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Archive for July, 2010

I loved the preview for this movie. An adorable beta boy (Michael Cera) has to battle his lady love’s (Mary Elizabeth Winstead) seven evil exes to win her heart.

I thought it might be a more kinetic Paper Hearts, but instead Scott Pilgrim vs. the World was two hours of an inside joke I didn’t get inside a video game I didn’t understand.

At first I just figured I was too damn old for the jarring, ADD-accommodating style of this movie, but maybe it’s just that I’m too damned out. This thing has cult written all over it in comic book bubbles, literally.

It did have good indie pop, though. And warm, grounding performances from the leads, plus delicious cameos from HBO’s Thomas James and Jason Schwartzman. Kieran Culkin steals every scene he’s in as Scott’s gay roommate; they share a bed even though there’s nothing going on.

I found myself annoyed with this movie. It wasn’t so much the comic book thing–my first Web site was an homage to Chasing Amy, after all–it was the video game thing. It was the way that after Pilgrims rivals were defeated (spoiler?) coins fell to the floor as if instead of returning to dust they were returning to bus fare. Or the way there was a Crouching Tiger aerial fight scene every ten minutes. Or the way no one questioned any of it.

I found myself wondering if this movie would just be a cult thing for the type of fanwankers who were surrounding me tonight, or if I should really be taking note of the jump cuts and stupid one-liners if I hope to make it as an author. I mean is this the way things are heading?

The practical adult side of me will be checking Box Office magazine to see the weekend returns so I can decide if I should start getting my narrative inspiration from video games.

I can’t hear my regular muse right now anyway. I have tinnitus from Scott Pilgrim’s quest.

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I was on a panel at the Baltimore Book Festival with Adena Halpern when Dating Amy came out and she was promoting her first book Target Underwear and a Vera Wang Gown.

Yesterday I read her most recent release 29.

It’s about a 75-year-old woman who wishes to be 29 for a day. She of course gets her wish and ends up hanging out with her granddaughter, experiencing life in Philadelphia as a beautiful young woman with no aches and pains, and maybe even has a chance to start over in love.

On the way she reflects back on her life. Does she have regrets? Of course! Can she rectify them? Maybe.

I read it in a day, which seems fitting since the novel encompasses a day.

Halpern lives in Hollywood and this book reads like a movie: fast-paced with a lot of snappy dialogue.

At its heart, 29 is a book about womens’ relationships: mother, daughter, daughter’s daughter, longtime best friend. It all works.

Most of all, it was thrilling to read a chick-lit style story with a septuagenerian narrator. Please, please give me more fun paperbacks where the main character isn’t a twenty-something. Although in this book she has the figure of one for a day.

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Hyperion has cancelled Displaced, the rebuttal book by Eat, Pray, Love author Elizabeth Gilbert’s ex-husband Michael Cooper.

Cooper told Page Six he finished the manuscript, but parted ways because of Hyperion’s “eleventh-hour demands” to make it more racy.

It sounds like the guy is well-meaning if a little naive. He wanted to talk about his human-rights work and says that the publisher wanted more controversy, so they parted ways.

Publishing is interesting in that it’s sort of a branch of the entertainment business. Meaning, I doubt his manuscript would have sold in the first place if it was just about humanitarian relief.

The full Page Six story is here.

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I just realized that tomorrow is kind of a weird anniversary for me. I left my day job a year ago and have been doing nothing but writing books ever since.

I worked on the first book of my paranormal series from last summer until around Thanksgiving, then put it aside and started the memoir that I am just putting the final polish on.

Apart from a whirlwind, college-student centric trip to Chicago, I truly have not done much else. Maybe a few dinner parties, regular parties, and faithful Sunday night television regime (True Blood, Desperate Housewives, Entourage, Hung, Mad Men, and the soon-to-be-cancelled-I-bet The Gates).

This next writing year doesn’t look too much different. I will get back into the paranormal book, Mad Men comes back on Sunday, and a few potential marketing-writing clients are started to chat me up, so perhaps I’ll be unofficially hanging out a shingle soon.

Happy summer.

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I think it’s weird when people take the going on XX dates idea, but it’s human nature to imitate something that’s even been mildly successful.

I think it’s really weird when people call their site Dating TheirName plus the XX number of dates idea, like this guy at DatingBrian.com.

When I named this site back in 2002, it was supposed to be a twist on the Kevin Smith movie Chasing Amy, which I love.

But when people call their projects Dating TheirName plus X amount of sport dates, it sounds like they’re just doing a twist on me.

Good luck to him, I’m sure he’s a sweet kid, but as George Harrison said about Homer’s barbershop quartet rooftop session: It’s been done.

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Loved this LA Times Magazine article on Mad Men’s Christina Hendricks.

One Mad Men underwear:

I have this little war wound—a blister from wearing a garter the other day for 17 hours.

On fandom:

I still get letters from people who watched the show—I get more Firefly than Mad Men letters.

Can’t wait until the season 4 premiere July 25.

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I personally don’t have a problem with the Ride-the-Ducks tourist boat. I would even go on one if I had relatives in town who were jonesing for a land-to-water tour of Seattle accompanied by a soundtrack that includes “YMCA.”

My friends, however, think it’s embarrassing that we even has such a cheesy attraction. The drivers yell things at locals walking down the street, and some of my pals are not amused.

There was something blackly humorous when, a few months ago, someone tried to burn the Seattle Ride-the-Ducks hub to the ground. Many joked that it was probably someone on the amphibious boat’s route.

It’s not so weird that the 50-year-old man who set the fire was a meth head who saw “shoes under his bed” and decided they were worn by people out to get him.
Or that he yelled at them to leave, and then left his apartment.
Or even that when he came back he saw “two people under his bed” and two more “people hiding under clothes in his closet.”

What is weird is that he ran off to the Ride the Ducks office where he worked and that he says he started the fire in an effort to call for help.

The damage is estimated at $70,000.

Today a Ride-the-Ducks boat collided with a barge in Philadelphia and two people are missing.

Is it time to actually vet the people who work for this company instead of just making fun of them for being cheesy?

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I’m knee deep in this memoir I’ve been beating into submission since Thanksgiving. My goal was to have it ready to send off to agentland on Monday, which is five days away.

I don’t think it’s going to happen, though, guys. That particular dream isn’t dead (yet), but we’re discussing putting it on life support.

I realized this morning that I have stumbled upon the answer to an age-old author question, though:

How do you know when the book you’re writing is finished?

I would say it’s when you hit that draft revision that’s not a huge leap up in quality.

Right now this particular book is improving by about 800 percent each time I do a new draft. That indicates to me that it’s not done.

There will come a day when it only improves by a few copy edits.

Sadly I don’t think that day is going to be Monday.

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