Showing posts with label interlard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label interlard. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Bullet Point Book Reviews

Astute readers may notice that despite my protests to the contrary, participation has decreased significantly over the past six months. Productivity is at an all-time low. While this directly corresponds to real life class changes, including prestige classes and grind burnout, it can't be denied that our blog is perilously close to entering that predictable "Sorry we haven't posted anything in two months" stage.

I blame myself. My dictatorial instincts have recently been focused elsewhere, and I've been suffering a crisis of conscience over whether or not content should be free. In general, I agree that free content is nice, as long as the providers aren't self-righteous about it. But ideally, I think their podcasts, blogs, v-logs, and YouTube stunts should be ancillary to work they are actually paid for. Gloating over the death of a magazine that would pay you for the same content you give away for free is the sort of thing that, hypothetically, might classify your podcast as no longer tolerable. And it upsets me greatly that the guys from LOSTcasts put so much thought into their work while TV reporters at the New York and LA Times are paid not to.

But I digress, and use "I" more than I'd like. In the interest of keeping our blog alive for at least a full year, allow me to suggest some changes to for our review formula. Specifically, how we go about book reviews.

A book-a-week reader as a student, I couldn't imagine a life where time spent reading books would become a luxury. But here I am. As a fully-employed reader, writer, and gamer, I currently view books according to three criteria:

  • Time: Is it worth the time spent to read/listen to a book?
  • Money: Is it worth the cost of the reviewed format of the title (hardback/audiobook/trade/etc.)?
  • Wait: Is it worth the wait to get it at the library or for a different format?

Note that these are the same criteria I use to judge anything supposedly entertaining or enlightening, from Battlestar to Buddhism.

As a hibernating aspiring novelist myself, I hesitate to suggest that a book is not worth the time spent reading it (you can learn something from any book, especially the bad ones). But there's no reason we should treat books with kid gloves when we're so harsh with more collaborative media like television, movies, games, and porn. Yes, it's sad for Christopher Pike if he spends years (benefit of the doubt) on his latest adult novel, only for some interlard to dismiss it as a waste of your time. But it's significantly more cruel to bash BSG or Sakura Tales, something we do often. It's probably not Apollo's fault that Starbuck isn't dead, and Mika Tan puts a lot more on the line than Christopher Pike. His heart may be on the page, but you won't recognize his face at the mall.

I'm not advocating that we descend to 5-sentence book reviews, but I think if we keep time, money, and wait in mind, it might be less daunting to get book reviews up on a regular basis. We need something to write about until television comes back. And our 8 readers might appreciate suggestions on what else they could be reading when I get passive-aggressive and refuse to post.

Saturday, May 26, 2007

Next Week On Canned Food And Shotguns

I hate to write about blog business, but I suppose it's inevitable every once in awhile.

New content has been a bit irregular of late. Let me assure you that this does not represent a decreased level of commitment among our contributors. If anything, it's the result of being too self-critical. Few people may know this site exists, but we hold ourselves to pretty high standards nonetheless. Sure, I could post my gut reaction to
Spider-Man 3 (The musical parts everyone else hated? Aside from Topher Grace's Venom teeth, those were the only parts I liked.), but if I have nothing constructive to add to the conversation, what's the point? This was never meant to be a forum upon which we vented Interlard opinion.

At the same time, all our contributors have been going through employment fluctuations. It's an unfortunate confluence of events to be sure, but I trust our readers will understand that these things happen. When the dust settles, things should get back to normal...at least until August, when we decide upon the blog's ultimate fate.


In the meantime, I propose that next week is Whatcha Been Playin week. I have my three P's (Peggle, Puzzle Quest, and Paranoia) to discuss, and I'm sure Mr. Bile and Tom Foolery are playing something, otherwise they'd have commented on this post by now. Blogs that aren't this blog are encouraged to contribute as well.

Game on?