November 2009

Flashback

by Marian Schembari on November 14, 2009

Marian readsMy mom just emailed me this awesome picture of my brother and me the day Harry Potter 4 came out. Thought it was appropriate…

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She Writes Call to Action

by Marian Schembari on November 13, 2009

I wanted to write a quick response to Kamy from She Writes and the PW debacle. PW debacle = no women on the list of the top 10 books of 2009. Gross, right? For those of you who have met me, even for 5 minutes, you know all about my lady-passion. Women’s issues get me going, and getting pissed about inequality is a regular (read: daily) occurrence. Now, I could go on and on about all the effed up shit us ladies have to put up with, but this is a publishing blog, and Kamy’s post was in regards to Publisher’s Weekly being douches. So here’s a little snippet (she’s funny, I like her, btw):

“…the opinion of Publishers’ Weekly, which published its “Best Books of 2009″ list on November 2nd and could not see its way to including a single book by a woman without destroying its integrity or betraying its unassailable good taste. Apparently books by women just aren’t as good.”

Now, Kamy suggested a Call to Action, where we buy a book by a woman, write a list of our top 10 books of ‘09. Here’s the thing: on my nightstand right now is a pile of books (no surprise there). Guess what? They’re ALL by women. Hm. What I’m currently reading:

I’m really not okay with this no women on the top 10 list. Really, PW? You’ve read them all and established not one of them is worthy of proper acknowledgment? Are women not as good writers as men? Are you sexist pigs? You say you felt really bad about it, which is funny to me. My favorite quote that you said: “It disturbed us when we were done that our list was all male.” LOL. You just happened to notice at the end the list was all male? Again I say, “Really, PW?”

I don’t doubt the “judges” of PW picked the books they thought the best. I don’t think the purposefully left out women. I do, however, think that subconsciously, women writers just aren’t taken as seriously.

What pisses me off even more is the fact that the Call to Action will no doubt result in lists upon list of the top books BY FEMALE WRITERS of 2009. It pisses me off that we need a separate group. That we still can’t sit in with the big boys. Why do women and minorities need a new list if we’re “just as good”. The answer is: apparently we’re not.

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How to Meet Cool People

by Marian Schembari on November 12, 2009

We all pretty much know by now that people hire people, not resumes. Networking is a beautiful thing. It’s meeting those people that can be tricky, and finding out who there are in the first place. Some tips:

LinkedIn: A relatively easy tool. Type in the name of the organization you want to work for, and magically you get a list of names. Figure out the company email formula and plug it in.  How to use this effectively? I used LinkedIn to find assistants at publishing houses and asked them to guest blog on how they found their jobs. Super easy, got lots of responses. Everyone was nice, offered advice, and told their story. Win-win. Whenever I found a job a wanted, I sent it to the hiring manager, but also to the head of the department of the open position.

Blogs you like: I have some blog idols: Penelope Trunk, Chris Brogan, Jessica Valenti, Michelle Goodman… I heart them. But in the blogosphere many people heart them too. But I’ve written them all emails to tell them that. You want to write for their blog or get some advice? They can only say no, but when they say yes, that’s when you’re golden. I just wrote an article for Penelope Trunk’s blog and I actually got to speak with her on the phone. Let’s just say I almost had a heart attack – but I tried to play it cool ;-)

Organizations: I can’t plug the WNBA enough, but this tactic is true for whatever industry you want to be in. Join the organization of your choice and offer to volunteer. You get closer to people that way, rather than scary networking, and you can help out and learn the ropes.

Mediabistro: Pay the $50 and get a proper membership. They have SO MUCH info I could cry. An awesome resource they have is the revolving door. There you can learn who’s joined or left a company. Write them an email to say congratulations. Not only is it a small connection you’ve made, but it’s also just plain nice. Regardless of how important they are or the fanciness of their job title, I promise they’ll be flattered.

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A rant on choosing only one career

by Marian Schembari on November 10, 2009

My awesome roommate and I have lived together since freshman year of college – we talk a lot, and there’s pretty much nothing we don’t know about each other. A few weeks ago we had a heart to heart that I can’t stop thinking about and now I’m mentioning it to everyone. Friends, colleagues, family, random people on the street. So let me set the scene:

Muffin, as she is known around the house, is an actress. A very VERY good one. She is also a mean baker, a health nut, and a gluten-free advocate. She’s also a fantastic writer, a comedienne, the best grocery-shopper I have ever known. As I mentioned in an earlier post, she moved to New York to pursue theater, and while I know she will be hugely successful, she wants to spend her life doing ALL the things she loves, not just one.

We’re allowed to be good at more than one thing

I moved to New York to pursue publishing. But I also love to write, cook, paint things and generally be crafty. But I moved to New York to work with books, meaning the only acceptable path in my life is to start at the bottom and work my way up. Apparently I have to always work with books. In the course of 20 years I should be the best in my field, giving speeches, teaching 20-somethings and successfully wearing pantsuits. Ew.

My mom (also awesome) wanted to join the ministry when she was my age. Then she dropped out of college and became a DJ, then a reporter for CNN. She then became an author and wrote a book about the TWA 800 crash. Because of this she became an expert. So she joined an aviation law firm as an investigator. She now writes freelance and is a Principal at Humanitarian Research Services. During all this time (I’ve left quite a bit out) she traveled to the Sahara to dig up a plane, moved to Syria to learn Arabic… The list goes on. I basically want to be my mom. I have a million passions and ideas and the thought of doing one thing for my entire life makes me tired. I also think it makes me boring. The least boring person on the planet is my mother. Who DOESN’T want to be that awesome?

Why is it that our society expects us to choose one thing and stick with it forever? People who jump from one job to the next are usually seen as irresponsible and flaky. But really they’re interesting and… here’s that word again… awesome.

I’ve started writing freelance, and have been hitting a few roadblocks. I have a few clips, but nothing major. But I’m 22, give me a break! But in journalism, regardless of your ideas or your writing ability, unless you’ve written for a major national magazine or newspaper, no one gives a crap. I pitched a story a few weeks ago to Major Parenting Magazine. The idea rocked. Editor was interested. She responded right away, we emailed back and forth, I wrote a nice long pitch, got my sources, etc etc. I gave her writing samples. Which is when it stalled. Apparently, I couldn’t write for MPM unless I had already written for another magazine, similar to theirs. Um…. Hello?! How does that make any sense? If you like my writing and you like my idea, what’s the damn problem? And do I need to mention the fact that it’s a vicious circle and how does anyone get anywhere with this mentality? I have written before, and the writing samples I do have should showcase my abilities regardless. But apparently not.

Whatever, I sold an article to Babble the same day.grand street painter

Experience is Relative

My point is this: If we’re good at something, we’re good at it. End of story. Unless you’re a heart surgeon, experience is relative. Why should we have to work for years and years at something in order to validate ourselves and our “chosen career”? We ask children, “What do you want to be when you grow up?” and they answer: teacher, fireman, astronaut, ballerina. And from the very beginning we give kids the idea that they can only be really good at one thing. That everything else they’re passionate about has to be pushed to the side and gets put in that horrible category of “hobby”. Which as we know, never gets taken seriously.

Plus, these careers can’t work in tandem. If I were to be an editor, do that for five years, then suddenly turn around to be in sales, I’d have to start all the way at the bottom again. Except for the fact that things you learn from 5 years as an editor can be hugely helpful as a saleswoman. There’s this assumption that when we choose one thing, we’re then incompetent at others. Of course, there are exceptions: law enforcement, lawyers, doctors, where you obviously you need more training than a simple BA or editorial gig.

But still, I’ve always wanted to be a cop. Maybe someday I will. After I write a book, open a bakery, travel the world, be a photographer and generally find a way to nurture all my passions and get paid at the same time.

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No, really…

by Marian Schembari on November 3, 2009

Well then! Apparently I pissed some people off! Is it weird if my response to that is “awesome”?

Negativity, worrying, stress and doubt really piss me off. I don’t want to hear about how hard it is to get a job or how the media is dying. Are these things not true? Of course not. But I don’t like worrying, so I’d appreciate it if you didn’t stress me out. The thing is, we are in a difficult time. The other thing is that the way things have always been done is not going to solve these problems.

If you think I’m callous, or in the words of one commenter, “self centered and glib”, I assure you I do my research. While I refuse to do the whole “today I went to the market”-personal-shit on my blog, I have been affected in my non-publishing life by said recession. Remember, 3 out of my 5 other family members work for The New York Times. Both parents are published authors. I work in publishing. I am, in fact, fully informed.

Maybe it’s my youth and/or nativity. Or my glibness. Or maybe my optimism. But I see people every day doing ridiculously amazing things and making it in the media world, despite the recession. Times are a-changing, and some people roll with it and succeed. Others roll over instead.

Example: Bookavore wrote a badass comment, with a lot of great points. In all technicality, since she is a bookseller, I accused her of whining. After doing my research and checking out WORD (her shop), she is NOT who I was referring to in my post. In fact, she is a bookseller who appears to be taking this stuff in stride. Check out the site, you’ll see what I mean.

The “whiners” I referred to are those who don’t have the imagination or creatively to turn a shitty situation into a good thing. A bookstore who can’t see passed the dropping price of books. Yeah, for those stores who are only open 9-5 and charge $25.00 for a new book, whine away. Sucks to be you. But for those who have events and make funny videos about the Kindle, and FIGHT BACK… Well, don’t whine. Because you’re awesome and I want to be your friend.

So I hope this clarifies my point. I like people who think outside the box, and in “this economy” (I said it… shudder) you are the people who are not only going to survive, but thrive.

WORD Brooklyn

WORD Brooklyn

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