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Story Hacks: Fourth in a Series

Most magazines pay by the word, but sometimes even doubling up on your adverbs won’t help you break that magic-million mark. How else can you fill the pages you’ll need to pay down that Porsche? That, dear wreater, is why Gutenberg invented the dream sequence.

Ooh! Dreeeeam sequence!

Some authors choose to “reverse-engineer”* one of the many sober, objective dream interpretation books on the market. If one wants to symboblize a penis, for example, one could use a snake, a pencil, a toothbrush, a remote control, a key, the letter I, or any of thousands of vaguely cylindrical objects we encounter every day. After all, our formative years were spent around lots of penises! Am I right? I’m right.

Of course, interpretative books with scanty indexing may require significant work to find the right symbiology. As we should know by now, work is the opposite of writing! Instead, google “dream journal” and grab about two things from every result you find. Don’t forget to change the names–unless you forget on purpose!

To help you get started, here are some useful common elements:

  • Uncles
  • Running but not going anywhere (isn’t that scary? It’s scary!)
  • A hunchback
  • Your mom
  • This one house you went to but now it looks completely different
  • Freud seriously said your mom
  • Nudity
  • People who are also other people
  • Freud was like the Tupac of his generation, kids

Once you’re published, your consumers may pay a lot of attention to your dream sequences. If they don’t like what they find there, remind them that it’s just a dream! It doesn’t mean anything! Except hilarity! If they claim that you’re just writing nonsense to pad your word count, point out that it is way deeper than them, and that they just don’t get your symbliography. It’s true.

* Translation: “drive backwards.”

Today’s Hack in a Nutshell: Nothing you can “wrighte” is “wronge!”

Today’s Anacrusis will be late because the one I was going to put up is just too awful. Too awful. I couldn’t inflict that on my readers.

Here it is!

C H I L I   J O H N

– – – –

“I was told we’d be noncombat!” shrieks Lester as he presses up against the trench wall. Phosphorus shells scream and gob-smack.

“That’s right,” Chili John nods, “you’re the civilian component of Operation Wombat.”

“Oh, that’s much better,” Lester says. He looks relieved.

“See that metal-plated monstrosity over there?” Chili John points. “That’s the Tomcat. Your job is to carry some fuel to it–here, use this top hat.”

Lester scrambles off with the crude naptha. Moments later, he and it are splashed all over the ironside, burning happily.

“You’re a bad man,” chuckles Moon.

“Stop that,” Chili John snaps.

Okay! We have successfully bullied seven people (er, counting me) into agreeing to come see Too Much Light on Sunday at 2:30. I bet you also want to come! I BET YOU DO.

I saw the Neo-Futurists doing their show Too Much Light Makes The Baby Go Blind last Saturday night, courtesy of Unstoppable David Clark. I am going to see them again next weekend, at the 2:30 matinee on either Saturday or Sunday. Tickets are $25-$28 and you, you personally, had damn well better come with me. We can get a 10% discount if we scrape together ten people.

The Neo-Futurists are fucking amazing.

You can find all this out by going to their website, but because other humans are apparently lazy about clicking, here’s what happens: there are five performers and thirty (original) plays. They do, or try to do, all thirty plays in sixty minutes. They’re microplays. You understand why I am smitten.

The thirty plays may happen in any order, because they’re numbered and the troupe will do whatever number they hear the audience yell out as soon as the previous play is over. They also swap out 1d6 plays every night and replace them from a larger pool, so by this Saturday it might be a completely different show from what I saw.

As if this wasn’t enough, there is a seven-item checklist that I personally keep for determining whether or not any given show qualifies as performance art. The list is as follows:

  • A person under a black cloth hood doing something ridiculous
  • Giant diapers
  • Performers dancing in the aisles and trying to get audience members to dance too
  • Large pictures of female genitalia
  • People eating money
  • A man rubbing his nipples with an expression of fiendish glee
  • The throwing of raw meat

And I shit you not, the version of the show I saw included six of those seven items. And it worked, because they were completely self-aware and loved it and laughed at themselves. They made metahumor work on stage. This is a feat akin to picking up litter with the pointy part of the Chrysler Building, and I’d only previously seen it done by the pre-Intel Blue Man Group.

I am completely serious about you coming with me to the show this weekend. Call or email me if you want me to add you to the possible-group roster, and I’ll tell you by Wednesday whether we have enough people. If the show sells out they’ll buy us pizza. I’m serious about that too.

Ian, I wish you could have been there. David Flora, the Neo-Futurists are from Chicago and they do this every week up there, you bastard, why haven’t you seen it yet?

I made myself wait two days to write this up because I didn’t want to rave and gibber and then be embarrassed when the high wore off. I’m raving and gibbering anyway. If you’re in Louisville, you need to come see the show.

I saw my paternal grandmother again today.

Mam-Maw: When are you going to quit growing?

Me: (totally inured to this question from grandparents) Oh, gosh, I think I’m done growing now–

Mam-Maw: No, I mean fatter.

I am waiting for familiar resolve

Got the first search referral for “thinspiration” today. That story is currently the #113 Google result for it. Think I’ll get any mail?

I’m not sure whether it counts as irony that I only realized this morning that “Me and Mia,” one of my favorite songs ever, is about, um, ana and mia. Ted Leo should enunciate better, and I should listen harder. It’s a vicious song.

Oh man somebody made a good web-based public social tagging personal library catalog that interfaces with Amazon AND the Library of Congress. Man! I’m not going to get anything done today.

In other news to make my friends geek out, LEGO has released software that will let you build your own virtual models and then buy exactly the pieces you need to make them in real life. Brilliantly obvious. The software is free, but disappointingly closed-source, and only for Mac and “PC” (by which they mean Windows). Opening that shit up could generate a pretty incredible building-hacking community.