Sunday, November 23, 2014

Does Your Band Need A Movement Coach?

Does Your Band Need A Movement Coach?
Kevin-andrews
Kevin Andrews is a Nashville-based choreographer and movement coach who works with country musicians on their stage presence in addition to such activities as choreographing music videos. He's focusing in on a specific niche but what he's doing is a good example of what a lot of solo acts and bands need. Some artists have difficulty adjusting to the stage imagining that somehow just "being themselves" will make them look "natural." But the stage is anything but a natural place and a movement coach might be just the thing you need.
I found out about Kevin Andrews via an interesting piece he wrote about the top 4 ways country music can compete with pop music performances.
Being a choreographer for hire, he does focus on that element of what country artists can do to up their stage show but also discusses rehearsing the performance on stage and not letting your lighting become a light show. The latter works in other genres but not so well in country music.
In the following video he gets down to some very basic concepts for stage performance:
Play YouTube video
3 Quick Artist Movement Tips
Andrews says he's worked with such stars as LeAnn Rimes, Big & Rich and Alan Jackson. It would be really interesting to see those interactions but from the article and the video we can see two basic keys:
Maintain an awareness of how you're presenting yourself to your audience so that you're not cutting yourself off with the mic or inadvertently closing off from your audience.
Have some choreographed moves in place that you can draw on at appropriate moments without making your act seem totally choreographed.
Of course the details will differ based on the size of stage and your musical genre but a movement coach or choreographer might be just what you need even if you don't want any dance steps or choreographed material.
Much Of Movement Coaching Isn't About Choreography
Note Andrews' advice in the video about holding the mic on stage with the hand furthest away from the audience so that your arm isn't blocking your upper body from view.
That's not something you choreograph. It's more a habit you develop that you can carry through everything you do onstage. Because the underlying principle is to never turn your back on your audience and when you turn to the side to keep your body open to the audience.
Someone who's trained to view detailed movement can help you with that and point out the moments you're most likely to lose track of the underlying principle. But they'll probably start like Andrews with a very specific and important technique from which you'll learn concepts that you can apply throughout your performance.
Analyzing videos of your performance focusing only on the movement and presentations can also be of help. A trained eye can teach you how to see the details that matter without getting distracted by all the other stuff happening onstage.
Here's A Different Example
Here's a quick example of what an outside eye can do:
I saw a young rapper in Raleigh years ago who had a strong presence on stage and well-developed songs for someone at that level of the game which basically meant he had the potential to go further.
But he had this habit of bending one of his knees in time to the music and following through with his thigh kind of bouncing up into the air. It was a fairly large consistent movement far beyond tapping your foot to the beat. The problem was he was initiating the movement on the beat but visually speaking the movement suggested that the beat occurred when his thigh reached the top of its arc.
That meant his leg always looked like it was behind the beat which he was rapping to in perfect rhythm. It also meant that his stage show was characterized by that one movement.
It's the kind of thing his friends would say doesn't matter and he might reject as an issue because it felt natural.
But when was the last time you saw a pro with a real career distinctly moving in the same offbeat manner through every song?
I can't think of anybody.

Monday, November 3, 2014

Guest Post – What Drives You to Buy Independent?

OCTOBER 7, 2014 BY LINDAGHILL

With the abundance of self-publishing that’s going on these days, much of what we run into when browsing through e-books are novels written by independent authors–writers without traditional publishers. Being that it’s relatively easy to upload your own shiny new novel to Kindle and Kobo, and it’s potentially a free enterprise, everyone and his mother are doing it, with or without the talent to back them up. The quality of said self-published works is a fairly hot topic, but not one I want to discuss today. (Been there, done that, wrote the blog post.)
My question today is a little more simple: what is it that compels you to buy an independently published book? Is it the normally $2.99 or less price tag? Or is it something more friendly?
With so many self-published authors blogging on sites like WordPress, everyone has the opportunity to get to know his or her favourite writer on a more personal level than ever before. The way I see it, this is a bonus for everyone involved. Not only do the readers get to see, potentially, what inspires the characters and places they enjoy, but for the writer I believe it supplies the opportunity to sell more books. Getting to know an author as a person and not just the shadow behind the words we love to read is a treat. If you haven’t looked them up by way of the website they provide in their novels, do! It’s a situation that just doesn’t happen with writers like Stephen King and Danielle Steele. They might give up a little of their personal lives, but not enough that we can relate to them or get to know them as real people.
Do you “know” any independent authors – and has knowing them compelled you to buy their books? Is it the price tag? Is it to support the little guy in the big world of publishing? Or is it something else altogether that drives you to buy independent? Please, share your experience!
Linda
http://lindaghill.com/

A clear writing mindset: Quitting sugar and Google

A clear writing mindset: Quitting sugar and Google
by Alex
Late last month, I felt like I was in a rut, trying to finish a short story for a collection. I'm still not done, but I feel like the end is in sight after a period in which it couldn't have seemed further off. A few changes helped me get back in the right mindset.
The Internet is often portrayed as an enormous distraction for writers. Writers like Jonathan Franzen have even made a big deal about disabling their networks in order to get some work done. I can understand the impulse. But I don't think such severe blanket action is needed.
Instead, I believe that many writers (and everyone else, too) would be amazed at what life is like if you just give up on Google's services. No Gmail, no YouTube, and no Search. Giving them up wasn't too bad for me since I'm not a big YouTube watcher and find Search too filtered and customized, so I understand how this technique may not be that extensible.
Still, avoiding Google's endless abyss of answers is liberating. If I wanted to know something, I would consult a book or use DuckDuckGo if I had to - both of which require much more effort. Not having it there to lean on was amazing - I could just write or think instead of trying to sate my curiosity about an inconsequential question.
Around the same time that I went off Google, I went off sugar. Not completely, but pretty close. I don't even put sweetener of any kind in my coffee now. After I felt terrible for days (sugar really is a drug, and withdrawal is palpable), I eventually felt much calmer and happier. It felt good to just write and not feel the background urge to eat something really sweet, which would take away time and then set me up for a crash after the high wore off.
Being a writer doesn't entail being puritanical like this (quite the opposite, in fact). I might relapse eventually - low-stakes, since we're talking about Google and sugar, not something more serious - but it's refreshing to know that it's not that hard to upend your entire experience of the world with a few simple actions

Saturday, August 2, 2014

No work No Money 3

Well here we go again, with this segment of No work, no money. I'm actually surprise this is actually becoming a good segment on this blog of mine. But for real this is a bunch of s**t here. This will make the second time that I've been laid-off. I'm telling ya 2011 is ending with a bang, of bad luck for real, for real. So ending my official last day at my current job that was seasonal, which I was aware of. Yes, I am disappointed that it had to an end, but yet the problem isn't that it ended it is the fact of when I'll be hired back. At first it was a two weeks, to a month lay off. But now it has become to be two months. Which actually kind of pissed me off. Cause the way my boss had told us. We had work a slow, but productive day to come find out that everyone in my department had volunteered to work on Christmas eve, for a hour, or so. I didn't really care cause it was extra money in my pocket. But also, my last day of work. So basically, I'm not trying to have this ruin too much of Christmas spirit, which I'm trying to get back slowly, but surely. But I'm not going drinking my sorrows away. But yet there will be drinking going on. But after, New Year's I should be ready if not before then hopefully. This won't be another two year drought, like last time. This time its worse, with bills and everything. But I shall survive this, like everything else in life. So dueces, for now, and again I will keep everyone posted of what going on. And please give me your opinions, and comments. Later!!

No Work No Money 2

Well from the last post, I did say that I would keep everyone posted about this crazy ass situation. Which completely,and utterly f***ing crazy. Let me slightly recap what was going on. Ook now to briefly sum everything up. Ok I had transferred from my current job that was in Baltimore,MD, to Gettysburg, PA. Everything was fine until I was told not to come into work 2 weeks ago, to come to find that my current job had not transferred my working profile, or data whatever you want to call it from Baltimore to Gettysburg. So I was told to stay at home until the situation was settled. Now let me remind you that I had already worked 3 days in Gettysburg to begin with. The problem also was that if this wasn't settled I could not work, also won't get paid either. So I'm thinking that this was minor problem which ended up a BIG problem. So I kept calling the human resources manager throughout the time I was out of work. Which ended up being a whole WEEK. So of course my next question was of course. "Am going to get paid for the time that I did work ?" So what had happened was that they did keep track of my hours. "Thank God" cause if they didn't that would of been a whole nother story right there. But everything was cool, I did get paid for those days. But what's f****d up is the fact that whole time I was off there is not check coming for me on Friday after Thanksgiving. A time that I could most definitely could of used the money. Going on the fact that I would be working all or least a few days this week before Thanksgiving. But as of right now that's not the case. It's one thing that I apparently as of right now don't work on Monday's, and Friday's due to the lack of work that is not there. But now as of the date that I wrote this post, that I didn't work either which is usually a busier day. But same answer I'm use to hearing. "I don't need you to come in tonight." So for right now I'm wondering how the holiday work schedule going to be like in December. So until then I will keep everyone up of this situation. Feel free to leave comments, comments always welcome.

Rob Zombie Talks Insane Clowns and Crowdfunding His New Film '31'


MUSIC NEWS
Rob Zombie Talks Insane Clowns and Crowdfunding His New Film '31'

By KORY GROW | Jul 31, 2014 AT 09:55AM

Rob Zombie, who has directed movies like Devil's Rejects and two Halloween films, was uncharacteristically uneasy at first with the idea of crowdfunding a movie. But that went away once he realized it was a quid-pro-quo tradeoff. On Thursday, the director launched a campaign to fund his next movie 31, offering the sorts of rewards he knows his fans want. "People have come up to me over the years and asked, 'How can I get these props?' 'How can I come to the set?'" he tells Rolling Stone. "So I realized a crowdfunding campaign is not a guy on a street corner with a hat asking for money."

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Over the next two months, Zombie is looking to raise funds for the film via his new website RZ-31. The director is offering up a variety of high-quality rewards to people who want to support the movie, including autographed posters, a chance for Zombie to follow a winner on Twitter, a winner's name in the credits, a lifetime laminate to see Zombie on tour at any show and a gig as an extra in 31. Zombie will also offer selected props from his movies, including Halloween masks and giant crosses from House of 1000 Corpses.

The movie tells the story of five people kidnapped in the five days leading up to Halloween and how they must fight to survive in a place called Murder World playing the game "31." The game's rules require the kidnapped person to kill his or her opponent – a group of clowns called "the heads" – in 12 hours to be freed.

"I've noticed with all of the movies I've made that so many people get tattoos from the movie," Zombie explains. "When you love something so much, you just want to be a part of it. And that's what I think about this crowd-funding campaign – you can be a part of it." Rolling Stone spoke to Zombie about 31 and coming around to crowdfunding.

How did you get the concept for 31?
I was reading this statistic: Halloween is the Number One day of the year when people go missing for some reason. I thought, "What an interesting premise for a film." This is five people that go missing on each day leading up to Halloween and what happens to them on the 31st.

Clowns are a big part of that, apparently.
In some fashion, yeah. Very horrible, disgusting, violent, despicable clowns, which people seem to hate.

Are you scared of clowns?
Maybe when I was a baby or something. I remember seeing this Super 8 footage that my parents made of me at the grand opening of McDonald's or something. I was a little older than a baby and Ronald McDonald was there, freaking the fuck out of me. I didn't even know it was a clown. It was just a guy with a white face and bright red hair, and a stranger. So I was not too happy. [But] I've never had a fear of clowns. I find clowns fascinating. On one level, they're very entertaining and on another, they're incredibly repulsive.

You've said you want this movie to be gritty. Why gritty?
With each film, I try to adapt the style that I feel is applicable to the story. A gritty approach didn't fit the story of my last film, Lords of Salem. I wanted to do something that was a little more grand; a little cleaner cinematically. For this, I feel like a very nasty, gritty, guerilla-style approach to the filmmaking fits the story and the vibe of the movie.

How far into the production are you? Is the script done?
Yeah, that's done. We're going to start location starting in about a week. We're moving along. Movies have only two speeds: painfully slow and "now you're behind schedule." Right now, we're in the slow phase.

Do you have a cast?
No, we haven't started that yet. But we'll get on that pretty soon.

What is the coolest reward in the crowdfunding campaign?
Getting your name in the credits. If there was a time where someone told me, "Your name can be forever in the credits of Star Wars," or whatever, I'd be like, "Fuck yeah." That's pretty rad.

You're offering masks from your Halloween. How many of those did you make?
They're from one scene in the film, and I don't know how many were made exactly. Maybe there were a couple hundred. Each one was one of a kind. They're all handmade. At this point, some were destroyed in the making. Some were lost. I gave some away to people, because it was a cool parting gift when we ended the movie. But there are about 50 that I have left over.

You're also giving away some big cemetery crosses from House of 1000 Corpses. Where do you store those?
I have a huge warehouse, because I need a place for my stage shows from the tours. We were cleaning it out and I found this huge crate filled with these crosses. They've been sitting there since 2001 at least. It's a cool thing to get. If I was a big fan of, say, Texas Chain Saw Massacre, and someone said, "We just found the original chainsaw. Anyone want to buy it?" it would be like that for me.

Another reward is a painting you did of a clown. How much painting do you do?
I went to school for painting when I graduated high school. I paint now more than ever. I've just been doing a bunch of clown designs and trying to work out the makeup.

Beyond the movie, are you working on a new record?
Yeah, I'm in the studio right now. I got off tour a few days ago, and right now I'm already working on the new album, which we'll have finished this year. I want to have it done before the movie starts. I don't want to come back to the record after the movie. It's too long of a break. We have a ton of stuff written and, little by little, we're finishing them up. We're more than half done at this point.

Lastly, are you at all concerned about giving away a lifetime laminate to your concerts?
It does sound funny, right? "Lifetime Laminate." I see so many people who come up to me and say, "This is the 25th time I've seen you guys." I figure that makes sense. We still have many, many years left of touring. You can go, "Hey, why rush to buy a ticket? I'm getting in anyway. It's sold out? Not for me!"

What band would you want a lifetime laminate for?
Well, at this point with the ticket prices, the Rolling Stones would be nice.

Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/rob-zombie-talks-insane-clowns-and-crowdfunding-his-new-film-31-20140731#ixzz39CNJMMy8
Follow us: @rollingstone on Twitter | RollingStone on Facebook

Cant sleep 4

Well after surviving a terrible year ending to 2011, it is finally 2012. So January of the new year, starts off miserable. Not like I expected it to start off with a magic wand in my hand and puff. So I can wave it and all the bad things that had happened to me in the 2011 will all disappear. "NOT!!!", not here dawg, not in the least. But getting back to my story. I had moved in with a woman friend, that I was seeing back in September of 2011. But I had left my wife, in September as well. Because of some major problems that we were having at the time. So I had moved in with my lady friend at the time. And I had lived there until the middle of January, she had stated that there were problems within our relationship. So I had moved back with my parents, which I thought I would regret. But actually my parents had been very supportive of me. While yet let me remind you I haven't worked since Christmas Eve of 2011. While yet also I have not seen or heard from my adopted (not legally adopted) daughter. She is 6 years old now. Me and wife were talking when I could see my daughter, at this time I was living with my friend. But no sooner that I got kicked out of her house, and back to my parent's house. "Puff" here is my daughter, at my parent's house. Also, at the same time the period that I didn't see my daughter, my parent's have not seen her either. So when I moved in to my parent's house. My daughter was there for a visit for a few days, so me and parent's had thought. But we had found out that she had moved in with us as well. Her mother, my wife had said that she was coming to get my daughter, but till this day she is still here. Me, and my parent's believe that she (my daughter) is not going anywhere at all. So we gone through January still looking for work. I had went to the welfare office by my parent's house hoping to get some food stamps so I can get some food for myself, while yet bring in food for my parent's house as well. Not like my parent's need food or anything but it was for the thought that counts. Ok so after visiting the welfare office, I was denied of food stamps. At that time I was shocked, and mad cause I was going to school at the time. The welfare office had told me that if I was going to school, and not working any kind of job that I would be denied. My first reaction of course was "if I had a job, then I wouldn't need food stamps in the first place" DAH !!!! But all in all that had fell through. So from that point on I was more determined to find a job then ever. So as of 2-14-12 I had started a new job. Hooray, hooray !!!! for me. So I started this new job where my orientation was at 8 am. Something I haven't done in a minute at a job. But I sucked it up and got to my new job bright and early, thinking that I was getting out early, even though everybody at the orientation thought the same thing I did which was orientations don't take all day for no apparent reason. But in our case that day, so after 2 pm that afternoon our orientation was over. So we thought we were going home "WRONG". So we were put to work for the remainder of the day. Which was from 2 - 5 pm, ok so after I got through orientation. So I start working the graveyard shift at my new job. My hours are 10pm - 8:30am yes you see it correctly it is 10 hours. Something I have never done before until now. So I embraced this new shift with open arms, taken whatever is given to me at this time. In desperate need of a job. So after being there a few hours I had realized how ridiculously slow the time was moving. And keep saying to myself "I have to be here for 10 hours, 10 hours WOW!!!". This is so tedious what my job description is. But after a couple weeks of doing this I finally got use to doing the job. But it didn't help my sleep much. When I got off work, from day to day I couldn't sleep at all. And then when my days off came around then first day of my 3 days off. That's all I did was sleep all day, and all night. I was so use to sleeping for a few hours and then getting up to do whatever. Not this time I went to bed after I drove home from work. When I got off work that morning. All I did was sleep from the time I got home, for a few hours. And then when I did get up I got myself something to eat and after sat down watched tv with my daughter, to fall right back to sleep. And then after I put her in bed. I went back down stairs again to watch tv again, to do the very same thing again. Fell right back to sleep. I was very amazed at myself. Those days at work had knocked me the **** out!!! So again after working there for a few weeks my body got use to it. So I thought, so now recently I can't stay up all night when I off work. Normally I would sleep most of the day away and be up all night. Not now!! Hopefully this won't turn into anything real bad. But as always I will let you guys, my followers, and readers now what is going on. Later, Dueces for now.




Can't sleep 3

I have recently started a terrible habit that I hate. Insomnia, hate with a little passion. Because it like takes almost forever me to get rid of for me. Well it started like this I was off work this morning I don't remember when it was but it really doesn't really matter just the fact that it was in the month of December. So anyway getting back to my random thought, my girlfriend wanted me to go with her to see her 6 year old son in a play that his kindergarten class was doing at a senior citizen home where we live at. And I agreed to go. So I decided to stop at Sheetz, if anyone doesn't know its a convenient store/ gas station. So I went in a got Red Bull so I wouldn't fall asleep during his play so I drank it, and watched his play. And if anyone wanted to know he played "Max" the dog in the play "How the Grinch stole Christmas" by Dr. Suess well at least the book is. But anyways, the play was great, and he was adorable in the play. But the point is that after all that I could not get to sleep til at least 2 in the afternoon that day. Which kinda made me mad. And every since then I have been up ever since then after I get off from work in the morning. But with me not working now maybe I can break that cycle up, you can read that post in "No work, no money 3". Last time I had this problem, I was working with a friend of my ex-wife's boyfriend, and at that time, I was in between jobs then too, but this was like almost over 10 years ago. At that time me, and him and his other co-workers of his would always stop at 7-eleven to get drinks and etc. So what I always did was get at least two bottles of ice tea with gen sing in it. And I had drank them faithfully for a month, the length of time I was doing roofing jobs before I found out that this is not my line of work. So yea I had energy for the whole day, and was tired and slept during the night until the next morning. But what I didn't realize was that it stayed in my body, even when I stopped drinking it. So I think it took me like 2 to 3 months for my body to stop reacting to the gen sing from the tea. So that's my story about me drinking anything like Red Bull, so hopefully this will end soon. Since now that I have the time to let my body rest. So as usual please leave me your comments on this post. Or on any other post that I have. So Dueces for now later.

Can't sleep

I can't believe this back in June of this year. I had finally started a new job, from being laid off for over 2 years, in Baltimore. And in the midst of all this. I had moved an hour an half away. So I started having trouble getting back and forth to work everyday, living an hour an half away who wouldn't! , along being sent home on a regular basis. Due to not enough work.
Now the more f'd up part is that I had transferred closer to where I live now, and a better commute back and forth to work. But yet at the same time the building that I work at. Doesn't have the work either. So I ask this: what was the difference between working in Baltimore, and where I work at now? They both don't have the work. The other f'd up part that I can't sleep cause I'm worried if I'm going to work that morning, or not. And then once I have found out that I'm not working, then I can't sleep to save my life. What to do, what to do.

Can't sleep 2/ No Work No Money 1


well, like I said in the title this continued after I got up from having a couple hours of sleep that I did get. So I human resources at my current job and they told me since I left the previous building in Baltimore. the current building( remind you I just transferred building not the job itself.) But anyway the point being all the information that was in Baltimore for me working there,was supposing transferred to the building. But. Human resources told me that they can't put the fing information in there computer system. Which also since I not in there system I can't work, which also means I don't get paid. Specially since I did work three days last week. So I asked a question that really couldn't be answered by human resources. Which was "So If you guys can't get the problem fixed, then what?" The woman on the phone sounded like the cat had got her tongue, so the only I got was that they definitely try to get the problem solved by today sometime, and if it wasn't fixed by Friday. That they would try to write me a check for the hours that I did work. Hopefully, by Friday all this crap will be settled. So until next time I keep everyone posted on what's going on. Later.

Some Old Post

I had an idea about bringing up, and republishing some old posts that I have that I never posted on this web page. But if you have followed my other blog page "Studio 1215 News" here on Wordpress, you may have seen and read these before but anyway I'm bringing them here to this new blog page of mine for everyone to enjoy. All these posts had been around March - December of 2011.

Sunday, June 29, 2014

The Big Problem Equity Crowdfunding Platforms Face


The Big Problem Equity Crowdfunding Platforms Face
Posted on January 7, 2014 by Michael Ibberson Updated January 7, 2014


Equity crowdfunding platforms encounter several challenges. The SEC knows this better than most, but there are more than just regulations standing in the way of this industry. While investors and project creators must tread carefully when raising capital, the many portals online face several obstacles of their own.

Once such challenge has been called the “Due Diligence Dilemma.” In the US, most equity crowdfunding platforms have a very low project acceptance rate — anywhere from 1-5% — meaning that portals must perform a substantial amount of due diligence in order to approve only a handful of applicants per few hundred. While this, in itself, poses a great amount of work, the real trouble may lie in the illusion of safety that results.

Portals with very low acceptance rates appear as the smarter investment compared to those with lenient filters. If investors believe that portals have done the due diligence for them, they may feel less inclined to conduct research themselves. Although this will not be a concern for seasoned investors, it’s a problem for those entering the market for the first time. If start-ups on a portal fail, investors may blame the website for their losses, generating poor publicity, which, in crowdfunding, is a huge deal.

On the flip side of things, portals may find difficulties raising awareness for certain campaigns since many start-ups try to hide from the public while in a volatile state. Although this would inevitably lead to the campaign’s failure, it’s still a situation portals and crowdfunders must both consider before moving forward. Determining the readiness of a given project will be important as competition between platforms increases.

Since reputation plays such an important part in a portal’s success, attracting investors who will put these worries to rest is paramount. Finding the balance between a healthy start-up and investor population is not so easy, however. Without a large population of investors, crowdfunders see no chance of success, and without enough lucrative projects, investors look elsewhere. As equity-crowdfunding portals scan more and more traffic to achieve this balance, things may get overwhelming. How they handle their due diligence under such circumstances will become a leading factor for industry success.


The art of cliffhangers






It is an undeniable truth: a reader’s emotions are at the mercy of the author.



And a cliffhanger is a pretty infallible way to pull strong emotional reactions from readers. We’ve all run into a cliffhanger: an abrupt ending or a thrilling plot twist during a moment of elevated drama, introduced to maintain suspense.



Cliffhanger-induced emotions range from elated anticipation for the next installment of the story, to pleasant introspection on subtext, frustration for the prolonged suffering of a character, and even blind rage at a cruelly timed cutoff.



Any of the above reactions could be part of a writer’s devious plan to entertain readers. It’s a strong literary device when well written. But unless it serves some vital purpose, anger should not be the emotional goal for writers.



Endings, regardless of closure, often stay foremost on our minds when recalling a finished book, so it’s important to leave readers with a good impression. Cliffhangers need to be employed wisely and craftily.



Done well, cliffhangers are a great strategy to keep readers engaged, quickly turning to the start of a new chapter. They’re also a strong marketing tactic, driving readers to purchase the next installment of a series. A great cliffhanger leaves the reader excited, anxious, even desperately craving, to know what happens next. Most of the time, it works in the author’s favor, like those on this list.



Done poorly, it leaves readers unfulfilled and with too many unanswered questions: Did the author intend to do that? Did I miss something? Am I supposed to draw my own conclusions? Why would that character do such thing? Or—most commonly asked, especially after chucking said book with bad cliffhanger at the nearest wall—that’s it? Why would this author play so callously with my emotions this way?



For a book ending on a cliffhanger, yes, it does play with readers’ emotions in the last few pages. That’s simply the nature of the beast. However, it also needs to respect the first 300-or-so pages that have built up to this thrilling ending. Why follow the characters through all the ups and downs, page after page when we don’t receive a reward?



Readers don’t appreciate feeling frustrated and dissatisfied. They want to know all the work they’ve put into reading your book was worthwhile.



A cliffhanger employed in a series can be appropriately timed and reveal just enough new information to tease the next book, while still tying up each individual installment. The key is to thoroughly strategize an overarching plot line to connect all of the books, while developing a self-contained plot in each installment. That way, you leave the reader with enough answers to have a [mostly] complete and satisfactory ending with each book.



Using cliffhangers at the end of a chapter is also a stellar technique—they are page-turners. Ending the chapter by sending your character to bed is fine if it the closing of the scene calls for it—but let’s face it, it doesn’t drive your reader to the next chapter.



Cliffhangers lead readers to the next chapter and call up that infamous internal promise to read “just one more chapter” before they go to bed. Chapter cliffhangers need to be used sparingly, though. Consistent abrupt endings only leave readers exhausted; readers still feel smaller cycles of anticipation and closure throughout the novel.



Bottom line: writers need to ask themselves if their story is being fair to their readers.



Sloppy writing, easy outs, vague story endings, and cheap selling tactics do not make the cut or readers’ approval. Be sure to tie up as many loose ends as possible and give readers some sense of fulfillment and closure. Otherwise you risk losing your readership.



How do you define a good cliffhanger? Read any lately that left you happy or frustrated?




Solving the Riddle of Discoverability



Brooke Kinley Adventures
Journalist. Adventurer. Sister. Outdoorswoman.

Solving the Riddle of Discoverability by AS Bond

As a new self published author, I quickly realized that the main challenge facing me in selling my books is ‘discoverability’. Or, in other words, making your book stand out and be seen; a particularly difficult task when you don’t have a major publisher getting reviews on your behalf in national newspapers, or buying window space in Waterstones. That’s where BooksGoSocial.com helped me, but it’s a part of a very big puzzle. Book marketing for yourself is a time consuming, difficult and even creatively challenging, but ultimately of course, very rewarding.

Patriot, A Brooke Kinley Adventure is my first self published novel, I was surprised at just how much hard work is involved! I’m not even talking about writing it; that’s a whole other blog post! I approached publishing Patriot as professionally as any publishing company and just managing the entire process was a full time job for several months. First, I had to research all the options for self publishing, right down to the minutiae of ISBN numbers, distribution options etc. This took two months. Then, I had to organize the editing, the formatting, the jacket design, the publishing (print and ebook) as well as my own business administration.

Yet it is the marketing that has been the real challenge. Like many authors, I’m focused on actually writing books. That’s the bit I enjoy, the thing I’m pretty good at (and I’ve been doing it for publishers both global and regional, as well as self publishing for almost two decades now). So, when it came to getting word out about my first novel, I was left wondering; where to start?

With my traditional background – and a few handy contacts from my career as a freelance journalist – I began with the solid stuff; press releases to relevant publications, asking for reviews, offering articles on related topics, that sort of thing. First lesson learned; start early. I mean really early, like 3 months before publication. That’s a difficult thing for self published writers to get to grips with, as you need a supply of print galleys and a digital version to get any big print publications to even look at your work. Plus, that’s assuming you ‘forget’ to mention it’s self published and you have a demonstrable track record and/or a killer hook to get their interest in the first place. How many self published authors have the book ready to go three months before publication? Well, if you want your novel considered by a national women’s magazine, or a big player like Fresh Fiction in the USA, you have to hold back and show some patience. It may pay dividends!

Many self publishers have tiny or non-existent budgets and depend on social media to market their books. This was a real learning curve for me, and I’m still travelling. Twitter (great), Facebook (variable), website (essential) and a blog (definitely essential) all work together, but you need more. Sign up to book discussion and recommendation websites, such as Goodreads.com, engage with other writers and readers by reviewing books, commenting on threads. There’s a world of social interaction out there and while the measurable impact of any particular part is impossible to quantify, what is clear that without it, your book will almost certainly sink without trace.

What I have also learned is to evaluate all the offers from companies for a) track record; can they do what they are claiming? b) can you do it yourself? c) can someone else do it for less? There are a lot of people out there trying to sell you market exposure. Be very careful. It would b easy, for example, to spend several thousand dollars on getting reviews by top Amazon reviewers and other types of Amazon based promotion, but it is actually free and easy to find out who are the top reviewers yourself and contact them directly. Similarly, there are many guides and books out there (some free, most at very low cost), as well as uTube videos etc on how to make Amazon work for you.

Among all this cacophony of marketers trying to sell to you, BooksGoSocial.com are really useful. They offer to showcase your first page free (‘free’ is a great twitter hashtag to get noticed) and multiple twitter accounts promoting your work, not to mention plenty of good ideas for practical, low cost marketing techniques for you, as author to put into practice straightaway. They are a great example of a low cost, high promotion tool that can really help with that thorny problem of ‘discoverability’. I did my homework before I signed up and they passed with flying colours.

What it all comes down to is putting in the time and the energy. You are learning a new skill. The best thing is, you then apply it to your own business; your books. The market is out there, so get stuck in and get your book discovered.

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Solving the Riddle of Discoverability by AS Bond June 16, 2014
PATRIOT Goes On Tour! June 11, 2014
Patriot Debuts at #13 in Amazon top 100 Best Seller-International Mystery & Crime! May 1, 2014
Q&A with author AS Bond April 24, 2014
Where you can buy PATRIOT April 24, 2014
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TriQuarterly: Not-quite-naked

TriQuarterly
Not-quite-naked

Dinah Lenney

Craft Essay
A writer friend of mine published a story, a family drama that featured a young couple and a difficult child. When her own daughter was old enough to read, she wanted to know, not if she was the baby in the book, but if her mother’s feelings for her back then were the ones she’d written about.

And another friend includes, in every novel she writes, a man with a habit—always the same gesture, a recurring trope—that irritates his wife. And yet. In life, her husband continues to do the irritating thing. All these books later, he doesn’t seem to notice or care. But I do.

*

I like to joke that I watch what I write about my husband and children. Because I want them to love me, I say. Actually, I’ve promised I won’t write about the kids anymore. Grown up as they are, their lives are not grist for my mill: I get it, I do. Still, my daughter teases now and then. “There’ll be no more of that,” she says. It’s not that she doesn’t trust me, not exactly—but she’s reminding me, lest I lose my place. And I reassure her: “This is why I write nonfiction.” Then I explain that it’s because I mean to choose what and how much I’m willing to tell. As a writer of fiction, I’d wind up baring it all, wouldn’t I? She makes a face. “What kind of fiction writer—,” she starts to say, then stops herself. In the first place, she knows (don’t we all): great writers of great fiction draw on their lives, their experience, their real-life relationships to tell their stories. In the second, even if they don’t, they’re suspect—that is, we readers are suspicious, how not?

*

Here’s Tim Parks in a recent issue of the New York Review of Books:

The narrator of Philip Roth’s Deception, himself called Philip Roth, tells his wife: “I write fiction and I’m told it’s autobiography, I write autobiography and I’m told it’s fiction, so since I’m so dim and they’re so smart, let them decide what it is or it isn’t.” For Roth there were few taboos left to break at this point and any partner of his could consider herselfwell-warned. With other writers much may be at stake.

And here’s Roth, himself, in the New York Times Book Review, having defended his fiction for the fiction it is. “As for the kind of writer I am?” he adds. “I am who I don’t pretend to be.” (Say what?)

And—a while back, also in the Times—in a piece titled “What Is Real Is Imagined,” Colm Toibin writes: “The world that fiction comes from is fragile.” About Mann and Beckett and Wolfe, he insists:

when it came to the moment when they were putting their stories together, working out the details, mixing memory and desire, they had no qualms, no problems aboutappropriating what they pleased. They used what they needed; they changed what they used. Their soft hearts became stony.

*

Why this preoccupation with fiction, Dinah? I’m supposed to be thinking about nonfiction; about point of view, “The Naked I” (a phrase coined by Margot Singer), as it informs voice in memoir and personal essay. No question it does. I’m convinced we come to the genre to keep company with the writer, that we are at least as interested in the who as the what—as in who’s telling the story, and why and how. However. Compulsive first-person narrator that I am, I feel a confession coming on.

Because I know why we read the stuff, but why do we write it? Do we mean to get naked? As if I could speak for everyone. That I can’t is among the most important reasons for each of us to get it right on the page. And this is why, when asked to confront “the Naked I” from every angle, I’m obliged to consider: Am I willing to strip down? All the way? To show everything? Or am I not only too encumbered, too fleshy, too flawed, but also too vain? Too devoted to “voice”?

*

Recently a poet friend, asked whether or not he prescribes or follows writing rules, answered with a quote from Roethke: “If you cannot mean then at least sing.” But as I understand what we do, it’s only if the prose is singing that a writer has a chance of saying what she means. “Sense follows sound,” wrote Leonard Michaels.

And Cynthia Ozick said, “Cadence. Cadence is the footprint, isn’t it?” That she said so in one of those Paris Review interviews titled “The Art of Fiction” shouldn’t trouble me—no surprise that writers of all genres are preoccupied with voice. But who actually has to get naked to find it? How naked exactly does she have to be?

*

Here’s Francine Prose, from an anthology called Who’s Writing This: Notes on the Authorial I with Self Portraits (edited by Daniel Halpern):

I often think that she would like me to disappear.
The evidence in support of this nearly incredible theory is that she never seems happier than when she is writing, when the work takes over . . . and seems to write itself . . . What pleases her is that she isn’t there, she no longer feels herself present, and I . . .
Someone else is writing, and both she and I have vanished.

For years I was an actor—almost straight out of college I went to acting school—if you’d asked me back then why, why go to school, I might have told you that I wanted to learn, among other things, to vanish—

But to vanish inside a part? If that’s what you want to do, you have to get naked first. Moreover, it’s not enough to get naked (this is what I used to tell my own students), you have stand up naked and turn around slowly. Which is terrifying and exhilarating—and, in some ways, a lot like writing when it’s going well.

The thing is—although either way the requirement is nakedness—most wannabe actors only think they want to vanish. Some are shy, perhaps, and acting sets them free. Many, though, have been made to feel self-conscious about their intensity—as if they were too passionate, too pungent. I was one those kids, my longings outsized, my feelings turned up too high for ordinary rooms. On a stage, however, framed by the proscenium, speaking and singing (living!) resonated with appropriate significance.

*

Jem Cohen’s gorgeous film Museum Hours, which came and went in a flash last year, is the story of a friendship struck up between a tourist and a guard in the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna. It’s also very much about the relationship between life and art: How do we discern one from the other? What defines the latter? What’s it for? How is it supposed to make us feel? In the film—in the museum—lots and lots of nudes on the walls, enormous nudes. And long, slow scenes (it’s a long, slow, movie) of ordinary people staring them down. Then, suddenly, the ordinary people are naked themselves, framed by the filmmaker and the screen—and we in the audience are compelled to gaze on them as they gaze on the paintings.

The scene is funny and uncomfortable, at first. In the dark of the theater, it takes its time, allows us—compels us, that is—to reflect: When are we attracted or repelled by nakedness? When is it beautiful and when is it artful, and when are they one and the same? And who decides—the creator? If so, how does he choose how much to reveal? For isn’t the act of choosing requisite to art? Beauty can be accidental, right? But if art isn’t contrived—conjured and made—then what’s to distinguish it from life? And if we’re determined to make the distinction—equally determined not to label the work a “fiction”—how, without undermining its value, to convince a reader that it’s true? The answer must have something to do with sound, cadence, voice. Music, after all, isn’t real or imagined: it’s music. That’s what it is.

*

Here comes that confession (she starts to disrobe): first, as with acting, I don’t write to disappear, but rather to locate myself. But wait—which self am I talking about? What a stunner to discover—to have to admit—I am not only or even essentially the mother, the wife, the teacher, the student, the neighbor, the friend, the actor, the writer—even as I have tended to write firsthand accounts out of those relationships and situations. But wait again: Don’t fiction writers use first-person narration? Don’t they break the fourth wall? But they’re writing in character, yes? As if I’m not? Of course I am. Does it make a difference—does it say anything about my state of undress that I’m telling you so? I’m certain it does.

With a nod to Vivian Gornick—who so well defined the difference between the situation and the story—let me insist that whoever I am, whichever self I bring to the page, for the purposes of this essay, the story is that I locate that best and most honest self—my frankly honed persona, I mean—through my voice.

And (she stands before you not-quite-naked) the other story, for now anyway, is that I’m not able to find that cadence—that willingness to sing out—as a writer of fiction.

Why not? Well, having to do with my friend’s intelligent daughter, and my other friend’s impervious husband, and with another writer, hugely successful, with whom I am only slightly acquainted.

Let’s say she’s a redhead.

Let’s say she has a husband and six kids and lives in a house on a hill.

Let’s say she writes fiction in first, second, and third, and many of her stories feature a woman with red hair and a husband and six children, and they all live in a house on a hill.

Let’s say these stories are full of lust and infidelity. In the stories, which are gorgeous and painful and embarrassing (they feel so true), the woman betrays her family again and again. Meanwhile the author—the real-life redhead—continues to live with the husband and their brood in that hilltop house.

Or what if she’s not a redhead? What if she’s a blond with a lover and two kids in a condo: but let’s say, though I hardly know her, I recognize a moment, an expression I’ve seen in her eyes, as described in the eyes of the redhead in the story. If I see it, surely her husband, her mother, her father, her friends, her children see it too, yes?

I have yet another writer friend—a colleague who claims that she always assumes that everyone makes up everything. But I don’t. That’s not what I assume. I want to think, after Colm Toibin, that a fiction writer uses what she needs and changes what she uses. How else to make me believe that her fictions are true?

So what I’m conceding? (she begins to turn—) I’m not willing to make you guess—Is she naked? Is that she? To boot, I only feel authentically present—that is, willing to fail, and fail again, and fail better—in one genre: nonfiction. And to clarify: it’s my intention not so much to expose myself (though I have, though I do, though I will) as to bust myself in that act and, in that way, to get closer and closer not only to what I think and what I know, but to the possibility of bumping up against the truth of what I didn’t believe I would ever understand. Me, too, Mr. Roth—I am who I don’t pretend to be.

Which is not to confess to a failure of imagination, oh no. Although possibly to a failure of nerve. To my desire to control, as best I can, your impression of me. Except I do so nakedly—I’m not convinced I could fool you otherwise. I don’t want to fool you, that isn’t my aim, not at all. I only want to sing for you, in the key of my choosing and as well as I know how.


5 Things Learned While Writing a Short Story

5 Things Learned While Writing a Short Story

Yesterday, I broke a years-long drought writing creative prose; I published a 5,000-word short story to my Tumblr. The last time I wrote anything similar, I did so in Microsoft Works, in 1999, when I completed the third and final part of a series of novellas I wrote for a middle school contest. I fell out of the habit once I entered high school and never came back to it, sticking largely to abstract poetry all the way through college and beyond.

Why did I come back? Because I realized that my avoidance of creative prose was due to a wall I had erected in my head, between “writing” and “creative writing.” Even as churned out tons of words for papers, blogs, and client websites, there as always some part of me telling me that that writing didn’t count and could not intersect with or influence my more artistic ambitions.

I was developing skills in producing writing that was done but not perfect, under deadlines, but whenever I sat down to write fiction, I immediately froze up, feeling like I had to write Ulysses or Madame Bovary. It was as if I was flipping off the writing switch whenever I wasn’t writing nonsense about gendering, cloud computing, or video games. It was maddening, plus the specter of the perfectionist Flaubert didn’t help.

Ultimately, I got over the hump by reading about programming. Paul Graham’s essay “The Power of the Marginal” helped me become much less self-conscious, dispelling a lot of the illusions I had about how “insiders” assess work from “outsiders.” It finally felt ok to write for whomever I wanted, rather than some mythical academy. Here’s what I learned along the way.

Reading is pre-gaming for writing
I mean that in two ways. Certainly, writing is like a plant that grows from the seeds of what the writer reads. More immediately, though, I find it hard to just to sit down and write without having a stack of books at my side to read before, during, and after I write.

Reading something – anything – before trying to type is not just helpful, but necessary in my experience. Even if it is comedic play read as I try to write taut Hemingway-style prose, digesting someone else’s great writing before trying to make your own is like feeling around in a toolbox while trying to build something. For example, I read lots of Aristophanes – Wealth, Birds – before writing my story. I don’t see the direct influence, but the reading helped on another level.

It can take hours to get “in the zone,” and sometimes you have to take a break
Very rarely can I just bang out prose that I’m comfortable with after immediately switching to it from some other task. I can’t just unfurl a good paragraph or poem right after exercising, and it’s a struggle to do so after playing a video game. This seamless multitasking seems mythical.

Instead, getting into a good zone requires one or both of the following:

Spending minutes or hours writing seemingly false starts: writing whatever is on my mind is a good way to clear the system and sometimes those ideas can be woven back into the eventual piece
Writing, encountering resistance, stepping away, and coming back: In another of Graham’s essay, he talks about how problems are often solved by returning to them later. Having time to walk (“All truly great thoughts are conceived by walking” – Nietzsche) and think is important, but your brain is also doing unconscious work for you, working out the kinks.
It’s fine – even preferable – to start in the middle
One of the most destructive tendencies in writing is trying to hammer out an epic introduction before even knowing what you’re writing about. This habit leads to overly broad introductory sentences (“Since the dawn of time, humankind has always liked ideas” or some such), plus it’s incredibly, incredibly constraining – it’s like you’re tying weights to your ankles before you even start the race!

Many aspects of the story I wrote only came into my mind in the act of writing – I did not, perhaps could not, conceive of them beforehand in the abstract. Starting in the middle or anywhere, using stream-of-consciousness if you have to, can be so much more productive than taking a strictly algorithmic approach to writing. On that note…

It’s hard not to be influenced by James Joyce
I once loathed Joyce, and I would never mention him as a favorite author. Yet, it is humbling to consider his influence. Almost any seemingly unstructured, free-form writing, chock-full of poetic sensibilities rather than just linear storytelling, owes a debt to Joyce. Reading Ulysses helped me chisel my way out of my years-long writer’s block, not because I liked it but because it refocused my mind on what tools were available to me as a writer, and showed me what could be done with them.

A Chromebook can help you stay focused
The Internet is terrible for focus. I mostly agree with this guy who can’t stay off IMDb when trying to write from his computer. While I haven’t faced this constant temptation while writing blog posts or technical writing, I can really feel it when attempting anything creative, perhaps since creative projects can be open-ended and make me feel like I can never read enough to prepare myself (when in fact my “reading” is just dicking around on Hacker News). So why/how did I write my story on a computer with an OS that is useless without an Internet connection?

Chromebooks, especially the Samsung ARM model from late 2012, are limited machines. Their limitations are part of their power and appeal, though. When using my Chromebook, I don’t have to deal with the vast, tangled mess of files on my MacBook, nor its ability to load webpages much more quickly than this ARM-powered laptop. I don’t keep as may tabs open and I don’t multitask (multitasking is bad for you overall, and a real killer for writers). I plan to write as much as I can from Chrome OS.


Footwear Evidence for Writers

Helping Writers Write It Right

Tuesday, March 19, 2013
Footwear Evidence for Writers – by Patti Phillips
Conferences are a blast for the mystery/thriller writing crowd these days. And not just because of the workshops improving our craft and technique providd by the many writing organizations. I appreciate those I do. But for all-out, slam-dunk fun, I go to the Writers' Police Academy (founded by Lee Lofland). It’s a three day, hands-on, mind-blowing experience that demonstrates the nuts and bolts of police and fire and EMS procedure – taught by professionals and experts actively working in the field. All with the purpose of getting writers to improve their technical knowledge so that they can get it right on the page.
WPA2012

Along with several other strands of study, the last two WPA conferences provided classes in bloodstain patterns, fingerprinting, and alternate light sources (ALS) conducted by Sirchie instructors. Because of the standing room only enthusiasm for these classes, Sirchie offered a five-day Evidence Collection training session for writers at their own complex in North Carolina. Sirchie makes hundreds of products for the law enforcement community and I felt this would be a great opportunity for Detective Kerrian (my protagonist) to learn more about the latest and best gadgets being used to catch the crooks.
FootwearSingleCastIMG_0536

Wolverine cast
Criminals rob, murder, rape or otherwise inflict bodily harm upon their victims. Physical evidence at a crime scene is an essential part of figuring out what happened. It is up to the police officers, investigators, and examiners to recognize what is and is not part of the evidence and then interpret the importance of each fiber, fingerprint, bloodstain, and other material in order to secure a conviction of the correct individual.
One of the most overlooked pieces of evidence at a crime scene is created by footwear.
If a window breaks as a thief enters the premises during the commission of a burglary, the glass will fall into the house, and onto the floor or rug below the window. When the thief steps through the window, unless the thief has wings, he/she will probably plant a foot right in the middle of the glass. And walk through the house, most likely tracking minute pieces of that glass. That glass may also become embedded in the grooves of the sole of the shoe, creating a distinctive footprint.
If the investigating officer can place a suspect at the scene with the footprint, then there is probable cause to fingerprint that suspect and hopefully establish a link to the crime.
A new method of eliminating suspects right at the scene involves stepping into a tray that contains a pad impregnated with a harmless clear ink that doesn’t stain, then stepping onto a chemically treated impression card. (So safe that it’s often used on newborn babies for the hospital records) No messy cleanup, immediate results, and it can even show details of wear and tear on the shoe. This can be a way to establish a known standard (we know where this impression came from) to compare with multiple tread prints at the scene.
FootwearClearInkImpressionIMG_0399
Footwear Clear Ink Impression
Another tool for creating a known standard is the foam impression system. It takes a bit longer, (24 hours) but clear, crisp impressions can be made, including of the pebbles and bits stuck deep into the grooves and the writing on the arch. Very helpful when trying to place suspects at the scene. A rock stuck in the sole is a random characteristic that can’t be duplicated, so becomes another point of identification.
We definitely wanted to try this method for ourselves. Each of the writers stepped into the box of stiff-ish foam – a bit like stepping into wet sand.
FootwearPressDSC_3253
Using foam impression system
An impression is made instantaneously. Look at the detail – down to the wear on the heel.
FootwearWolverineIMG_0410
Foam impression of Wolverine boot
We used pre-mixed dental stone (made with distilled water and the powder) to fill the impression.
FootwearCastPouringIMG_0411

Making the cast with pre-mixed dental stone
We waited 24 hours for them to become firm enough to pop out of the foam. We now had permanent records of the footwear treads, which could be used for comparison to other prints found at the scene. There were more than a dozen of us walking through that room every day on a regular basis and assorted other visitors tramping through the perimeter. If a crime occurred before we left for the week, we’d have a LOT of eliminating to do, but we were ready!
FootwearCastsIMG_0016

Photo: Footwear casts
Occasionally footprints are found on the ground outside a window or in the gardens surrounding a house after a burglary or homicide. Ever see a crime show on TV where the fictional investigator makes a snap judgment about the height and weight of the owner of the footprint because of the depth of the impression? That’s merely a plot device and is not scientific evidence in real life. A crime scene photographer or investigator can photograph the footprint (next to a measurement scale), make a take away cast, and then compare the impression with those of the suspects or other bystanders at the scene. Beware: making a cast of the print destroys the print, so a photograph must be taken before pouring that first drop of dental stone.
Footprints can be found at bloody crime scenes as well. The suspect walks through the blood, tracks it through the house, cleans it up, but the prints are still there, even though not obvious to the naked eye. As we learned during the ‘Blood and Other Bodily Fluids’ session, blood just doesn’t go away, no matter how hard you try to get rid of it. It seeps into the cracks and crevices of a floor and even behind baseboards.
A savvy investigator will collect sections of carpet (or flooring) taken from where the suspect might have walked during the commission of the crime, then conduct a presumptive test for blood (LCV - Aqueous Leuco Crystal Violet), find a usable footprint, compare it to a known standard, and then be able to place the suspect at the scene.
 FootwearPrintDSC_2388
Footwear Print
Kudos to Robert Skiff, the Sirchie Training Manager/Technical Training Specialist who conducted the classes with his assistant, Chrissy Hunter, all week. He fielded our many (sometimes wild) questions with solid expertise as we attempted to find the perfect scenarios for our fictional crime-fighters and criminals.
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Patti Phillips is a transplanted metropolitan New Yorker/north Texan, now living in the piney state of North Carolina. Her best investigative days are spent writing, cooking, traveling for research, and playing golf. Her time on the golf course has been murderously valuable while creating the perfect alibi for the chief villain in “One Sweet Motion.”
Did you know that there are spots on the golf course that can’t be accessed by listening devices? Of course, it helps to avoid suspicion if you work on lowering your handicap while plotting the dirty deeds.
Patti Phillips writes the www.kerriansnotebook.com blog and the book review site www.nightstandbookreviews.com

Five Questions to Ask Yourself Before Crowdfunding a Film


Five Questions to Ask Yourself Before Crowdfunding a Film
Posted on February 26, 2014 by Aaron Djekic Updated February 26, 2014
By: Ryan Strandjord

1. Are you willing to be the face of your campaign?

The personality of the creator behind the film can often be the difference between someone admiring the project and actually making a donation. First and foremost this means that YOU HAVE TO BE IN YOUR VIDEO. Making a personal connection with your audience is paramount. Seriously, go look at how many successful campaigns don’t have the filmmaker in the video.

2. Is this a project worth crowdfunding for?

This is a tough question to answer on your own so you may need some help (see #3). Just because you want money to make your film doesn’t mean you should ask for it.
Is this a film that people are going to get excited about? What’s the hook? Have you pitched the film to a number of people already? It’s a great way to gauge potential interest in the story. If people aren’t interested they’re not going to donate.

3. Can you assemble a team to work on the campaign with you?

Don’t do it alone. You’ll want people to consult on your ideas, others to help produce/shoot/edit videos, and possibly more to help with marketing and to push social media promotions. If you’re doing it alone then whenever you get “busy” the campaign stops evolving. Filmmaking is a collaborative art and crowdfunding should be no different.

4. Are you prepared to follow up with your backers throughout the life of the project?

Launching a crowdfunding campaign is like entering into a marriage with your future backers. If you’re working toward a sustainable career as an artist this union is vastly important. People want more than just their perk and to see the movie and keeping your audience engaged helps you to fulfill one of the greatest benefits of crowdfunding a film project which is AUDIENCE BUILDING. This is especially important if you ever plan on crowdfunding for another film in the future.

5. How much are you willing to sacrifice to make the campaign a success?

It takes hard work to reach your goal, and that translates into hour after hour spent prepping for the campaign and pushing it after launch. Be prepared to wake up early, work over your lunch break, and to spend many evenings working on getting the next donation. Often it becomes a battle of attrition. You have to make sacrifices with your time and for a bit sleep/friends/fun will have to wait. This is where you find out how important making the film is to you.



Ryan Strandjord is a Minneapolis based filmmaker, producer, crowdfunding consultant, and community organizer. His latest film City Boots premiered at the Minneapolis St. Paul International Film Festival, and will soon make it’s museum and television debut at the world-renowned Walker Art Center and TPT respectively. The film has also played numerous festivals around the Midwest. He’s currently developing a script for Prescription Happiness, a story about a young pregnant woman struggling to hold onto free emotion while living in a society controlled through prescription drugs.


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Beyond Design International - Award winning graphics company with 17+ years experience specializing in elegant, eye-catching book cover designs that stand out from the competition. Follow BeyondDesignInt on Twitter.

Dan Absalonson: we've heard good things about DanDanTheArtMan's services. A committed indie-phile, Dan also works on audio books at a very competitive rate as well as producing some very professional covers at less than half the cost. Follow Dan on Twitter.

Author promo:


TweetYourBooks.com. The affordable and friendly Tweeting service for authors and writers worldwide, reaching an audience of 125,00 genuine and select followers. You get 60 tweets per day over six biblio-related accounts - cost $29 - discount when booking more than one day. Follow @TweetYourBooks on Twitter.


Free book reviewing services:

Here is a constantly updated list of reviewers who do not charge for their services. Choose those who seem suitable and request a review by contacting them direct. Bear in mind that the reviews are honest and may have some critique element in them. Reviewers may also have a waiting list.

Useful odds and ends:

UK English dictionary: http://www.merriam-webster.com/

U.S. English dictionary: http://nhd.heinle.com/home.aspx


http://fakers.statuspeople.com/ are useful to identify promo services that comprise mainly of FAKE followers. They allow 3 free checks but their paid service is not recommended because spurious services can bury their fakes by collecting a few genuine followers due to StatusPeople's reliance on taking relatively recent (and thus inaccurate) samples. The rule of thumb is that if a service has far more followers than they are following then they are extremely likely to be mostly fakes regardless of their diminishing faker scores:


"More Means Less!"



Faker scores on 10th February 2014

Scores were lower on 15th February after collecting fewer than 1% more followers

Our scores on 21st February:*