Publetariat Interview: New mediums, Twitter, and storytelling

Last week, I was interviewed by April over at Publetariat about the story I’m telling via Twitter. As one of the central touchstones for the indie publishing movement, she thought the whole idea of creating a story via Twitter — something that would really never transfer to paper in its original format — was interesting, and that’s where our conversation kind of started.

The interview went on for a bit, so it had to be broken into a couple parts, but part one is over here: Twitter As A New Medium In Authorship.

Because it went on a while (and because I’m unforgivably verbose when I get going) some bits had to be left on the cutting room floor, but I’m really happy with the thing as a whole, even if the transitions from one question to the next are a little herky-jerky, due to the necessities of editing.

One piece that makes me sound nearly intelligent:

I think it’s long past time that writers look at new mediums for their work. Paper is just a medium, and as our world (and the smaller publishing world within it) changes, it makes sense for writers to take a look at the tools around us and see if there aren’t some that we overlooked. Artists and sculptors do this sort of thing all the time; “Maybe I can paint on this building, maybe I can make something out of this old car… wait, even better: maybe I can paint on this building with this old car! Genius!” Tom Waits likes to go into hardware stores with a mallet and see what kind of sounds he can find.

What do storytellers use? Spoken words… and paper. That’s it. Very recently, people have considered the still hotly-contested idea of taking the-thing-that’s-on-the-paper and reproducing that exact same thing electronically, and that’s fine, but that isn’t storytelling intrinsically designed for the electronic medium – I mean so intrinsically designed for that medium that it doesn’t actually translate well back to paper or spoken words.

Maybe this story about Finnras is that kind of non-transferable thing – if so, I’m comfortable with that. It’s fun for me and for the people reading it.

The following sentence, which was cut for good reasons, but which I like: “People are trying to take things that were built in/for an electronic medium and force it ‘back’ into a paper format. I’m starting to think ‘maybe you can’t always do that, and maybe that’s okay.'”
Anyway, it was a lot of fun, and got me thinking about things which, frankly, I usually don’t. Parts 2 and 3 go up next week.

Updates for 2009-03-17

  • RT @mightymur “SciFi wishes to shed the geeky image – it’ll shed the geeks too. Idiots.” Truth. #
  • Just realized direct messages aren’t seen by those not following you. (A) I sent stuff that never got there (B) I don’t remember to whom. :( #
  • To those correcting @finnras’s velocity math: 1) he’s only falling 100 meters, so it’s correct b) he’s FALLING, cut him some math-slack. #
  • Adrift: I start to scrape/tumble along one wall and slow down. Apparently, this thing curves, which means.. http://tinyurl.com/cmuxy9 #
  • RT: @warrenellis: TIME: circulation a little over 3mil. BoingBoing: monthly uniques a little over 3mil. People don’t notice these things. in reply to warrenellis #
  • RT: @toniandrews: Part 4 of Toni’s article on the common issues that get manuscripts rejected is up on http://tinyurl.com/ToniBlog #
  • 3 o’clock. Going to prove Jean-Paul Sartre wrong and get some writing done. Where’s that writeordie link… #

Twitter: No, you still don’t get it.

[This isn’t the polished examination of Twitter I was planning it to be, but I’ve got other writing to do today, and it’s gets some thoughts out there that have been cluttering up my head for awhile, so… well, there you go.]

So there’s this thing going on with people who think they get Twitter – who predict or observe one or more demonstrably false things about the service after looking at it for a few minutes… and then write a ‘news’ article about it.

There’s this other thing going on with Twitter where celebrities see that folks like Stephen Fry has over 300 THOUSAND followers, Wil Wheaton has 242 THOUSAND followers… and they think “I’m a big star — I can do that. I SHOULD do that. It’s PUBLICITY.”

(There’s this third thing where people writing about Twitter see that celebrities are joining in, and infer something doubly wrong, but that’s a whole ‘nother thing.)

So I want to talk about Twitter, what it is and isn’t, and I’m going to do it in the most ironic way possible — by comparing celebrity twitter-users. (Hate to explain the joke, but: it’s ironic because ‘celebrities’ make up such a tiny percentage of Twitter, and their involvement is all that mass media seems to grasp.)

First, let’s take a look at Seth Green’s page on Twitter. Here’s some of his most recent messages:

  • News: Robot Chicken will return on April 26th with the first of 10 new episodes. Seth has also recently batted around ideas for an RC film.
  • Watch “Without a Paddle” Thursday, March 19th on TBS @ 10:00PM.
  • Last year’s Buffy reunion can be purchased here – https://www.createspace.com…
  • A sequel to Family Guy’s Blue Harvest will air on FOX in season 8
  • Seth has signed on to star in the upcoming “Mars Needs Moms,” a Disney feature adaptation of the Berkeley Breathed children’s novel.

Right. That’s about enough of that pablum.

Now (and I know this is an unfair comparison), let’s put up a few Tweets from Wil Wheaton:

  • Ok, last one before I get offline and set up for today’s D&D session: You really want to track http://is.gd/ns9A. May the Force be with you.
  • Because I’m sharing all kinds of awesome things this morning, a new shirt from @jephjacques that rocks my world…
  • RT @Lilibet “d20 dice cufflinks: http://tinyurl.com/bqu33y srsly!” Holy crap, they’re actually affordable. DO WANT.
  • GAH! Fucking Kings.
  • Many of you point out that it’s Einstein’s birthday today. Holy carp. I decree that today is Science and Technology is Awesome Day.
  • Today is GEEKTASTIC: Not only is it pi day, it’s the 15th birthday of version 1.0 of the Linux Kernel. Also, I’m DMing tonight.
  • In the time it took me to walk to the car, the Kings scored 2 and tied the game. In the time it took me to start my car, they lost it. Sigh.

Okay, class, anyone see the difference?

Lemme help: Mr. Green is basically using his twitter page to repost promotional crap. Wil is telling you what he’s thinking. One is advertising, and one is making a connection.

Which one do you think I actually give a crap about?

Who do you think I actually (actively) *like*?

Now don’t get me wrong: I’m a fan of Seth Green. He’s a funny guy, and he’s smart, and I’m sure that he’s quite engaging as a person. But I’ll never know that from his page on Twitter.

Wil? Wil is like reading posts from ME (even when he bitches about how the Kings are tanking yet another game, which is nothing I care about, but still funny in the way that your friends getting worked up over things is sometimes funny).

And he’s got nothing on the way Stephen Fry works to connect with people: the man’s got over 300 thousand people following him, and makes an actual effort to follow all of them back, then apologizes when his mouse-clicking hand gets sore after an hour of clicking ‘Follow” and takes a break. Crikey.

Now, do I care about Wil Wheaton or Stephen Fry more (or even as much) as the other people I follow? No, I do not. I don’t follow them because they’re celebrities of one stripe or another — I follow them because they post things I enjoy. If they did not, I would not follow them.

That’s true of everyone I follow. That is, in fact, what I aspire to when *I* post to Twitter. Enrichment. Connection.

And yeah… sometimes I’m just bitching banal crap about spilling diet coke into a pocket of a borrowed jacket (sorry, hon!), so no, it’s not some kind of Zen answer to Life, the Universe and [trademarked], but it’s a hell of a lot more than “What are you doing?” and much, much more than “What are you Selling?”

Updates for 2009-03-16

  • RT @largeheartedboy Amazon MP3 sale: the expanded 18-track Pogues album If I Should Fall From Grace With God for $3.99 http://is.gd/nqFq #
  • RT @MaryRobinette I am amused by the people who don’t like Twitter, but update their Facebook status regularly without qualm. #
  • http://twitpic.com/2506v – Bleeehhh #
  • Adrift: Full atmo and low grav means lower terminal velocity, but the only real difference between 23 and.. http://tinyurl.com/cgts4h #
  • According to Kk, the villain’s name in The Lion King is “Scarf”. #

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Updates for 2009-03-15

  • I wrote 713 words in 34 minutes with Write or Die. http://lab.drwicked.com/writeordie.html Time for round two… #
  • 1700 words done in three 30 minute sprints. I decree writeordie.com to be my new favorite web ap. #
  • Also, as many have pointed out, today is a geek/awesome nexus: Pi Day, Einstein’s Birthday, Linux’s birthday. I should run a game tonight. #
  • ((Sorry, that’s not writeordie.com – though it should be – it’s http://tinyurl.com/bbo3st #
  • Seriously, Write or Die should be a downloadable app that saves final output to sequential files when you hit ‘done’. Someone get coding! #
  • Adrift: I shine a light into the shaft (smooth, undecorated; a launch tube turned sideways?) and ask how .. http://tinyurl.com/c3653d #
  • Ordered Papa Johns in honor of Pi Day. Watching Bambi with Kk. Twitterpated. #
  • Nice big fat chunk of words today. Finally got out of “create polished scenes that blend seamlessly” mode and into “just write it” mode. #
  • When I’m first-drafting, “just write” mode is easy. When I’m writing new scenes for existing, polished work, it’s damned, damned hard. #

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Updates for 2009-03-14

  • To anyone who has their Twitter set up to see @replies directed at people you’re not following (why?) i apologize for the last hour of spam. #
  • QftD: “Outlining, researching, talking to people about what you’re doing, none of that is writing. Writing is writing.” – E. L. Doctorow #
  • Adrift: In a place that’s nothing more than ships purposely crashed together, no passage is straigh.. http://tinyurl.com/apgkml #
  • I wrote 592 words in 23 minutes with Write or Die! http://lab.drwicked.com/writeordie.html (thanks @toniandrews : awesome ap!) #
  • You speak truth, @LuciasM. I ask my daughter if she wants to watch Avatar, and she says “No, I want to watch Sokka.” in reply to LuciasM #
  • RT @turbine Aren’t you glad you’re following us? You’re the first to know that Book 7: Leaves of Lorien arrives on Tuesday, March 17! #
  • RT @turbine LOTRO: Final patch notes for Book 7 are up. http://tinyurl.com/cpc2t2 (Must. Get. Writing Project. Done. This. Weekend.) #
  • Been hard, remembering how to write Hidden Things – everything (other stories, blog, twitter) is different from its cousins. Getting better. #
  • RT @TerryMoran Just finished interviewing three of the top Alzheimer’s researchers in the world. Bottom line:There’s hope on the horizon. #

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Passing on

“Age does not protect you from love. But love, to some extent, protects you from age.” — Anais Nin

My grandmother passed away early this morning, almost exactly six months after my granddad (her husband of some sixty-plus years).

She has missed him terribly since he died and spent many of her waking hours wishing for him after he was gone. The last few months have been particularly rough, and for both her and her family I believe today came as something like a release. An easement.

I was very close to both her and my granddad – we lived on a farm near theirs, and I spent almost every summer day in her care when I was growing up. She taught me and my sister how to play checkers and how to use a typewriter. She was the grownup I was brought to when I gashed open my forehead while learning to bike uphill (a scar I still have). She’s the reason I says “crimiNETly” when I’m frustrated.

She grew strawberries in her garden.

She made the very best cinnamon rolls.

I wrote about my last real visit with her and my granddad here, and I’ll let that stand, for now, as my memorial to both of their lives. In a very real way, they left us on the same day, and they will be missed.