What the hell are they playing on the jukebox in here? It sounds like “I’m Leaving Las Vegas” — Sheryl Crow? And I thought this place was hip.
That’s called In Media Res, a fancy-pants Latin term for “just skip the intro and jump right in.” See, I didn’t mention anything about who I am, what I’m doing with this blog, or what this is all about. I just jumped right in and started righting the first thing that came to my mind.
Now there’s some guy with a scratchy voice trying to sound like a soul singer, something about “its too late to say goodbyyyyeeeee” and no, it is not Julien Lennon.
Apparently, that’s the way it is done on the Internet. Out of curiosity (and a little creative desparation) I did a little research into some of my favorite blogs and took a look at how others started their first posts.
Blake Butler started his blog in May 2007 with a post called “DFW and” with a sort of diary entry about accidentally discovering a new story by David Foster Wallace in a Barnes and Noble. Blake Butler has a higher regard for DFW than I do, probably because he has taken the time to crack open a copy of Infinite Jest. At the end of the post, he writes with his typical wit: “I’m not sure what I’m going to do writing on this thing. I may just blabber and not mention that its alive. Every fucker has a blog yes why not why not.” And that is one reason why I like him.
Michael Kimball launched his blog in March of this year with a straightforward, no-bullshit plug for his novel. Good marketing move, I say. I would mimic him, if my novel were published. More on Kimball later.
The infamous Tao Lin decided to use his first post to give his spin on Richard Yates, a writer with whom he has almost nothing in common (on the surface of style, at least). His first post ends this way:
‘not everyone in the world is the same’
i am a person and i don’t read a book to judge and congratulate the writer, but to feel connected to another human being
and i don’t feel like i can (as effectively) feel connected to you if you’re making up characters who are not you, who have not had the same experiences as you, who are deliberately not you, then if you are writing about yourself
but other people, i know, are different than me
i’m not saying it’s ‘bad’ that you are good at ‘imagining worlds’
just that me personally would rather read something by someone who does less of ‘imagining worlds’
people are different, they read for different reasons, and no one ’should’ be doing anything
Media Res, indeed. Just jump right in and start swimming with Tao Lin and Blake Butler and all the rest. Why the hell not?
Another female singer. “Little bit of this, little bit of that.” How trite. Someday I will write a fully researched monograph specifying exactly why the female’s voice is inferior to the male’s (Bjork’s excepted, of course).
OK so I am very, very late. I am belated, as Master Bloom would have it. It is August 2008 and every twelve-year-old girl has her own blog. Even dogs have blogs. Until today, I was blogless. I don’t know why I waited. I’ve been reading blogs for years now, and got myself on friendster and myspace (http://www.myspace.com/260284) before most people. No excuse — once in my life, I am way late. So now that I’m here, what is this blog all about?
Art
Politics
Culture
Resisting Tyranny
Classical Liberalism
Secular Humanism
Arab Soccer
Amnesty International
Latin American Literature
The Landmark Forum
Scientology
Disney
Motivational Speaking
Jehovah’s Witnesses
Latterday Saints
Writing Letters to My Senators
Victorian Poetry
Narcotics Anonymous
Apostacy
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights
Postmodernism
And anything else that happens to occur to me. Oh, and I’m hard at work on my second novel. More on that in posts to come.
Up-tempo reggae. At least it is an improvement.