12.19.2007

Fuck You, Average Reader

From an interview with David Simon, creator of The Wire. As some people say, it's better to make something great that a few people love than to make something shitty that a lot of people like. Quality, not quantity.

NICK HORNBY: Every time I think, Man, I’d love to write for The Wire, I quickly realize that I wouldn’t know my True dats from my narcos. Did you know all that before you started? Do you get input from those who might be more familiar with the idiom?

DAVID SIMON: My standard for verisimilitude is simple and I came to it when I started to write prose narrative: fuck the average reader. I was always told to write for the average reader in my newspaper life. The average reader, as they meant it, was some suburban white subscriber with two-point-whatever kids and three-point-whatever cars and a dog and a cat and lawn furniture. He knows nothing and he needs everything explained to him right away, so that exposition becomes this incredible, story-killing burden. Fuck him. Fuck him to hell.

Beginning with Homicide, the book, I decided to write for the people living the event, the people in that very world. I would reserve some of the exposition, assuming the reader/viewer knew more than he did, or could, with a sensible amount of effort, hang around long enough to figure it out. I also realized—and this was more important to me—that I would consider the book or film a failure if people in these worlds took in my story and felt that I did not get their existence, that I had not captured their world in any way that they would respect.

Make no mistake—with journalism, this doesn’t mean I want the subjects to agree with every page. Sometimes the adversarial nature of what I am saying requires that I write what the subjects will not like, in terms of content. But in terms of dialogue, vernacular, description, tone—I want a homicide detective, or a drug slinger, or a longshoreman, or a politician anywhere in America to sit up and say, Whoa, that’s how my day is. That’s my goal. It derives not from pride or ambition or any writerly vanity, but from fear. Absolute fear. Like many writers, I live every day with the vague nightmare that at some point, someone more knowledgeable than myself is going to sit up and pen a massive screed indicating exactly where my work is shallow and fraudulent and rooted in lame, half-assed assumptions. I see myself labeled a writer, and I get good reviews, and I have the same doubts buried, latent, even after my successes. I suspect many, many writers feel this way. I think it is rooted in the absolute arrogance that comes with standing up at the community campfire and declaring, essentially, that we have the best story that ought to be told next and that people should fucking listen. Storytelling and storytellers are rooted in pay-attention-to-me onanism. Listen to this! I’m from Baltimore and I’ve got some shit you fucking need to see, people! Put down that CSI shit and pay some heed, motherfuckers! I’m gonna tell it best, and most authentic, and coolest, and… I mean, presenting yourself as the village griot is done, for me, with no more writerly credential than a dozen years as a police reporter in Baltimore and a C-average bachelor’s degree in general studies from a large state university. On paper, why me? But I have a feeling every good writer, regardless of background, doubts his own voice just a little, and his own right to have that voice heard. It’s the simple effrontery of the thing. Who died and made me Storyteller?

11.21.2007

11.19.2007

Snow Bunnies, Don Your Apparel

Looks like the Burning Dog: Pray for Snow Party had it's message heard. There's at least 5 inches of snow outside.

A big first snow is always nice.

11.14.2007

Optical Media is Dead

And Steve Jobs has declared it so. Or at least he will in January.

Rumors abound that an ultra-light notebook is coming from Apple in January. Certainly intriguing, as I'd really like a tiny laptop just to surf the Internet on the couch or when I'm on the go.

The big news here is that they will be excluding an optical drive for CD/DVD use. Sounds kooky to most. I'm unsure of exact dates, but I recall that Apple was the first computer company to ship a computer without a floppy drive on the original iMac. I can't even remember the last time I've seen a floppy disk. I definitely wouldn't mind seeing the DVD go the way of the floppy, though I think this will take many years longer. In some ways, I still like the idea of a physical DVD to take home and watch.

As one poster from the linked site above put it:

That's why there will not be any Blu-Ray or HD-DVD drives on any Mac Pro. The HD format war is over before a winner has been declared.

Optical media is SO 1990's.
This is Apple's trojan horse for their idea of completely removing any optical drive and distributing everything via digital download. They will be the pioneers of yet another kooky idea that in ten years people will proclaim as genius. I just feel sorry for all the movie rental employees, though I don't feel sorry for the companies themselves. For too long, DVDs have been too costly to rent. $4+ to rent a new release? Are you kidding me?

11.03.2007

Another Tease

A behind the scenes preview of season 5 of The Wire: