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Bad Writing Documentarians Talk Advice, Inspiration

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For all of us who have battled writer's block or have cringed while glancing over a previous attempt at producing the Great American Novel, it's comforting to know that somewhere out there, there are people who can actually appreciate that. They can do more than just appreciate it, in fact: They can try to turn it into art. At least, that's what husband-and-wife team Vernon Lott and Jennifer Anderson of Morris Hill Pictures did when they put together Bad Writing, a documentary that looks at the ins and outs of the craft, as well as what makes writing so bad and what good can come of it.

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Filmmaker Celebrates the Best of Bad Writing

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To anyone who has ever written anything and had it returned with so much red ink it looked like it had barely survived a street brawl: rejoice. 

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“I’m not Christian so I don’t give a flying fruit loop about Christmas, but I am excited about that Mariah Carey holiday song on the radio,” prefaces actor Mitchell Fain, mixing a dry martini and toasting a sold-out crowd at the start of Santaland Diaries, the one-man show that shakes and stirs the happy snowglobe world of Christmas with the less-than-jolly adventures of Crumpet The Elf, running til January 3, 2009 at Theatre Building Chicago, Thursdays through Sundays.

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Michael Ian Black makes arch nemesis out of David Sedaris

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Michael Ian Black If you can't beat them, start and maintain a phony Internet fight with them without their knowledge. At least, that's what comedian Michael Ian Black is doing to author David Sedaris.

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What is the best David Sedaris book so far?

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Vote in PasteMagazine.com's latest poll...

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David Sedaris talks to Jon Stewart, unleashes Flames

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Author, humorist and North Carolinian ex-pat David Sedaris unleashed upon the world another collection of self-deprecating witticisms yesterday with When You Are Engulfed In Flames. The book of essays includes several pieces that will be familiar to fans of The New Yorker and NPR's This American Life, for which Sedaris is a regular contributor.


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David Sedaris announces new book release

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There's nothing quite like the feeling of remedying an unfortunate situation. Turning lemons into lemonade, if you will. And if you're David Sedaris, the "lemons" are equivalent to a painfully dysfunctional childhood, and the "lemonade" is the collection of bestselling novels he wrote as a result of his youthful experiences. Hey, we can't all have it good and grow up maladjusted - it's the luck of the draw.

But in a radical shift away from his scarred past, Sedaris has announced his next book to be a collection of short stories that DO NOT contain any sordid details of family insanity. Of all things, the June 1, 2008 release of All the Beauty You Will Ever Need will bring a book of animal fables, written from the perspective of the fauna. Talk about changing horses in midstream.

Related links:
Update on ProductShopNYC.com
Collection of Sedaris' essays in The New Yorker
Listing of Sedaris' appearances on NPR

Got news tips for Paste? Email news@pastemagazine.com.


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Dress Your Family in Corduroy and Denim

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David Sedaris’ reputation as America’s preeminent smart ass is well earned, so much so he can maintain it while living in Paris. In both his print and NPR essays, he has mined just about everything in his personal life for laughs. Nothing—family, race, sexuality or Christmas—is too sacred a topic. He once gleefully bashed a children’s play and defended himself by saying, “If there’s a cancer, it’s best to treat it as early as possible.” He wasn’t much kinder to his own attempts at performance art in his previous book, Me Talk Pretty One Day.

So it should come as no surprise that in his latest, Dress Your Family in Corduroy and Denim, Sedaris once again aims his caustic wit at his family, friends and partner. He’s certainly not in unfamiliar territory: castigating his sister Tiffany for living like a slob during his short stay at her apartment, or revealing his brother Paul’s predilection for crude language. For Sedaris, a story like “Six to Eight Black Men,” which skewers Christmas customs in other countries, seems downright traditional and as brutally funny as anything he’s ever written. (The story’s title refers to the Dutch concept of Saint Nicholas who, instead of elves, “travels with what was consistently described as ‘six to eight black men’”). Sedaris has a talent for finding the oddest pockets in culture and behavior and, while turning them inside out, making what should be truly horrifying entertaining.

Most surprising about this book is how often Sedaris forgoes the sarcasm and seems genuinely hurt or affected. “The End of the Affair” is a tribute to his love for his partner, Hugh. His affection for his father is clear in “Slumus Lordicus,” in which the two of them battle a nettlesome tenant in one of his father’s buildings. But the tension over Sedaris’ homosexuality in “A Million Bubbles” is palpable, particularly because Sedaris doesn’t realize that’s why his father is kicking him out of the house. Much more than a comedic memoir about a semi-dysfunctional family, Dress Your Family is as moving as it is funny, leaving the impression that with all Sedaris has revealed, plenty remains for him to explore.


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