit down and write. And eventually you will write something that sticks with other people.
Precisely. Keep writing. Keep showing your stuff to family and friends until the comments change from "yeah, that's pretty good" to "this is really good!" Keep submitting stuff to publishers, because it'll help you to develop a nice thick carapace of indifference to rejection letters. The only one who can make you quit is you.
Re: The Trunk
Date: 2006-02-11 12:44 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-02-11 12:42 am (UTC)What was that other book Desmond mentioned? Turn of the Screw? Was that a clue...?
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Date: 2006-02-11 12:47 am (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2006-02-11 12:43 am (UTC)Heck. Yes. LOL
I've been writing since I was about seven or eight. My first story was about a group of kids stealing a hot air balloon. I think they eventually crashed (no, not on an island. Unfortunately. ;-)) in the ocean and got picked up by a passing cruise ship.
I'd make 'books' out of my stories, too . . . only I begged my dad to print them up at the office so they'd look "professional", and then I'd search through my magazines for pictures of models/actors who looked like my characters so I could make book covers. I still have those covers somewhere. It's so, so sad. lol
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Date: 2006-02-11 12:48 am (UTC)The Barbie was bleach blonde with teased up hair, and the Ken's hair was a gelled-back silverly dark brown. Both wore leather motorcycle jackets and torn clothes, looking exactly like they'd walked out of a Billy Idol concert. They were my favorites.
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Date: 2006-02-11 12:48 am (UTC)Word. Have they always done this? I sure don't remember my Barbies coming with ready-made plots when I was a kid, but maybe I was just oblivious. In any case, I would not have cared one bit about Ken "finding himself," since my Barbies were usually involved in nefarious kidnappings, daring escapes, spy missions, and catfights. Oh, and makeovers. :P
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Date: 2006-02-11 01:41 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-02-11 12:50 am (UTC)This frightens me. Seriously.
And that turniphead baby is the cutest thing I've ever seen.
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Date: 2006-02-11 12:59 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-02-11 01:08 am (UTC)Also, I didn't have Ken dolls either. I'm not sure why, but as a kid I never questioned it.
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Date: 2006-02-11 01:16 am (UTC)and I never had any pink toys either...I had a teal jeep...well no the no pink thing is a lie...i had a pink RV and a beat up old pink t-top convertible.
oh i miss those days...(we sent our barbies careening down hills outside with kelly and friends playing the role of children and not siblings)
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Date: 2006-02-11 01:18 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-02-11 01:26 am (UTC)I do like the Silkstones. They remind me of the first Barbies.
Victoria's dolls have a haunting quality so I can see why you like them. The new one has stunning brown eyes.
Mom pimping her daughter's artwork now. My daughter's latest repaint is going off tonight and really up there, especially considering this is a bad time of year to be selling dolls or anything else collectible. Here's the link to her doll on eBay now. Proud Mom I am!
The nails on these she has done are so tiny and a piece of art in themselves.
http://cgi.ebay.com/Nicolette-OOAK-Angelina-w-EXPRESSIONS-Nail-Spa_W0QQitemZ5664782193QQcategoryZ11698QQrdZ1QQcmdZViewItem
Hugs, Christina
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Date: 2006-02-11 01:32 am (UTC)This is _gabrielle_/grayeagle, btw. I took advantage of LJ's offer to change names with underscores for free, because I hated those underscores. But both "grayeagle" and "greyeagle" were taken, damn and blast.
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Date: 2006-02-11 01:53 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-02-11 01:41 am (UTC)Unrelated things: I went through a stretch a few years ago where I fancied myself a writer. My laziness quickly murdered that notion, though.
Still, I plan on attempting it one day.
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Date: 2006-02-11 02:49 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-02-11 01:44 am (UTC)And Matthew McConaughey, wtf? When I was five and you asked me who I thought was cute, I'd probably say KEN.
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Date: 2006-02-11 01:56 am (UTC)(What is up with SF, btw? I can't get it to load!)
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Date: 2006-02-11 01:47 am (UTC)...What? Who is this for? Why did anyone need to know this? You make toys, Mattel people. You don't write for the WB.
I really, really want to know the twist ending to Pincher Martin now. Anybody want to spoil me?
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Date: 2006-02-11 01:57 am (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2006-02-11 01:53 am (UTC)I find it intriguing that there are other people out there who have actually tried to QUIT writing. I don't much like what the writing process does to my personality, so I try to give it up pretty frequently. Then I discover that NOT writing makes me an even BIGGER crankybitch than writing does....
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Date: 2006-02-11 02:50 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-02-11 03:24 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-02-11 03:44 am (UTC)I actually have an embarrassing number of Gene dolls--like, probably twenty, at least. And clothes. The only reason I stopped buying them--right as Madra was first introduced--was because I couldn't afford them anymore. Although my mom and I collected them together for a while, which was fun.
Speaking of dolls, I just saw a preview of the new Sideshow/Weta Legolas superdoll. I am dying over here, with my empty wallet. Fnarrr.
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Date: 2006-02-11 03:55 am (UTC)...I had to wad up smaller dresses for the misshapen pregnancies. My mother didn't really believe in cotton balls, really. Or use them. Or keep them in the house or something. Cotton balls are like, a treat. Then my mom got a Give-Birth-to-Twins Barbie as a joke for having twins. And she wouldn't let us play with it, because I painted mine with nailpolish and my brother would chew on their hands and feet, tear off their legs and throw them out the second story window. Then we'd put them in their car (admittedly pink,) and send them off down the driveway, which is at very near a 45 degree angle, with thick blackberry bushes on the opposite side of the road to prevent losing them utterly in the neighbour's yard. (I still have the one Barbie that got severe roadburn on her face and left arm and breast. They kind of got ground off by the pavement at one point. Maybe she got caught under a real car--I don't remember. Then into the speedboat for a terrible capsizing accident in the pool in the backyard, and then Barbie turned into a mermaid because she has the right kind of flowy hair that rocks the under-water look and Ken tragically drowned and had to sit at the bottom of the pool from February until June because that sucker is solar-heated and ain't nobody going in there to rescue him.
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Date: 2006-02-11 04:17 am (UTC)Is it strange that I never called any of my barbies....Barbie? xD And that I didn't call ken, Ken?
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Date: 2006-02-11 04:05 am (UTC)Heh. How is it I always end up talking on and on about dolls of some sort on your journal? :-)
I appreciated your comments about writing, and what Neil had to say as well. I particularly liked his reaction to the rejection letters. :-) One of the first stories I remember writing in elementary school had something to do with books coming alive in the bookstore after hours. Gone With the Wind spoke with a Southern accent, and at some point, what with the Burning of Atlanta and all, the fire was manifested, and a book about firefighters came to the rescue. There were assorted other "characters" as well, but...yeah. I think I've admitted enough. ;-) Sadly, I don't think I have the "manuscript" anymore, and I don't remember much more than what I've written here. I have a box full of papers of other stories I've done, from elementary on up to high school and college. And then a computer full of everything thereafter. :-)