cleolinda: (Default)
Important note: LJ's going out tomorrow for a physical server move. Just in case, you might want to back up your journals with ljArchive. If you need to get hold of me for some kind of OMG LOOK AT THIS! reason, I'm on Twitter and Facebook (see sidebar), and you can get me at my Yahoo email (dailydigest @). I'm not going to assume that the cleolinda at livejournal.com email will work.

Meanwhile: 'Twilight' Fans Line Up Day Before Premiere. I'm not so much surprised that they did this as surprised that I didn't go, "Oh, it's Sunday afternoon, they must be setting up camp about now."

Twilight Movie Premiere Day Coverage. I was skimming quickly and initially read that last word as "carnage." These are not mutually exclusive concepts, though.

The Vampire of the Mall. Excellent NYT piece about the Philadelphia Hot Topic stop. And by "excellent" I mean "sad-making": A girl in a Team Edward shirt fell into the arms of her friend )

So awesome it goes above a cut: Tell us: What's Better: The 'Twilight' series or 'Harry Potter'? I think this is what's known as "trolling for traffic." Although the comments to the article are deeply, unspeakably full of win (someone was saying that ONTD infiltrated?): Garth, reading Twilight is punishment for shoplifting in some countries )


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cleolinda: (Default)
From [livejournal.com profile] joannad: The Russian hackers got someone else. Whatever you do, do not click on the user journal or Shoebox Project links mentioned in the entry. And to secure your own journal, choose a secret question NOW. (ETA: Or not?) Here's what I would advise doing, in terms of setting your question/answer: since we're worried about hackers and not people in our daily lives stealing our journals, I would suggest writing the question and the answer down on a piece of paper, not storing it anywhere on your computer or online, and guarding that paper with your life. Here's why: choose a question, and for the answer, pick something completely unrelated. What was your first pet's name? Hardware store. You see what I'm saying? Something that no one would ever, ever guess, even by combing your journal for clues, because it's a non sequitur in the first place. And that's why you're going to want to write it down, in case you forget your randomly-chosen unrelated thing.

Okay, in less urgent news: If you didn't catch the ETA on the Twi-spam entry, Hot Topic has given up on trying to set line-up times and they're just giving out wristbands for Thursday and Friday in a first come/first serve free-for-all. People who don't hear about this until they show up "early" tomorrow night? Are going to be exquisitely pissed.

In even less urgent news: Sometimes people have to interview writers for school assignments (you know, "Interview a published author"), and because I'm not as scary as people who are actually important, sometimes they ask me. So if you'd like to hear (well, read) me answer questions I am spectacularly unqualified to answer, my most recent interviewer has let me archive some here.

In just really frustrating news: Our dishwasher has officially given up the ghost. Sigh.

Something fun: from [livejournal.com profile] t3andcrumpets, pretty, crazy-color eyeshadow that I have been drooling over all week. I'm not saying I'd go full-on rainbow with it (like on the front page), but you can shop by color, if you know what looks good with your eyes. I might just be crazy enough to try Hibiscus or Blaze in the distant future, I don't know.

(Purples are so preeeeettyyyyy.)

The Alternate History Theme Park Where Dinosaurs Fought in the Civil War )


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cleolinda: (Default)
Quiet day. Checked email and things on and off, but mostly spent the day outside in this foreign thing you call "sunshine" and away from the computer, if only because my strain-induced eyelid twitch was starting to get really bad. I feel like a total punk, but... if I needed the rest, I guess I needed it. Decompression time, maybe. I was getting to one of those OMG STFU INTERNET points again.

(Nope, not doing NaNoWriMo. It's still National Save My Family's Finances Month over here.)

(Update on Pete: he's better and has gotten his stitches out. But not before he was able to chew his lampshade off. No, I don't know how you do that, either.)

Also, I hear some of y'all are having a hard time getting the page to load in a timely fashion--I hate to say it, but I think my Halloween background was dragging it down. That should be less of a problem now--sorry about that.


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cleolinda: (twilight)
Lots of work done today! No whammies! no whammies! crashes! And yet, there is still more to do. And once again, I hunger. I hope there's some of that ravioli downstairs.

Let's get the pre-trailer bedazzlement Twi-spam out of the way so you can skip it if you want.

ETA: ~*THE TRAILER IS HERE*~

Widget, you suck.

(WHAT THE SHIT IS THIS, FOR REAL)

I got an update on the Baby Renesmee situation; new pictures )

A few non-partisan stories about (American) voting: Massive voter roll purges being done in secret?; 5 Friends, a celeb-packed campaign to get people to register and vote; Vote for Change, where you can check your voter registration regardless of affiliation; Your Grievance For the Next Four Years: "Voter Fraud"; There's Nothing Some Fear More Than Citizens Exercising Their Constitutional Rights.

I'll tell you the truth, I'm to the point where I want to vomit if I so much as see the word election on a TV screen--I can't even find a channel that will report news on anything other than the election at this point, and it's been going on for more than a year now, and all they do is talk about the same superficial talking-head soundbite non-issues over and over again. And I make a point to rarely, if ever, mention politics here, because the parts of this journal that aren't personal are pop culture/entertainment blogging, and I like it that way. I like not having to moderate arguments and I like having a happy little quiet place where I don't have to hear about politics--not because I don't want to hear about politics ever, or because I don't want you to hear about them, but because I assume we're all getting our daily political FDA requirement elsewhere, at (the few?) blogs and websites and newspapers that actually know what they're talking about.

Anyway, my point is that I do care. I just don't want to care about it here, other than the occasional link or story that's about politics as it relates to entertainment, or politics as it relates to everyone regardless of party. Like voting. Because I do believe it's important, and you better believe that if someone tries to stop me from voting I will raise holy goddamn hell about it. And you should too.

More linkspam! Gambit and the Nuclear So & Sos )


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cleolinda: (Default)
To all of you lucky, intrepid bastards going out to see The Dark Knight tonight: Godspeed, good times, and giggle at the Twilight trailer for me. And don't you dare come back here telling me how awesome the Watchmen trailer was on a big screen, or I'll thump you into next week.

ETA: WATCHMEN OFFICIAL HD ZOMG.

ETA 2: Well... it's not as bad as the Twilight cover.

([livejournal.com profile] cleojones, who is not me, has seen The Dark Knight already!)

Livejournal caves, brings back Basic Accounts. Poet laureate, Emmy nominations, S&M Barbie and more )


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Let me be clear about this boycott: I do not have a problem with anyone who wants to do it. If you do participate, I hope it meets with all success. I am personally concerned that 1) Russian antisemites are joining and co-opting the boycott, not running it, and that 2) it's not going to be very effective in the first place:
I don't want to harsh on anyone's slacktivism, and oh boy do i not want to get into an argument about this one way or the other -- the scars are still healing up -- but I can tell y'all that unless things have changed considerably -- something I do not rule out -- nobody even looks at single-day stats; the minimum aggregate time period inspected is a week. ([livejournal.com profile] synecdochic, via [livejournal.com profile] newroticgirl)
If I thought it was going to be effective, I'd plaster my journal today with anti-antisemitic (pro-semitic? Jewish-friendly? What's the terminology here?) disclaimers and do the boycott anyway. And hell, I may or may not post tomorrow anyway, just because I don't always post every day, and tomorrow's going to be busy.

What I'm more interested in, since statistically a boycott may go unnoticed anyway, is the idea of sending postcards, quite frankly. And you can boycott and send a postcard; it's not an either/or proposition. So while I'm at the grocery store tomorrow, I'm going to pick up a couple of cards and send 'em on out. As [livejournal.com profile] txvoodoo points out, a protest-a-thon might actually be more effective than silence, although I don't know how much they'll notice either way. I personally feel like it's going to come down to people persuading SUP that American-style (or whoever-style) customer service is a win-win situation, no matter what business is like in Russia:
Let me try to explain what I mean by that. Customer service in the Soviet Union can be summarized in the following statements (both translations of sayings that are very familiar and understandable to many Russians I know; I am aware that I cannot speak for an entire country or an entire political and economic era): "There are many of you [customers], but only one of me [salesperson]" and "Keep bitching, and I won't serve you at all". Unfortunately, you couldn't just take your money to a competing shop - there wasn't one (I am aware I am simplifying, but I don't want to wax loquacious).

It's not about people saying they will leave SUP like they said they would leave SixApart. It's about a business model not built on "we exist to serve the customer", not built on "the customer is the reason we are in business", not built on "hey, the customers are the guys who give us money, how about that". It's that cultural memory of "you don't like what I have to offer? Too bad, I am your only choice for goods and services" that is steering this ship. Learn about capitalism the hard way? Freedom to choose what to spend money on? Keep bitching. See if I serve you. ([livejournal.com profile] cormallen, via [livejournal.com profile] biomekanic)
I don't quite know the best way to go about this, but to me, the optimal solution would be to keep talking, to keep a dialogue going, in which we explain that LJ is not the only game in town--but it's the game we love, and we don't want to leave. We want this to be a win-win situation for everyone, where LJ prospers and we stay and SUP's (or 6A's, or whoever happens to be running the show at any given time) actions are introduced and explained to us in the full light of day. It's not even that the customer has to be right all the time; I do think that, apart from the secretive manner in which Basic accounts were discontinued, ads probably are necessary for LJ's growth (who pays for additional servers?), and we're going to need to get some good adblockers and move on with life. It's really the customer service/transparency issue and the shady, secretive treatment of fandom we're concerned with now. And it seems to me like the only way to accomplish this is to adopt a "squeaky wheel gets the grease" approach--I suspect they'll notice that more than a one-day boycott. But I think we're also going to have to sit down and figure out what it is, exactly, tangibly, that we want. Because I'm trying to think what to put on that postcard tomorrow, and I'm not sure what to say. They apologized. They retreated on the disappearing-interests issue. What's left to say? "Try not to be asshats in the future?" "Find a better spokesperson"? "Restore Basic accounts as an option," I guess, but I think of that more as a better way to attract new users for them than something that affects current Basic users as long as they're grandfathered in as promised. And maybe that's the way it needs to be phrased to SUP.

By the way: telling me that I'm fucking stupid is not the standard of discussion I expect or encourage on this journal. Tell me that you disagree in civil terms, or find another soapbox.



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cleolinda: (black ribbon5)
Still congested, tired and lightheaded, so am taking it easy on the journaling front, backlog be damned. Been trucking on with my Sherlock, however--these are the books I have (I'm in the middle of the first one), and this is the third book I'm going to get. I particularly want the annotated A Study in Scarlet in the third book, for reasons that... will someday be clear, let's put it that way. Also, my soul craves the complete 12-disc Granada series set, because my first introduction to the Sherlock Holmes stories was in eighth grade when we had to read The Hound of the Baskervilles, so my English teacher also had us watch some of the Granada episodes. So basically, Jeremy Brett is Sherlock Holmes to me, even though I've seen other versions; I always liked how he got Holmes' manic-depressive energy, the way Holmes would brood and then a case would turn up and it'd be all like THE GAME IS AFOOT! And Watson would be like, "Uh, no more cocaine for you today." And didn't Natasha Richardson randomly show up in "The Copper Beeches"? Good times.

Meanwhile: The latest LJ hoohah. I'm simply going to set this information out here and let you decide as you like: Boycotts! Blackmail! Shenanigans! )


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cleolinda: (Default)
So. Massive catch-up linkspam. Watched the Eliot Spitzer resignation press conference (well, "conference"; he didn't take any questions. Didn't actually seem contrite, either); nearly finished with the prostitution section of Mayhew's London Underworld. Watched American Idol and its 2000 mentions of Horton Hears a Who; did not think Jim Carrey had any dignity left to lose, but was proven wrong. Lexicon saga still ongoing. Also, my poor grandmother has come down with shingles, woe.

Scientology Seeks Restraining Order Against Anonymous. Just a note: the next wave of protests is scheduled for Saturday. Keep your eyes open and be safe, guys, if they're really trying to set you up the firebomb.

From Fandom Lounge and a few of y'all as well: "Melissa Kern, a very well-known organizer in the Lord of the Rings fandom in Atlanta has been diagnosed with Lou Gehrig's disease, or ALS. Her husband has started a petition to have her cast in the upcoming Hobbit movies as an extra, since the typical ALS survival rate beyond a few years is very low. Information can be found here. There are already 1,000 signatures on the petition, including some people very well-known in Tolkien fandom, such as Ted Nasmith, Daniel Falconer, and Peter S. Beagle. Thanks everyone for looking."

ETA: No new free (i.e., ad-free) LJ accounts. More in the 6A Cornfield post discussing the actual LJ News post, which neglected to mention this fact.

Moar linkspam )


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cleolinda: (Default)
Quick note: The Golden Compass in Fifteen Minutes, Part 2, is up.

Terry Pratchett diagnosed with rare, early-onset Alzheimer's. He announced this himself, by the way ("PS I would just like to draw attention to everyone reading the above that this should be interpreted as 'I am not dead'. I will, of course, be dead at some future point, as will everybody else. For me, this maybe further off than you think - t's too soon to tell. I know it's a very human thing to say 'Is there anything I can do', but in this case I would only entertain offers from very high-end experts in brain chemistry"), so he's all right for the moment. Meanwhile, at [livejournal.com profile] nadwcon2009, [livejournal.com profile] charishawk (one of the organizers) notes, "We'd like to confirm that the convention will be going ahead as planned. Terry is very optimistic about his health, and has indicated to us that he plans to attend as long as circumstances permit."

(In a similar, sad vein: 'Wheel of Time' to be finished by new author.)

(In reply: This puppy will cure all the world's suffering.)

I think I have more linkspam than this, but... I just ran out of will to spam )


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cleolinda: (Default)
I'm deeply behind on my linkspam because my internet connection hates me, so it's going to be a little scattershot today. I have a story about a neighborhood feud, but I'm saving that for a less busy entry.

Golden Compass updates: Includes Subtle Knife footage )

Major kerfluffles: LiveJournal sold to Russians, Facebook, SFWA, fanfic for pay and more )

Linkspam )


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cleolinda: (Default)
Today was better. Although... I have decided, and it kills me to say this, to let go of the birthday deadline. It had gotten to the point where I was going off on nervous crying jags, and I finally just said to myself, there's no reason to sit here and make myself crazy over an artificial deadline if the amount of work, the scope of it, just can't be finished by December 14. I hate the idea that I won't be able to say, "I'm now twenty-nine and I've finished this book," or even go to my friends' Christmas party and say, "Yes, I finished it." But at the same time, I don't really want to say, "I'm now twenty-nine and I'm having a complete nervous breakdown for no damn reason at all," either. And I had asked for a ton of researchative books for Christmas and my birthday--I usually spend the second half of December in an orgy of reading--which, obviously, I won't be able to read or even get until after my arbitrary deadline. So... that's kind of pointless. And the book is really looking like it could go up to something like 350-400 pages now, depending on what stays in, and... I just finally got a point where it was like, why set myself up to fail? I'm disappointed that it won't be done, but there's no point in ruining the thing in a mad effort to be done with it. Enjoy it, you know?

So. That's where that stands. I got about 2000-2500 words today (I wasn't really keeping track), and I'm just going to try to keep up the same level of productivity as before, just... with a smaller amount of artificial life-and-death stress.

Linkspam )


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cleolinda: (Default)
A quick note about The Invasion and zombies spoiler for the basic premise )

(Something interesting I found out about The Invasion: "Originally wrapped in early 2006, the film underwent massive reshooting in 2007. The reason for this was the studio which didn't liked the cut director Oliver Hirschbiegel delivered. To change that, Andy Wachowski and Larry Wachowski were brought in for rewrites and James McTeigue (V for Vendetta) to direct the new scenes.")

Also, the trailers: we got the weird one-two vigilante punch of The Brave One, a movie in which Jodie Foster searches her conflicted, vengeful soul, and Death Sentence, a movie in which Kevin Bacon shaves his head and buys a shitload of guns. Yeah.

And then I came home to this in my inbox:

From: Binghui Demers
Subject: Do you yield, sir, or shall I sweat for you.


I confess, I knew this was junk mail, but I opened it anyway just out of sheer appreciation for the subject line.

A rather jumbly collection of awetastic linkspam )


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cleolinda: (Default)
Because I am The Best Sister Ever contrary to what you may have heard, I have printed up a Things to See and Eat in Savannah packet for my sister, complete with detailed MapQuest directions, based on the suggestions y'all made. Along with suggestions for various tours, I'm recommending River Street Sweets (particulary since she just got an associate's degree in pastry), the Saltwater Grille, the Chart House, the Pirate House, the Pink House, Clary's Cafe, Mrs. Wilkes' Dining Room, Zunzi's, Angel's BBQ, Aveda, Moon River Brewery, and the Breakfast Club on Tybee (but not the Lady and Sons, per y'all's advice). And, of course, Bonaventure Cemetery and the Mercer-Williams House. She's leaving at three am (!), so if you have any other suggestions, get 'em in now.

Re: Strikethrough 2: Electric Etc., Etc.: LJ comes back with an updated policy: "They're now working on a two-strike system, and treating drawings and animation (read: fanart) differently to actual photographs and videos (read: child pornography). The two suspended users have been retroactively affected by this, and one has had her journal reinstated (I've heard that the other has refused)."

A Wikipedia followup from [livejournal.com profile] xander77: Wow, this makes me want to slap someone. Preferably the delete-happy Wikipedian in question. Trufax for the ages: "No, the problem with Wikipedia is a bizarre amalgamation of elitism and anti-elitism which will ultimately come down to 'whatever editor is more stubborn than all the others.' " (Favorite [sarcastic] comment: "It's about time we got rid of other non-notable junk comics like MegaTokyo and Penny Arcade. Nobody cares about them and their articles are taking up valuable room in the Wiki that could otherwise be used to expand our list of prominent Wookies in SW fan fiction.")

Moar linkspam )


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cleolinda: (Default)
Hmm. Seems to be a quiet day for news. Not that I mind; it's hot as Satan's underwear down here. Went swimming again today; managed not to burn.

Read more... )


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cleolinda: (rapunzel trinascharthyman)

I am an alarm clock.

Sister Girl dropped her phone. (Again.) And broke it. (Again.) So she's borrowed my phone. (Sing it if you know the words.) The only problem is, she uses her phone to wake up in the morning, and apparently the alarm function on my phone isn't sufficient to wake her up. So could I wake her up at two am (so she can take her meds), three-thirty (so she can sleep in an extra half hour) and four (so she can actually get up)?

Yeah, sure, I guess so. Or I could just unplug my clock and lend it to... no? You sure? I mean, it's really loud. You're not going to sleep through... really? Well... okay, I guess.

Thus I got about three hours of sleep, and found myself doing random things on the internet in hours so wee that you'd step on them if you weren't keeping an eye out. I got addicted to flickr. (You can look at pictures of anything! And they're all pretty!) I ended up wrestling with LJ for far too long at five in the morning because my account expired and I DO NOT WANT TO MAKE AUTOMATIC PAYMENTS, LIVEJOURNAL. I would like to be able to make sure there's five dollars in my account for you to take every two months before you do, in fact, take it. I felt like LJ was pushing the auto payments a little hard, to the point where it took me five minutes to figure out how to get around that, although you do have to take into account that I have had, after all, three hours of sleep because I am, in fact, my sister's alarm clock and do not, therefore, make a large amount of sense.

(Oh, icons, never leave me again!)

My parents were watching 60 Minutes, as is their wont, and they just happened to have a segment on Stephen Colbert. My mother went from "Who?" to fangirl in the space of ten minutes. It was glorious to behold. I think "Trollop Islands? The Been Around the Block a Few Times Islands?" was the part that broke her, although it might have been the Stone Phillips impression before that. "I'm going to act out some Italian stereotypes" just sealed the deal. I think the Colbert Report is perfect for her, though, because my parents are the kind of people--Republicans, no less--who watch Bill O'Reilly because they hate him. They played a little Bill to show what Colbert is actually mocking, and "Plantations were very efficient" prompted a tandem "OHHHHHHHH" of Oh No He Di-in't proportions. And then she asked five times when the Colbert Report comes on. And was really, really excited to find out that it reruns at 6:30 pm, "which is exactly when we're looking for something to watch!" Hee.

Ten Things You Should Not Send to Your Favorite Writer, by Neil Gaiman's assistant, featuring things that she has actually intercepted. ("Silver pen on black paper is not nearly as cool as you think it is." Also: "Things with blood on them. I don't care what they write, they don't want it." Which conjures terrifying images of what Stephen King's assistant must deal with.)

Bookstore speed-dating: A good idea until it turns out that the speed-dating company simply imported its usual barflies, rather than seeking out new daters who actually, you know, read.

I forget who I was talking about this with, but I made a certain assertion, and the other person wanted to know why I thought that. And now I have visual aids. This is why I think Nicole Richie is going to die from anorexia. There's a starving Ethiopian child with a bowl of rice somewhere who's like, "No, seriously, you need this more than I do."

What to Do When You Can't Win An Argument. The reason I really love this entry is because it lays out all the classic logical fallacies in terms I can understand."Ohhhh! 'The lurkers support me in email'!"



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Currently obsessed with New Order. I haven't listened to actual radio stations in years, so "Crystal" and "Jetstream," if they were even played over here, completely passed me by. So now I'm obsessed with finding the perfect remix. That, and I have finally identified a song I heard on the speakers at Bath and Body Works as Hooverphonic's "The World Is Mine," but--unless it just sounded different over the speakers--I can't quite seem to find the right version of it. The one I heard seemed a little dancier, so... I don't know. (Ooo! I think I just found it!)

I had half an entry about movie merchandise written, but it just wasn't coming together. Suffice it to say that the phrase "Barbie Loves Kraken" was involved. But that's okay, because I've been writing an average of five pages a day for nearly two weeks now, which is why you're not hearing from me much.

Rilly, rilly good POTC2 trailer caps. Like, "I can count Davy Jones' fillings" good. More screencaps: Casino Royale. Superman Returns. Tristan and Isolde (What? I really wanted to see this! PRETTY DRESSES!).

(Speaking of Isolde, what's this I heard about Sophia Myles being on Doctor Who? Something about Marie Antoinette and dating David Tennant?)

Lost links: Here's what happened if you called the number in the Hanso commercial. More on the Lost Experience. More clues. Were the Others were communicating with Henry? "Lost" Book Clues In Fans. WAAALT! (Hang on, guys, I screwed up the links. I'm trying to go back and fish them up.) (There we go.)

Yes, I have heard about the original Star Wars DVD release. (ACK. That ought to be all the links fixed.)

Meg Cabot addresses the Viswanathan plagiarism. Kind of, because she's too classy to actually mention the girl by name. Remember, she originally weighed in on the whole thing--and then it came out that Viswanathan had ripped her off, too.

(Can I just say that I have seen so much plagiarism that does not make sense to me at all? I mean, if you know exactly what you're doing and you know it's wrong and you do it anyway, I can at least understand that. You're cheating, and you know it, because whatever attention you get from "your" writing makes it worth it to you. What I don't understand are people who take someone else's work [cough], doctor it up a little, and then seem to get genuinely upset when someone calls them on it. This is generally what happens to me. I mean, people who take the entire parody, unaltered, and post it as theirs or [innocent look] "never said they wrote it!" but didn't say who did, I understand what they're doing. They want the attention, and they'll get more attention by reposting the entire thing than just posting a link to it, and they'll get even more attention if they coyly allow people to think they wrote it. I can understand the motive there, and usually if you call them on it, they'll sheepishly take it down. What I don't understand is how someone could take, let's say, the Phantom parody I did, change 50% of the lines while keeping the essential format--that is, the scenes as I wrote and described them [example: I have been known to do a scene in one or two lines, combine scenes, or skip scenes. This is left unchanged, is what I'm saying], my scene titles, and, oh, HALF MY LINES, and this person will not consider it plagiarism. A message board mod actually got involved between someone tipping me off and my actually getting there, so I didn't have to do anything. And you know, it's the internet. I've come to realize that there's not much to really do about it anyway, which is why I stopped hunting this kind of thing down a long time ago, but... once someone points it out, it's hard to just sit there and not do anything about it. Anyway. Why would you think that you could take someone's work, change it a little, and that would make it yours? But people apparently do. And there are moments when I think that Kaavya Viswanathan might really have written compiled Opal Mehta herself, rather than a hapless typewriter-for-hire at her book packager, and that she therefore did all that plagiarizing herself because she thought it was okay. I mean, you steal from so many sources, that makes it yours, right? Except that, while all of us, as artists, steal to a certain extent, most of us don't take other people's actual WORDS. In fact, I don't even really know how to tell you what kind of "stealing" is okay, except that I know it when I see it. Maybe a lot of it has to do with stealing in a way that the reader recognizes what you're doing--that you're doing it for effect, and that the reader recognizing your sources is the whole point of the game. The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen is okay. How Opal Mehta Ripped Off Three Different Chick Lit Writers and Salman Rushdie (I KNOW!) is not.)

The strange story behind the LJ outage last week. "So, returning to my original point: saying that Six Apart’s services were taken down as the result of a 'sophisticated distributed denial of service attack' is an incredibly gracious statement that only addresses about 10% of the whole story. The other 90% of that story is that Blue Security, a company with already-shady practices, decided to solve its problems by dumping them onto Six Apart’s doorstep, something I’m pretty damn sure isn’t part of the TypePad service agreement. I know that ultimately, the denial-of-service attack came from the spammers themselves, but it was specifically redirected to the Six Apart network by Blue Security, and I hope that they get taken to the cleaners for this one."


ETA: Cruise's "Mission" underwhelms at box office. THAT'S RIGHT, TOOTHY!


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cleolinda: (Default)
Vladimir is high as a kite completely giddy right now--I think he just broke out the Bailey's. He deserves it, though--he's liberally plagiarized my last entry about The Hair That Ate Cheboygan for his latest entry in the new work-in-progress over at [livejournal.com profile] nevenpezdec. Basically, it's a novel written in real time.

Cleolinda: would you call your enterprise a Livenovel?

Vladimir: I'm calling it - well, hey, that's a good name for it
Vladimir: (tipsying self up)

Cleolinda: when it becomes a huge literary trend, I want it noted that I coined the term.

I highly suggest you go read it while there's only four or five entries and the bizarro stuff has only started to happen. Also, "Linda" started out as my namesake (Cleo...linda), but is really, totally nothing like me now. Particularly in the redness of her hair, in which I am much of the envy.



Vladimir: but you just got invited to join http://www.english.org and I'm totally flabbergasted

Cleolinda: eh

Vladimir: allow me to extend my sincerest congratulations, milady

Cleolinda: I wasn't invited in college, and was very disappointed
Cleolinda: and then I remembered I was a Spanish major

Vladimir: but you are invited now!
Vladimir: yes, I was a Spanish colonel once, in Galithia, it was v. difficult

Cleolinda: ...

Vladimir Cvetkovic: but we shouldn't spent too much time on wartime remembrances
Vladimir Cvetkovic: :D

Cleolinda: you
Cleolinda: are
Cleolinda: so
Cleolinda: high
cleolinda: (Default)
Well, this is interesting:

A Call for Nominations - Live Journal's Most Wanted!

I am looking for the most interesting & intriguing journalers on the 'net for a special project that I am working on. The end-result will be a book that profiles at least 50-100 of them, along with some other interesting things that I won't detail just now. I am asking that you do two things for me:

1. Respond to this post with the name of the one person from your friends list that you nominate to be a part of this project and why you think they deserve to be a part of this project. Please be as detailed as possible. One sentence isn't going to be very convincing.

2. Post a link to this inquiry in your own journal, asking your friends to respond (to me) as well.

The more people I can get involved in this project, the better the outcome will be. Please understand that this is not a popularity contest, it is a nomination. A journaler won't get preferential treatment because they have 100 people recommend them. I encourage you to use your best judgement and be completely honest with yourself and with me. Who do you think has "it"?

For the time being and the purposes of this post, the journals must be Live Journals. There will be future posts for other journalling sites and programs so everyone who has a weblog has the potential to be considered.

Thanks for your time!

Michael



I think it says a lot about my personality that my immediate reaction was, "Oh, I hope someone nominates me!" And then I remembered that I've only been journalling since Halloween, and I don't even say very interesting things at that. And before you step in because it sounds like I'm fishing for compliments and say, "Oh no, you're very interesting!"--come on, top 100 interesting? Hardly. The best entry I ever wrote was probably one of my Easyjournal entries I carried over.

Well, there was the Cléagol sequence, I forgot about that.

My point is: there comes a time in every writer's life--probably several dozen times, quite honestly--when she wants to wave her arms and shout, "Look at MEEEEE!" The thing you have to ask yourself is, do I have anything worth looking at yet?


P.S. "I encourage you to use your best judgement and be completely honest with yourself and with me" in the Michael Nolan entry is totally code for "Don't nominate yourself, fool." Heh.
cleolinda: (Default)
Is anyone else getting weird password prompts popping up when they visit their friends page? I filled it in and all, and then I had a weird paranoid thought that it was some kind of hack, so I actually went and changed my password.
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