Below is the testimony I delivered from the podium at the City of Boston's public hearing on the establishment of a "Literary Cultural District." I'll give a full report on the hearing in a subsequent post. Special thanks to the individual who gave me the idea for this post's title.
We’ve been hearing a lot
lately from the spokespeople for the Literary Cultural District about
“branding” and “leveraging.” For example, the Boston Globe piece from last October spoke of the proposed district
as a “branded zone,” while in a more recent Publisher’s
Weekly article, Grub Street Director Eve Bridburg has said, “We’re thinking
about branding the work that everybody is doing.”
Well, I’m here today with the
modest proposal that Boston’s writers be branded as well. The marking of
individual animals has long been regarded as integral to good herd management; it
is a time-honored way for this Athens of America to increase shareholder equity
in its stock of writers.
The branding of writers can
even become a beloved annual festival just like the Boston Book Festival and
Muse & the Marketplace. We can hold it right on the Common, in the growing
shadow of new luxury developments like Millennium Tower.
Branding has come a long way since
the days of the old west when you’d just thrust a red-hot poker into the
haunches of a lassoed, bellowing steer. Now there are plenty of other
techniques to choose from, including freeze branding, electrical branding, ear
notching, tattooing inside the lip, and even implanted microchips. Each way has
its advantages and drawbacks.
First, however, the design
itself must be chosen by the coalition’s democratically-elected Executive
Partners. I suggest a “G” for GrubStreet (or Gentrification) plus a dollar
sign. Just remember that the simpler the design the less painful it is for the
livestock.
Next of course it must be decided where on the body the writer will bear the brand. Ideally brands should be easily seen and readable from over 50 feet, so this suggests the face as the prime real estate. Here is where “leveraging” could come in, as a way of lifting and holding the writer’s head steady during this painful but necessary process.
Next of course it must be decided where on the body the writer will bear the brand. Ideally brands should be easily seen and readable from over 50 feet, so this suggests the face as the prime real estate. Here is where “leveraging” could come in, as a way of lifting and holding the writer’s head steady during this painful but necessary process.
Whatever way is chosen for
them by the Executive Partners, Boston’s writers are certain to greet it with
instant, clamorous acclaim; the only downside is the stampede they’ll risk
starting to be first in line.
Thank you.
Boston writers assembling for the annual LCD branding ritual
1 comment:
Waiting to hear what happened after!
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