To be honest, I believed
it was going to be worse. There’s an encouraging beginning. Is there anyone still out there? Actually, in a way, it would have been better
if it had been worse; I’d have had a more definitive example of what I did wrong. The fact that it’s not terrible is instructive
in itself, demonstrating that an
established professional can gussy up a pig.
Or a dog, depending on which is your animal of choice when labeling
“ugly.”
“Like there’s any comparison. Did they do Best in Show about pigs?”
(Do I need to identify who’s talking?)
I had been putting off writing yesterday’s post for some
time, confident – thus proving that you can be confident about being unconfident
– that in the immortal words of Jimmy Durante, I would “stink up the place.” I also knew, being a servant to my creative
impulses, that I would inevitably make the effort.
I had already written concerning the relationship between
chemical stimulation – Read: drugs of all varieties – and greatness. I wondered equally about it’s motivational
sidekick: Obsessive ambition and greatness.
My personal biography reflects neither addiction nor
laser-like ambition. But also,
disappointingly, no greatness. Was there
a connection, I wondered? Or was it simply
that I was inherently “good” but not exceptional? I voted for “connection.” Who wouldn’t?
There was no doubt I would write about this. The only question was “How?”
I decided to write a dialogue. Two talented practitioners with contrasting
approaches – one, gifted but sensible, the other, Darwinially obsessed.
The problem was, your humble chronicler was “light years”
from being objective. Which was the hindering
obstacle from the get-go. How do you
write something literarily successful when your thumb is transparently pressing
on the scale?
The answer is, you can’t.
The writer’s prejudice is exposed in every selection they
make. Starting, in this case, with the
colors. Did you notice? I made the guy on the “wrong side” a vituperative
“Red”, the representative of my
views, a relaxing “Blue”. I had not yet delivered
a syllable and I was already tipping my hand.
Choosing a racket I knew nothing about – the culture of
concert pianists – guaranteed that my effort would be blissfully “experience
free”, opening the door to unlimited caricature. “Rule Number One” in dramatic delineations
– “Never write ‘Types.’” (Unless you’re a polemicist. No one expects polemicists to be
multi-dimensional. Or funny. “Burn it to the ground!” has never gotten a
laugh.)
Two.
I went immediately “over the top”, having my monomaniacal
character wearing protective gloves while drinking coffee. I know it’s comedy, but was I perhaps
prematurely – and shamefully unsubtly – going for the “ha-ha”?
I made the character reflecting my views deliberately
likable (“I wish you luck on that”), the single-minded character sarcastic ({“Practicing} eight hours a day is
great… if your lifetime objective is ‘Honorable Mention’”), cold-hearted ({MOCKINGLY}”… “‘a balanced life’ – Like
anyone will ever remember you for that!”)
and Machiavellianly pernicious (purchasing his competitor’s neighbors noisy
animals, tossing a disruptive “monkey wrench” into his practicing.)
Any question whose side I was on? Any way my unbalancing bias made the material
more enjoyable?
Oh yeah, and there’s this.
The two characters, portrayed as hardly strangers, interact
as if they have never talked to each other before. I suppose I could have identified this “coffee-date”
as a “first encounter”, but I didn’t, which is sloppy. What I am left with is… well you know how the
two cops walk into the station house after a long drive together, exchange
dialogue you would think would have
happened in the car, like…
“Did you notice the guy’s hands were shaking?”
Shouldn’t they have already said that? Ditto in this case. Colleagues speaking unrealistically for
purely expositional purposes…
“How many hours do you practice?”
That’s a “D-minus” in Writing Class.
Oh, and that “breaking the ‘Fourth Wall’” ending – “I guess
Earlo was teaching us a lesson”?
After hitting the “Bad
Guy” with a garbage truck?
Can anyone say “desperate”?
Conclusion (Which I was already aware of but I fell
into the trap anyway): You are doomed
from the get-go when you are stacking the deck.
And neither teach nor entertain when you are “sledgehammering
the message”.
I have dutifully learned my lesson.
(WITH SERLING-LIKE EARNESTNESS) “Message to aspiring writers:
“Do not let this happen to you.”
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