Category Archives: Literary Endeavors

For-Real Interviews: Craig Robinson

In America, baseball is, sadly, often seen as the brussels sprouts of sports: something that must be consumed because it’s good for you. Many people view the sport as obligation rather than entertainment, something you are required to take your kids to during the summer because, well, that’s what you’re supposed to do, right? Those who wax poetic about the game’s virtues can sound a bit like enthusiasts of quaint hobbies, like scrimshaw or silhouetting. The game is so fraught history and tradition and baggage that it seems impossible to say anything new about it.

Or maybe it just someone with a fresh perspective to say them. Enter Craig Robinson, an English illustrator whose love affair with the game was kindled by a trip to Yankee Stadium while in New York on business back in 2005. Not long after that, as his baseball fandom grew, he began to ponder questions that may not have occurred to someone who grew up with the game. Like, what is the actual monetary value of all the bases “stolen” during a major league season? Or how would A-Rod’s salary look if dispensed in pennies and stacked on top of one another? Or how long did it take to assemble, then disassemble, the 1986 Mets? Or what would the box score look like in a playoff game between the Wu Tang Clan and the E Street Band?

Robinson decided to answer these questions and many more at his site, Flip Flop Fly Ball, in gorgeously streamlined infographics. They are elegantly simple, packing enormous amounts of information into their space while not appearing remotely cluttered. They are works of art that beg to be seen write large, and that’s just what’s happened with the release of Flip Flop Fly Ball, a fantastic book that collects some of Robinson’s best work from the site, along with new items and essays on his evolution as an unlikely baseball fan. It is the kind of book that justifies the invention of the coffee table.

The author was kind enough to answer a few of my queries about his path to baseball fandom, the Mexican League, and what he would do with his favorite team. Answers to those questions and more after the jump.

Continue reading For-Real Interviews: Craig Robinson

Studio 60 Concludes, In a New Format!

I want to take you on a journey toward what is perhaps the dumbest creative endeavor I’ve ever undertaken.

You may recall a few weeks ago, episode 12 of Studio 60 on Roosevelt Avenue ended in a bit of a cliffhanger, with the classic two-parter stinger “To Be Continued.” For those who have been on the edge of their seats wondering how everything could possibly be wrapped up in a neat little package, wonder no more. The exciting conclusion, the one that will leave no question unanswered, is now contained in an ebook collection cleverly entitled Studio 60 on Roosevelt Avenue: The Complete Scripts. It is the first ever Scratchbomb ebook and it is now available from Amazon for the insultingly low price of 99 cents.

This ebook not only includes all 13 episodes of the only series to combine a funhouse mirror image of the Mets’ season with the golden pen of Aaron Sorkin. It also contains a foreword by the greatest and most intense televisual dramaturge of our age, a preface by the often-shackled Yo-Yo Ma, and sketches of story arcs for future, unrealized seasons. And you can read it all on your Kindle or Kindle-type app on the device of your choice this very moment for less than a dollar.

Why am I charging anything for this ebook? A great deal of time and effort went into this endeavor, both in the writing and the technical flimflammery necessary for ebook conversion. I feel this has value and that a nominal fee is reflective of that value. I know this is the internet age and we’re all supposed to get all our entertainment for free, but I don’t feel all that bad for asking money for something that took considerable hours and brain-wracking to make. If that’s a dealbreaker for you, there’s a lot of my writing in a lot of different places on the interwebs for free and you may still feast on that.

But if this quixotic publication appeals to you and you think that 99 cents is a small price to pay for it, please download! If you dig it, RT, Facebook it, give it a good review on Amazon, shout out your window at random strangers, and so on. Every little bit helps. If you don’t like it, please scream at me on the social networking platform of your choice.

If you’d like to read this ridiculous thing but don’t have a Kindle device or app, I am currently looking into what it will take to get it out there for other such devices. This will depend largely on the cost and hours in the day at my disposal, but I’m one of those weirdos who likes to figure out how to do things technically, so if there is any way at all I can make this ebook for other formats, I will. Stay alive! No matter what occurs I will find you (and accommodate your technical needs)!

For those who will purchase it, I thank you, and personally guarantee this will be the most pointless thing you will ever read. And just for the record, this Studio 60 compendium is not the massive tome I’m working on that I often allude to on Twitter. That is still a good ways away from being completed, but completed it shall be.

Onward and upward!

Substance Abuse

Perhaps you’ve heard of the children’s book parody Go the Fuck to Sleep. It is written in the style of simplistic board books aimed at toddlers. Each rhyming couplet ends with the titular line as a parent begs and pleads with their child to go the fuck to sleep.

With its provocative title and premise, it blew up on the internet not too long ago, to the point of landing on the New York Times’ bestseller list and being #1 on Amazon for a while. (As of this writing, it’s #3 overall, #1 in Parenting & Families, and #2 in Humor.) An audiobook version read by Samuel L. Jackson produced just as much buzz. It wasn’t the most hysterical or earth-shattering thing ever made, but it was amusing, and expressed a sentiment every parent could relate to.

Naturally, there had to be some spoilsports to rain on this parade. An article at CNN.com by Karen Spears Zacharias took what is essentially a lark and transforms it into a clear and present danger to children. As you read it, you can imagine the voice of Helen Lovejoy speaking its every word. If it was written 20 years ago, it would be crusading against slap bracelets or jarts.

It’s the kind of joyless, preachy screed that makes you ashamed to be a liberal, as you realize Ugh, I’m on the same side as these guys? To give you a taste, here’s an actual excerpt from this piece. I swear this is not from an Onion article, though you’d be forgiven for drawing that conclusion.

“Imagine if this were written about Jews, blacks, Muslims or Latinos,” says Dr. David Arredondo. He is an expert on child development and founder of The Children’s Program, in the San Francisco metropolitan area [shocker!], which provides consultation and training for those working with troubled youths.

It is hard to imagine this kind of humor being tolerated by any of the marginalized groups Arredondo cited.

Imagine if Go the Fuck to Sleep were written about minorities? I think this doctor flunked analogy school. Why stop there? Why not imagine if The Great Gatsby was written about kittens? It makes about as much sense (though it would also be far more adorable).

This article came to my attention thanks to an excellent response by comedian Baratunde Thurston. I don’t want to simply parrot what he wrote, as it was spot-on and you owe it to yourself to read his work, but I do want to add a few observations of my own.

In addition to the troubled youth counselor cited above, Zacharias talks to a few other folks who are not fans of the book, including this person:

Joan Demarest is an attorney in Corvallis, Oregon, and the mother of three young boys. Demarest told me that initially she thought the book was funny. That was before she read it. “Now I find it unsettling. I don’t like violent language in association with children.”

She has good reason to be concerned about the message behind such a parody. Demarest was the prosecuting attorney in one of Oregon’s most high-profile child murder cases. She understands the fear that far too many children endure because the lines of what’s appropriate parenting have become blurred.

I’m sensing a pattern here. Demarest prosecuted a terrible crime against a child. Arredondo aids troubled youth. Zacharias herself is the author of the forthcoming book The Shelter of Mockingbirds, which is about the murder of a three year old. These are all people who are disturbingly close to violence against children, and so are ultra sensitive to anything that reminds them of such violence.

I can totally understand this. There’s no way any of these folks could not be deeply affected by such work. And yet, I think all of these people need to chill the fuck out.

First of all, this is not a book to be read to children. It is a book to be enjoyed by adults. In order to believe this book is bad for kids, you have to also believe that parents are either reading it at bedtime, which is insane, or that it will inspire parents to use hateful, curse-filled language when speaking to their kids, which is even more so. People who think the latter are the same people who think playing Grand Theft Auto or listening to NWA will turn kids into gangsters.

Secondly, there’s this:

For far too many kids, the obscenities found in [Go the Fuck to Sleep] are a common, everyday household language. Swearing is how parents across the social, educational and economic strata express their disappointments or anxieties, their frustrations and outright anger at their children. Sometimes the biggest bully in the neighborhood lives in the same house you do. Sometimes it’s your parent.

Has it been conclusively proven that swearing is bad for a child? Apart from the fact that it would make you look bad if you sent your kid to school cursing like a sailor, is it inherently harmful for a child to hear and repeat these words? Are these somehow magical syllables that endow your child with terrible problems? I’m inclined to say no, even though, again, you probably don’t want your four-year-old talking like Susie from Curb Your Enthusiasm.

Losing your temper and yelling at your child does not necessarily constitute abuse, or even bullying, any more than a skinned knee constitutes a broken leg. Not every single slightly negative childhood experience automatically translates to lifelong trauma. A kid is not scarred for life every time s/he gets screamed at to stop clanging toy cymbals because mommy’s got a headache. Equating such a thing with actual child abuse is ludicrous. All the people involved with this article, who are deeply familiar with child abuse (or worse) should know better than that.

As I discussed on this site a while ago, of all the media that people need to be concerned about, books are very low on the list. I refuse to believe that people with the inclination and disposable income to purchase a book called Go the Fuck to Sleep are so feeble minded that said book will inspire them to verbally and physically abuse their kids.

But if nothing else, maybe this means there’s a market for my own kids-book-for-adults entitled, Calm the Fuck Down, You Whiny Babies.