WorldCon 64 Part II

The last two days of the convention brought me some very good moments.

First, I took it very easy on Saturday. Attended two panels in the morning, then cleared my schedule in favor of running errands with Evo for that evening’s party, then hanging out with Jack Mangan and Christiana Ellis until it was time to have the last party of the week.

Let me back up a bit, first…

I complained and whined in my last post about how the publishers and, to a lesser degree, editors in science fiction have a close-minded view of podcasting, e-books, and new media in general when it comes to the future of distribution. Saturday morning, I met an editor who helped erase all my cynicism.

When asked about the future of publishing, Pyr editorial director Lou Anders held up his cell phone and (paraphrasing) said, “This, or whatever they’ll call this in five years.” He talked about kids being able to text faster than they can type, and how media and mobility are converging.

This is exactly what I’ve been evangelizing. I thanked him for being the only editor I’d heard all week who had half an eye on the future. So that was cool.

The party in the Podiobooks / Escape Pod suite was good fun Saturday night. I ditched the Hugo Awards in favor of being with my friends and having good conversations, and that was the right choice.

Then, Sunday morning. Breakfast with the gang, then Steve Eley’s last panel, some wandering around the vendor tables, and farewells. I had to dash to see Ray Bradbury speak.

So, so, so glad I did.

Ray was about a half hour late (during which time we were treated to a lengthy film following the progress of a very complicated Rube Goldberg device) and arrived in a wheelchair. I know he’s had at least two strokes in the last few years, and he’ll be eighty-six today, so there’s obviously some slack to be cut, here. I’m glad the guy is still among us, period.

He was articulate and careful with his speech, and, even with the microphone, had strength in his voice. We stood and applauded for him, a long time.

He presented a talk that explored the connections in his life that led to his writing. He talked about Forrest Ackerman lending him money to attend one of the first (the first?) science fiction gathering in New York, right before World War II, and how many connections that led to. It struck me as wonderful and amazing that these two men who have been friends for the better part of a century are still alive, and still friends. He talked about Chaz Addams doing the art for a short story, and how the two always wanted to collaborate and never did. Just the same, Addams expanded on the characters in that illustration… and hence came the Addams Family.

He related the story of Mister Electrico. I’m not going to relate the whole thing here — try Sam Weller’s “The Bradbury Chronicles”– but essentially, it’s the story of how Ray Bradbury was literally charged with a sense of wonder and a love of the fantastic one Sunday afternoon, thanks to a carnival side-show character who, the day before, had touched him on the nose with an electrified sword and demanded the young man live forever.

Man, it chokes me up right now, thinking about it, thinking about Ray telling the story, the power in his voice when he repeated those words… watching a man who is four years short of his ninetieth birthday, crippled in body but still twelve years old in mind, tell the story of how his life began. He started writing his first story the very next day.

It was astonishingly moving.

“He said, ‘Live forever!’” Ray bellowed the words, an invisible electric sword held out in his hand. I was the first person in the auditorium on my feet, slamming my hands together as hard as I could, and the last person to sit down.

Bradbury’s talk focused on how love — love of John Huston, love of Forry Ackerman and Robert Heinlein, love of Lon Chaney and King Kong, love of Edgar Rice Burroughs — how love led to connections, and opportunities, and success and fulfillment. After a week building relationships, discovering friendships, and experiencing a tiny community within the larger convention, it was the perfect message to close the convention for me. It wasn’t the end of the day for WorldCon, but it was for me.

Happy birthday, Ray — and thanks for the present on Sunday: reminding me that community, friendship, and passion matter more than anything. They say the Golden Age of Science Fiction is twelve years old. If I can keep that twelve year old boy alive in me until I’m pushing ninety, well, that’ll be something, indeed.

So now I’m home. Caught a cold — “con crud,” they call it — and so feel a little under the weather. Slept most of today. Tomorrow, back to the keyboard, and Light of the Outsider, and the rest of my career!

Good times.

Matthew Wayne Selznick Reads For “Pseudopod”

Pseudopod.org is a new podcast magazine from the publisher of Escape Pod. Matt Selznick had the pleasure of reading for episode two, a short story by Richard E. Dansky: “Good Advice.” This is a subtle, tense psychological tale that keeps the horror out of the frame in the tradition of Alfred Hitchcock… so the squeamish among you are safe to listen to it.

Once you’ve listened, be sure to leave comments at Pseudopod, and drop the author a line to let him know what you thought of the reading and the story!

WorldCon 64 Part I

Well, the past few days have been very busy, a lot of fun, a bit frustrating, and very, very tiring.

All at once!

I shoved as many panels as possible into Wednesday and Thursday, plus dinner and partying with the folks from Podiobooks.com and Escape Pod — and all their friends, including Dragon Page regulars, podiobook authors, Escape Pod readers and writers, artists, and so on… who are a fine bunch of folks! That made for some full days and late nights.

Today, I slept until ten and didn’t get to a panel until something like one or two. I can’t recall. And there’s another party tonight (a whole floor of them at the hotel, actually) but I’ve spent most of the night catching up on e-mail and RSS. I’ll head up there when I’m done here.

Why do I say I’ve been frustrated? Well, I hoped to hear some forward thinking when it came to publishing, electronic media, and so on — this is a science fiction convention, after all. However, I forgot to consider that most of these authors, editors, and publishers are firmly dedicated to traditional publishing. They either can’t see an alternative, or they don’t see the alternatives as viable. Craziest of all, these people who spend so much time thinking about the future can’t allow that there might be a future for publishing that includes e-books, podcast, and print-on-demand as accepted media.

There are exceptions — but they are certainly the minority. This is an industry I thought would be chock-full of independent, underground media… but it’s actually an industry dominated by Big Publishing. Silly me.

Of course, there are independents… they’re called “fandom.” It’s a subculture that seems to revel in the “meta” — catch phrases, inside jokes, reverent history, deep tradition… a lot of energy, a lot of passion, and I admire that, don’t get me wrong… but it sure seems insular. I will grant that is probably my newbie’s perception coloring things.

I haven’t really learned anything at the various panels — a sharp contrast to my only other convention experience, last year’s Portable Media Expo. Often, these panels have diverged far afield, are taken over by individuals with agendas, or make assumptions that everyone in the audience knows the references and dropped names without explanation. Made an uninitiated outsider feel like… an outsider.

I understand — and appreciate — that these conventions are like family reunions, gatherings of old friends who don’t see each other in person all that often… and, no less important, these conventions are an opportunity for an entire sub-culture of misfits and outsiders to feel accepted and understood. I certainly value that… I mean, I’m a geek, myself.

I just might not be enough of a geek to really take value from this environment.

On the other hand…

I’ve really enjoyed getting to know Evo Terra, Jesse Willis, and Steve Eley better, live and in person. Conversations with Evo have been particularly enriching — we have some very similar attitudes about a lot of things… or at least that’s how it seems to me! Additionally, their circle of friends… indeed, nearly everyone I’ve met here so far… are genuinely nice people I bonded with quickly.

Note that nearly all of that is happening in a restaurant, or with drinks in a party suite. It turns out the most useful “take away” of the convention — meeting people I like and having good conversations — has nothing to do with science fiction culture. The fact that there’s a convention going on had very little to do with the topics of conversations I’ve been involved with after hours.

I’ve had a few! perfect strangers approach me and tell me how much they like “Brave Men Run,” which is just fantastic. Granted, two of those were drawn to me because I had the obvious-as-a-bare-lightbulb BMR tee-shirt on, but others simply recognized my face. Wild.

Believe me, I don’t want to give the impression that I haven’t been having fun. I have. I’ve just had to adjust my expectations a little. I don’t know if I needed five days of this. I know if I do this again, or any other genre conventions, I probably won’t go to panels unless I’m on them.

Funny. Part of me is afraid of offending or somehow betraying people by my not reporting a 100% wow-zowie experience here. I’m not dissing you folks, honest! The people I would diss… well, that might be for another post.

Here’s a great snapshot from today:

In the lobby of the Hilton, across from the convention hall, a whole family is checking in for the convention: Mom, Dad, and three little girls. Dad is wearing a Star Trek: The Next Generation uniform (command colors, of course.) All three little girls are skipping and dancing as they sing-song chant in the most excited, joyous way, over and over:

“Nerdy nerdy, nerdy nerdy, nerdy nerdy nerdy!”

Like an anthem.

Wear it proudly, kids!

Prequel: WorldCon 64

Okay! Got up at about a quarter to six this morning, hit the road shortly after seven. Took about an hour and a half to reach Anaheim, during which time I caught up on some episodes of Escape Pod, I Should Be Writing, and Dragon Page: Cover to Cover. Fun… I miss listening to podcasts while I’m driving. However, I don’t miss driving three hours a day, so…. there’s that.

I found my hotel, and got an early check-in so I could come back in the afternoon. Since the hotel is literally right next to the convention center, I left the car in the hotel lot and took a five minute walk in the convention center and to the registration counter.

I was registered and ready to go by about nine thirty or so. I sat on a concrete bench and poured over the program… you know what’s perfect about it? It smells exactly like a brand new high school yearbook. Uses the same heavy, glossy paper.

How perfect is it that a program for a convention that celebrates a genre most of us discovered when we were teens calls to mind being a kid again by its very smell?

Now, the next part of the plan was to meet in Long Beach with author Henry Baum, who I got to know when we were both part of a preliminary committee to form a writer’s collective. That project imploded when the primary organizer proved to be, um, crazy (and that’s a story for another time), but Henry and I continued to correspond, and my being “down the hill” provided an opportunity for us to meet in person, since he’s in Los Angeles. Unfortunately, Henry took ill, so I had some time to kill.

I ate breakfast. I tooled around and bought some odds and ends and sundries I needed for the week. Then, around one or so, I went back to the hotel and claimed my room.

Now, this was the least expensive hotel near the convention center I could find. I knew full well I would get exactly what I paid for, and no more. Some of more charming features:

  • Wireless Internet in the tiny lobby only
  • No three-prong plugs in the room
  • A total of three hangers for my seven shirts
  • The alarm clock resets to blinking “12:00″, seemingly at random
  • No TV remote, and only the local channels plus HBO. This is actually no big deal, since I’m not going to have a whole lot of television-watching time this week anyway, and am actually looking forward to not having it on
  • Did I mention no three-prong plugs in the room???

So to my next quest — I found a Radio Shack and drove off to them, and bought me a couple outlet adapters so I can at least get some LOTO writing in tonight and possibly at other times through the week. And now, because I’m somehow loathe to write in the tiny hotel lobby, I’m sitting at a Starbucks, gettin’ this all down.

I’ll be taking pictures of the room, the hotel, and so on. This week may finally give me a reason to use my languishing Flickr account.

That’s all! The real Con begins tomorrow. I’ll be up early, running errands for the Podcasting parties that begin Thursday night.

Time to find some dinner! I think I’ll try the Marriott… might run into some people..?

Matt Selznick At The 64th World Science Fiction Convention

If you’re in Anaheim, California from August 23rd through the 27th, check in with Matt! He’ll be playing fanboy, networking, and soaking up the vibe at LA Con IV, the 64th World Science Fiction Convention. While Matt isn’t on any of the programs, he will have copies of “Brave Men Run – A Novel of the Sovereign Era” available for purchase and autographs.

Can’t make it to WorldCon? Matt will be chronicling his first science fiction convention experience throughout the week, as often as possible — stay up to date through Scribtotum, Matt’s blog!

Older Posts »