Archive for June 23rd, 2009

Why We Should All Write For Free (Sometimes)

First, a minor digression: in all the hubbub over the Gawker clusterfuck and that NYT piece, it was easy to forget just how damn well Emily Gould can put a sentence together. I mean, like, really, intimidatingly well. The same goes for Moe Tkacik. But writer-crushes are a conversation for another time. Probably while I’m lying backwards on a leather couch talking about my mother. Anyway.

In this lovely piece, Gould talks about why she writes for free, largely in response to this n+1 piece on online literacy and culture. It was an article we all bookmarked and really wanted to find a reason to agree with, but couldn’t because it  simply articulated the same formal and structural problems with the web we already knew. Thanks a lot. We need more pessimism these days.

But what Gould cleverly points out in this piece is:

  • ‘The Internet’ is not simply one thing. It is no more ludicrous to say ‘the culture of the internet’ than it is to say ‘the culture of the world’.
  • the internet is not a text. Gould argues that this is because you find what you`re looking for. I`d add that I think all texts ultimately act this way, but what’s different about the web is that it’s a network of texts and databases and cannot be understood solely through the view of textuality. You will find what you’re looking for long before you actually start looking,  because the web is not a passive medium.
  • writing for free sustains the really cool smart work you find on places like The Awl or, well, nplusonemagazine.
  • Writing for free and getting paid for it are symbiotic, not mutually exclusive ideas. Accept it. This is the new world.

To this, all I want to add is ideology. (Hear that sound? That’s the clicking sound of the Marxist brain implant they force you to get when you get into grad school.) There is a relationship between economic networks of distribution and the reception of ideas. No-one will pay you to say things that people don’t think they want to hear (but might after actually hearing them) or to say things that only a tiny number of people care about. Writing for free – coupled with: a) the web’s low barriers to entry; b) the difficulty in controlling flows of information on non-linear, asynchronous networks; -  allows you to say things that you otherwise wouldn’t be able to.

Of course, we all have bills to pay. I’m unabashed about the fact that this blog is partly meant to kickstart a writing career (and, in fact, is already responsible for starting it). But it isn’t just about creating a brand of oneself: it’s about writing for its own reward; of writing against the grain; and writing things and one’s self into being.

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Spinning Wax, June 2009

Spinning Wax is a new, hopefully regular feature here where I’ll post videos and links to music I’m enjoying right now. (I should note that this was inspired by Matthew’s Musical Box posts.)

You know, I thought I was done with Emily Haines and her shtick of “I’m a ROCK STAR, you silly 9-to-5 schlub!”. While I’ve really liked Metric ever since I saw them open for Broken Social Scene in 2003, it’s hard not to get annoyed by famous artists who lecture you about the ills of mainstream life. Trouble is, Metric are as energetic and infectious as ever. “Help I’m Alive” is the first track off Fantasies and, besides being much better than the first single “Gimme Sympathy”, it’s catchy as… well, something really really catchy.

Keeping with the Canadian music, Gentlemeg Reg are a ‘fey pop’ duo out of Toronto. The sound is recognisably Arts&Crafts and the track, “To Some it Comes Easy”, has that breezy, ragged vibe that not only makes it perfect for drunken summer evenings – it may just be my song of the season. (h/t to my pal Roxanne for this one)

The following video, simply called “Alice”, is a remix that uses clips and sounds from Disney’s Alice in Wonderland . It’s by a YouTube user called ‘Fagottron’. Um, yeah.[Update: it's actually by Australian electronica artist Pogo - see comments]  But trust me: you’ll be addicted to it. It’s like aural-visual crack. Less addictive, but equally fun is the same user’s take on Harry Potter.

And finally, the one song that cannot fail to make me happy when I listen to it. By renowned Punjabi singer Malkit Singh, it’s a reworking of old Punjabi folk song “Jind Mahi” that exhorts listeners to ‘hold on to their culture’ and, by extension, themselves. (Yeah yeah, I know.) If you’re not used to this sorta’ thing, it might sound ridiculous and weird and impossibly cheesy – but it’s not half as weird the fact that this YouTube user chose to pair it with pictures of phat cars. (Fun fact: the back-and-forth of culture between Vancouver and Punjab has resulted in souped-up cars with bhangrha booming out of them being a common sight in both areas. See – being an annoying, macho asshole isn’t just limited to one culture). Nonetheless: enjoy!

Have suggestions for ‘Spinning Wax’? Leave a comment or send me an email. You’ll find the address on my about page.

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