About This Author
I am SoCalScribe. This is my InkSpot.
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Blogocentric Formulations
Logocentric (adj). Regarding words and language as a fundamental expression of an external reality (especially applied as a negative term to traditional Western thought by postmodernist critics).
Sometimes I just write whatever I feel like. Other times I respond to prompts, many taken from the following places:
"The Soundtrackers Group"
"Blogging Circle of Friends "
"Blog City ~ Every Blogger's Paradise"
"JAFBG"
"Take up Your Cross"
Thanks for stopping by!
January 20, 2016 at 12:23am January 20, 2016 at 12:23am
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Today marked the beginning of the second week at my new job. It's been a hectic, crazy week and I'm just now starting to understand the sheer scope of the job I signed on for. I know I don't talk a lot about my day job on WdC, and that's partially for some semblance of anonymity, and partially because working in the entertainment industry tends to bring out a lot of people who see connections to a well-known movie and television company as a means of getting their own foot in the door. ("Oh, you work for [SUCCESSFUL COMPANY]? That's amazing! I've got an idea for a movie I think would be perfect for them..." )
Without going into too many specifics, there are a couple of things I need to mention about my new job:
First, I'm working for a company whose projects I love. I've literally seen every single one of their movies in the theater, and every episode of all but two of their television series. I've been a fan of this company's intellectual properties since I was a little kid, and I'm totally geeking out over the fact that I play a small role in seeing that IP brought to the screen. My last job made well-known movies and television, but it's not the stuff I would choose to watch on my own, if I weren't trying to support my employer. This is a case where I was a fan of my new company's projects long before I started working there, and will continue to watch them long after I'm gone.
Second, I've been trying to get a job at this company for over a decade. For whatever reason, the timing hasn't been right. I've applied for jobs I knew I'd be perfect for and not even been called in for an interview. I've gone in for interviews and had them lead nowhere. To be fair, it's a popular company that gets hundreds of applications for every job, so competition has been fierce. I had to take a significant pay and title cut to get the job, but I did it gladly. Suffice to say, I've really wanted to work here for a really long time, and now it's a reality.
Third, the job is on a studio lot, which has always been a dream of mine. At lunch I can walk to the commissary and pass sound stages where they're building movie sets, and iconic buildings that feature architecture and artwork that highlight film and industry history dating back more than fifty years. God must have had this really well planned out, because the company I work for just moved to the studio lot a few years ago, after several years of bouncing around to other locations around Los Angeles.
Fourth, this new job is very specific and directly related to getting a movie ready for release into theaters. All of my previous jobs have involved a wide variety of responsibilities relating to the business of making movies (not all of them movie specific). The job I just left after five years, for example, had me doing everything from tracking payments and deadlines to managing company relations to implementing document control processes. I was very much a generalist that put out whatever fire was burning on the corporate frontline that day. Now, I'm the one specifically responsible for the movie's screen credits (making sure all those names at the beginning and end of a movie are correct) and promotional items (making sure the movie posters, merchandise, and advertising all attribute credit and legal notices properly)... and that's it. All day every day is doing that specific job - which is considerable based on the size of the movies we release - and it means that I can sit in a theater on opening weekend and point to a part of the movie and say, "I was the one who did that part of what you're watching" rather than, "I work for the company that made this movie." It's a weird feeling to be so specifically involved in these productions.
Fifth and lastly, I can already tell this job isn't going to give me a lot of downtime. At each of my past jobs, there's been ample time to distract myself with other things (like WdC!) during the day. Things at those companies would move slower and, for someone like me who is pretty efficient at his job, there were lots of times where I had time to kill because everything on my to-do list was done and I was waiting on input from other people to do the next thing. This job isn't going to be like that. I had over 50 emails on my first day, and it's only gone up from there. I'm busy from the minute I get to work to the minute I leave, and I haven't so much as logged into my Gmail, checked WdC, scrolled through my Facebook feed, or even surfed the web since I've started. It's probably better that way (work should be a time of work, not recreation), but it's definitely a transition from what I'm used to.
While I was typing all that, I completely forgot my reason for writing this blog post.
I suppose the point of all this is just to say that I'm ridiculously excited about my new job, but I'm also feeling a little out of sorts and overwhelmed. I'm sure that will change as I settle in and start to get familiar with the way the company runs, but it's an odd feeling to be at a place I've wanted to be for a long time, doing a type of job that's relatively new to me.
2016 is starting off as a year of many changes, and - after the last five years of pretty steady consistency - it's exciting to see what's in store during this new season!
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January 3, 2016 at 1:24am January 3, 2016 at 1:24am January 1, 2016 at 12:53am January 1, 2016 at 12:53am
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It's the end of 2015, which means it's time to review all the reading and listening I've done over the past calendar year. Last year, I hit my goal of reading 52 books (one a week) in 2014, so I set a goal of 53 books in 2015 in hopes of besting my best result. I ended up blowing past that goal and setting what I'm pretty sure will be a high score for many years to come. Here's how it breaks down:
= favorite
= also highly recommended
FICTION
3:00 AM by Nick Pirog
50 Shades of Alice in Wonderland by Melinda Duchamp
50 Shades of Alice Through the Looking Glass by Melinda Duchamp
50 Shades of Alice at the Hellfire Club by Melinda Duchamp
Alchemist of Souls, The by Anne Lyle
Alias Omnibus [Graphic Novel] by Brian Michael Bendis
All The Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr
Angels Flight by Michael Connelly
B is for Burglar by Sue Grafton
Big Sleep, The by Raymond Chandler
Blaze by Stephen King
Bullets by Elijah Drive
Calm Before the Storm by Ryan Mullaney
Cat's Cradle by Kurt Vonnegut
Chop Suey by Ty Hutchinson
Clockwork by Phillip Pullman
Courage Matters by R. Scott Mackey
Entertaining Stories by Bennett Cameron
Fade to Black by Francis Knight
Fat Vampire by Johnny B. Truant
Filthy Fairy Tales by Lexi Maxxwell
Firefight by Brandon Sanderson
Glass Castle, The by Jeannette Walls
Half a King by Joe Abercrombie
Halloween Tree, The by Ray Bradbury
Honeymoon by James Patterson
Incrementalists, The by Skyler White & Steven Brust
Infected (Click Your Poison) by James Schannep
Lions of Lucerne by Brad Thor
Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
Malice and Mistletoe [Graphic Novel] by Nathan Graham Davis
Martian, The by Andy Weir
Midnight's Children by Salman Rushdie
MILF: Episode One by Lexi Maxxwell
Occult Assassin: Damnation Code by William Massa
Paper Towns by John Green
Partials by Dan Wells
Plagiarist, The by Hugh Howey
Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
Private by James Patterson
Reapers: Stave 1 by Jason & Chris Thornton
Red Queen by Victoria Aveyard
Shadows Beneath by Brandon Sanderson, et al
Smash Cut by Sandra Brown
Snake Skin by C.J. Lyons
Snow Queen, The by Hans Christian Andersen
Snowblind by Christopher Golden
Stand, The by Stephen King
Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel
Stone of Fire by Joanna Penn
Strange Death of Fiona Griffiths by Harry Bingham
Superpowered (Click Your Poison) by James Schannep
Tourist Season by Carl Hiaasen
Twelfth Night by Williams Shakespeare
Unicorn Western by Sean Platt and Johnny B. Truant
Ur by Stephen King
Whiskey Sour by J.A. Konrath
White Noise: Season 1 Episode 1 by Sean Platt and David Wright
Wool by Hugh Howey
Yesterday's Gone: Season 1 Episode 1 by Sean Platt and David Wright
NONFICTION
2K to 10K by Rachel Aaron
A Mind for Numbers by Barbara Oakley
Bittersweet by Shauna Niequist
Circle Maker, The by Mark Batterson
Cold Tangerines by Shauna Niequist
Crazy Love by Francis Chan
Down the Rabbit Hole by Holly Madison
Forgotten God by Francis Chan
Love Does by Bob Goff
Made to Stick by Chip & Dan Heath
Mere Christianity by C.S. Lewis
On Writing by Stephen King
Power of Giving, The by Azim Jamal and Harvey McKinnon
Quiet by Susan Cain
Quitter by Jon Acuff
Start Here by Don Williams
Successful Novelist, The by David Morrell
Think Like A Freak by Steven Levitt and Stephen Dubner
Why Jesus? by Ravi Zacharias
You and Me Forever by Francis & Lisa Chan
PODCASTS
Business of Film - 23 episodes
Chicks Who Script - 30 episodes
Creative Penn, The - 30 episodes
Freakonomics - 14 episodes
How Stuff Works - 7 episodes
Intelligence Squared - 2 episodes
Moment with Brian Koppelman, The - 9 episodes
Nerdist - 14 episodes
Nerdist Writer's Panel - 29 episodes
Q&A, The - 6 episodes
Rocking Self Publishing Podcast, The - 16 episodes
Scriptnotes - 56 episodes
Self Publishing Questions - 39 episodes
Self Publishing Podcast, The - 100 episodes
Serial - 2 episodes
Slate Political Gabfest - 35 episodes
Stuff You Missed in History Class - 7 episodes
TED Radio Hour - 12 episodes
Writing Excuses - 53 episodes
WTF with Marc Maron - 3 episodes
You Must Remember This - 14 episodes
COMICS
Arabian Nights - 14 issues
Code Red - 5 issues
Red Ten - 1 issues
Robyn Hood - 5 issues
Oz - 6 issues
SCREENPLAYS
20 Unproduced
TOTALS
80 books, 501 podcasts, 31 comics, 20 screenplays
Thanks to recording my reading on Goodreads, I also have some general reading statistics from my year:
Total Pages Read: 21,999
Average Pages Per Book: 286
Shortest Book: 39 pages
Longest Book: 1,153 pages
As part of my reading year, thanks to Elle - on hiatus 's prompting, I also participated in the PopSugar 2015 Reading Challenge ▼
A book with more than 500 pages
A classic romance
A book that became a movie
A book published this year
A book with a number in the title
A book written by someone under 30
A book with nonhuman characters
A funny book
A book by a female author
A mystery or thriller
A book with a one-word title
A book of short stories
A book set in a different country
A nonfiction book
A popular author's first book
A book from an author you love that you haven't read yet
A book a friend recommended
A Pulitzer Prize-winning book
A book based on a true story
A book at the bottom of your to-read list
A book your mum loves
A book that scares you
A book more than 100 years old
A book based entirely on its cover
A book you were supposed to read in school but didn't
A memoir
A book you can finish in a day
A book with antonyms in the title
A book set somewhere you've always wanted to visit
A book that came out the year you were born
A book with bad reviews
A trilogy
A book from your childhood
A book with a love triangle
A book set in the future
A book set in high school
A book with a colour in the title
A book that made you cry
A book with magic
A graphic novel
A book by an author you've never read before
A book you own but have never read
A book that takes place in your hometown
A book that was originally written in a different language
A book set during Christmas
A book written by an author with your same initials
A play
A banned book
A book based on or turned into a TV show
A book you started but never finished
Overall, I'm really happy with my reading year. I accomplished way more than I set out to, and I read some really great stuff. I appreciated the additional challenge of trying to find books to fit the criteria of the PopSugar Reading Challenge, but I don't think I'm going to take on another challenge like that for a while, because it became a real struggle toward the end to read stuff that simply ticked off a box. I got through about 80% of the challenge with either books I wanted to read or books that piqued my interest and fit a category. But the other 20% was a real slog to get through.
I'm thinking that, for 2016, my reading goals will center around the types of things I read rather than the quantity. Most notably, I'd like to read more books by friends, independent authors, and writers here on WdC. I hope to self-publish something myself soon, and I think I'll get more value out of reading the types of things similar to what I hope to publish than I will participating in challenges where I'm trying to round out items on a list by choosing genres and subject matters that aren't even close to what I'm interested in for myself as an author.
Time to say farewell to 2015, and hello to a brand new year of reading opportunities!
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