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cybermule ([personal profile] cybermule) wrote2010-11-21 02:26 pm
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Book review - Count Zero (William Gibson)

A book and event review subtitled "Wake the Fuck Up"

I reviewed Necromancer fairly recently. I think my overall impression of that was that the ideas were great and I couldn't understand why I hadn't taken to it when I (think I'd) read it before. This book is much better. The cool cyberpunk philosophy and dystopian environment are still there, but the story is a lot more polished and fleshy. I still lost the plot a bit at the end, but this time I'm more willing to accept that it could be my own fault, and I'll probably re-read this at some point in the future.

And that reminds me that I never posted anything on when I went to see William Gibson at the Watershed. Or if I did, I found a new point to the whole experience that I've been pondering for a while, so bear with me...



I actually really enjoyed listening to him talk far more than I expected. I grabbed a ticket mostly because I knew he was cool, and because I will pretty much go and see most things live. I just have a real thing for watching artists express their craft in real life in front of me. Anything from bands to blacksmiths to be honest - watching the actual visceral clunky creation of stuff is amazing :) And the guy did not disappoint. he read a bit of his new book (which sounded good) and then talked about his work and the process of writing with a sort of gentle humour and a neat balancing act along the fine line between self-deprecating and fucking annoying false modesty ** I think he encompassed the fact that you had to be somewhat talented to write a novel, but then you also just had to graft.

Pretty much that sometimes he just sat in the space where good writing seemed to happen, and waited for it to happen again. He was also amusingly wry about the fact that he knocked up Neuromancer AFAP out of bits that he had lying around.

Anyway, that was good. But the point I wanted to eventually get to was that all the way through I kept catching sight of the guy in front of me fiddling with his bloody smartphone. He wasn't listening to what William Gibson was saying, he was just following the hashtag for the talk on Twitter and occasionally looking references up on Amazon to see how people reviewed them. WTF was that about? Apart from the fact I know people who would have loved his ticket while he sat at home and self-referenced with his phone, why do so many people not actually grab real life any more? The internet is great. Lots of my friendships are initiated and perpetrated there, and I love the fact that I can scratch a brain itch any time I like.

But there's a time and a place. I love my billhook, but I don't cut cheese with it. Although now the thought is in my head...

The last couple of gigs I've been to have been full of people not even looking at the stage but texting or FaceBooking all the way through. And it makes me uncomfortable. All those layers of damping between you and the experience at hand. And taking pictures of your life not because you're having fun and what to document it, but purposefully so that you can be seen do the thing on Facebook. Gigs sell out in minutes, but nobody is watching. They only went along because Twitter told them to.



** (ref Danny fucking Elfman on the Willy Wonka extras - oh, I just knocked up a song and it was rubbish but Tim Burton just loved it and used it on the soundtrack just as it is. Fucking twat. It's just false modesty and insulting to people who work hard at the same thing and people who would love to do that but can't. Did I say fucking twat? I meant to...)

[identity profile] girfan.livejournal.com 2010-11-21 06:02 pm (UTC)(link)
I sometimes feel a bit guilty for taking photos at readings, gigs or events, though I got into the habit by working as a concert photographer for almost 30 years. I still enjoy the event, but have something to bring it back to my mind.


Saying this, I know what you mean about people only being somewhere because it's the cool/trendy thing to do. I remember going to see U2 in the late 80s and the entire row in front of me were there since they heard a hit song on the radio and all their friends were going, etc. Those girls spent the time at the concert chatting loudly, putting on their make-up and fidgeting until the hit song they knew was performed. They then screamed "I LOVE this song!" and sang along and high-fived each other. I had friends who were unable to go to the gig due to tickets selling out to this sort of idiot.

[identity profile] cybermule.livejournal.com 2010-11-25 05:27 pm (UTC)(link)
I like to take a few photos, definitely. If nothing else, it cheers me up at work or waiting for the bus, just to remember that I was there and saw that. I'm a keen photographer, so at some point in the not too distant past I did have to make the decision not to live life through the lens. It's so tempting sometimes and once you start, you just can't stop.

Do you still have the photos you took for concerts?

[identity profile] girfan.livejournal.com 2010-11-25 11:25 pm (UTC)(link)
Do you still have the photos you took for concerts?


Yes, thousands of them!

[identity profile] cybermule.livejournal.com 2010-11-27 07:32 pm (UTC)(link)
Fantastic! If it's ever practical, I'd love to see some of them.

[identity profile] weemadharold.livejournal.com 2010-11-21 07:59 pm (UTC)(link)
You're right. Real life is worth engaging with 1-on-1. I'm guilty of not doing it often enough myself, although I've never felt the need to even glance at my phone when at a gig (except in the interval, but that's okay I think).

Wil Wheaton made a post on this topic a few days ago. He's a complete Twitter/Reddit/etc. whore, so it was interesting to hear coming from him:
One day, though, we worked at a location where there was no internet or cell coverage. As it happened, it was also a day where pretty much everyone in the cast was filming the same scene. During our breaks, we all hung out together and, unable to connect to the Internet, had actual face to face conversations that didn't involve LOLCats or some funny comment on Twitter.

It was, in other words, just like the old days, and ... well, I really liked it. I felt a connection to my friends and fellow actors that was stronger than usual, that I didn't even realize I'd been missing. I recall wonderful conversations with Joe Morton about going to see the movies in an actual theater versus watching them at home, and fascinating conversations with Niall Matter about his time working on oil rigs in Edmonton. It was one of my favorite days on the set this past season.

Since that day, about a month ago, I've made conscious efforts to turn off my cell phone, get offline, and spend more time back in the analog world. The first few weeks of this were tough, because I kept feeling like I was missing something important (and there have been countless times I've thought, "Oh! I have to Twitter that!" only to realize that I can't. This is not a bad thing.) I have to tell you, I'm happier for it. It's really nice and quite convenient to be plugged in all the time, but, for me at least, it comes at a price that I wasn't even aware of until I wasn't paying it. If you can handle going offline, even if it's only for an afternoon, I highly recommend it; there's a lot of people and world out there that you don't even know you're missing.

[identity profile] cybermule.livejournal.com 2010-11-25 05:35 pm (UTC)(link)
That's a brilliant post - thanks for sharing. I think I'm kind of moving around the same areas covered in your post re extrinsic values, and for some reason this is even more offensive to me. It's way beyond choosing clothes to impress, bending your life around for extrinsic gain. I'll probably be more coherent when I'm less hungry ;)

[identity profile] holyoutlaw.livejournal.com 2010-11-21 10:41 pm (UTC)(link)
There's a class I'm taking that's relatively large (21) for the school I'm in -- there are always a couple students who have laptops open, surfing the net and basically goofing off (which I can see from where I sit). The teacher is too open-minded to tell them to shut the laptops. Oh well.

[identity profile] cybermule.livejournal.com 2010-11-25 05:28 pm (UTC)(link)
I would get annoyed by that. We're having big issues around further and higher education over here that are making it seem like much more of a privilege for the wealthy.
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[identity profile] cleverkat.livejournal.com 2010-11-21 11:42 pm (UTC)(link)
I went to a show this weekend and a good third of the people there paid the entrance fee to ignore the bands and text on their phones incessantly. It's so rude and pointless when people worked their asses off to perform for you to sit there with your stupid phone texting "OMG, do u know where i am?" or some other such nonsense.

The worst though was when my boyfriend and I went to the planetarium a few months ago to watch a meteor shower and over half the people there were texting, watching YouTube videos on their smart phones, or talking loudly over the presenters. It was really disheartening.

[identity profile] cybermule.livejournal.com 2010-11-25 05:29 pm (UTC)(link)
It's a shame you can't just send them off in some ship somewhere else. I'm mostly tolerant, but occasionally I just can't see the point of some people.