T 5706

She stopped talking, her point made. He said, In the future I’m going to be beautiful. But she knew there would never be a future like that.

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T 5705

First he wrote books, and then he did seminars and he got very rich telling people how to live. He’s happy. At least his third wife says so.

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LOL!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N81G-fI_oi8

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Two Weeks of Nothing: Random Thoughts After a Relaxing Vacation

Back from vacation. From possibly the most relaxing vacation of my life. You want to know what made it relaxing? Well, lots of things. But I stayed in a place with no cell reception. No internet.

No internet will set you free.

There was a television but I hardly watched any of it. I wasn’t completely unmoored. I just had to drive a few minutes and my phone showed a few bars. I still posted stuff. My kid and I are in a deep Pocket Planes game on my iPad and our aviation empire grew. But otherwise, I was off the grid. In the sense that I didn’t really know what was happening in the world and, for two weeks, I didn’t care.

Random thoughts:

  1. Vermont is enough to make you sense America’s greatness. Vermont is both simple and surprising, or can be, and yet fully a part of something much larger. America is not, of course, perfect. It’s not even close. But still.
  2. The America not being perfect part. Well, yes. Just before I left on vacation, we had Aurora and a shooting during a movie premiere and then upon my return, the shooting in a Sikh temple in Wisconsin. America had its original sin in slavery (and I’m not singling America out on this – I think each and every country in the world has its own version of original sin) and now it’s guns. I do not believe Americans are more violent than other people. But that Second Amendment is screwy, let’s not sugarcoat it, and the gun debate in the US is screwier because it’s not even happening. It is an enormous blind spot and to people from outside the country it continues to be a head scratcher (here’s a great post from a friend who was once pro-gun but can’t bring herself to be anymore). Gun ownership in Canada, to the surprise of many, is actually quite high. Something like 30%. It’s even high in Quebec, considered a province of pacifists (meaning no one from outside the province has seen the amount of hunting and fishing media this place generates). But our murder rate, or violent crimes committed by guns, is way lower. A fifth lower than the American rate. A few years back, Quebec City, a metropolitan area of about 600,000, did not register a single murder. Not one. Think about that, America. Something gives.
  3. I think everyone should read Gods Without Men by Hari Kunzru. I won’t say what it’s about (here’s a link to its Goodreads page) because the plot is secondary. I just think you should read it because of the writing. It is astonishing. I was astonished. Doug Coupland wrote a fabulous review of the book in the New York Times. It’s a good starting off point. An added bonus: Doug’s review is also one of the best book reviews you will read this year.
  4. I reread The Stranger by Albert Camus. I kept imagining a movie of it, but set in Texas, maybe near Galveston, or even perhaps Reno. I think America is kind of having an uber existential moment right now. Discovering, or rediscovering, the logical conclusion of the Existential argument, and its basic amorality, sets you up for some strange truths every time you watch the news.
  5. Quebec is having an election. The choice is between nationalist assholes, corrupt assholes who have lost all the courage they may ever have had, shitheads whose platform on immigration is about as appealing as the acronym of their name, and a party whose only elected member is a dangerous smooth tongued anti-semite. Lovely. It almost makes the American election look palatable. Not quite. But almost.
  6. What has happened to the political class and when did it happen?
  7. I can not understand NBC’s policy in terms of the Olympics. In some ways, I’m happy their coverage is so awful. If not, I might have actually watched some of the Games and my vacation might have turned out differently. My question to NBC: what year do you think we are in right now? You have this 24/7 multi-platform coverage and yet nothing of import is live. Huh? And on the topic of the Olympics, I didn’t think the Brits were going to pull it off. Even the opening ceremonies (the only thing I have watched other than yesterday’s 100m final) were kind of goofy spectacular. A perfect embodiment of Great Britain. Kind of like bangers and mash.
  8. Mother loons give their newborns piggyback rides. There was a family of loons on our lake. The babies were less than a month old. We watched them every day.
  9. I ate a fish so fresh I could taste the lake. I also killed the fish with a 2×4 to the head. The entire lake heard the whacks. I gutted it. The whole thing was kind of primordial.
  10. Jersey Beef. We talk about Wagyu beef a lot. Try Jersey. Wow.
  11. Speaking of guns and the Olympics: Syria. Don’t forget what’s happening there. Every time you think it can’t get uglier, it does.
  12. Finally. Facebook. Someone take it away. It’s just not worth it. I hate that I don’t have the courage to delete my account. I truly do.

I’m going to work tomorrow. I’m going to travel and experience new things and places. The world will unfold. It unfolds with or without us. We fill the air around the world with stuff. With noise. Some of it tremendously beautiful. We reach for Mars and dig up rocks and search for life. We are capable of some spectacular things. And we also have to learn that Sikhs in the US have suffered greatly since 9/11 because ignorant nut jobs think they’re Muslims. And no one says anything about the sad facts and ironies loaded into this reality. Or that nut jobs are hunting down “Muslims.” Because that would make every one uncomfortable. And we wouldn’t want that.

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Vacation Notice

Not that I’ve been posting much recently. Life really does get in the way. And I’ve said it before but I’m not going to post for postings’ sake. I don’t care what that does for my search or “findability” – those people that tell you to post to your blog regularly are giving bad advice. Because regular content invariably leads to bad content and there is more than enough bad content in the world. It’s full of it. I don’t want to add to the noise.

I am off on vacation. I’m not going to hear about shootings in Colorado, or the bloodshed in Syria, or whether or not there’s a famine in Somalia, or the killing of protesters in China, or more random bad stuff, always more, nope. I won’t have to watch and read the nasty stuff flying back and forth in the US. They’re threatening an election in Quebec and I can miss some of that bruit too. Does brutal come from bruit? Can someone let me know? Serious question.

I’m going to be in a cabin by a lake with my family and we’re going to swim and boat and hang out by the dock. I’m going to make cocktails. Perhaps pitchers of them. I’m going to eat a cheeseburger or two in a diner somewhere. I’m going to watch the clouds move past us. Listen to the wind.

Having said that, I imagine I’ll still post stuff to Twitter. Probably. Maybe. Depends on how good the cocktails are. And then, yes, I’ll jump back in to the noise. I’ll plug in. And then maybe make some noise of my own.

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Another Drunken Paper Puts Me on A List Made Up of People Who Tweet

Pity the Brits. Losing the Euro on penalty kicks (surely the most dastardly invention ever devised to solve a sporting event). Suffering through a summer of epic rain (no really, we all joke about the British weather but this year’s rain is breaking their records). Preparing for the Olympics with that English mixture of fatalism and indifference. And now, today: Andy Murray, Scottish sure, but still the country’s hope, to end a British drought at Wimbledon that goes back further than even the Toronto Maple Leafs’ record of futility in their pursuit of a Stanley Cup (donated to the game by a Brit, no less…) So what happens? The Brit get more drunk. And then an upstanding paper like The Sunday Times writes about Twitter. And not only that, but they put me on a list of the top 100 Twitterers. I mean, how many gin and tonics must one consume to come to that conclusion?!?!? Frankly, the fact they used the word “dude” in the lede is a hint as to their complete drunkenness if you ask me.

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The Story of the (My) Novel So Far

I tried to hit a home run. In that sense, it’s hard to find blame. I perhaps should not have tried to swing for the fences. Maybe I should have settled for a double. A solid single even. But I tried to hit a home run. They’re so much sexier.
What am I talking about? Anyone who has followed my ramblings here, or who knows something about me, knows I have tried to get a novel published for a good 18 months now. Perhaps longer. I don’t know. Let’s call it 18 months. I am on my second agent (or third but second trying to sell this novel). And really, at a certain point, I have to say, it’s not going to work. Because it’s not working. It’s not a bad thing to admit but it’s something that has to be admitted. The gatekeepers of the (American) publishing industry have looked at what I had to offer and were indifferent.
Here is my predicament, in random order:

1)   I’m on my second (American) agent. Wait. Third. But I say second for a reason. Hang in there. I went American for many reasons. Now who am I, as a dumb Canadian with one (minor) book of short stories under his belt, to try and publish with a foreign-owned American multinational conglomerate? Why should they even look at me? This is perhaps the most relevant question here. Who am I? Or more to the point: who do I think I am?

2)    And the agent thing is a story in itself. My first American agent, an old pro, and a lovely fellow, was not interested in my fiction. He was interested in what I do on Twitter. I said fine. The industry didn’t. We parted ways. This was amicable. I have an open invitation to return to him. Should I stop this annoying fiction habit. And believe me, it is annoying. (And no, don’t worry, this is not a “why write?” post though, honestly, I rue the fact that I have the urge to put words together to form sentences that aren’t remotely true. Unlike that last one. That was true. But then again, it wasn’t fiction.)

3)   I met my second agent through Twitter. We worked on my novel. I redid it twice (which would be, for those keeping score, drafts 8 and 9). And then I heard absolutely nothing from her. Months later, I tried to get in touch and she told me she’d left the agency she was at when we’d met to start up her own and that I was not on her roster. Then she accused me of being passive aggressive. It was an odd kind of experience. Frankly, it was a huge waste of time. But the editing I did under her was good stuff. So all was not lost.

4)   My current agent. Another old pro. Very nice. But he’s getting nowhere. And not for want of trying. I have listed some of the responses from some of the publishers in these pages. Some were nice. Some ignored me. Some asked for more material and then said they didn’t find the original material compelling. Some were dicks. Some suggested I stay with male editors. They were also dicks.

5)   By this time, a large sub-section of you are thinking: so self-publish, already. I’m getting to that, hold on.

6)   I have a call scheduled with my agent in August, after I’ve returned from holidays. I know what we’re going to talk about.

7)   Self-publishing is work. It’s a job. Full-time if you want to do it properly. Yes, today authors are at the center of publishing – they can control everything. The internet will set us free. Musicians have done it and now writers can do it too. But it is a job. And, frankly, I have a job. I have a great job. It pays me well (but if you’re my boss and you’re reading this I am SEVERELY AND GROTESQUELY UNDERPAID AND SOMETHING MUST BE DONE ABOUT IT). It more than holds my interest. And, most importantly, it is a full-time job. More than full-time. It’s so full-time it cuts into my bourbon time.

8)   The American thing. OK. I went American with this book. Why? The vast majority of my book is set in America. Let’s go with 98%. Perhaps 2% is set in Canada. There is a Canadian character in the book, a woman from Montreal. But the rest of the characters are American. Except for one dude from Japan. He’s important. Of the main characters, two of them are Italian-Americans. Why? Probably so I could write about Italian food. The book is set in New York. And Montana. And there’s a road trip between New York and Montana with pit stops in Kansas City and Denver. There is a sex scene in a service station toilet in Wyoming. (I’m going to post the synopsis that we’ve used in the pitch at the end of this, um, what is this exactly? A screed? I don’t quite know.)

9)   Why is a Canadian, and a brown-skinned Canadian at that, writing about America? Why not? You want to know what my book’s about? It’s about the pursuit of happiness. It’s about many things, sure, but it’s mostly about the pursuit of happiness. Which is universal. But also particularly American.

10)  Why did I call myself a brown-skinned Canadian? Other than the fact that I am, indeed, a brown-skinned Canadian? Because as a writer, that sets up expectations. My novel is not that Canadian. We’ve covered that. Canadian novels can be set in a lot of places but Canadians don’t like Canadian novels that are American. This suddenly becomes an issue. The fact is, I don’t really write very Canadian fiction. My writing is mostly urban and not really concerned with typically Canadian themes. (The who and what of CanLit is for another time, really, I have a headache.) I’m also not a genre writer. I write fiction. You might even call it literary fiction. Plus I didn’t write about brown-skinned people in the novel. I didn’t write about some brown-skinned Canadian Yuppie reminiscing about his grandmother making chapatis in some dusty lane in India. Why? Did I mention that many of the characters in the novel were Italian? Why? Because I don’t see characters first by the color of their skin. Or where I came from. Or where my family came from. Hell, where I grew up, over 90% of the population was Jewish. My high school grad ceremony was in the auditorium of a synagogue. (I was valedictorian. At the end of my speech I got Biblical and told my classmates to go forth and multiply.) I didn’t write about that, either. I rarely, if ever, write about myself. My life is really not the source material for my work (answering a huge question I get on Twitter all the time.) That’s the point of writing. You get to make things up. You get to invent worlds and people and all sorts of things.  Mmmmm. Chapatis.

11)  The other question, of course, is why not return to the publisher who published Squishy? That is a fair question. But they are small. They are too small. I don’t even know that they would want this work but mostly these are people who haven’t even managed to put Squishy out as an e-book. I’m pretty sure I can get those rights back soon.

12)   So I tried to hit a home run. It didn’t work. I would just give up but I don’t think what I’ve written is bad. But I’m not objective.

13)   At some point I’m going to have to do this self-publishing thing. I have a “platform” (publishers love using that word – authors need platforms! And I have one. You know what? I have more than one!). And I’m a loud mouth. I guess I just need to figure out how to do these things. The industry has changed. What a revelation. I think I’m trying to play by the old rules.

14)   A few days ago, on another blog, I asked this: Do all writers have to become content strategists now? I’m about to find out. Of course, the irony of that question, is that….my job that pays me relatively well (unless you are my boss in which case I AM AMAZINGLY AND EMBARASSINGLY UNDERPAID) requires me to be, um, a content strategist. It’s kind of what I do….

15)   I love this post from the great great great website Brainpickings. Some thoughts from George Orwell  about why he writes (if you haven’t read the book mentioned here buy it). Every part of it rings true. Let’s face it. Writing is a form of immortality. It takes a certain kind of arrogance to put your work out there. To think that what you write is worthy enough for others to read. The creative impulse might be misunderstood, or not understood at all, but there is arrogance at its heart. It is the driver. What makes you put that stuff out there. What makes you swing for the fences….

16)  (And here, folks, never before seen – except by certain publishers – is the synopsis/pitch of my novel)

 

Waiting for the Man is a novel about the pursuit of happiness. It’s about listening to the voice in your head, the one you know you shouldn’t listen to but you do, because sometimes that’s all that makes sense. It’s about how your happiness might clash with mine and the conflict that arises when it does. It takes place in a world where the private is the public and our innermost thoughts become fodder for the world’s insatiable consumption.

Plus there’s sex in a bathroom in a truck stop in Wyoming.

Joe Fields is a relatively successful ad copywriter in New York, best known for a campaign for a new beer he called Berlin (though it was not a German beer). But lately he’s been unhappy writing ads for diapers and detergents. And a strange man – who bears an striking resemblance to Starsky & Hutch’s Huggybear – has been speaking to him: In his dreams, when he’s awake, this man, this voice won’t leave him alone. And so Joe submits to this voice and starts “waiting for the man” on the front steps to his walk up. A few days later, a beat reporter from the Post, Dan Fontana, takes an interest in Joe’s story and a media storm slowly builds – to the point where Joe’s wait has attracted a crowd, the cops have shut his street and networks across the country and around the world clamor for the rights to Joe’s story.

Dan and Joe’s different ambitions and dreams form the basis of the odyssey that propels the narrative. Dan is both enabler and foil to Joe’s pursuit. And Joe is the same to Dan.

Following instructions from the Man, Joe takes off on a road trip in a sponsored mini van with a media bus (and Dan) following and documenting every aspect of the journey. Joe picks up a Japanese hitchhiker (touring America before returning home to the safety of his father’s business), has a very public encounter with his invasion of privacy in Indiana, and suffers through the horrors and humiliations of fast food along the way. The longer the trip takes though, the less the public’s – and media’s – interest and his quest to meet the Man ends in disappointment.

But he does manage to find himself working as a dishpig in a five star ranch/spa in northern Montana, where his advertising past leads him to a new and improbable job. Until his more recent past shows up at his doorstep…

Waiting for the Man is about the pursuit of happiness, yes, but it’s also about family restaurants, Kansas City bbq, love deferred, the Cambodian war, social media, the hospitality industry, farming, the death of traditional media, foreskin restoration, greasy pizza, the lawns of New Jersey, Japanese nepotism, French pastry, religion, Tupperware containers, the Blackfoot nation, celebrity, the American countryside, German tourists and our ownership over our own stories in an age of always-on media.

Arjun Basu is a Montreal-based writer and magazine editor. His first book, Squishy (DC Books, 2008) was shortlisted for Canada’s ReLit Awards and garnered favorable reviews from Canadian media and was recently released as an audiobook (Iambik Audiobooks). In 2009, he started writing “twisters” on Twitter – 140 character short stories – for which he won a Shorty Award in Literature. His twisters have attracted media attention from the likes of the Washington Post, NPR and Fast Company, among others, as well as media in Canada, the UK, Portugal, the Netherlands, Norway, Australia, Japan, India and South Africa, and have recently been published in two high school text books about new media by McGraw-Hill Ryerson in Canada. He has 150,000 followers. His short stories have been widely published. He is currently mulling over his next novel, a story inspired by a recurring character from his twisters. For more about him visit www.arjunbasu.com.

 

So this fall, we’ll see. I might try and swing for the fences again. Except I’ll do it on my own….

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Mursi Mursi Me: On Blowback, Self-Interest, Idealism, Long Weekends, Pain. And Bourbon

The world is disappointing. It almost always is. Sure there is beauty but overall, it’s disappointing. (The human world. Let’s make that clear. The world itself is stunning. Most of the time. Except on the drive between Montreal and Toronto. That’s the world’s worst drive.) It’s more disappointing for optimists. Or most disappointing. It’s probably least disappointing for cynics. Pessimists can never quite feel fulfillment. They feel satisfaction, perhaps constantly, because the world keeps confirming their view of things, but they are never happy. I say this because I’m imagining what it must feel like to be one of those brave people who called for the downfall of Mubarek’s regime in Tahrir Square in Cairo last spring. Politically, the result of the recent election, was entirely predictable. Of course the Muslim Brotherhood was going to win. These people had decades of pent up suppression to exorcise. But can you imagine being a young liberal, surviving the water canons and smoke bombs and plastic bullets of last spring only to see the Muslim Brotherhood win the election? Win everything? With the army, the army, basically pulling the strings everywhere?
This is what happens almost every time. The law of unintended consequences is the ultimate law in human history. How many Russians wanted to overthrow Communism and then get stuck with Putin?
We are all spitting in the wind. Don’t you think? I mean, think about all the effects, the myriad of things, that happened once the US and the West backed the mujahideen in Afghanistan. Against the Soviets. Think about that. We’re still getting spat on for that one.
This is not a political entry. It’s really about consequences. It’s really all I write about. The consequences of each and every decision we make. Intended or not. About the awesome march of history and how one little insignificant thing can change everything later. The Butterfly Effect. Yes. But also not. Humans are generally idealists. The brave Egyptians protesting against the Mubarek regime were idealists. Even though almost every semi-smart political commentator saw the election of Muhamed Mursi coming.
Idealism is easy. Thinking is hard.
It’s just that thinking isn’t all that fun. Idealism is though. Because it makes you feel better. It empowers you. It’s a way to find a tribe and then you can go yell at other people.
Some idealism seems benign. What are the Olympics but a vision of an ideal world? A very expensive, doped up, ridiculous vision of a perfect world?
Idealism doesn’t do anything for you. It’s just a blanket. But you can’t eat it.

Random thoughts:

1) I’m getting tired of people equating print with books. They are not the same. Ditto for magazines. Print is in trouble. Even profitable media brands are letting people go. Print is in big trouble. But not media. What’s happening right now is The Culling of the Boomers.
2) Every weekend needs to be a long weekend. I feel more productive squeezing everything in to 4 days. The three day weekend won’t ever happen, of course. Because everyone in Asia works way too hard.
3) Almost everyone in the world is in the business of selling something to someone. Have you noticed that?
4) There is too much serious in the world. I watch grown men seriously discussing other grown kicking a soccer ball around and I find it funny in a sad kind of way. Very few industries have internalized the ridiculousness of life into their fabric. Except perhaps fashion. Which is why Robert Altman’s take on it didn’t work (and you know why it didn’t work? Even the trailer is ridiculous. It’s so dated as to be prehistoric). The only serious thing in the world is pain. There’s a lot of it. Especially when we ignore it.
5) I’m not talking about country music pain. I’m not talking about the pain Existentialists felt while hanging out in the cool cafés of Paris. I’m talking hunger. Extreme poverty. That kind of pain. Jerry Sandusky victim pain (which was enabled, I believe, by what I say above – college sports in the US is one of the most faux-serious things in the world – and another thing: Happy Valley sounds more like a really great Chinese restaurant than the site of a large state college).
6) Self-interest is the second worst kind of interest there is. After credit card interest.
7) When all else fails: bourbon.

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More Random Thoughts (said with seriousness, and reverb)

1. I’m tired of people telling others what to do. Professionally. There are so many how-to experts. And then you achieve some kind of fame doing something (and that fame is usually completely deserved) and so you translate that success into telling others how to do what you just did. Because it was so easy? You diminish your hard work by making it into a formula. Think about it. But don’t take my advice. I’m not really offering any. Just opinions.
2. So, life coach. I don’t get that. You need a coach for your entire life?
3. The thing is, we have an enormous industry making you believe you need to be better and more perfect and so you know what you need? A coach. For what? Empowerment. What is that? I’m not entirely sure.
4. Women and men and funny? That’s stupid. I mean, the real question is which sex is dumber? And which one is angrier? Or sadder? Because I think both are equally funny. And stupid. For the record.
5. Lately I’ve been thinking of not doing the Twitter thing. I love Twitter. I just don’t feel like writing there. But then, I do. And I do it again. And again. I think they put bath salts in Twitter or something.
6. Last time I did this Random Thoughts thing, I said I was sick of the Euro song already. I imagine you are as well by now. If you’re watching. I’m still not going to link to it. But I think there is a connection between Euro-pop and the debt crisis. A very direct connection.
7. I’m starting to think, seriously, that the book industry has it in for me. My agent is getting perplexed too.
8. Humidity is the mosquito of weather.
9. That is, if you see the mosquito as useless. Or question its value. I’m sure mosquitos feed a lot of things. I’m sure entire species depend on mosquitos. As much as mosquitos depend on the blood of innocent victims. Someone tell me what depends on humidity. I’m sure there are entire ecosystems and thus global weather patterns dependent on humidity. I understand humidity is just water in the air. And we need water. Regardless, please illuminate me. I’m serious.
10. There is nothing more perfect than the full you feel after dim sum.

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Random Thoughts About Clouds, Dancing Writers, TV, Boomers, Beer and Serena’s Butt

Thoughts generally are random. That’s what makes them magical. Or at least interesting. The random nature of thought, or what some of us might call stream of consciousness, leads to the difficult brilliance of the likes of Joyce and Borges, or the hilarious (but studied) non-sequiturs of Family Guy’s Stewie Griffin. Wait. I think watching Stewie read Joyce would not just be funny, it would cause a worm hole to open up and for Spock to come back and not die again. (see what I did there? And I’m sorry). Or, look at the clouds in the top image. A bunch of random shapes creating drama and beauty.

So, in the spirit of Leopold Bloom or Stewie Griffin, some random thoughts.

1) I haven’t written here in a while. I know. And I don’t feel the least bit guilty.
2) I was in Malaysia on business a few weeks ago. If you haven’t been, go. If just to eat the food. I tried to eat all of it. I wasn’t successful. I’m going to have to return.
3) Anyone in the West who complains about an excess of materialism has never been to Asia. Ever. And, frankly, does not understand the nature of the world they inhabit. Or of human nature.
4) My novel, that thing that exists for no other reason than I had a random thought and strung some more random thoughts into something somewhat linear, was rejected by another publisher because it was “too quirky.” If I put all the faint praise from all my rejections together, I might have an extremely awful poem.
5) I have been thinking a lot about the nature of time recently, and what a crock of shit it is. Time is a human construct. It makes us feel important. It’s something to own and lament and study. And waste. For proof of this, consider the recent transit of Venus. Without making a joke about Serena. Or at least her butt.
6) Beer is a universal good. Unless you’re not allowed to drink it. Then, what I said is either gloating or irrelevant. (and never mind that some think that beer was one of the reasons humanity went for agriculture – though this sounds like wishful thinking to me)
7) Something might be happening with my Twisters in a secret kind of way. Could be exciting. More later.
8 )  I’m still trying to figure out if the book business is where the music industry was about a decade ago. It feels like that. Except that the manner in which musicians can earn money – by performing – is not really open to writers. Unless we all learn to dance. I can see the TV show now: Writers Can Dance! In this episode: Stephen King goes against Margaret Atwood! But then Amazon goes and buys a publisher – why would they do that? (my guess is because they can and I suspect they might do it again) – and takes a stake in Waterstone’s (a major book retailer in the UK) and, well, who knows? I don’t. I suspect a few things. But I don’t know. I wish I did. Now: Jennifer Egan dances off against Jeffrey Eugenides! The winner gets a three part movie deal, a diamond cased iPad and a new car! Yes!
9) I should write TV. I think I’m going to do that. All the good writing is on TV now. No. Stop. I didn’t say my writing was good. Please.
10) I’ve become like a touchstone, at least my Twitter feed has. For “writing short.” Look it up. Google me (I would add quotes around my name otherwise you end up with a lot of Bollywood – not that there’s anything wrong with that). I suppose it’s good to be known about something.
11) My kid, at 12, has become a teenager. In attitude. But then in a moment of introspection, he told me he didn’t want to be “independent” because that would make him into “an adult” and he didn’t want to become one yet. Of course, this all started because he wouldn’t make himself a snack.
12) The Euro tournament is three days old and I am already sick of the song. I’m not even going to link to it here. Its awful. Europe has a long and noble tradition in music. Why must everything from there now sound like the product of a broken synthesizer found at the bottom of the Danube?
13) You haven’t really lived until you’ve heard a Malaysian cover band do the Bangles at a bar called Waikiki overlooking a swimming pool in the middle of Kuala Lumpur. I think I was drinking Carlsberg. I wish I had taken photos.
14) Why do North American advertisers use British voice over talent? Do North Americans still believe a British accent makes something sound more classy? Really? Are we that insecure? The British stopped being classy a long time ago.
15) The troubles in Montreal. Perhaps you’ve heard of them. Here’s where I stand: I don’t believe education should be free – because it’s a choice not a necessity. Please don’t tell me it’s a necessity. if it were, every graduate everywhere would have a great job right now. Having said that, student debt is a huge issue and I think debt should be tied to income so it can be paid back in a way that is not crippling. Banks shouldn’t make billions on the backs of students. Something feels wrong with that. And here’s where I especially agree with the students: the corruption and waste by the universities is a real issue. The government needs to clean up their own spending before asking students to pay more. But how ironic that the students want the same government or system that encourages such waste to take on the entire burdon of paying for their education? The logic of that escapes me. Mostly, though, neither side, student or government, knows how to escape this situation. Neither side thought the other would be this stubborn. Both miscalculated. I’m pretty sure neither side knows how it will end. Having said that, anyone who thinks this is really about tuition is mistaken. It’s not. The tuition is a symbol but in the end this is not a protest over $325 as some have said. It’s not. If you think so, you’re wrong and need to stop passing judgement. Maybe go back to school.
16) And having said that, if you’re young and don’t raise your fist at the world, something’s wrong with you. Something is obviously going on in the world. There is a sense of the world becoming more and more unfair. This sense is feeding protests around the world. Again, I don’t know how it all ends.
17) Finally, the Boomers in Quebec told everyone “you can have everything for free” but never really figured how to pay for it. I don’t blame the students for saying “But you said we could have stuff for free” and then freaking out when their Boomer overlords take that promise away from them.
18) Boomers kind of suck. But Boomers in Quebec suck the most.
19) Don’t think student debt isn’t going to be a huge issue in the years to come. What’s going on in Quebec is just the start.
20) And just when you think the world is against you, you’re out walking your dog and you see this sight and you think, the world is lovely. How do I make it lovelier? (and isn’t that top image great? I took that from my plane between Hong Kong and Kuala Lumpur last week) 

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