Here’s how the Internet kinda works.
I have something that I think is cool or interesting or that I desperately wish people would recognize. I have this thing — think of it as a beach ball or some kind of many-pronged sex gizmo or perhaps the glowing briefcase from Pulp Fiction — and I’m trying to get other people to take it. I want them to grab it and then pass it along. It’s like a funky little game of Whisper Down The Lane except for the most part, the information remains intact. It is, in its way, a viral transmission: a bacterial replication of information. A graphic I think is funny. A blog post I wrote. A ghost story about cats. An article espousing the propaganda I believe about vaccinated GMO grandmother hipsters. A campaign to raise money for toilet dogs — meaning, dogs found in toilets who now must be rehabilitated to live once more among people and other dogs, acclimated anew to Life Outside Big Porcelain. This is memetic transference: the epidemic of ideas.
We are all nodes on this network of sharing.
Some of us are doorways — open for the transmission of pretty much whatever. Our door is mostly open and we pretty much hand shit through that open space day and night.
Some of us are walls with tiny windows or little boltholes in our brick. We block most everything except a tiny extruded Play-Doh tube of meager information that we find somehow vital.
Some of us are kept gates: portcullises monitored to make sure whoever comes into our castle isn’t covered in plague buboes or won’t try to sell us on cults or Tupperware or meat sold out of a van.
I received an email the other day about some… writing thing. A website with a free something and a contest for something and something-something I don’t fucking know. But one sentence in that email struck me: “I’m contacting you because you represent the doorway to a larger audience.” (The email also used words like “micropublicity” and “a bonafide movement” and then also said he’d shout-out my blog and also hey he wrote a novel too well what a shocker! Ahem.)
Here’s the thing:
I do not represent the doorway to a larger audience.
You people reading this are my audience.
And I am not the way to get to you.
What I mean is this — I am not going to take any old thing handed to me and just jam it into your hands. “Here, someone gave me this because I am a doorway to you,” I mumble as I hand you a jizz-hardened mitten filled with old potato salad. “Someone said I should share this so I am sharing it.” And then I use your hands to give the mitten a good squish.
I despise the word “tastemaker” with the heat of a thousand fire ants nibbling my perineum, because I have little interest in somehow making tastes or setting trends. But what I am interested in is being a trusted source for… well, whatever. Good books or smart ideas or tasty coffee or the finest animated GIFs the world has ever seen. I curate what I pass along.
My social media footprint these days is bigger than I had anticipated. This is inadvertent bragging time, but I now have over 40k Twitter followers and almost 8k subscribers to this blog and 10k of additional visitors to this space daily. Which means over 3 million visits annually. I think I’m operating at 0.3 Scalzis? Something like that. Point is, for whatever reason, you poor misguided mooncalves keep on coming back here and hearing whatever inane shit I have to say and share with some regularity.
I thank you for that.
And one of the ways I thank you — or try to, anyway — is by not sharing total garbage. Or even passing along anything that has the potential to be secret garbage — like, “Oh, look, a pretty vase, OH GOD WHY DIDN’T ANYBODY LOOK INSIDE IT’S A SCORPION ORGY THEIR LITTLE LEGS AND BITS SCRAPING AND TINKING AGAINST THE CERAMIC NOOOOO WHY CHUCK WHYYYYYY.” I don’t have the time to curate everything you want me to to share. And I get a lot of requests to share things — writing contests, events, charities, pleas for financial aid, self-published books, and on and on. Sometimes people are trying to engage me by talking to me directly, and sometimes it’s folks just throwing spaghetti at the wall that is Wendig and seeing if anything sticks. They don’t even bother engaging. They’re just trying to hand off their Internet Thing in a dark room and hoping somebody like me will be dumb enough to grab it and sleepily pass it along.
So, this is why I won’t share the thing you want me to share.
I don’t know it and I don’t trust it.
I won’t share your writing contest. Or your publishing opportunity.
I won’t share your book no matter how you published it.
I won’t share your GoFundMe campaign to rehabilitate Toilet Dogs.
I won’t share your IndieGogo campaign to fund a smartwatch that also contains Nano-Bees to attack your enemies okay wait I might actually fund that one so bounce me an email, okay?
I won’t share most of the things you’re going to ask me to share.
Because I don’t know you and I don’t have the time to curate. That curation would become literally a full-time job. I have a hard enough time answering my actually important emails — how am I supposed to vet your plea for charity? I won’t even donate to or recommend an actual charity without first running it through CharityNavigator. How am I supposed to know that you’re not going to take the money you raise and fuck off to Fiji for 10 days? No, no, I’m sure you’re not a scammer — but everyone else is, so how am I supposed to know?
In this game of viral memetic transmission, I like to cover my mouth when I’m talking with you. Meaning, I won’t just cough on you and pass along any old cold. You won’t just get boring old warts from me, my friends. If I share any of my diseases, it will be the good stuff. The primo vintage gonorrhea. The rare flu that killed all those bats that one time. A very special Norovirus from a cruise ship featuring that celebrity you love so you can have the same diarrhea as Donnie Wahlberg or I dunno, whoever. Only the best for you, my darlings. Only the best.
Note: all this changes if we actually know each other. I’ll endeavor to take that time if we’re friends or, at the very least, friendly online (though no promises, of course). But otherwise? Your pleas to share things will thud against me like a shoe thrown at a bear’s head. It will drop into the mud, unregarded and ignored. And then I will eat you because I am an actual bear.
I am not, however, your doorway.
AnneGracie says:
Damn! You mean I’m not going to get a jizz-hardened mitten filled with old potato salad? 🙁
June 10, 2015 — 7:46 AM
Catastrophe Jones says:
Why isn’t there a LIKE/STAR/OMG function on replies like this? WHYYYY CHUCK, WHYYYYYY?
June 10, 2015 — 8:23 AM
Matt Black says:
Your writing makes me imagine the most interesting visuals… I’ll never get Spaghetti-covered-Chuck out of my mind now.
June 10, 2015 — 7:49 AM
terribleminds says:
NOW THAT YOU HAVE SEEN THE SPAGHETTICHUCK YOU WILL DIE IN SEVEN DAYS
June 10, 2015 — 7:51 AM
Leif Husselbee says:
Are you going to crawl out of his twitter feed with a cage filled with syphilitic squirrels?
June 10, 2015 — 12:11 PM
Matt Black says:
If I had a dollar for every syphilitic that crawled out of my twitter feed….
June 10, 2015 — 2:19 PM
Deane Saunders-Stowe (@DSaundersStowe) says:
An actual bear, or a Chuck Wendigo?
June 10, 2015 — 8:01 AM
terribleminds says:
A Bear Named Chuck Wendigo.
That’s also what I will call my memoir.
June 10, 2015 — 8:03 AM
Ellie Di Julio says:
Careful saying you’re a bear on the internet. You’ll get an entirely different class of email.
June 10, 2015 — 10:16 AM
writersbridgebridgebuilder says:
Hey, Chuck: I’m glad I could give you an idea for a blog post. Honest, though, I meant no offense by calling you a doorway. OK, you’re not a doorway.
June 10, 2015 — 8:13 AM
terribleminds says:
Oh, hey, wow. Hi. I didn’t expect the writer of the email to actually show up.
That’s good of you, and I appreciate the comment.
To be clear, I didn’t take offense at your email. Especially your particular one. It just joins a cabinet of emails I get every day — and yours had that great quote about a doorway in there that was worth grabbing hold of and using as the metaphor. Because it’s perfect. (So, thanks for that.)
Good luck with whatever it is you have going on! Unless you’d actually like to talk about the e-mail and the process of getting word out about things. I’ll be poking my head in here and there if you’d care to.
— c.
June 10, 2015 — 9:23 AM
KM Golland says:
God, I love this. Even the jizz filled potato salad mitten thingamajig.
June 10, 2015 — 8:16 AM
mtassin says:
I’ve been wanting to ask a question about this for awhile, and this article seems like the perfect place to ask.
From the outside looking in, I see what looks like an infinite line of spaghetti flingers who are totally willing to send their “help me out” tweets/emails/posts/etc to (aka people with WAY more followers than the rest of us).You see lots of tweets and posts like this one…
“Hey @ Will you help spread the word about my thing?”
…and every so often, the actually DOES retweet it or post it or share it in some way.
I don’t do this sort of thing* for all the reasons you described in your article.
But then I see stuff like that example above get shared by , and I think, “So does that actually work?” Because if it MIGHT work, you wonder if you are an idiot for not trying. After all, as a creative person you’ve probably poured your heart and soul (and lots of money) into whatever project you want to share. If you’re struggling to get people to even FIND it much less like it, you wonder if that’s really the time to hold back.
It starts to feel like a “nice guys finish last” scenario, where the obnoxious people who shout “Hey ! Check out my sweet project!” get attention while you sit alone with your piles of books and your etiquette.
Any advice or thoughts on this?
* Actually, to be totally honest, I did this once, but I felt really bad about it. I don’t do this as a general rule.
June 10, 2015 — 8:42 AM
terribleminds says:
It’s less about holding back and more about targeted engagement. Like, assume you want to hit a bullseye with a bullet. Your best way to do that is not:
SPRAY MACHINE GUN BULLETS EVERYWHERE ON THE HOPE ONE OF THEM HITS THE EXACT CENTER OF THE BULLSEYE.
The best way is to:
Load up with a few bullets and take the time to practice and aim for the bullseye. Patience. Find the target. Hit the target.
But it is tough and I am sympathetic to that. I just hope folks remember if they’re the ones flinging their marketing around like a monkey throwing poo, they’re not alone — they’re joining a chorus of hooting primates and it all becomes rather noisy and rather poopy.
— c.
June 10, 2015 — 9:17 AM
mtassin says:
Thanks! Yeah – I’m definitely not going for the poo flinging primate brand image, although I guess I need to accept that I may occasionally be mistaken for a poo flinging primate, even if my poo is in a nice box and directed to…okay, I’m giving up on the poo analogy. Thanks again for the response!
June 10, 2015 — 9:33 AM
Deane Saunders-Stowe (@DSaundersStowe) says:
Couldn’t agree more. It helps if you’ve got something specific or unique to target – there’s so much (good) competition out there, especially in genre fiction, that it’s difficult to stand out from the crowd. I’ve been pretty lucky in having a niche market (one of my protags is disabled) and I’ve managed to get interviewed by a magazine and have the synopsis of my book printed in that one alongside it as well as in another disability magazine.
That’s not to say that it’s the main topic of the book, no. Magic in hard sci-fi is more along the lines of what it is, but that seems less saleable and is difficult to stand out as credible. Not enough time has passed yet to see whether the disability articles will help, but I feel it’s probably the thin end of the publicity wedge.
June 10, 2015 — 10:20 AM
Anthony W. Eichenlaub says:
This is interesting because I was just reading an SEO blog that recommended attempting to use you as an actual door. It even had detailed graphics on how to attach hinges and one of those little bumpers so that you won’t wreck the wall.
June 10, 2015 — 8:48 AM
TymberDalton says:
^^^ *snork* Can he win a potato-salad-mitten for this comment? It made me chuckle.
June 10, 2015 — 9:21 AM
Terri says:
Was it the deadbolt version or the keyed version? I saw that too and want to make sure I have up-to-date instructions and use the best spaghetti-proof paint.
June 10, 2015 — 6:26 PM
YA Lover says:
I really appreciate your writing advice and enjoy most of your posts, but I wish you had the same stance about posting comments-free *opinions* complete with links to other authors blogs that are mildly related yet don’t really say the same thing as you do about being a “door”.
Im not champing at the bit to write a big rape opus, but in all the arguments I’ve seen, if you replace the word rape with murder, it reads the same and there seems to be no shortage of books filled with murder. This is especially true with the argument that making rape commonplace in entertainment will result in people thinking its ok and more of it will happen in real life, when 1 out of 5 women in America have been raped and often this happens at places like college or the in the military, not dark alleys or seedy underworlds.
Also, while I agree with your post about the Tor.com publisher, I keep seeing people say that opinions posted on personal sites shouldn’t have professional repercussions. Thats how it is for every single person on the planet, I have never heard of anyone posting something privately and not having it affect them professionally. I don’t even understand that point.
Not that your opinions are poor, or that I necessarily disagree with them, it just the preachiness of them (and many many many other authors who I wouldn’t bother to state this to because they are such garbage its not worth the effort, this by far isn’t something I attribute sole to you).
BTW I will never understand exactly what gamer-gate really is, the sick puppy thing is disturbing and I don’t get that either.
June 10, 2015 — 8:58 AM
terribleminds says:
…
uhh, what?
You seem like you’ve built up a head of steam about a bunch of posts where I had the comments turned off, and then you saw comments turned on in this post and thought, “NOW IS MY OPPORTUNITY.”
This is not your opportunity.
But thanks!
— c.
June 10, 2015 — 9:14 AM
TymberDalton says:
“Scriptus mea, regulae meae.” (Chuck’s blog, Chuck’s rules.)
June 10, 2015 — 9:26 AM
Denise Willson says:
I adore how you OWN YOUR SITE, Chuck. Yes, you’re out there (the net), and yes, you share your shit, but that doesn’t mean you forfeit the right to CONTROL your presence. Kudos to you, for making choices, voicing your opinion, and standing proud.
Dee Willson
Author of A Keeper’s Truth and GOT
June 10, 2015 — 9:14 AM
TymberDalton says:
THIS. THANK you. I’ve wanted to rant about this for a while. (And now the face bees can come after you. Heh. 🙂 Sorry… )
I get so many daily requests from writers I’ve never even heard of to help pimp their books or whatever. And it’s not that I’m not flattered they think I’m “big” enough to help them gain traction, but seriously, I barely have time for all my own stuff. And then there are the daily requests to donate to their whatever it is.
Ummm…
I pimp people I choose to pimp, because 1) they’re my peeps, and I’m all about the peep pimpage; 2) I genuinely like/believe in whatever it is I’m pimping; 3) all of the above.
It’s one thing for someone I know, like, and have nearly daily interactions with to ask me to lend them a hand. I have a pre-existing RELATIONSHIP with them.
But when someone’s FIRST social media contact with me is worded, “I have loved your books and now I need your help pimping mine…”
Ummm…
Here’s my comment to them: No, I’m NOT a bitch because I ignored you. You’re a tool for putting me on the spot like that in the first place. Think about this in real-life terms. If someone you didn’t know and had never met before walked up to you at a backyard barbecue and said, “Hey, I know you run Acme Insurance, so I know you’ll be able to donate to my new fundraiser and help me pimp it,” would you?
Probably not. Not without knowing them first, and even then likely not until you’ve done research first before throwing your name/reputation behind it.
New writers: PLEASE, do NOT do this. This isn’t a case of, “Hey, I Tweet about your books, even though you don’t know me, so now it’s time for payback.” Seriously. PLEASE, think about this in REAL-LIFE terms. I know it’s easy on the Internet to forget that kind of boundary.
Writers have lives and jobs, too.
“Well, it’s just a quick minute for you to–”
NO. STOP. It’s not “just” a quick minute. We have to VET stuff. That takes TIME, time AWAY from our JOBS, our FAMILIES, our WORK. Then multiply THAT time by however many requests we get every day.
(Thank you for letting me get that off my chest, and where the hell is my mitten of potato salad, dammit? *pouts*)
June 10, 2015 — 9:20 AM
Ed says:
I think it’s a personal view as to whether we are a “door” or a “wall with a window” or whatever. I remember being at University and the department made changes to how bibliographies were to be compiled. We moved from a “you mention it you name it” stance to “you read it, but don’t mention it still goes in the bibliography stance”. As a student rep I questioned this advising that what were me meant to do, start mentioning granddad in the bibliography because as a child a war story he mentioned directly related to essay we were writing?
We have to remember is that everything we see, hear, feel and think is influenced by others. All we do is put our own spin on it, jumble it up and reformat it before sending it spinning out into the world, be that over the garden fence, the pub table or on twitter.
Chuck has the right not to mention who approached him and for what, just as he has the right to close the comments section. He is not a doorway in this instance, but he IS a door because why do people come here? We come here cos he has something to say and we want to listen.
Keep it up Chuck.
June 10, 2015 — 9:20 AM
terribleminds says:
Hahaha “upchuck.”
…
Sorry, I’m like, 12.
June 10, 2015 — 9:24 AM
YA Lover says:
I don’t think you read what I wrote, but thanks for replying anyway. I did and do appreciate your writing advice.
June 10, 2015 — 9:42 AM
terribleminds says:
I read it, I did. I just don’t really want to use this post to engage on those points because those points were in posts where I turned the comments off because I didn’t want the engagement on those points.
I’m glad you find the writing stuff helpful!
— c.
June 10, 2015 — 9:44 AM
YA lover says:
Fair enough. You are my doorway!
June 10, 2015 — 9:56 AM
Katie Doyle says:
Oddly enough, there was a warning in my area about a guy selling meat out of a van this morning. ARE YOU THE MAN IN THE VAN, CHUCK?
June 10, 2015 — 9:52 AM
terribleminds says:
…
no?
*throws meat back in van and speeds away*
…
More seriously, this is actually a thing. I think the last time they hit us up they were called CAPITOL MEATS or something. MEAT VAN. Because nothing says delicious like meat sold out of a mysterious black van.
— c.
June 10, 2015 — 9:53 AM
Katie Doyle says:
The guy here is just some guy, no company involved (and possibly a pedophile? inviting kids to look at puppy pictures too? That may or may not be true, but it came as part of the warning).
It’s still a good analogy for sharing info. You don’t know where that meat has been or who the guy selling the meat is, so why are you buying it? I’m not someone with as big a platform a you, so I don’t get people sending emails and stuff asking me to share their stuff very often, and if I DO decide to share their stuff, it’s after at least a couple days deliberation on whether or not I like/agree with/understand what it is I’m sharing.
June 10, 2015 — 10:00 AM
Terri says:
As an only mildly related aside, when I was in law school there was a serial killer on the loose posing as a door-to-door meat seller. That was his ruse to get into the house. People – do not buy meat from a guy who comes to your door.
June 10, 2015 — 6:30 PM
rowyn says:
Hang on, he’s selling meat out of a van and trying to lure kids with pictures of puppies? You don’t think that’s how he gets the meat do you? Because that’s just wrong on so many levels. I’m officially skeeved out … and very worried about the children. (I’m also worried that a small part of me is thinking that could make a great opening for a horror story.)
June 10, 2015 — 10:33 PM
Kylie says:
So glad to know I wasn’t alone in thinking ‘kid meat’. But yes, it would make a great story. Write it. You know you wanna…
June 16, 2015 — 8:06 PM
mannixk says:
Aww, Chuck. I adore most everything you write but this is the cutest: ” for whatever reason, you poor misguided mooncalves keep on coming back here and hearing whatever inane shit I have to say and share with some regularity.” The fact that you’re modest, on top of being funny, smart and entertaining as all get out is what keeps us reading. Plus you have a good community of other writers on here, and have built this cool club where we can all hang and drink and dance and spew stories and then sometimes, OMG, CHUCK’S HERE! 🙂
June 10, 2015 — 9:53 AM
terribleminds says:
I’m basically like Beetlejuice.
June 10, 2015 — 9:59 AM
sheltonkeysdunning says:
Chuck! Chuck! Chuck!
damn, didn’t work….
June 10, 2015 — 11:46 AM
Mark Gardner says:
Does that mean If I say your name three times you’ll appear?
June 10, 2015 — 11:46 AM
jrmurdock says:
This is very similar to what Nathan Lowell said a long time ago when he first gained popularity.
I am not your platform.
Every author, or creator, must build their own platform and other authors, creators, celebrities, are not the means to that end.
Great post. Thank you 🙂
June 10, 2015 — 10:02 AM
todddillard says:
Guys, let’s not focus on jizz mittens alone. “Vase full of scorpion orgy” is also pretty righteous.
June 10, 2015 — 10:07 AM
Julie Luker says:
YES!!! That quite got my attention!
And all along I’ve been cultivating my relationship with Chuck so he could be the doorway to my yet-unfilmed and unpublished youtube channel of adorable Papillon videos. ‘Cos who doesn’t love adorable dogs?
Not.
xo Chuck. I would say I’m one of your minions, but these days that has an unfortunate association with a movie.
June 10, 2015 — 10:52 AM
terribleminds says:
I await this Papillon channel.
June 10, 2015 — 11:30 AM
Paul Baxter says:
WrIters help us see the world in fresh ways.
I will never see doorways quite the same again, and potato salad is probably off the menu for the Fourth of July picnic now.
June 10, 2015 — 10:24 AM
Brian Basham says:
It’s up to each author to build their own platform. You can’t expect to stand atop someone else’s platform and yell “Buy my puppy! I swear he’s toilet trained! Err trained to live in a toilet…”
Everyone is looking for help but that help is meaningless if the person giving it isn’t doing it because they want to. Chuck could post a link on twitter and sure some people would click on it. If he continues to share like this without caring about what he shares then it will dilute the message he is sharing. Resulting in less people clicking on the facebees link that he truly cares about. Sharing is caring but if you want others to carebear then you need to carebear too.
June 10, 2015 — 10:26 AM
gardenlilie says:
Hey Chuck! Well, I feel like I know you a bit. I think I’ve been a follower, yes, a follower for 4 years or so. Geez, sometimes I hate you and adore you, but most of all you keep me engaged and for that I thank you.
You’re kinda like those big HBO shows out there, fascinating, outrageous and I can’t stop watching, or reading. I know you’ve helped me as a writer to keep on doing it. I haven’t put it all out there yet, rather my delivery is more subtle like my personality, I think. IDK, I just enjoy whatever you have to say.
Someday, I think I’d like to have a beer with you, maybe after you find me an agent. Ha. Subtlety aside.
Cheers! Kim
June 10, 2015 — 10:29 AM
suzannebrazil says:
I’m one of your 8,000 subscribers. I do not read every day or I would not get any of my own writing done. I tune in periodically. Usually, I am searching for word combinations such as: “jizz-hardened mitten filled with old potato salad.” Just engaging to let you know I have not been disappointed.
June 10, 2015 — 10:33 AM
Ed says:
But beetle juice used to be used as the red food colouring of Smarties before being replaced with some E number………you’re not being replaced are you?
June 10, 2015 — 10:38 AM
Shae Connor says:
When God closes a Chuck, he opens the FACEBEES.
June 10, 2015 — 10:54 AM
terribleminds says:
PUT THAT ON A SHIRT
June 10, 2015 — 11:30 AM
decayingorbits says:
O.K. http://www.customink.com/proof_page?cid=zfn0-00a5-61km
June 11, 2015 — 6:02 AM
Toni says:
whoa!
June 12, 2015 — 7:41 AM
nlhartmann says:
Great post, er, except for the food parts. Never eating potato salad again and spaghetti is not passing my lips for a long, long time. But it’s all good: you’re helping me stay on my low-carb diet.
June 10, 2015 — 10:55 AM
Erika says:
What about sharing the Go Fund Me page for rehabilitating dogs who eat the kids underwear and socks, then regurgitate them in the living room? I need funding for that.
June 10, 2015 — 11:07 AM
elctrcrngr says:
You need a new dog
June 10, 2015 — 2:21 PM
Lynne Cantwell says:
I said pretty much the same thing as this on my own blog some time ago, except I forgot to mention the jizz mittens and potato salad and…uh…that thing about scorpions.
When I tweet or share about a book, it’s because I’ve read the book and liked it (unless I didn’t like it, in which case I put it on my review blog and explain why. Although I put books I liked on the blog, too, so…). I want my recommendations to mean something. So I don’t go all, “Hey, this person has a book out — I haven’t read it and it might be crap on a pogo stick, but buy it anyway!”
Do you think people will stop pestering me to share their stuff I mention the potato salad?
June 10, 2015 — 11:24 AM
Stephen Hunt says:
And it while you’re being my doorway, , would you bend over so I can stick a broom up your arse – I’m sure you can still write while you’re sweeping the floor on your way out.
June 10, 2015 — 11:31 AM
terribleminds says:
*makes face trying to figure out if you’re trying to be rude and succeeding, or trying to be funny*
June 10, 2015 — 11:36 AM
mat says:
I’m guessing he’s British. It’s a thing we say if someone asks an already busy beaver to add another task to their list. “Oh sure and I’ll shove a broom up my arse and sweep the floor while I’m at it.” So file under B.
June 14, 2015 — 2:28 AM
Eva Odland (@EvaOdland) says:
“The way is shut. It was made by those who are Dead, and the Dead keep it, until the time comes. The way is shut.”
June 10, 2015 — 11:41 AM
Mark Gardner says:
Just curious, Chuck. When did you transition from “Hey cool blog thing, beaver farts,” to being unable to keep up with the requests/retweets/etc? I ask because I get some of these requests and I also want to curate, but my curation of requests usually takes less than an hour. Is it purely a quantity thing, or did you just wake up one day and were all “screw this stuff,” and that was it? I’m not trying to be snarky, I really am curious, and sorry for my lumbering Frankenstein’s Monster post, but sometimes I can’t seem to words.
June 10, 2015 — 11:52 AM
terribleminds says:
A couple-few years ago, I guess?
I mean, even if curation took an hour a day, that’s an hour I really don’t have. (Though it would be far worse than an hour, now.)
June 10, 2015 — 12:58 PM
lissainkslinger says:
TLDR Haiku
SPAGHETTICHUCK ROARS
Gizz hardened mittens beat off*
Wendig Bear eats fans
Got it.
*And by “beat off”, I mean thwarted but thwarted lacked the sting of a thousand face-bees.
Thank you for holding back the tater salad and gizz mittens Chuck!
June 10, 2015 — 12:27 PM
Toni says:
I dunno; I rather enjoyed the double entendre, whether intended or not.
June 12, 2015 — 7:43 AM
jimheskett says:
Dale Carnegie said you never pitch someone with what they can do for you. I’ve been on a few podcasts lately, and I always contact the host with a message like “Here’s the value I can bring your podcast audience.”
June 10, 2015 — 1:03 PM
C_N_Martin says:
There once was a man from Nan-Chuck-et,
Whose Wendigo did want a sock-puppet
And he said with abhor, as he slammed shut the door
“If I had time I’d still tell you to ‘suck it'”.
High give.
June 10, 2015 — 1:13 PM
Terri says:
This needs to be a contest . . .
June 10, 2015 — 6:33 PM
C_N_Martin says:
I totally meant “High Five”, not “give”. Ugh, I didn’t even notice until just now.
June 10, 2015 — 7:05 PM
marylholden says:
This might be–no, this IS INDEED–the BEST essay I have ever read on the Internet. Thank you. (Going back to the book I’m turning pages in now.)
June 10, 2015 — 1:31 PM
brandonearlbristow says:
Exactofuckingmundo.
June 10, 2015 — 1:42 PM
thedebc says:
Ok, so… The way I see this is that nobody wants to be “used”. If we help someone along the way that’s great, but we don’t need to promote something or someone who’s work we either don’t know, or don’t choose to promote.
So ,,, now to I get the potato salad mitt?
June 10, 2015 — 2:41 PM
M T McGuire says:
You are not their doorway and the big thing, we know that, which, of course is why you are so valuable to them. Because we trust you not to sleepily hand us a gizz hardened glove full of old potato salad… so that’s why if you do hand out anything we look. And because we look… that’s why they want you to.
Hey, I have this fish scale-encrusted, bile green pus podule and I wonder if you’d…
Cheers
MTM
June 10, 2015 — 5:45 PM
jrmurdock says:
You are not the doorway, but are you the table?
https://youtu.be/adyC404_gEk
I love Metallica, but this makes me laugh…a lot.
June 10, 2015 — 6:33 PM
janinmi says:
omfg that is so GREAT! Thanks!
June 14, 2015 — 3:51 PM
Terri says:
Because I’m a writer, I know people who have also written books. Occupational hazard. Occasionally, I have introduced some of them to professionals I have met who are further along the writing continuum than I am. I value these acquaintances and, in some cases, friendships very much, and do not abuse them.
Because I mind my manners, if said professional friend sees a request that is a mutual friend with me, they might be one nano-Scalzi (the new social media measurement) more likely to accept/response to it. After one unfortunate incident, I must now caution people that if they are trying to meet my professional friends, their first action had fucking well better not be posting a link to their book in this pro friend’s social media space. Because that not only hurts them, it hurts me. To quote the one and only Daffy Duck, “I don’t like pain. It hurts me.”
We all curate to some extent, or damn well should.
*realizes it is trash day, scampers off to throw away all the potato salad in the fridge*
Terri
June 10, 2015 — 6:45 PM
Elizabeth Marling says:
Let me see if I follow this logic.
Someone who you do not know sends an email with attachment of something he/she has written along with the following message:
“I have written the attached, and I would like to use you as means of promoting it. In exchange for this service, I not only offer you no monetary compensation, but will give the chance you take on me now no recognition if the work proves a commercial success. If, on the other hand, my work is a failure, you will be the one to take the fall because you chose to publish it on your website. Regardless, you will likely never hear from me again unless I want something. Best wishes, John Doe.”
I don’t even know what to say. I feel genuinely sorry that this happened. This is going to sound weird, but I hope you don’t stop caring about new talent because of this jerk.
Thank you for not seeing your readers as some kind of test audience, but as actual people.
Oh yeah, and something about potato salad seems to be a popular way to close the comments. Remember when Dan Quayle misspelled potato in front of all those kids? Ha ha. When I am having a bad day I think about that and it makes me laugh.
June 10, 2015 — 8:00 PM
jmh says:
The great thing about all this is it makes sure the things you *do* share get noticed. Which increases your power.
If you just shared any old jizz-mitten that came across your desk (ha!), people would quickly get tired of listening and your social-media feeds would be irrelevant.
This is an excellent stance to have. I wish more people felt the same way.
June 11, 2015 — 3:14 AM
njmagas says:
I’ve had a similar problem this year since my blog took a peek over the fence of total obscurity. I’m now being contacted by companies who are looking for a bit of free organic marketing in the form of “Hey, we really like your blog, are you interested in writing a post about topic X and somehow mentioning our company without making it look like we asked you to? If you do this for us, we might even feature your post! Cool huh? And remember, don’t tell anyone we asked you. We like to keep things exclusive *winkwink*.”
First of all, no. Also how about, nope, uh-uh and I’d rather not? I don’t know what about this nettles me more, the fact that I’m being asked to do marketing for someone for free, or that they want me to participate in the maddeningly irritating trend of native advertising. Again, for free.
June 11, 2015 — 5:10 AM
Jessa Slade says:
I just got something similar today. What annoys me most is they can’t even be bothered to autopopulate my name. Sheesh.
June 13, 2015 — 12:28 AM
njmagas says:
Aww, that sucks. The people who contacted me at least tried with my name, along with the obligatory, “your blog is so interesting!”
June 13, 2015 — 1:17 AM
Sheila says:
OMG! You had me laughing out loud and pumping my fist in the air, “Damn right!” Thanks for speaking the truth with such vivid imagery. Something tells me, I’ll never see potato salad the same way, ever again.
June 11, 2015 — 6:50 AM
Hawkie says:
A potato salad-filled jizz mitten comes my way and I am sooooo fucking out of wherever it hailed from. Thank you for protecting my sometimes insurmountably high standards, Mr Bear.
June 11, 2015 — 9:46 AM
Jo says:
So kindly said. You could have saved valuable pixels by just saying “Away with your spammy requests for endorsements, Internet slime buckets!”
I subscribe to your blog because you put the wordz together in ways that make me spew coffee on my keyboard. Bad for the keyboard, but good in every other way.
June 11, 2015 — 11:32 AM
Kate says:
I am a lurker. This post finally got me to step out of my dark typing hole, which is odd because usually your rants get me to nod while I read. (Note: I did not write “nod off.”) But I had spaghetti for dinner night. Too much of it. After reading this and my pasta hangover, now I want spaghetti banished to orbiting Hebrides for proper disposal.
My NYT headline feed just posted this: “Russian Groups Crowdfunded the War in Ukraine.” You might have unwittingly turned down a chance to pay for a war. How many writers get to do that? Turn it down, I mean. Anybody can pay for a war. We do it all the time. Pretty much every year I’ve been alive it seems. But I digress.
Another great post. Tone is everything and your ear seems pitch-perfect to me.
But did you have to mention potato salad in June? Please no turkey references in November or we’ll all have to bail on the bird. That includes stuffing, if you’re going to parse the request. Especially oyster stuffing.
June 11, 2015 — 12:56 PM
terribleminds says:
Holy crap. Link to that article?
June 11, 2015 — 1:07 PM
Kate says:
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/06/12/world/europe/russian-groups-crowdfund-the-war-in-ukraine.html?src=se
June 11, 2015 — 2:38 PM
angelacavanaugh says:
I just want to say that I appreciate your blog. I’ve learned a lot here, and your Flash Fiction Friday really got me up and running, opened my creativity, and also taught me to write tighter. It’s great to see your subscriber numbers. I was just noticing that it’s nearly doubled since I started coming to your site. Thanks for all you do.
June 13, 2015 — 2:43 AM
W.R.Gingell says:
I think my favourite part in this whole thread was the bit about “upchuck”
Maybe I’m still 12, too 😀
June 14, 2015 — 8:56 AM
Ink Hopp says:
Chuck. I love your brain vomit.
June 14, 2015 — 11:58 AM
Spencer Ellsworth says:
Full disclosure: I bought a box of steaks from a door-to-door meat salesman. They were delicious.
June 15, 2015 — 1:36 PM
Lindy Moone says:
Well said. Got it. Also got scorpion story:
Bottom of the pool. Three days. Finally fish it out, pat it dry, figure it will be fun to keep around. Last minute before bed, decide to put it in antique clear plastic cassette tape cover. (Cassette player had died years before; why did we still have cassettes?) Morning comes… and what’s that sound? ITS LITTLE LEGS AND BITS SCRAPING AND TINKING AGAINST THE… Yep. It’s alive. And feisty. THREE DAYS AT THE BOTTOM OF THE FRICKEN’ POOL. And we patted that sucker dry.
Took it up into the hills and set it free. You live at the bottom of a pool for three days, you’ll get a pass, too.
June 21, 2015 — 2:02 AM