The Stupid 365 Project, Day 43: The Fannies
November 13th, 2010
I have a confession to make.
Back in the old, bad days, I wrote for the fannies. And I don’t mean the upscale fannies like Entertainment Weekly or Vanity Fair. I mean the down-and-dirty, crowded-cover, primary-color, bare-chested teen idol fannies. Fannies like Tiger Beat. Fannies like the one in the awful scene in Skin Deep in which Toby Vane humiliates and sexually harasses the young female editor who’s come to do a photo session with him.
At the time, I was still in college and working in the promotion department of a local rock radio station which shall remain nameless. My boss was a very strange individual who shaved his head, had a Fu Manchu mustache that ran all the way on either side of his mouth down to his jawline, wore Nehru jackets, ate Pepto-Bismol tablets literally by the handful, and was writing a musical based on the relationship between Adolf Hitler and his teenage niece, Geli Raubel, to be set to a score (he hoped) by Joni Mitchell. Hitler being at heart a flower child and all. He twice showed me an interminable slide show of Hitler, interspersed with pictures of Young Things With Bare Breasts Through the Ages, set to “Ladies of the Canyon.” This is all true.
So, Mr. X — we’ll call him Doug — called me into his office one day and said he had an assignment for me. I was to write a story about some teenage idol, no fewer than 1200 words and no more than 1500. I said, “What’s it about?”
Doug said, “Anything. Bobby Cries, Don’t Forget Me.”
I said, “Excuse me?”
“That’s your headline,” Doug said. ”Write it.”
So I wrote it and gave it to him and he gave me three more headlines and I wrote three more stories and he gave me $400, for what was essentially 90 minutes’ work, minutes for which I was already being paid by the radio station that shall remain nameless. From then on, I wrote six to eight a month until Doug got fired for many, many things, and a few days later the phone rang and it was someone at Tiger Beat or one of the others (I’ve always remembered Tiger Beat because it’s so totally meaningless) asking for Doug and telling me, when I said Doug was no longer among the corporate living, that he needed to reach Doug about doing his stories for the month.
I said, “I’ve been writing all of those.”
The person on the other end of the line said, “Oh. Well, we need six.” And I wrote them and they paid me not $100 but $500 for each of them, and six months later I was writing full-length novels, mostly teenage love stories (I was something of an expert on teenage love at the time).
For the novels, I developed a set of work habits that would get me through a few dozen novels, first for teens and, later, for adult detective series published as paperback originals. (If I’ve written about this before, please forgive me. It’s getting hard to know, with this one-a-day scheme, what I’ve written before.) They would call me and we’d settle on a title over the phone. Then they’d give me eight weeks or three months to write the book. Then I’d forget all about the book until the Friday before the Monday it was due, at which time I would tear my house (Simeon’s Topanga shack) to pieces looking for the title, and then go down to the Fernwood Market and buy two gallon jugs of Gallo Hearty Burgundy and a carton of Marlboro Lights. On the way back up, I’d stop at the home of a free-enterprise pharmaceutical salesman to pick up some speedos, and I don’t mean swimming trunks. Get home, open a ream of paper, fire up the Selectric, pop a speedo, light up, and think of five words in a row that seemed to go somewhere.
Forty-eight hours later, red-eyed, seeing triple, and reeking of cigarettes, I’d drive into LA, drop the manuscript off, and go home and sleep for two days. Once in a while I’d get a call from the editor, demanding, “Who the hell is Edith?” and after we talked for a while — since I had no recollection of anything about the book, and certainly nothing about anyone called Edith — we’d determine that Edith was the female lead, who had been called Ellen for the first 140 pages but had been transformed into Edith by some of that speedo.
I actually learned a lot about storytelling doing this, although it took me several years to remember what it was. And every time I heard the Beatles’ “Paperback Writer,” I knew exactly what they were talking about.
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9 Responses to “The Stupid 365 Project, Day 43: The Fannies” -
EverettK Says:
November 13th, 2010 at 8:42 am
Don’t worry, college was designed as a place to do things that we’d later be embarrassed about.
It certainly sounds like you put in your time “learning your craft.” But fer cryin’ out loud, leaving yourself just TWO DAYS to write a novel? No pressure here! What kind of challenge is NaNoWriMo, anyway. Heck, counting the two days of sleep in between, you could write 6 or 7 novels in a month!
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Suzanna Says:
November 13th, 2010 at 10:05 am
Whoah,it wouldn’t be an easy thing to invent a more, um, interesting character than, Doug, but somehow I have a feeling that he has wormed his way into your author’s palette here and there along the way.
I really do have a lot of respect for the way you worked your way through school. Writing teen romance novels and stories for the fannies at least took you out of the realm of low paying far less interesting jobs that most folks need while they’re working their way through school, and clearly it allowed you to work your imagination and speed writing skills. No pun intended.
You’ve come a very long way from those days. Phew!
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Beth Says:
November 13th, 2010 at 10:51 am
Everett wrote – “Heck, counting the two days of sleep in between, you could write 6 or 7 novels in a month!”
Isn’t that what James Patterson does?
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Bonnie Says:
November 13th, 2010 at 1:12 pm
Beth: I think Patterson has some help.
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Timothy Hallinan Says:
November 13th, 2010 at 2:41 pm
Everett, I was a lot younger and stupider then, and also much more tolerant of mind-altering chemicals. And, of course, the books were drivel, although they taught me an enormous amount about unfolding a story and about structure, by which I mean not letting the reader nod off for too long. In the end, this was probably my way of overcoming the fear of the blank page — wait until there was no choice, and then get cranked and write. NaNoWriMo is actually fairly leisurely — I wrote CRASHED, which is about 100,000 words, in a little under four weeks. More about that later.
Zanna, the trouble with Doug is that no one would believe him in a novel. He’s still alive, to my surprise, and was interviewed on TV, looking grandfatherly, when Michael Jackson died. Thanks for the respect, but it was a relatively easy way to make a relatively large amount of money (for my age, at that time) and speed was my middle name.
Beth, Bonnie is right. Although Patterson does come up with the story ideas and titles and, in some cases, an outline for all those books.
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philip coggan Says:
November 13th, 2010 at 3:57 pm
Doug sounds like the indispensable central character for a murder mystery. Loads of suspects.
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Gary Says:
November 13th, 2010 at 6:07 pm
Ah, you were the guy!
You wrote “Springtime for Hitler” for your old boss Doug. And then promptly forgot about it. And then “The Producers” made a fortune out of it.
Do you realize how much you could be owed in back royalties?
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Laren Bright Says:
November 13th, 2010 at 8:28 pm
While this is definitely fascinating and fun to read, I need you to know that when I see “Fannies” in a headline, I’m not thinking magazines. I wonder why that is.
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Timothy Hallinan Says:
November 14th, 2010 at 12:14 pm
Philip: yes, the victim for which everyone had a motive. Very Agatha C.
Gary, wish it were true. In retrospect though, Joni Mitchell’s music and Adolf Hitler’s sublimated (maybe) love (maybe) for a young girl who’s related to him — it’s a natural, especially with Joni’s music.
Laren, I refuse to be held responsible for the turns your imagination takes, although I do admit to enjoying them.
captcha THE swoofing
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