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Greetings!
On September 5, 2005, The New Yorker
published an extraordinary article called �In
the Kitchen: The Egg Men: How breakfast gets
served at the Flamingo Hotel in Las Vegas,� by
Burkhard Bilger.
Here's the opening:
Las Vegas is a city built by breakfast
specials. Sex and gambling, too, of course,
and divorce and vaudeville and the creative
use of neon. But the energy for all that vice
had to come from somewhere, and mostly it
came from eggs. In the early days, when
depositing your savings in machines designed
to cheat you still seemed a dubious
proposition, the casinos offered cut-rate
rooms and airfares. And eggs, always eggs.
What an angle! What a hook! The tacky city of
sin built on, of all things, the most mundane
of foods. What could be simpler, or more
outrageous?
Bilger builds his case egg by egg as he
describes, in a full seven pages that ramble
through culinary demonstrations, interviews,
and history, the kinds of breakfast you can
get in Las Vegas,
how much they cost, and how they�re made.
Throughout the article, Bilger showcases his
exquisite eye for detail and evinces a
ravenous interest in his subject.
But it�s this beginning, with its astonishing
premise, contrast between the mundane (eggs)
and the profane (sex, gambling, divorce, and
the neon that shouts all of it to the hotel
tops), mantra-like repetition (�eggs,
always eggs�), and chatty tone that grab us.
Now that's writing!
--Paula B.
Visit us on the Web at
writingshow.com
Contact us at
paula@writingshow.com
| Our 2007 First-chapter-of-a-novel contest |
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Our 2007 First Chapter Contest is now
open!
Download and listen to our 20-minute contest
2007 podcast here
First Prize:
- $500
- The two-volume print version of
Literary Market Place (LMP) (a
$299.95 value)
- An interview on The Writing Show
- Chapter posted on The Writing Show Web
site.
Two Second Prizes:
- $100
- Chapter posted on The Writing Show Web
site.
All Entrants Receive:
Dates
- Early deadline May 15, 2007
- Late deadline June 15, 2007
Winners will be announced on November 15,
2007.
Entry fee:
- $35 if received by our early deadline
of May
15, 2007
- $45 if received between May 16 and June 15,
2007
POPULAR CRIME FICTION AUTHOR C.J.
BOX, who writes the Joe Pickett
novels, will be part of our celebrity panel
selecting the winners from the judges'
short-list.
What We're Looking For
We want to find the world's best first
chapter of an unpublished novel. Above all,
you must tell a compelling story. That means
that you have to grab us so quickly, so
completely, that we can't stop reading, come
earthquake, fire, flood, or pizza.
Your writing will be judged on the following
five criteria:
- Story. Is it a
compelling read with a great hook? Are we
engaged?
- Style. Is the writing
smooth and tight, without awkward
constructions, extraneous verbiage, and
redundancies?
- Dialog. Is the dialog
natural and does it move the story along?
- Character. Are the
characters interesting? Do we care about
them?
- Mechanics. Are grammar,
spelling, and punctuation correct?
We�re not necessarily looking for great
literature or fancy writing. We just want an
absorbing story. The point is to write
tightly and economically. You don�t have to
write in a spare style like Hemingway, but
you must make every word count. And please,
watch those extra commas, capricious
capitalization, overuse of individual words,
and "it's" where you mean "its" and
"their" where you mean "there!"
For more information about the contest,
including rules and how to enter, see our
Web
site.
Sponsored by Literary
Market Place,
the ultimate insider�s guide to the U.S. book
publishing industry, covering every
conceivable aspect of the business
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| How to Write a Press Release, Part 3 |
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In the last two issues we've explored how to
write your press release using advice from
Paul J. Krupin,
Trashproof News Releases: The Surefire
Way to Get Publicity. In January, we
addressed how to
write the release. In February, we explained
when to send it.
This time we discuss where to send your release.
Krupin suggests localizing your story for
best effect because you�re competing with
fewer people than if you go national or
international. Focus on a person, place, or
thing �that is directly
involved or affected by your news.� If you
follow this advice, it�s easy to figure out
where to send your announcement. Check out
Krupin's
free media database you can search
geographically.
Other places that host media lists include:
Or, Google �media lists.�
Whether or not you localize your story, study
the media you�re targeting. Create a release
that meets their specific needs. Do not send
your announcement to outlets that won�t be
interested in your topic.
Once you�ve
identified likely candidates, ascertain which
editor is responsible for your subject
and direct your release to him or her. But
first, put yourself in their place. What do
their readers, listeners, or viewers want? If
it isn�t what you�re offering, figure out how
to fit into their scope or go elsewhere.
Otherwise you�ll waste your time and end up
in the trash bin. And what�s the point of that?
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| For Screenwriters: The Current State of the Film Industry |
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In the January 8, 2007 issue of The New
Yorker, movie critic David Denby
takes a searing look at the current and
future state of the Hollywood movie industry
("Big Pictures: Hollywood Looks for a
Future"). His thesis is that content on
demand is changing everything.
The studios have
started to
notice that the ability to get movies when
you want them, where you want them, and how
you want them
is changing consumer behavior and affecting
the industry's revenues and potentially, its
future, with some
observers
describing the situation as "a panic." In the
attempt to control runaway salaries and
budgets, the studios have been laying off
employees and cancelling projects featuring
big stars like Ben Stiller and Jim Carrey.
What�s going on? Denby explains that even
though 2006 box office grosses were up from
2005�s unhappy dip, the industry is facing
devastating hits to its revenue from more
important sources. (Ticket sales account for
less than 20 percent of total movie revenues.)
Specifically, DVD sales have levelled off,
cancelling out the box office recovery. At
the same time, the studios have been
investing in expensive new high-definition
technology
that may or may not prove popular with
consumers. Red ink is flowing.
But it�s more complex than that. At the heart
of the crisis is the industry�s business
model. Hollywood studios are simply
divisions of giant conglomerates racing to
keep returns high for investors. Because of
the enormous pressure to produce results
quickly, the studios create films they
believe will appeal to opening-weekend
audiences, mostly families and people between
12 and 25. (The more buzz generated on
opening weekend, the greater potential
earnings for the film over its lifetime.)
These movies, typically on the
dumb and unoriginal side because of the
target audience, which patronizes theaters
more than other demographics, cost an average of
$60 million to make and $36 million to
market. International blockbuster wannabes
like "King Kong," which open simultaneously
worldwide, can cost more than $300
million. Can you imagine that the $550
million "King Kong" grossed was considered
disappointing? What an amazing universe the
movie industry creates for itself.
With the stakes so high, the studios spend more
and more in pursuit of the magic bullet. As
Denby says, "Everyone wants the big kill and
the bragging rights that come with it."
He concludes, "So
there you have it: the business model
swallows the studio, which, obliged to supply
its conglomerate outlets and subsidiaries,
cannot prevent itself from repeating a failure."
Are these mega-movies what people want to
see? Not necessarily, but they�re the ones
the conglomerate parents think they can sell.
Meanwhile, people are making their own movies
and putting them up on YouTube and MySpace.
Kids especially are taking control of their
own entertainment, and, as Denby says, "may
be unwilling to sit in a darkened theatre for
two hours, submitting to someone else�s control."
However, there may be a solution to this
budget bloat.
Director Steven Soderbergh is touting a new
business model in which A-list talent works
for small up-front payments, deferring some
income and sharing payback, if any, with
studios and investors. By keeping costs down,
studios and filmmakers will have more leeway
to experiment and be less driven by fear. If
this idea catches on, there may be more work
for more people, but with smaller payoffs.
What would this model mean for writers? My
conclusion is that it would create new
opportunities. And that can only be good.
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| Writer�s Challenge: Build a Platform |
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You may not be ready to look for an agent or
publisher, but there�s something you can do
right now to increase your chances of being a
successful writer: build a platform.
What is a platform? It�s your reputation and
following: people who read your blog, attend
your talks, take your classes, read your
articles, subscribe to your newsletter,
listen to your podcast, and so on.
These people comprise a built-in audience for
your books, and prospective publishers want
to know about them. Your marketing and sales
campaigns will be built upon your platform;
the size of your advance will hinge on it;
and your long-term success may very well
depend on it.
Your platform proves your public
commitment to the subject about which you�re
writing. Since most outstanding publishing
careers are built upon expertise and
specialty, the more you can demonstrate these
attributes, the more you�ll impress agents
and publishers and the stronger career you�ll
build.
Don�t have a platform? It�s time to get busy.
Start with a blog or podcast. Or write
articles for professional and trade
publications. You might also submit to small
local papers or specialized Web sites. Build
up your clips, then capitalize on them by
using them as samples to submit to other
venues. And all along the way, find those
connections with readers, listeners, and
viewers. Answer their questions, help them
out, and stay in touch.
It doesn�t matter if you�re in your teens or
your eighties. It�s never too early or too
late to start building a platform.
Now get out there and start hammering! (Our
upcoming writing weekend is the perfect time
for a little "home improvement.")
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| Writing Show News |
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Our next writing weekend is March
24th and 25th!
All you have to do to participate is spend
three hours over the weekend writing,
planning your work, researching, or
marketing. There's no signup, and you don't
have to share what you're doing with anyone.
Join us for this low-pressure event in which
we all sit down and just do it!
Upcoming shows:
March 19, 2007. "Writing
the Celebrity
Memoir," with William Bast, author of
Surviving James Dean.
March 26, 2007.
"Ghostwriting," with Joey
Robert Parks.
April 2, 2007.
"Bookfinder.com," with Anirvan
Chatterjee.
April 9, 2007. "I Was a
Teenage Writer," with
Elizabeth Harrin.
We'll also be hearing from screenwriting
coach and creativity expert, Linda Seger, and
we'll be checking in with our reality show
subjects, Jean Tennant and Mark Leslie.
Have a question or topic you'd like covered on
the show or in the newsletter? Want to write
for us or be a guest host? See mistakes in my
writing?
Let me
know.
--Paula B.
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| Trivia Question |
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Last month I asked �Which language features
the greatest number of words?�
I apologize. I never should have asked this
question. At the time, I was looking at a
Wikipedia article that compared vocabulary
size among languages, concluding that English
is the most verbose, with more than 900,000
words.
Of course, I neglected to save or
bookmark the answer, and now I can�t find it.
What I can find, however, is a lot of dispute
about how words are counted. I should
have thought of that. You�d think a person
who writes books about statistics would be
more careful. Oh, what a dodo I am! (I don�t
know if the Wikipedia article has disappeared
or if I just can�t find it, but extensive
searching on the Web has convinced me that
the question itself is useless.)
However, I do have a legitimate question for
you this month:
Which literary work
inspired
physicist Murray Gell-Mann to propose the
name �quark� for a
group of hypothetical subatomic
particles?
I have saved the answer to this question,
which has a real answer, and will reveal all
next month.
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This Month's Silly Picture: Writing Show Host Paula B. in the Eighties |
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