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October 02, 2007

31 Things About the Neighbor Who Fucks Too Much

007_2 From ebogjonson, one of my favorite writers:

"1. You and your live-in girlfriend are pretty high on your sexual high-horses until you realize that in the loft next door is one of those neighbors who fucks too much.

2.  You figure you and your lady have a sex life that is the cat's pajamas until you start keeping tabs on the neighbor who fucks too much.

3.  It's a little embarrassing riding the elevator with a neighbor who fucks too much just after she's been, like, fucking.

4.  It's a little annoying when one of the many guys the neighbor who fucks too much is fucking knocks on your door at 2:00 AM. Coming or going, you wonder. He is drunk enough to be either.

5.  You are grudgingly impressed that anyone that drunk is able to fuck a neighbor who fucks too much.

6. The neighbor who fucks too much is white. You are not. You want to make something out of that fact, but keep coming up dry."

Keep on reading... the other 25 things.

And now that you've fallen in love with Gary Dauphin, you have to read his other master work, "Should I Use Blackface on my Blog?"

Photo from an upskirt gallery. 

September 18, 2007

The Hobo Stripper Takes Her Socks Off

Bedheight "If you want to live in a van or be a stripper, then wow, I've got some tips for you."

The Hobo Stripper

I felt like I'd been 'schooled by the time I finished the Hobo Stripper's blog end to end. Aside from the afore-mentioned topics, she also waxes on the joys of living in Alaska, making righteous plant medicine on the road, interviewing her mom, and being a lifer in the stripper biz who has no interest in a "real" job.

She's such a good writer. And a DIYer. I got lost in her blog for hours. Don't know whether to change my oil or shave my bottom next.

December 30, 2006

The Top Ten Stories of Susie's Year

02twain2 Lies, damned lies, and statistics. But I do love them so!

I was fascinated to learn from my stats provider, BlogLog, about the most popular stories published here at my humble journal.

My hottest links are  skewed toward the end of the year, because my blog readership has tripled this fall.

Why? I'm a poster girl for the natural curve of blogging— if you keep at it (two years being a turning point) and you post daily, the worm turns.


1.  That's Right, You're Not From Texas, Sodomy Loves You Anyway

What's not to like? Molly Ivins in prime form, dildo details you never dreamed of, and the Texas State Legislature in a rare form that would take Mark Twain's breath away.


2.  My Cartoon Blow-out

I thought I was being a sentimental, self-indulgent diaper-baby to post all my nostalgic cartoon favorites, but apparently a lot of us are sucking on the same tit! This link was also wildly promoted by the new browsing tool, Stumbleupon, which I had never heard of 'til I wrote this!


3.  Penthouse Letters Are Real, Grand Theft Auto is Not, and St. Louis, I Do Mind Dying

This is one of the best-written stories I ever posted, and I'd like to think it was my skill and poetry that shot it to #3.  However, it's more likely a hit because I interviewed the woman, Lavada Nahan, who worked for Penthouse for more than a decade and was shut in a room with one million unopened sex letters and told to spin them into gold!


4.  The Best Spaghetti You Ever Had

This just goes to prove that sex bloggers and their readers are the biggest food sluts you ever met.


5.  Sneak Preview of Best American Erotica 2007: The Lolita Backlash

Well, wait 'til you read the whole thing! I look forward to interviewing many of the authors in the coming months.


6.  Four Things You May Not Know About Me

Okay, here's a fifth thing: When my alarm clock goes off in the morning, this is what I hear: Carolan's Welcome. I got this album from the musician himself, James Kline, busking in front of the San Francisco Farmer's Market, and my lover recognized him from playing on the streets of Sienna!— years earlier! I'd love to see him again and kiss his feet.


7.  Esther Perel Musses the Marriage Bed

This is one of the best interviews I've ever done for In Bed, thanks to Esther's tour de force extemporaneous analysis of why married people stop fucking and then don't understand why.  The whole interview is posted for you to listen to.


8.  Egg Sex

My story of my sex life— physical, emotional, political— during pregnancy and childbirth is one of the most popular stories I ever published, long before blogging. I'm eggstatic it found a new audience here.


9.  BlogHer Sex Survey Results

The square business press portrayed the first woman's blogger conference as either a bunch of hard-bitch geeks, or "really nice pretty girls that you don't have to be scared to talk to!"  Yawn. I found it to be the coolest pool party and hands-on change-the-world party I'd been to in a long time. And of course I had to give a sex survey...


10.  The League of Amazing Latkes

I want some more right NOW.


My potato pancake recipe was followed in popularity by a blistering polemic by Dan Savage, my G-Spot Fraud Detection Squad, and the index of all my posts on photography.

I happen to think my photographic art babble is right up there with Susan "Dyke" Sontag on Hash, but to my dismay, I think my link gets mega-hits because there's some nekkid people in the illustrations.  It's a huge hit in the United Arab Emigrates, surpassed only by Kansas.


Thanks again to Steve Ho for the stats that made my head spin. Tomorrow, I'll post the top ten places you all came from! Glorious illustration of Mark Twain by Ralph Steadman.

August 01, 2006

Blog the Cradle of Love

Clitsupbutton_1 Wherefore art thou, girl geek?

I'm home from Blogher, the women's blogging meet-up, that happened this past weekend. 750 women bloggers... kind of shocking. We all came out of our cubbyholes.

I've never been to an IT gathering of any kind before. I live on the coast next to Silicon Valley,but I've never been to San Jose except to drive to the airport. I've used Apples since 1983— when I published the first magazine in the world on their desktop publishing software—  yet I have never had any relationship with them other than a credit card transaction.

I recorded stories on geek-sex albums like "Cyborgasm," without hobnobbing with anything cyber. I entered virtual erotica without communing to any virtualists. I'm an early-adopter who's rarely rubbed shoulders with my brethren.

I'm emphasizing my naivité here.

I had no idea that a group of female computer nuts, blogging women, were so revolutionary.

Gender Bias, you see, was the elephant in the BlogHer living room. It was the fundamental reason why we all were there, whether it was spoken or not. This wasn't a koffee klatch for girls who like to talk about burping babies and losing weight, which might have surprised Weight Watchers or some of the other promoters at the conference. (I threw the baby bib, sugar substitute, and smelly lotion in the trash).

Few attendees planned to talk about gender bias directly, because the focus of the conference was one of YOU-GO-GIRL entrepreneurship.

But no one would have to say, "You go girl," if others hadn't said, "Shut up and go away, little girl," in the first place.

Hi there, Mr. Elephant.

I didn't realize how bad it is. I should've. I know that women in the sciences have a lot of horror tales.  Masculine Sci-nerd chauvinism is so far removed from my life I haven't stared in its hairy eyeball since I was last waved away from the Bunsen burner in junior high school.

I'm expert, like all women, in defensive maneuvers. The computer boho world has  been a haven for oddballs, art freaks, and social radicals, outside of corporate kingmaking. I tucked myself in those corners, happily sheltered.

Susiesexpanel Still, my outsider status in IT is typical of women, including women far more mainstream than I.

The few females who are involved in the corridors of IT power have barreled over gates like daredevils over Niagara Falls. They are self-taught. I met some of them this past weekend and it was a revelation— my god, they're tough. I felt like I did the first time I  met female steelworkers in the 70s.

So I've been living in a cocoon. The men who have helped me along the way, from Matisse and Richard Kadrey at The Well who first got me online, to Ewald Christians who made my first BBS, to Ron Hogan who showed me Movable Type— were all radical individuals with defacto feminist hardwiring. We never talked about it, it was just assumed.

And then there've been the women, completely unsung: Debi Sundhal, the first sex worker to ever make use of a Mac. Camilla DeCarnin, who wrote about faghags and Slash fiction before anyone. Patrizia DiLuccio from the Well—really, all the women on the Well. Laura Miller was my editor at Salon, at its inception, and we knew each other from Good Vibrations. Or Jane Duvall's Demystification School of Adult Entrepreneurship. I could go on and on.

Sometimes my cocoon was rudely disturbed. When I started this blog, and GoogleAdSense turned my application down for lack of "family values," I could've spit. Their correspondence infuriated me. But it was just another formulaic insult.

Since 1996 I've been told repeatedly from major IT businesses and apologists that my site is NSFW, porn, blacklisted, firewalled, etc.— because of its sexuality.

200046272_33305e23de Regular readers of this journal would be hard-pressed to say exactly where all the freaky shit is. I've never used language in this blog you couldn't find in a copy of The New Yorker. The pictures might get a "R" rating. If I had to rate this site as a porno hot spot, I'd give it an "F." 

On the other hand, I have written about being a woman, a mother, a bleeder and a breeder, a dyke, someone who's given birth, had an abortion, entered hormone havoc, used every kind of birth control, and was once was a virgin like everyone else.

And it's this: women's physiology— the fact and story of it— that gets me, and every other woman who writes about it, into the most trouble.

Florynce Kennedy, 1973:  "If men could get pregnant, abortion would be a sacrament."

Well, if American men today wrote about their reproductive life and sexual mind, their journalism would be treated like the finest prose and argument. "Andrew Sullivan, please accept our Pulitzer for your work on man-o-pause."

Dream on. In the real world, when a woman writes with grace or clarity about her female passage, it's considered obscene or trivial— definitively not safe for work or men's imaginations.

When I produced the first g-spot ejaculation movies with my friends in the 80s, we were told that our videos were  "fetish" that could not be legally distributed anywhere in the country.

It's biological female sexual response. Why is a woman's orgasm considered an obscenity?

Why are women nursing their children considered a prelude to a sex panic?

Why is a woman writing anything about abortion politics considered NSFW on the Web?

Remember when AOL shut down the chat room for breast cancer survivors, because they used the word "breast"?

And yes, we watch the news about children being bombed to bits, skin flambeing off their bones, because it's all Absolutely Safe for Work, as long as you don't show any woman's tits.

In our sex blog workshop at Blogher, several women raised their concern of writing about sex publicly, in any context. They were fearful of ridicule, discrimination, and dismissive stereotypes.

That threat is legitimate— and why? Not because of "frightening the horses," but because of gender bias.

LogansusieChristie Keith, one of the women in our discussion, said, "When gay men post about sex in their otherwise non-sexual blogs, they couldn't care less what anyone thinks."

She's right.

No gay male blogger would dream of putting a peer down for a bawdy or erotic remark. You could be the most successful gay businessman on the internet, and your colleagues wouldn't think any less of you for admitting your sexual knowledge or maturity.

Open gay men, largely white and middle class,  have found the time-honored milieu— a successful world of their own. Nevertheless, their nonchalance about "sex... and so what?" is telling.

Why don't straight men include sexuality in their blog writing—  aside from the resolutely anonymous few that sex-blog professionally?

Because outside of the "adult" world, a straight man writing about his sexual life— his erotic self-reflection— is considered feminizing.  It would make him a pussy to his peers.

Paul Krugman... wouldn't you love to hear what a great writer like that had to say, every once in a while, about sex and economics? Wouldn't it be great to hear some IT hotshot talk about what they've learned about sex from web life? "Steve Jobs Confidential!"

NEVER NEVER NEVER does this happen, except in the most anonymous forums. It's like risking castration. I wonder how, or if, it even crosses their minds.

Some folks at our panel talked about the risk of hurting loved ones if we blog about our sexual lives. They were concerned with boundaries, respect, and discretion— timeless issues for authors in any era.

Those concerns are about ETHICS.

The far more brutal issue, in women's blogging, isn't whether you have the sense to refrain from advertising your teenager's puberty, or your husband's nose hairs— it's the fact that gender bias will paint you whore-red. It's gender bias that will condemn you for your impudence in speaking on female passage.

I realize I'm talking about "gender bias" as if it was an inanimate object. Of course it's people. It's a prejudice, that unfolds in a myriad of ways.

There were a couple dozen men at Blogher, and few hundred women. Some of the men I met were thrilled to be there. Guy Kawasaki wrote in his journal: 

There is a contingent of readers of my blog who do not like it... when I write about  non-business, non-tech, non-male subjects. To these readers, I say in advance: “You can never support a mom, much less a mommy blogger, too much, so deal with it.”

A few other men I spoke to, confided to me that they were apprehensive to be in attendance, afraid they might get thrown out on their ear.

"Really? What do you mean?" I asked. I was taken aback.

I know what it's like to be the bizarre minority in a room, the white chick at the Black Islam conference, the lone female member in a labor hall of cigar-chompers, the bisexual plaintiff in a dyke court. I know that sensation of trying to maintain your integrity without setting someone off into a rage.

Susielulu But Blogher was like a tea party. The women attendees were dying to talk to the IT professional men who showed up— after all, they were largely there because they has some product or service of interest.

So why would the fellows I spoke to be terrified? When I pressed them, in genuine curiosity, they  repeated their sense of being under threat. They allowed that yes, everyone had been very, very nice, in fact. No one had been strung up for patriarchal war crimes. Good grief!

I asked my partner Jon at home what he thought of this, if he could help me figure it out. He said, "Well, just imagine if one of those cigar-smoking labor guys came to one of your women's union reform meetings... how would they have reacted?"

I laughed. "They would have been extremely uncomfortable."

"And why...?"

"'Cause they would be resentful, sort of guilty—  feeling like the world's been turned upside-down and no one gave them the memo. Feminists violate their idea of what their mom and their wife or their daughter is supposed to do. They really do have this idea about women being "different creatures."

"Well, there you have your answer."

"But do you think that's unconscious on their parts, is that why they can't confess it  to me?"

Jon shook his head. "No, it's just the opposite... they're hyper-aware of how they've excluded women in the past, and they're terrified that their own tactics will be visited upon them."

Halleysusie "Well, not all of them are terrified," I said, picking up business section of the Mercury News, which ran a story advising "single geek guys" on how "pretty" all the little BlogHer girls were. "That's just condescending."

"Same thing!"

The conference was astounding for the authority of its women speakers. You can find "pretty" girls anywhere— how often can you find ones who can rewire your whole world?

I went to one workshop on something very technical, that I've been wanting to master.  It featured two of the best educators at the conference, who were dazzling, at the top of their game. Pardon me if I don't remember what they were wearing.

The Q&A began... and each time a woman in the audience asked a question, one lone man sitting at a nearby table, rose to answer. He cut off the presenters, he cut off everyone. He had to be the first, and he had to have the last word.

He was blind to the eyes rolling around him. Eye-rolling was all we did— no one said to him, "Dude, shut up already." He was indulged and allowed to sail off without realizing that he had alienated every last person in there. I doubt anyone from his mother on out has ever given him a clue. I feel ashamed of myself for sitting there and writhing in silence.

At this conference, there was a great deal of hand-holding on all fronts, and it wasn't altogether unwelcome. Sometimes I wished the conference had more debate, less esteem-building— but other times, I was glad for the encouragement, especially on a one-to-one basis.

For feminist convention organizers, on ANY TOPIC,  one fears there is little space to occupy between Pablum Rah-Rah on one side and Queen Bee Death Match on the other. Women in leadership positions have often complained that they don't want to be sharks, but they don't want to be holding hands and singing lullabies either.

Some argument came up in the Mommy Bloggers colloquium. There are women who chafe at being called "MommyBloggers"— they feel it trivializes their mission.

Others want to reclaim the word, like Dyke or Pussy-- this is what we are; it's the listener's problem if they lack respect for a righteous mother.

Arielsusie How does one accurately describe a mother's life, anyway? Some said profanity had no place in a mommy-blog, while other mommys shouted, "No MotherFucking Way."

The tension once again scratched the toenails of that Elephant I mentioned in the beginning. Blogging IS a feminist issue—and is perhaps its most subversive force.

In the 60s, womens libbers articulated that the personal was political, and that the Double Standard had to go. Every madonna was a whore, and every whore a mother. We wrote it on the walls: "Daddy, I'm Through."

And yet, despite Ms. magazine, despite The Hite Report, despite Billy Jean King, I have never seen the demonstration of personal-is-political, double-standard shredding in action as I have seen it today, practiced on women's blogs.

Every time a woman's blog proclaims her intellect, her sexuality, and her nurture — all on the same page— she has diced the dominant paradigm.

She has motherfucked her way into new consciousness, with the radiant touch of real life, the opposite of all those ridiculous "women's" magazines, TV shows, and celebu-crap.

The hand that blogs the cradle informs the world —this, the blog-her generation, is the crux of women's liberation that I thought had passed its due date. Who's drooling now?

Lots of great photos, eh? There was a blizzard of BlogHer photographers. From top to bottom we have: Ariel with Clits Up! button, Halley Suitt, Susie, Logan Levkoff, and Melissa Gira leading sex panel, Meg Hourihan, Heather Champ, Maggie Mason, Leah Peterson, me (hiding) and Heather Armstrong, as taken by Ms. Cupcake at the Cocktail  Reception,  Susie and Logan, Susie with Lulu folk: Charlotte, Katie, and Jason, Susie and Halley, Susie and Ariel.

You can find the photo subjects and shooters here: Ariel Meadow Stallings, Halley Suitt,Logan Levkoff, Melissa Gira, Lulu, and Jason Adams.

I really did have a lot of fun.

March 24, 2006

The Keys To Konsciousness

Img_1546_1About a year before my aunt Molly died, she sent me a little cardboard box filled with thirteen antique keys.

These ornate brass lockbusters looked like they opened the door to a secret garden— or maybe Bluebeard's worst room!  It was like receiving a box of jewels.

I asked Molly what they opened, exactly. She didn't answer. That was typical! In my family, you have to make up your own answers.

After fondling them for awhile, I got the idea that I wanted to string the keys on beads, like rosaries, and then make some kind of mobile out of them.

Today I finally did it, on my birthday eve. I found a cascading shell lamp for sale at CostPlus, one of those "island romance" numbers you're supposed to hook up as a lamp. The metal grid that holds the strands of shells is just the kind of "solar system" design I needed to suspend my secret keys.

Jon hung my mobile just above my bed, in front of the window light. He used fishing line and hardware store "spinners," so it will twirl without getting twisted.

There's something about these old keys that make me smile, in spite of my curmudgeonly approach to a birthday. They have this funny way of insisting, "Hey, there's always another way in."

And speaking of birthdays... big kiss to all of you who've sent me postal greetings! I love tearing open those envelopes! I have something to send y'all, too, but you might have to wait a week for me to cram myself into my shipping closet again!

Special embraces to those girls at "BadButtons," who made me a whole baggie full of itty-bitty "Clits Up" buttons that are AWESOME. I'll take a picture of them next week, something artful and astounding.

Last— but hardly least— to all of you twiddling your thumbs,  do feel free to get all sentimental and send a donation to my blog this week... if you enjoy the commentary, the activism, the stories, the advice—  or even the nude ice dancers— why not throw some spare change in this journal's direction?

You know, if I had a rubel from everyone who clicked on my naked ice skater, I would never have to ask for another donation. I could just get my own web server, a raft of elves, and be done with it. The traffic I got on that ice-dancer link from Russian language web pages was unbelieveable.  It even dwarfed the JT Leroy kerfuffle.

"Naked Ice" still comes up in my list of most popular key words associated with this site. I am so mystified every time I look at the "key word" hit list for this blog. It changes every day, of course, and  it's like a found poem.

Today we have:

orgasm
clitoris
big red one
vietnam
michelle tea
lesbian nipple pullers
press corps and male escort
prison new orleans

Yikes! I'll need every secret key I've got to jimmy my way out of that one.

March 14, 2006

I'm Good Enough, I'm Smart Enough, and Gosh Darn It!

I got Kurt Vonnegut's new book in the mail just before Xmas last year; I thought it must be a gift from a friend who spotted it on my Amazon wish list. But today, I found out different.

The book is a gift from someone named David Madden. If I had your email, David, I'd write you in person!  It has taken me all these months to read your "gift message," that impossibly small print on the slip of paper that came in the Amazon package. I've been using it as a bookmark!

This afternoon, my lover pulled it out of the book, and said, "Have you read this?":

Dear Susie, We talked to each other a few years ago— I had a friend, a stripper, who taught herself to read using your books and a dictionary; 'twas her turning point. Recall? Peace, David.

Wow. David's friend was a beautiful Russian woman from Odessa. Back in the 80s, she had one of her penpals in the US take copies of my work, rip them into pieces, and use it as packing material for a glass vase — as if the paper was only stuffing for a box.

When she received the package, she would  smooth out each ripped piece, tape them together, iron them, collate them, and get out her  English/Russian dictionary.  And then share them with her girlfriend. There was— needless to say— no Russian language lesbian anything. No paper, no community, nothing.

When she emigrated to the US, she came directly to the On Our Backs offices in San Francisco, a hole in the wall overhanging the worst Chinese restaurant in the city.

She was SO beautiful, as I'm sure David recalls, and her story had us all in tears. I have rarely met such a determined young person. I know she started her own business after stripping at the O'Farrell for a couple years.  Then what?  Maybe you'll fill me in.

I've been in the middle of a bad day. That means a lot of rejection on the work front... media people who don't come out of their coma until you scream, "Paris is on the phone!" And that's just the clueless ones. On the more vindictive tip, I've gotten so much personal hate mail about my recent posts, I feel like one of Napoli's sodomized virgins by proxy.

In consequence, I've made several threats to my loved ones today about how I am "this close" to flippin' vegiburgers at the school cafeteria with a hair net and a bad attitude. —In Alberta.

To find this note today, typed in 6 pt. italic Palatino on the waybill, gave me pause. I put down the gun, and had a little moment of gratitude. Maybe it's the lunar eclipse.

Thank you David! Thank you, Anastasia! Thank you, Kurt! Who was it who wrote to me recently, "Let no one disturb your peace— and live to fight another day" ? I'm going to write that on my forehead for tomorrow!

March 04, 2006

Put On Your Big Girl Panties and Deal With It

Y1705_1 How did I miss this new bumper sticker with my name on it? I'm only afraid I might have them on backwards.

I'm just coming down from my Oscar party. Did you think Brokeback Mountain got robbed,—or are you just as happy that Crash won?

This past week, I wrote a piece for a round-table discussion on "what people don't say about Brokeback."

I thought some of the other participants were fascinating, especially the therapist who has a lot of "clients" like Jack and Ennis— and the porn guy who made me burst out laughing at his critique of the rather unrealistic portrayal of anal sex implied by the movie. It just goes to show how Hollywood can put that only-on-celluloid spin on any kind of sex! Good reading, all around.

I'm going to write a separate bitch-fest on the fashion side of the red carpet, that I'll post tomorrow. I'll just say for now that I wore a silver lame number with impossible decolletage, my "Carmella Soprano" fur jacket,  "diamond" bunny necklace, a wiglet straight out of Valley of the Dolls, and matching Birkenstocks.

May I ask your advice, on some projects that have been bedeviling me? I have a little blog news, too.

1.  I need a reel-to-reel tape recorder. I want to make some digital copies of music my  father lent me — fabulous old tapes of music from India, California Indian songs and stories, and even some young-as-a-spring-chicken Doc Watson.

I have the Harmon-Kardan CD Player/Recorder that converts analog to digital— for example, from a cassette deck, or a turntable— but I cannot find a working reel-to-reel, that I could either have for free, for pennies, or to borrow.

I don't want to buy a new machine because I won't use it again, and this is going to take some hours of recording and editing... I don't have the budget for a luxury hobby!  Any leads? Let me know.

2.  I need to scan some of my old books and manuscripts which were written in the Stone Age, before digital files. (Sensing a theme here?)  I need them scanned with OCR software, so they will be text documents that I can then edit and convert into PDF's.

I Google'd "book scanning" and such, and found a long list of companies that profess to  do this very thing. They were pitching themselves to corporations and schools, but I figure I'd call them anyway, since I'm accustomed to not seeing "For Starving Artists" written on the home page.

I have called FIVE of them... the top links on Google, and only one guy called me back. He was at a convention in Chicago and yelled, "Whaddya want?" like I was calling for a cab on a rainy night.

I said, "I might have some business for you, I need a series of books scanned," and he rang off, saying he had no time to talk. Never heard from him again.  I could have been Melinda Gates, and now he'll never know.

I'm convinced there must be people out there who have the page-feed scanners, the OCR software, who do this for a living, small projects, whatever. Is there someone in the South Bay Area like this? Or anywhere? Please let me know if you've done this or have the perfect referral. I have copies which can have the binding broken, etc.

3. My dad is always recommending good things for me to read; I love his taste in books. So I asked him to write some book reviews, and you'll find them down my right-hand sidebar. It's called "Grandpa's Book Reviews, by Bill Bright." That was Aretha's idea. He'll update them every month or so.

On the left-hand sidebar, scrolling down, you'll find a list I made of my father's books in print. I feel so silly, I never looked at them in Amazon before. He got so many great reviews! No one ever says, "This ISN'T Linguistics! Who are YOU to talk about language!" ( Which is what many people say when one writes about "erotica" for example).  Anyway, I hope you enjoy them, 'cause I'm very proud.

5.  Oh, let's just go back one more time, to the issue of traditional mediums and what-the-hell-to-do. What do you do with hundreds, even thousands of beautiful photographs you'd like to immortalize online?

I know the negs should be saved for posterity, if  it's art photography or legacy stuff. I'm not even talking about all the cute dog/kitty poses.

I have been completely flummoxed by this sort of thing. It's so labor intensive... I'll do a dozen photos, and wonder where the day went. And I'm not even doing particularly great quality. My Valentine project was one of those.

Here, I'll give you an example of something to cherish: my maternal grandmother was the first pianist at the first Nickelodeon theater in Fargo, ND. She played piano for all the silent movies, and was a HUGE fan of all the first actors and actresses to make their mark. This was the early 20s.

She would write away for autographed photos— and what lovely prints she received and collected!  Gorgeous photography by the great Hollywood snappers of the time, beautifully printed on exquisite paper, signed in great gushes of fountain pen ink. Pola Negri, William Hart, Lillian Gish... a treasure trove of these jewels.

Of COURSE I want to scan them and make a little online museum of them, with notes on the portraits and players.  I'm a huge old Hollywood buff, and this is the buff's great dilemma!

Have any of you been faced with this kind of project, where you didn't have piles of money or time, but you wanted to do it justice?

February 28, 2006

Flogging 'Til It Hurts

I have a new "flog," I mean "Plog," on Amazon.com. It's a special diary that any author can run on their book pages on Amazon's site, and it's kinda like crawling into every reader's lap!

The best part of the "Plog" is that any Amazonian can write to me right there on the spot, and I can reply. I've encouraged all who see it to: "ask me anything."

Of course, since it's such a public site, people won't probably ask me as sexually candid questions as they would here, which is a shame. I would love to talk about sex on the same pages that I'm griping about my iPod battery! It's like talking dirty in the aisles of Target, another thing I like to do.

Like many authors who're trying this, I'm wondering how an Amazon blog should be different from what I post here. I feel a little giddy that I get to "meet" every single person who looks up or buys one of my works on Amazon. Or what about the people who just troll by to write reviews that amount to "you suck!"? Finally, I can confront them!

Speaking of new blogs, I started a Susie space on "myspace" just to watch it die... actually, just to see what fumes come up, like a science experiment. I really don't get "how" you do myspace. I don't know how to post music, or hot graphics, and I answered the profile questions honestly, which I now see is a faux pas. Clearly, I am a myspace duffer.

However, the first message I got was from a nice woman named Buttercup, who I immediately made my "friend." Is it appropriate to be so impulslve?

I get so nervous about these "internet friend" things. Have I ever mentioned that "J.T. Leroy" hounded me to join Friendster, which amounted to an avalanche of spam which has never, ever abated? Needless to say, I didn't make anything resembling an actual F-R-I-E-N-D on that site at all, it was just another one of JT's time drains.

Today I got my second message from myspace, from a guy who told, not asked, me to meet him at a local beach so he could "stuff his cock in my cunt." Of course I dropped everything to fulfill his needs. How do I block turdwads like that?

All this fooling around on other people's sites made me miss home. I  sat down and wrote about twenty new music, movie, and book reviews for my own site here, which you can read on the pink sidebars. ENJOY!

January 22, 2006

Blogging My Ben Wa Blues Away

SusiepicWelcome to my behind-the-scenes blog gossip for regular readers. If you're bored, go read Molly Ivin's column — a fabulous kick-in-the-ass for anyone to scream or steam over. I love her.

1. As some of you noticed, I turned on comment approval for the past couple days, which meant you couldn't see your comment published until I gave it my nod. Very annoying, I know, but I was being hit by a wave of trolls/spammers.

I will occasionally turn on the delay when we're getting flooded with troll-pies here, but I will turn it off when things die down. It's amazing how indifference drives them away.

1A. "Wow," you may ask, "What awful things did they say that I missed?"

They don't bear repeating. It would be like asking someone to fart one more time so they can clear the room.

Trolls tend to be mean, and specialize in personal insults.You couldn't imagine anyone saying this shit to your face unless they were plastered.

The spammers are either robots, or crazypeople hawking their jujubeads du jour.

2. I have posted on a comment policy on my right sidebar. Those of you who bother to read it are probably already the soul of courtesy, but I had to give it a go. If it inhibits one emerging bully or self-advertiser, it was worth it.

3. If you want to talk back to me about what I write here, I encourage you to comment on the blog. I get a lot of email from people who write me amazing things, and I wish  you would post it right here in the comments! You're good enough, you're smart enough, and doggone it, the editor likes you! Besides, lurking is boring. And I won't let the trolls bite you.

For example, I got about 50 emails about JT Leroy, and every single one of them would have been great reading for everyone here.

Sure, maybe it's hard to admit you got down on your knees to give JT a pedicure and the last of your coke— or fucked Savannah Knoops last summer and never told her you had herpes— but who cares? Use a pseudonym! This is a understanding group! And everyone has herpes!

Your comments elicit a good conversation, and I enjoy jumping in and sharing my reaction with everyone too. As it is, I haven't caught up answering all the emails individually, and I don't know if I can!

I partly started the blog  because I couldn't keep up with email. I'd have a hundred different people writing me about the exact same issue, ("My ben wa balls were screened in my vagina at the airport...")  and it seemed crazy to have them all be apart from each other, or sending out a form letter each time: "Dear Ben Wa Terrorism Victim..."

4. Thank you so much for all your donations to this blog. I so appreciate it.  Further more, I need them. Blog or Bust, baby. My dream this year is to cover my overhead and maybe earn one penny per hour for writing. It’s good to have goals!

4a. Also, you may not realize how darn cheap it is to advertise here. Your manifesto / product / life's-work deserves nothing less.

5. I'm closing down my old static site next month— the original susiebright.com I started in 1996!  It will still be available to stare and giggle at in the Wayback Machine, but it will be gone from the live web. I will transfer my domain name here, so everyone will land in the right place when they look for me.

I'm going to salvage and rewrite some of my favorite stories that I posted at my old site over the past ten years. —Like the FAQ, for instance, which is hilariously out of date. If there is anything over there you are concerned about losing, please let me know and I'll bring a copy of it over here.

6. Yes, I will be wearing overalls to read my Dworkin memorial at the SF Library. But nothing else. And thank you for all your suggestions, I have some really great material and I just hope they don't drag me off with a cane.

December 16, 2005

Back From the Dead

Madcat3aiAs many of you noticed yesterday, my blog was broken. It's okay now. Unfortunately, it was like a black-out, entirely out of my hands. I'm very sorry for the confusion.

The blog service I use, called Typepad, had a meltdown in the middle of the night, Thursday. It wasn't until about 12 hours later that it came back up. It affected thousands of web journals.

I was vexed, and frightened.  The night of the shutdown, I  had just sent my very first mailing to my entire email  list— thousands of people— telling them to "come on over!" 

If they were innocent enough to try my blog link, they got an ERROR message!  So much for my credibility.

Another cause for anxiety... I've been invited to be a columnist for The Huffington Post, and they're running my first column  Saturday the 17th.  I dreaded to think that HP readers might link over to my blog, and find it D.O.A.

I meant to tell you the Huffington news in a spirit of celebration, before all this happened! I'm flattered to death. I hope a zillion people come over here and pick out their purity rings!

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