Home

Previous Entry | Next Entry

How to Teach Men to Write Women

  • Apr. 29th, 2009 at 9:37 PM
borromir walmart
(This popped out of my fingers during a discussion of last night's NCIS epsiode, Legend, wherein Ziva, once again, is written poorly.)

I've *got* it! They need to put the writers on the following regimen.

Bookcases stocked with the collected works of Dorothy Parker, Molly Ivins and Erma Bombeck. Also a complete edition of the Oxford English Dictionary (they're writers, they'll eat it up).

A full cookie jar, candy dish and mandatory hidden chocolate stash (it tastes better that way) to be provided on demand. Coffee, soft drinks and MacAllen 15 should be stocked at all times. Some writers may protest that they don't drink alcohol. Ignore them. They lie. If they don't drink when they start, they will before the week's out. Possibly before lunch if they've never even *tried* to write realistic women before.

Three weeks out of the month:

Breakfast (to be brought in on a tray): Bagels and cream cheese, a side of bacon, attractively arranged fresh fruit and limitless coffee. Once finished, the plates and flatware used for the bagels and bacon should be removed. The untouched fruit is to remain as a centerpiece and as a reminder that they really are more virtuous than it seems, but to break up the aesthetic lines of the arrangement by eating any of it would be criminal.

Moral: write the stories that work and don't add crap just because some authority somewhere said it was good for you, especially not if it's attractive and desirable as it stands.

Attempt to drag self away from the OED and open a new document on the computer. Put down the OED's way cool magnifying glass and begin to create a viable script to highlight a strong, independent female character between the ages of 30 and 50. Put magnifying glass in the drawer to resist the urge to shrink the font on the monitor just so you'd 'need' to use it. Type, print, read, cry; rinse and repeat until lunch.

Lunch: Choice of club sandwich, pastrami on rye or heart healthy veggie/tofu wrap served with Nacho Cheese Doritos (optional side of artfully sliced vegetables - sheeyeah, right). Order the heart healthy veggie/tofu wrap for yourself and the pastrami on rye because, of course, you're, um, yeah, you're expecting a visitor at lunchtime. Yeah, that's the ticket. Artfully redistribute the veggie/tofu wrap into the trash where you cover it with the pages you've already abandoned from the morning's writing session. Wolf down the pastrami on rye because, hey, it's pastrami on rye! (Damn, that's good eatin'.) Reserve the chips and wash down with soft drink of your choice.

Regret not having "two visitors" because you could really go for a second pastrami sandwich.

Decide you need inspiration and pull down a book at random. Put back the volume of the OED your hand unerringly found. You can't read that until you produce something. Select, instead, a collection of columns by Molly Ivins. Eat chips while reading about the trials and tribulations of covering the Texas Legislature. Try to dust out the Dorito crumbs before hiding the book under the sofa cushion and hoping no one will notice.

Spend 20 minutes trying to remember where you stashed the chocolate. Give up and decide to have cookies, instead. Take them to the computer and begin to work, hearing Molly Ivins' voice in your head while you work. Just as you're picturing her squaring off against Gibbs (and that's a smack down I would have *LOVED* to have seen - Gibbs wouldn't have stood a chance), you remember where the chocolate is and rescue it from the Dorito encrusted tome under the same couch cushion.

Write virtuously until dinner.

Dinner: Screw looking like you're eating properly. Request KFC, wedge fries and a chocolate silk pie. Threaten to shove the rather tired looking fruit plate where the sun don't shine if you don't get fed and get fed *now*. Wash it down with coffee and follow it with three fingers of MacAllen 15. Oh, shoot. Just keep the bottle on the table.

Decide you need more inspiration.

Grab the copy of Erma Bombeck's The Grass is Always Greener Over the Septic Tank and read with no little horror about the travails of suburban life. Drink more. Vow to never move out of the city proper. Read more. Realize with horror that you, too, write notes with crayons on old receipts covered in coffee stains and the odd small finger print outlined in grape jelly. Drink more. Begin to realize the ideas for your magnum opus that will free you from the sweatshop that is television writing *is* sitting at home on a collection of restaurant receipts, your children's old home work papers and that weirdly erotic birthday card from your brother-in-law. Realize you're either on the verge of an artistic epiphany or you're just really, really drunk. And why would he send you a birthday card with an eggplant on it in the first place?

Attempt to save your work, but you might have just emailed it to everyone in your addressbook. Manage to get the cap on the MacAllen, tuck a volume of the OED under your arm and stagger to bed.

Thus endeth the first day.

Rinse and repeat for three weeks.

In the fourth week, your diet will consist of hunks of raw zebra thrown through the door and as much chocolate, caffeine and alcohol as you can stomach. You won't write a word, but by the end of it, you'll have Dorothy Parker memorized and will have built a shrine to Erma Bombeck out of empty Dorito bags and empty chocolate boxes. Every bite of zebra will be followed by recitations of the idiocy of the men involved in Texas politics as told by Molly Ivins.

The dawning of the fifth week will be your salvation. For now, you will have absorbed all you need to write female characters that real women out there watching your show will recognize, embrace and love. (Hint, if you can get Gibbs and DiNozzo into a clinch at least once an episode, those women will likely offer to have your babies... ha! Gotcha! Like that's gonna happen. But they will send you brownies and booze and thank you notes written in crayon. Just ignore the grape jelly on the back.)

Comments

( 32 comments — Leave a comment )
[info]dicranum wrote:
Apr. 30th, 2009 02:51 am (UTC)
Bwhaahahaha! You just made my night. Very nice.
[info]tejas wrote:
Apr. 30th, 2009 03:13 am (UTC)
:-) Glad to hear it.

I only wish Hollywood would get a clue. :-)
[info]blackchaps wrote:
Apr. 30th, 2009 02:52 am (UTC)
giggles - you funny
[info]tejas wrote:
Apr. 30th, 2009 03:13 am (UTC)
LOL! :-)
[info]spoonyriffic wrote:
Apr. 30th, 2009 03:33 am (UTC)
Holy crap. You are brilliant. Seriously.

This made me laugh so hard, I'm surprised I didn't wake up the house. Then my loud laughter degenerated into that quiet laughter that robs you of air, and I think I stopped breathing for approximately 1.5 minutes. I'm surprised I'm not dead.

*bows at your feet*
[info]tejas wrote:
Apr. 30th, 2009 03:39 am (UTC)
LOL!!! My work here is done. :-)

I confess I was inspired, partly, by Anais' brilliant Dr. Jackson's Diary.

This also bears a scary resemblance to my own writing process.
[info]cookiemom6067 wrote:
Apr. 30th, 2009 03:49 am (UTC)
You? Are a genius, love.

You are hilarious and you are SO RIGHT,

I would SO have paid to see the Molly/Jethro SMACKdown. I miss her SO MUCH, and would have loved to hear her thoughts about Gov. Goodhair and his secessionist whining.

And yes, one (slightly used) womb up for grabs in exchange for G/D clinches (I'm sort of spayed, but it's the thought that counts).

p.s. Love your "Boromir goes to Bentonville" icon.
p.p.s. Please don't get the flu - I need to hear from you daily.
[info]tejas wrote:
Apr. 30th, 2009 03:54 am (UTC)
LOL!! Thanks!

I so miss Miz Molly. She would have ripped Goodhair a new one in seconds. He'd spend a week trying to figure out if he'd been insulted. :-)

Hey, mine's up for grabs... not spayed, but pretty much out of commission. :-)

I can't remember where I found that icon, but I *love* it. :-)

No flu here, so far. *fingers crossed*
[info]nialla42 wrote:
Apr. 30th, 2009 04:09 am (UTC)
I so miss Miz Molly. She would have ripped Goodhair a new one in seconds. He'd spend a week trying to figure out if he'd been insulted. :-)

My grandmother had that same skill. She could tell people to go to hell and they'd think they were getting a compliment.

One of my cousins and I were, and still are, in awe. We only wish we came even halfway close to gram's talent with insults. We are merely pretenders to the throne.
[info]tejas wrote:
Apr. 30th, 2009 04:14 am (UTC)
The Queen of Texas Women's Insults:

"Oh, Bless your heart."

LOL!! Sadly, I am only now beginning to learn the Art of the Insult. I had no role models growing up.
[info]nialla42 wrote:
Apr. 30th, 2009 04:22 am (UTC)
At our gramma's funeral, the minister made a comment about how you always knew where you stood with her, because she would tell you exactly what she thought about things.

The entire family almost lost their shit laughing through the tears, because, oh hellz yes. Whether or not you wanted to know, you were damn well going to be told.

I had one grandmother who was very much into speaking her mind, while the other would worry over every little thing and drive us nuts. I think this explains a lot about me.
[info]tejas wrote:
Apr. 30th, 2009 04:23 am (UTC)
We must be related on the worrier side.

While I would be proud to count you as a relative, I wouldn't wish that side of my family on anyone. :-)
[info]nialla42 wrote:
Apr. 30th, 2009 04:30 am (UTC)
Oddly, I get along with every single relative on the worrying gramma side. But there's a whole lot less on that side of the family to deal with.

When I was getting sick around Christmas one year, someone suggested I was just trying to get out of seeing my family. "No! I actually like that side of my family. The other side... they say absence makes the heart grow fonder, so I'm trying that out with about half of them." *g*
[info]tejas wrote:
Apr. 30th, 2009 04:31 am (UTC)
LOL!!!! The worriers can be quite entertaining. :-)

And yeah, I get along very well with some of my family. Oddly enough, they're the ones who live in other states. ;-)
[info]nialla42 wrote:
Apr. 30th, 2009 04:07 am (UTC)
Why teach men how to write women? Just let women write, and not just for the female characters.

Oh, and why is it you can write this out and it's funny, but when I start saying stuff like this, my friend seems torn between laughing and asking if I got my meds screwed up? *g*
[info]tejas wrote:
Apr. 30th, 2009 04:12 am (UTC)
I figure they're going to have to try and fail miserably before they'll actually get to the point where they'll even *consider* hiring women. :-)

LOL! Hon, your stuff is freakin' hilarious! :-)
[info]nialla42 wrote:
Apr. 30th, 2009 04:16 am (UTC)
Either try and fail, or get them so damn drunk they'll never see the revolution coming. Possibly spiking their drinks to reduce libido would be beneficial?

The muse doesn't really visit anymore. She doesn't call and damn sure doesn't write, the fickle bitch.
[info]tejas wrote:
Apr. 30th, 2009 04:18 am (UTC)
Terminal hangovers'll work. ;-)

You need booze. Muses are all lushes.
[info]nialla42 wrote:
Apr. 30th, 2009 04:26 am (UTC)
Booze doesn't work on me. Unless the point is to vomit merely by smelling it.

It tastes exactly like what it is to me -- rotted grain. Being a farmer's daughter and having the unfortunate opportunity to clean spoiled grain out of bins and such, the smell of beer makes me violently sick to my stomach.

I've tried feeding the muse chocolate, which usually works, but the meds counteract it. It's like what ADHD patients describe what it's like when they're on meds. It allows them to concentrate, but the side effect is often kills creative spark.
[info]tejas wrote:
Apr. 30th, 2009 04:28 am (UTC)
UGH!

But ditch the beer. You need Tequila and the soft drink of your choice. :-)
[info]nialla42 wrote:
Apr. 30th, 2009 04:33 am (UTC)
Can't do any booze. Much to the lament of me in high school and the utter amazement of my French friends would I couldn't get past a single courtesy sip of real French champagne.

If you want to know the real freak of nature I am, I can't do coffee either. Love the smell, loathe the taste.

I make up for these deficiencies by mainlining chocolate, preferably dark.
[info]tejas wrote:
Apr. 30th, 2009 04:38 am (UTC)
Godiva Dark Chocolate Liqueur. :-) Add it to hot chocolate. :-)
[info]discodiva76 wrote:
Apr. 30th, 2009 08:40 am (UTC)
Bwahahahaaaaaa!!...*falls off chair laughing*....



You're good you know!!...*snortle*


Deeds xx
[info]tejas wrote:
Apr. 30th, 2009 12:33 pm (UTC)
*beam*

It just had to be said. :-)

*wanders off looking for chocolate stash*
[info]aelfgyfu_mead wrote:
Apr. 30th, 2009 12:19 pm (UTC)
Or . . . shows and movie studios could start hiring more women writers, we'd get used to seeing women properly depicted, and the next generation of writers, male and female, might grow up with their heads on right and able to write both sexes.

Your way works too. :-)
[info]tejas wrote:
Apr. 30th, 2009 12:34 pm (UTC)
Man, you do want the moon, don't you! :-)

How sad is it that there's a far better chance of the above happening than there is of, y'know, *hiring* women.
[info]sallymn wrote:
Apr. 30th, 2009 09:54 pm (UTC)
{snicker} Now let's tackle how to write foreigners, yes? (oh the pain, the pain...)
[info]tejas wrote:
Apr. 30th, 2009 10:26 pm (UTC)
I think if they could ever work out how to write women, foreigners might come easier.
[info]mornincamper wrote:
May. 1st, 2009 01:26 am (UTC)
I kneel before your Bombeckian wit.

you rock.
lololol
[info]tejas wrote:
May. 1st, 2009 01:33 am (UTC)
ROTFLMAO!!! Thank you, thank you, chocolate will be accepted willingly.

I *loved* Erma Bombeck. We lost a good one when she died.
[info]green_kiwis wrote:
May. 1st, 2009 01:50 pm (UTC)
I admire your masterplan, but the easiest way might be to just snatch away their copy of I'm Glad I'm a Boy! I'm Glad I'm a Girl!
[info]tejas wrote:
May. 1st, 2009 02:18 pm (UTC)
LOL!!! I fear it's going to take serious deprogramming. But taking it away will certainly be a step in the right direction.
( 32 comments — Leave a comment )

Latest Month

October 2009
S M T W T F S
    123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031

Tags

Powered by LiveJournal.com
Designed by Tiffany Chow