-
Steve Almond: What Is this Gawker You Speak Of?
We've always found Steve Almond's writing enjoyable, mostly because of his willingness to write honestly and hilariously about his own neuroses and flaws. But his New York–cover–story–inspired piece today, in which he claims that he "never paid much attention to Gawker" and only "had a vague sense that they were a gossip website that had something to do with New York" until someone e-mailed him a link, whereupon he found to his great surprise that they'd been "talking shit about me for a while" sounds to us like, shall we say, total bullshit. First of all, are we really expected to believe that Almond, who writes frequently for Websites, has not self-Googled once in the past two years (Gawker first wrote about him in 2005)? Uh-uh. Second, it was just two short years ago that Almond wrote a five-page think piece about the loathsome behavior of literary bloggers in Salon. During the course of research for that piece, did he really not come across the blogosphere's largest? We suspect Almond's actually deploying the same techniques he used when he encountered a blogger who made fun of him back then:
"Any sign that I knew who he was, that he mattered to me in any way, would simply give him too much pleasure So I had to be very detached. My plan was simple — I would pretend I didn't know who he was."
Posted 10/17/07 in Daily Intel : Ink-Stained Wretches
Advertising
Popular Topics
politics, movies, barack obama, spring 2009, john mccain, music, sarah palin, early and often, economy, paris fashion week, shopping, tv, video, models, the greatest depression, business, elections, slideshow, alexander mcqueen, debates, neighborhood watch, the greatest depression, openings, saturday night live, sports, tina fey, designers, ink-stained wretches, marc jacobs, party lines, sales, advertising, art, behind the scenes, chat room, gossipmonger, hair, john galliano, louis vuitton, media, mediavore, nightlife, overnights, parties, reality tv, right-click, two for eight, vivienne westwood, chanel, corton, diesel, early and awesome, federal reserve, ferran adria, hawaiian tropic zone, instant politics, jeremy kost, kanye west, karl lagerfeld, kudos, last night's gig, maison martin margiela, makeup, nbc, nina ricci, openings, real estate, sonia rykiel, stock market, television
Why Would Sarah Palin Ever Leave Wasilla?

How Nate Silver Built a Better Crystal Ball
Home Design Issue: The Country in the City
Obama's Optimistic Populism 