Ken Levine, of bykenlevine
renown, has graciously invited me to appear on one of his upcoming podcasts.
Which is flattering.
And exciting.
And, I believe, there is a free lunch involved.
So it’s good.
Except that I am viscerally reluctant to talk about what I
do.
Which is a problem, because what else would he want me to do
on his podcast?
Sing?
That would be great.
But seemingly unlikely.
Here’s a secret. I
may have mentioned it before. Which makes
it no less of a secret, only a frequently
repeated secret. Of course, if I frequently repeat it, how much of a secret can it
actually be?
Thank you for taking that little trip to nowhere with me.
Here’s the thing.
Most of the time, I have little to no idea what I am doing
here, by which I do not mean what I am doing on this planet, which is also a
mystery, I mean what I am doing in this particular exercise, though the opaqueness speaks equally to writing in general.
Five days a week, I write blog posts. And – no false modesty – I truly do not know
where they are coming from. Or how they evolve
into publishable posts. Yes, there is
some “experienced writing ability” involved.
But mostly, the process happens mysteriously without me.
Here’s the thing.
I have a pile of jotted-down “notions” messily stacked on
top of my (newly invigorating “Stand-Up”) desk.
Some of them work out. Others, I
eventually throw away, with an exasperated, “What exactly was I thinking when I scribbled these notes?”
Many ideas just sit there, sometimes for months, suffering
the precarious limbo between “Top of my (‘Stand-Up’) desk” and the wastebasket. With these, though I am unclear on how to
successfully execute them, I maintain a “McCawber”-like hope that something, eventually,
will turn up.
The thing is, as with where the original ideas come from,
when the way to successfully “lay it out” ultimately materializes, I am
entirely clueless as to its generating origin.
I am also amazed. The most exhilarating thing about writing is
surprising yourself, which is realizable
only if that surprise is not
emanating from you. At least, not the conscious you, which sits there passively, a passenger, waiting for
a bus.
I assure you, it’s not me – at least not entirely me – doing this stuff.
Who exactly is my “collaborator”?
I have no idea.
But whoever it is,
Thank you.
The thing is – a third time, though I would have to go back
and count and I don’t feel like it –
Since what I regularly receive from “outside” bears
similarities to a gift, like with the head honcho “Coffisto” who inexplicably gives
me “VIP Treatment” at Groundwork Coffee
Emporium – today, for no apparent reason, he knocked seventy-five cents off
my “Venice Blend ‘Pour-Over’” – I have no fathomable understanding of how it started,
and no control over an abrupt “Cut-off.”
As such, I feel, generically, out of control.
Since “It’s not (essentially) me, it’s “Them” – and I want
to continue doing this – I live life,
fearful of angrying the beneficent “writing gods.”
I inadvertently take undue credit, and it’s, like,
“You think it’s you? Well watch this!”
And it’s blogatorial “Game Over.”
Possibly forever.
My “protective position”, therefore, is to let things
naturally unfold, remaining abstemiously “Shtum”
(silent), to the point where I am leery
of telling anyone to check out my blog, worried my egoish “self-promotion”
triggers a crippling backlash.
You would think after ten years of blog writing, I would
have developed some confidence. I have confidence. But only about the past. When it comes to the future?
“I would rather not talk about it.”
Leading to the problem…
What am I going to say on the podcast?
And why risk saying anything at all?
I don’t know, maybe I’m just afraid I am going to be boring.
But, you know… just like I do not know what to write about
and how specifically to write about it – until I do – maybe what to say on the podcast will just… miraculously come
to me.
Maybe I’ll surprise myself, and say something worthwhile.
I hope so.
The guy’s paying for my lunch.
2 comments:
Where do your blog ideas come from? An example from your previous post: You observed a movie star and her non-so-attractive waitress. In my experience, a personal experience or a concept on the media triggers a reaction, and from that thought an essay is born.
My guess is that when you and Ken Levine get together for the podcast (whether you get together in the same physical room or if you're just "together" over the phone or some other virtual "there" device), he will not turn to you and say, "Why did you come here and what do you have to say for yourself?"
What he will probably do is prompt you for things to talk about. Based on other Hollywood and Levine podcasts I've listened to, Ken will probably ask a lot of questions. He will interview you. He likes you as much as we readers of Earl Pomerantz: Just Thinking... do. He (and we) want you to succeed.
Ken has not asked me to be on his podcast and he is smart - I am not entertaining. I am not funny (in spite of how hard I try to be). And the big reason is, nobody knows who I am. You, on the other hand, are entertaining, funny and a well known and awarded television writer. You have insights into the entertainment industry, writing and the human condition. Now, you get in there and talk with your friend and make us proud.
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