Wednesday, May 07, 2008
"IT IS DIFFICULT FOR THE FISH TO SEE THE STREAM" - Persian proverb
As the merry month of May begins, some of you may have noticed I’ve been giving myself a bit of a break around the blog. The fingers have been a bit taxed these days as my schooling enters the final phase. I spent a goodly portion of last week preparing to write two papers, one of which topped out at 25 pages (about 6,700 words) and the other at a relatively lean eight or so (around 1,800 words). Needless to say, writing about subjects other than movies comes a little less naturally to me, so when I finished at dawn on Saturday morning, I was feeling somewhat spent. So if it seems like I’ve taken a back seat of late, well, I have.
But in case it’s crossed anyone’s mind, I’m not gearing down and getting ready to say good-bye to blogging, as two of my esteemed colleagues decided to do recently. That isn’t to say that I haven’t thought about it, and not just since Matt and Ray climbed off the merry-go-round. But if I accept that I can no longer keep up the pace of prolific posting as if I was getting paid for it—a pace that seems to inevitably lead to either exhaustion or possibly madness—then I suspect that, as someone said in commenting about the retirement of the two aforementioned excellent writers, the blog will being to stop running me and I will once again begin to run the blog. I’ve never had any illusions about wide-ranging readership; that this blog has a readership at all still amazes me. Yet it is a wide-ranging readership, as far as it goes, and it came from not trying to be an all-encompassing site where readers can catch up on all the latest film news, or where they could indulge in a lot of deep-dish thinking about movies. This blog came from my desire to write about what I found fascinating, and never mind the sell-by date on the product. I have only hoped that those who would be interested in what I’m interested in would find their way here, and that seems to have happened. So I’ll continue in the same vein and hope that you, Dear Reader, will find continuing reason to stay with me, even though it might be four or five days, sometimes more, in between posts. Just know that if it takes longer than that, I’m still around and will soon return. When it’s time for me to go, you, my friends, will be the first to know.
Speaking of which, I want to spend just a brief moment, much more than he did himself, acknowledging the exit of yet another fine writer from the blogging scene. My good friend Larry Aydlette, the whip-smart, good-natured force behind Welcome to L.A., has, like Matt and Ray, called it a day. Larry, as most of you probably know by now, is the entertainment features editor of the Palm Beach Post, and will not suffer for an outlet for his writing by any means by exiting from his corner of cyberspace. In true hard-boiled journalist fashion, Larry issued not a long interview-style announcement of his intentions, nor a mysterious one-line kiss-off to the form; he simply flipped the switch, the room went dark and he walked away. Larry has never been one for looking back—he never even archived the material that made his blog such an addiction over the last couple of years. (His original incarnations, That Little Roundheaded Boy and The Shamus, have long been consigned to memories of ones and zeroes, as well as all the great pieces that gave them life.)
I don’t remember the exact circumstances of how we met—Larry seems to have traced it to my linking to his blog, and his subsequent comment on my piece on Jonathan Glazer’s Birth. That sounds about right. But however it started, our friendship would have never come about had one of the two of us not got in on this blogging adventure. (We have still never met in the flesh, but that minor formality doesn't make me treasure the friendship any less.) He has been a constant source of encouragement to me, and he’s never less than willing to say what’s on his mind, even if we don’t always jibe in our thoughts. He promises that his departure is not a departure from writing—he does have that newspaper gig, after all, and he will still be lurking and commenting as usual, here and on the many other blogs he has come to love over the past two years. As Mac Davis once sagely advised, Larry is simply taking advantage of the chance to more frequently stop and smell the roses, which means spending more of the increasingly dwindling amount of free time there is to go around with his beloved family. As much as I’ll miss his blog, I would never begrudge anyone, least of all him, the chance to do that.
Thanks as always, Dennis. You know I feel exactly the same way about you. If it hadn't been for your initial support, I know I wouldn't have made as many friends as I have throughout the blogosphere. As I just posted over at Jonathan's site, I'm not exactly going away. I hope to make more time to actually leave comments on other sites, and as we discussed earlier, I hope to provide some guest blogs as soon as we get the lights and Internet hooked up in the new East Coast office...
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteI'm a little shocked by this news... Larry's a unique voice in the film/pop culture blogosphere and I sure hope he means it when he says he's "not exactly going away." Stay in touch, Larry!
ReplyDeleteI never really got why some bloggers feel the pressure to post something every day. There's no need for that if what you write is interesting enough. Speaking for myself: I only post when I have something to say or show. Lately, that's only once a week, and that's fine by me.
Peet, as you know, I used to torture myself with the idea that I had to post something every day or every other day. But as someone said to me recently, it all ends up feeling like filler, and then you're too exhausted to write the substantive stuff, or something else you really feel passionate about. I'm learning that one or two good posts a week are better than six or seven designed just to take up space, or to try to keep up on all the latest news (there are plenty of blogs that can handle that angle). When they're fewer and further between, and they're of good quality, then you actually begin to build some anticipation in your readership. But regardless of how many posts a week I do, I've often needed to remind myself why I started this in the first place-- the writing, which I never expected anyone to read.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the heads up on Larry Aydlette. I think I came across his blog through this site. I didn't know he was behind the Welcome to LA Site. Not sure how I came across that either. I was shocked today to see his site gone. I will miss reading him.
ReplyDeleteMaybe just short and sweet!
ReplyDeleteHaving seen Larry's transition from Roundheaded Boy to The Shamus to the most recent incarnation, I was less than surprised when I clicked on "Welcome To L.A." from my blogroll this morning and I got the dreaded "Blog has been removed". That's not to say I wasn't bummed, but I figured Dennis would have an update. So when I saw that Hopper painting I knew I'd find Larry's latest digs...
ReplyDeleteWhoops, maybe not. Damn.
If memory serves, Larry was one of the first people to link to my own blog and that alone (considering I really enjoyed and respected his own writing) was a big confidence builder.
Best of luck Larry...Any Major Dude Will Tell You that you'll be missed.