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| Playlists |

Q2 – 2022 Playlist

by Robert Hyma July 7, 2022
written by Robert Hyma

It’s that time! Another 3 months of new music and this is the compiled playlist of everything that was a step above the rest (according to DJ Robert Hyma…not a real DJ name, just trying to get the point across that I catered this list). In Q2 of 2022, lots of new releases came from seminal favorites like Arcade Fire, Foals, and even a new album from my favorite band Bloc Party.

There were some great new finds as well. Jalle and Saint Kochi were surprises and I found myself listening to them quite often. instant crush has a great range and angst behind their sound, as well as a much more jam-based, saxophone centric band Loose Fit.

Sure Sure, one of my favorite bands from the last two years, has new EP out that is absolutely worth the listen. New tracks by Max Frost and Pomplamoose rounded out the playlist into something exciting but familiar. And, of course, a new track sung by Lin-Manuel Miranda about mothers was the musical theater cherry on top.

There’s something in this playlist for everyone and I’m curious to hear what you’ve found as well!

Below is the track listing as well as links to Apple Music and Spotify playlists.

Enjoy!

  1. “Playlist” by Besphrenz
  2. “Picture” by dee holt & Chris James
  3. “Dreams” by MisterWives
  4. “All I need” by Sir Woman
  5. “Downers (feat. Issey Cross)” by Jalle
  6. “Almost Lost” by Saint Kochi
  7. “T” by 88rising, Hikaru Utada & Warren Hue
  8. “Nightmare” by instant crush
  9. “In Situ” by Bloc Party
  10. “This Time” by Sure Sure
  11. “CHAMPAGNE” by Valley
  12. “Honey” by Abhi The Nomad
  13. “Rain On Me” by Lady Gaga, Ariana Grande & Purple Disco Machine
  14. “Ringo Starr” by Max Frost
  15. “Disposable Friends” by AVIV
  16. “Meteorite” by Anna of the North & Gus Dapperton
  17. “Stupid Drama” by Loose Fit
  18. “Unconditional I (Lookout Kid)” by Arcade Fire
  19. “Break the Rules” by Charlie XCX
  20. “Then It All Goes Away” by Dayglow
  21. “Life Was Easier When I Only Cared About Me” by Bad Suns
  22. “As It Was (feat. Sarah Dugas)” by Pomplamoose
  23. “Always Got The Love” by Cub Sport
  24. “Muthers R Speshel (Wen Yer Sad)” by Lin-Manuel Miranda & Joe Iconis & Family
July 7, 2022 0 comments
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| Short Stories |

Oh Brother, My Brother

by Robert Hyma December 6, 2021
written by Robert Hyma

            Brother Omaron was probably dead. It wasn’t definitive, no one had checked his pulse. We weren’t allowed to, part of the Greater Plan authored by Brother Omaron himself. “In case I shall be struck down by Heavenly Father, His aura shall roam near, and I will be pure.” (Subsection 2 of the Greatest Plan). There were three of us there, myself and Brother Dan. The third was a brown labrador retriever that had quickly risen up the ranks of our brotherhood, Brother Bark, and he sniffed the body of Brother Omaron with fierce curiosity.

            “Shoo!” said Brother Dan. “You’ll desecrate all we’ve accomplished! Go on, Brother Bark, out!”

            Brother Bark sniffed once more, sneezed into his brown coat of fine fur, and trotted from the tent.

            “I’m sorry, Brother Solomon,” said Brother Dan. “I didn’t mean to disrespect Brother Bark as I had, but you saw where his nose was sniffing. If I didn’t intervene, he might have sniffed up Heavenly Father’s aura.”

            I nodded and thought my secret thoughts, the ones that should have been purged from my conscious upon entering the brotherhood, but I could not help but wrinkle my brow and partially raise an eyebrow.

            “Brother Solomon! The accursed mask of doubt is on your face!”

            I cleared my throat, straightening my features. “Right. Brother Dan?” I asked, “Do you know how long we are to let Brother Omaron lay on the floor before the aura of Heavenly Father, I don’t know, heads elsewhere?”

            “What pertinence,” Brother Dan dismissed. “Heavenly Father will leave when He sees fit. We are bystanders basking in His graces. He is here, among us! Do you not feel His presence, Brother?”

            A slight wind rustled the tent flap of Brother Omaron’s teepee, it smelled faintly of toasted marshmallows and smoke coming from the Bon Fire of Sacrifices—really, just a big fire made from still-wet wood from the campsite. I could hear laughter, and someone shouting, “Brother Bark, fetch!”

            I shrugged, another sign of the demonic doubt, so Brother Omaron told me. I might have said more, but didn’t, and reached out to Brother Dan’s hand—he was crying, overwhelmed, I think. We watched in silence as Heavenly Father’s aura roamed over the still, bloodied body of our former Brother, his stiffened hand resembling what it must have looked like just before pulling the trigger of his Civil War replica firearm. 

            “I do, Brother Dan,” I answered at last, squeezing Brother Dan’s hand. “As Heavenly Father wills it, I do.”

December 6, 2021 0 comments
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| Weekly Post-Eds |

Weekly Post-Ed #16

by Robert Hyma September 28, 2021
written by Robert Hyma

PRIMED AND READY

           Some housecleaning items to start with: the website has undergone another visual overhaul, this time in the guise of the Metroid series. In anticipation of Metroid Dread launching October 8th on Nintendo Switch, I’m celebrating the series with a few new illustrations. The main logo is a homage to Metroid Prime, one of my favorite games from the Gamecube era. The background behind my picture is a flat-art interpretation of the key-art to Metroid Dread, featuring the E.M.M.I. robot ready to strike a badass-looking Samus Aran in the foreground. Lastly, the background is a criss-cross of Samus’s morph ball transformation from two games: the power suit variants from Metroid Prime (on the left) and Metroid: Samus Returns (on the right).

            The Metroid series was a big influence growing up and has entered back into my adult life in a big way: from watching speedrunners beat the game in record time during many GDQ finales, and the recent release of Metroid: Samus Returns and being a favorite in every Super Smash Bros. game since the beginning. With Metroid Dread on the horizon for Nintendo Switch, I’ll be looking forward to revisiting another world with Samus Aran in the coming weeks and await the slick gameplay that awaits.

            Get hype!

            The New Illustrations are posted a gallery below:

***

MEGAMAN’S BEST SYMPHONY

            I watch quite a few video game symphonies (soundtracks not withstanding—they are all beautiful), and the reason I do is because, like all live music, there’s an energy that goes along with being there, hearing the music in person. With medleys, there comes the added depth of juxtaposition. A symphony isn’t just a greatest hits compilation. Along with musical selection comes the power of narrative, to tell a story through a collection of pieces that makes something arguably more compelling than the source material it came from—all the while adding the allure of nostalgia to sell the script.

            There’s one symphony I’ve rewatched on repeat this past week and  it’s The Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra’s rendition of the “Megaman Suite”. Not only does it include some of the series’ finest hits, but the tempo and flow of the medley is downright moving. It triumphantly begins with the introduction to Megaman 3, transitioning to the adventurous and frenzied tracks of “Flashman Stage” and “Topman Stage”, and turning dark and sinister with a duo of Wily Stage themes, all the while building towards a finale that speaks to the heroic robot at odds against a metal vision of the future.

            A symphony like this isn’t just a homage to video game music – which certainly catches the attention of orchestra conductors around the world – but exists because there is something in the story of the music that pulls us all in. Though this recording was done a few years ago, I only pine for the next big-time symphony to take a stab at some of video game’s greatest musical iterations—perhaps an homage to Donkey Kong Country is long overdue?

            You can find the video of the “Megaman Suite” below:

***

ABOUT THAT SUMMER PROJECT…

            Elephant in the room: all those weekly updates and essays that were promised are officially delayed (after being two months late already? Shocking news, I know). When it came to writing up the project, I realized that it was more extensive than I had previously planned. Essays and other pieces are well underway, but as of this writing, I’m not ready to announce a delivery date. Until then, plan on some unique pieces showing up every once in a while until the big reveal.

            It will be worthwhile; I promise you that.

            Stay tuned….

***

A NEW SHORT STORY APPROACHES!

            It’s been nearly four months since I’ve posted a short story…*sigh*. I’ve been editing a few over the past couple months and one is nearly ready. I won’t say much about it other than the length being short and sweet. As a teaser, here’s the cover art below:

            The story will be posted sometime this week, so keep an eye out. 

***

  • “Powder Blue/Cascine Park” by Yumi Zouma
  • “Distant Past” by Everything Everything
  • “Dover Beach” by Baby Queen

***

Wishing everyone as well as they can be. You’re not alone out there,

September 28, 2021 0 comments
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| Weekly Post-Eds |

Weekly Post-Ed #9

by Robert Hyma May 6, 2021
written by Robert Hyma

New Pokémon Snap

             First of all, I don’t like everything that I write about on this website. But since this is a website about all the things I’m into, I tend to write more positively than not.

             So, you can guess what I’m about to write about New Pokémon Snap.

             If anyone was looking for the original game with a graphical overhaul, this was it. And, for fans of the original, that’s all they ever wanted. It’s a lovely game. Pick a level, look around with your camera, snap photos, and marvel at the world of Pokémon. If that sounds enticing to you, then this game is everything you’d want it to be.

             The game functions with a photo assessment algorithm that grades your shots. This algorithm obviously doesn’t account for Avant Garde images (like a Tyrannitar’s face filling half of a photo, a melancholy night background blurred for a moody atmosphere—yeah, this tends not to score well), and so there’s some discrepancy with what photos generate high scores. To me, this opens the door for a fun take on DLC. Suppose there was a “Post-Editing” mode that allowed for different scores, points for style and filters, and additional Pokémon poses; to me, that would round out some of the limitations of the photography system.

             Then again, this isn’t a game celebrating the art of photography as much as it is a safari through the world of Pokémon.

             You pay what you get for.

             And $60 goes a long way in this case.

***

Masterclass Therapy

            I subscribe to the service primarily for therapy. Masterclass offers courses from some the world’s most famous and revered in their fields (including many of my favorite writers such as David Mamet, Aaron Sorkin, Salman Rushdie, Neil Gaiman, and David Sedaris). For me, sitting through these courses isn’t so much about instruction for any particular craft as much as it is a firm reminder that, “Hey, there are people like me out there.”

            There’s a common message through the majority of courses I’ve watched and that is: to keep true to yourself and the process.

             This is harder than it sounds because there’s no roadmap, no reference guide to YOU. To become yourself requires something else, something undefined and undiscovered, which is paradoxically exciting and grounds for giving up.

            I’ve never met people who look as competent as they are on Masterclass, but man do I feel better after watching them. And if that isn’t the point of therapy, I don’t know what is. I feel like I can do what they do. True or not, I think the illusion is more meaningful than the reality.

            Like a magic trick: I don’t need to know how its done to enjoy it.

            And I do love magic.

            Every once in a while, a new course pops up that grabs my interest. At the start of the year, it was Matthew Walker’s “Science of Sleep” course (spoiler: we don’t get enough, and “sleeping in” doesn’t actually help). Then, there was Jon Kabat-Zinn’s “Mindfulness and Meditation” course, which was beneficial for recognizing why the mind and body respond to stress the way it does.

            As of two weeks ago, there was David Carson’s “Graphic Design” course.

            Since starting this website, designing logos and graphics has become a passion I never knew I had. Watching David Carson’s Masterclass affirmed much of the same lessons as other instructors: to dig deeper into who you are, never mind the outside world or the litany of instruction guides, and go through the process of figuring out what you want to say.

            Like this website.

            I don’t think this website is there yet. It’s a nice extension of thought, but it isn’t complete.

            I think more experimentation is on the way.

***

The Easy Years

            I wrote the following in my journal over the past week. I don’t usually share things directly from it, but I thought it was worth sharing something a bit more personal than usual.

**

             I’ve caught up with most of the podcast Conan O’Brien Needs a Friend, another outlet used for personal therapy. David Spade was a recent guest and the two reminisced about their time on Saturday Night Live. David’s memories were about how difficult it was, that there wasn’t direction or mentorship (really), and he had to either sink or swim. He thought, along with just about everyone who has ever been on that show, that he was most assuredly failing, that Lorne Michaels would pull him aside and relay the news that he had been fired. I guess it has happened enough to warrant true fear. But David’s point was that this blitzkrieg of experiences led to his toughening up, that he was better off when he was done with SNL.

             I agree that the hard years likely pay off, but I’ve been so trapped in my current lifestyle of constant struggle that I wonder if the “easier” times are ever coming. I’ve never experienced such a thing, even when I’ve had summers and summers of little to no job or responsibility. 

             Perhaps it was all a bad cocktail. All those years of lacking responsibility (no job, tons of free time to try new things, and master the ones I cared about) were full of deeply rooted mental hurdles. I couldn’t sleep at night, most of my days were spent in comparison (“I’ll never be as good as Aaron Sorkin, f*$*%!”), and a back catalogue of teenage memories and experiences only exacerbated a time of my life that should have been freed up for discovery and exploration.

             I guess without those crutches I might have enjoyed that period of no work and no expectations. Now that I’m beyond some of the self-hatred, I realize I’m 32 and able to finally get started. It isn’t any easier, the job is still the same – figure out what the hell is going on – but with the added pressure from the Clock’s hands. I already know the solution is that I’ll never truly know what’s really going on (oh, the wisdom I’ve struggled for), but the hardships of molding any semblance of career, or love life, or purpose has been the epitome of teaching an old dog new tricks.

             There’s a reason we pine for the war years. It wasn’t because it was easier, it was because of the promise of youth. Being older, it feels like hope is fading, or just beginning to. All the potential, of the things I thought I would become – either believed or imagined – is starting to blur on the canvas. The lines aren’t as sharp, the colors blander than they ought to be, and I don’t understand what I’m looking at half the time. I still see me, but Picasso might as well have painted it.

             And it’s hard to appreciate a Picasso if you weren’t brought up on it.

             I guess there are always Art Appreciation courses. Right?

***

Hoping everyone is as well as they can be. You’re not alone out there,

May 6, 2021 0 comments
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| Weekly Post-Eds |

Weekly Post-Ed #8

by Robert Hyma April 28, 2021
written by Robert Hyma

Another New Look

            This one is short notice, but the latest look of the website is based on New Pokémon Snap, which is out this Friday. The Nintendo 64 game was addictively fun when it launched in 1999, and I was just as a surprised as anyone that it took 22 years to get a proper sequel. Not that the Pokémon Company was clamoring for that audience with the success of literally everything they produce (mobile games, main series entries, a hearth of collectibles and memorabilia, Build-a-Bear collaborations, etc), but there was always something special about Pokémon Snap that other games didn’t have. It truly felt like a safari with the creatures you’ve come to know and love.

            I can’t wait to play New Pokémon Snap this weekend.

            Oh, and please check out the art I made for the website below:

***

Mortal Kombat 2021 and Its Criticisms.

            First, a brief summary of how I felt about the film.

            Over the past week, the new Mortal Kombat simul-released in theaters and HBO Max. I watched it this morning, feeling trepidation about how the movie would work apart from the techo-frenzied fight sequences of the original films. Indeed, witnessing all the violent fatalities that were promised didn’t deter from the fun of the film, and I was pleasantly surprised by the end.

            By far, the best addition of the movie was Kano, a character I never thought I’d like. Kano was the humor and heart of the movie, honestly. Every other character felt shallow or played the stereotypical “tough guy” part in a fighting movie. Kano was funny, sociopathic, opportunistic, and hilarious. I wish every character had the depth and charm that he had. When he gets killed (spoiler), the movie deflates a little, which says more about the strength of the story. Outside of a tragedy, if a character dies and so does the energy of the film, it’s not a good sign.

            At least the tease for Johnny Cage at the end might mean a more satisfying sequel. Certainly, if Johnny’s character is as fun as Kano’s, we’re in for another good time. Plus, the new Sonya was perfect, and seeing the love-tension between those two forces could be very fun. I’m very happy with the new Mortal Kombat; it wasn’t a remarkable movie, but for its genre and tone, and for everything it was, the movie went well beyond what everyone was expecting.

            The world needs more movies like this.

**

Criticisms

            The most peculiar part about the aftermath of the movie was listening to some of its criticisms. I’ll write more about how I feel about critics and criticism in depth in another piece, but in short, I don’t see the benefit of the critic. Not only does widely spread criticism warp the expectations and openness of someone who hasn’t seen/read/heard something, but over the years there has been a shift in motive for criticism.

            And criticism for Mortal Kombat 2021 is a prime example.

            Most criticism I heard and read was polarizing, which may be by design (I don’t know, I don’t write criticism nor think like a critic). Either the critic liked the film and thought it worked for its audience or lambasted it as a colossal failure as a film or for blowing its potential. Upon hearing what this film was “supposed to be”, I was left disoriented and, honestly, confused by how these critics think movies are made.

            Criticism often morphed into long dialogues of, “What they should have done was this…” and then a lengthy reworking of the script was discussed and, by committee (because these criticisms are often discussion), there was an agreement about how the movie would be better if X, Y, and Z plot points were inserted instead.

            I stopped listening at this point. The fundamental error in this kind of criticism is a misunderstanding of what it takes to make something. Any change introduced in the story has a ripple effect for everything else. When a critic loftily says, “They should have done this instead; it would have solved ALL their problems,” what they are really saying is, “Here’s a completely different movie that we DID NOT watch.”

            These critics are pitching their own movies, which are similar but NOT the thing they are reviewing. This “better” movie is just another deformity and becomes derivative of the original. And like most derivative things, it won’t work either.

            Again, I can go on at length with my views of what criticism is used for, but here’s the TL;DR of it:

            Mortal Kombat doesn’t have to be the things you wanted it to be. It exists, it did its thing, it was a good try, and it can be better. But goddam, it shouldn’t be the thing someone without a hand in making it suggests.

            If you want to make a Mortal Kombat, then go off and make one. Show us how it’s done. Then, you can say what it should have been.

***

The Falcon and the Winter Soldier

            The other great piece of cinema I watched was the finale of The Falcon and the Winter Soldier. It was a series exploring what it would mean for Sam Wilson (The Falcon) to become the new, black Captain America. I loved how the show depicted black America and the terrible differences between those with power in a room and those who are left to be experimented on or taken advantage of. In the context of the Marvel universe and the repopulation of the planet from the reversal of Thanos’s snap, those issues – which ranged from what to do with immigration to how those with resources look at other races and their actions, militant or not – was a message that needed to be heard. For me, it was another example of how making something can make a difference.

            I’ve always been torn about the purpose of art. Should it try to impact the world in a specific, message-oriented fashion? Does there need to be a moral to the story? My deepest held belief is no, not in the slightest. It isn’t the primary function of art to tell the world how to behave itself. Done in the worst ways, this kind of art deforms into propaganda and is the opposite of the creative spirit—it then becomes a tailored message of a machine (political, corporate) and thereby loses its soul. The purpose of this art is, then, to manipulate, not illuminate.

            Put simply:

Propaganda tells you what to do/believe/say.

Art gives you the freedom to discover what it all means to you.

            In The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, I don’t think its message was propaganda. The final episode has a great deal to say about current issues of immigration and the role of governments to help those in need instead of relegating them to undesirable groups such as terrorists, immigrants, thugs, etc. It was a message aimed at a world that further wishes to partition itself into the haves and have-nots, and it was the right time to say it. In fact, there isn’t a wrong time to relay this message.

            Why this message is not propaganda is because it exists in a world that has foregone human decency and community in favor of greedily snatching up everything for themselves–or at least the idea that these people ought to have things over others. I think this message was particularly powerful because of the way Marvel shepherded it along. The combination of the characters, the villains and their motives, and the interweaving of both heroes and their counterparts, how each could play the role of villain or hero, is what made this show special.

            In other words, just as with this show’s message and the audience, a hero can become a villain, a villain can play a hero, and it is up to us to choose for ourselves.

            I can’t wait to see what Marvel is planning next.

            Well done, Malcom Spellman and company.

***

Hoping everyone is as well as they can be. You’re not alone out there,

April 28, 2021 0 comments
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| Weekly Post-Eds |

Weekly Post-Ed #7

by Robert Hyma April 13, 2021
written by Robert Hyma

New Kombat Koming Soon

             Hey, guess what!

             There’s a new Mortal Kombat movie coming out in a few weeks.

             Did you know?

Did you??

Did you??!

Well, did you?

             So, as a celebration of the new movie and the series as a whole, everything is Mortal Kombat themed for a little while.

             When anyone thinks of Mortal Kombat, they think gratuitous violence. Fatalities, Brutalities, blood splatting across the screen with limbs in tow like confetti. I think this, too, but there’s this strange double standard that exists within this kind of gore and killing: 

             I have no problem watching it. 

             Horror movies and displays of violence on television and movies? I hate it. I cringe and have to turn away because I hate seeing it. When it comes to violent video games, I’ve never had a problem. Maybe it was because my first introduction to overly violent video games (the first MK from 1992, and certainly MK 3 Ultimate) had graphics too displaced from reality, almost cartoony, and the violence didn’t seem real  (like watching the manic violence of an old Tom and Jerry short and laughing instead of being horrified). This was fine, but watching an actor gored or dismembered with a host of special effects in movies or television felt FAR MORE real. I’m an adult in my 30s and still struggle with watching stuff like that, but my excuse is that I never know it’s coming.

             With Mortal Kombat, one expects the over-the-top violence. It’s the sole attraction of the game (other than the bevy of ninjas, superhero-like powers, and scattered lore). And with every new iteration of the game, I’m searching for compilation videos of all the new Fatalities and Brutalities.

             The new movie is bound to be just as violent and crazy, but I’m expecting that. So, for once, I won’t hide away when Fatalities smear blood across the screen. I’ll invite it.

             As contradictory as that sounds.

             And here’s the new website logo if you haven’t seen it (which, how did you get this far without noticing?):

***

“Cairo” by San Fermin

             I don’t like country music. It isn’t a debate. Sometimes when I tell people that I don’t like country music, they tell me, “Well, you just haven’t heard the good stuff yet.”

             Which, to me, is like saying, “Well, you just haven’t had a good STD yet.”

             “Cairo” by San Fermin is as close to country music as it gets for me. If it was a country song, I might have been a convert, but it isn’t one, so that settles that. The singer has that deep country voice and rhythm, but it isn’t country. It even sounds like country music, but it isn’t.

             How do I know that? 

             Because I don’t like country music, but I like this song.

             Sound logic, I know.

            Anyway, it was a close call for actually liking country music. I like this song, though. Have a listen, it’s a good one.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b2BgX-gaD_w

***

An Awful Joke

             I don’t have much to write about this week (obviously). So, to finish things off, here’s a terrible joke I heard.

“To the person who stole my anti-depressants, I hope you’re happy.”

Hoping everyone is doing as well as they can be. You’re not alone out there,

April 13, 2021 0 comments
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| Weekly Post-Eds |

Weekly Post-Ed #1

by Robert Hyma February 21, 2021
written by Robert Hyma

Some Wonderful Lines from The Wild Wild West

            Having watched a few episodes with my parents lately, there are some absolute gem-like lines in this 1960’s television show. Here’s a sampling:

            Evil Prison Warden: “Show them what happens when they cross you, Iron-Leg.”

            [Iron Leg crosses to a nearby wooden bench and proceeds to kick it into two perfectly cut halves].

            Evil Prison Warden: [A snicker] “Be careful, Mr. West, or the same fate will come to you.”

            And:

            Random grizzly bearded prospector chopping a cigar-store Indian with an axe in an abandoned western town: “There’s a pandemic of neck breaking going around. And it’s contagious! I’d watch out if I were you.”

***

Robert Caro’s Working

          I read this book over a weekend. Robert Caro is the biographer of books on Robert Moses and President Lyndon Johnson, men of power and ability to shape the worlds they lived in. Caro’s book, Working, however, is about the author’s experiences with interviewing the people connected with those great men and finding the story. I felt I was reading about a writer from another time, when answers didn’t come from a convenient Google search. Caro is the journeyman journalist, out on the road and tracking down answers to something much bigger than what is on the surface.

            He and his wife, Ina, devoted three years of their lives to living in the Hill Country in Texas to understand the place President Lyndon Johnson grew up. Hill Country in Texas, according to Caro, is little more glamorous than a town without electricity. Houses can be miles apart, there isn’t a sense of community other than convenient geography, and the desolate countryside is so utterly abandoned that without the moonlight or brilliance of a starry night, it’s a world drowned in darkness.

            I admire Caro’s drive, his grit to find what he was looking for.

            Most of my writing (short stories, certainly) is improvisation. I sit down at a computer, type the first title that comes to mind, set a timer, and start writing something. Usually what ends up on the page is the final story in one form or another. So, it struck me when I read Robert Caro’s writing advice from a former Princeton professor of his. Caro wrote short stories in very similar way to my own (last second, off the cuff, procrastinating until finally getting to it). The professor said to him, “…you’re never going to achieve what you want to, Mr. Caro, if you don’t stop thinking with your fingers.”

            What Mr. Caro’s professor meant was to put more care into his writing, that he wasn’t fooling anyone by writing in this well-received, speedy way.

            I’m sure to write more about this, but I have a complicated relationship with writing short stories. To me, they feel “easy” because I can write them without overthinking. This doesn’t mean that what I write is good, but that I can sit down and crank something out feels more like a party trick than something to take seriously.

            It doesn’t mean that I don’t enjoy them (I love my short stories), but it doesn’t feel as satisfying to write them as, say, a novel or something I’ve developed a more meaningful relationship with.

            I think with Robert Caro, and with the words of his professor, I felt exposed in a very constructive way; that I wasn’t getting brownie points for how I wrote my own stories. It was worth reading.

            More to come on that topic in the future, I’m sure.

***

Pyra/Mythra in Smash Ultimate

            Pyra/Mythra from Xenoblade Chronicles 2 was announced for Super Smash Bros. Ultimate. It’s a good addition. My favorite thing about Smash DLC announcements is that they are seldom what leakers suggest. In this way, I’m more satisfied that Nintendo fans can’t predict what will happen with a favorite franchise. When the audience knows what will happen next, you’re sunk. In that spirit, Smash Ultimate remains afloat.

            Besides, what the game’s director, Masahiro Sakurai, decides to do with new characters is FAR more interesting than who the character is revealed to be, in my opinion.

***

The Rest of Nintendo’s February 2021 Direct

“Meh.”

“Oh, hey! A new Mario Golf!”

“Really, no Breath of the Wild 2 news? Not even some concept art? Yikes.”

“Meh, and it’s over.”

***

On the Brightside, Guilty Gear Strive

            It has been fantastic watching the Beta for this game. Such a frantic, fast-paced, beautiful fighting game with great rollback netcode. It brings me joy to see a game bringing joy to others.

***

New Short Story Coming Next Week

            I’m finishing up a draft of an upcoming short story that will be posted this week. I’ll include a teaser to hold you all over. It’s a silly little story.

***

Wishing everyone as well as they can be. You’re not alone out there,

February 21, 2021 0 comments
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