Posts Tagged ‘humor’

5 Tips to Build Your Blog Audience or Why My Blog Will Never Be Popular

Friday, November 13th, 2009

I do a fair amount of reading about blogs. The structure of blogs, blog writing style, how to have a successful blog, and so on. I think anyone who has been blogging for any length of time, I’m going on 5 years now (more than 3 in this current incarnation), would like to see their work widely read by thousands of adoring fans. I certainly would.

Having gone out and done extensive research through reading successful blogs, to reading articles about successful blogs, I think I have uncovered the key. Not having much interest in radically transforming my style from where it currently is I decided to use my own blog as a negative example to illustrate the five keys to a successful blog.

  1. Broad Topic Area
    American theater is a good broad topic area to bring in a wide array of readers. You have many elements to touch upon that could resonate with theater makers and theater goers alike as well as the casual observer. My blog not only limits its discussions to design elements, it further concerns itself with lighting design alone. While that alone still provides a broad enough area as designers, technicians, and appreciators of light might enjoy the blog, my readership is further constricted through an approach that looks at the philosophic underpinnings of the aesthetic concerns in a certain flavor of design.

    There is the occasional deviation from this. The most popular post on my blog from web searches shows pictures from a production of Wizard of Oz that I lit. That and my semi-regular posts about money management and the business of freelancing are quite popular. The rest of it is rooted in an analytic tradition borne from my early exposure to, and love of, late modern continental philosophy.

    Not only should the ideal reader of my blog have a love of lighting design for live performance, they should also have a love of continental philosophy. The combination makes it too theatery for the philosophers and too philosophic for the theater types.

  2. Accessible Language
    Derived from the first point, this blog is written in a formal academic style. Not as extreme as some blogs out there, but it is far more to that end of the spectrum than it is rooted in colloquial English. Simple words, unless the blog is about linguistics, help to boost popularity. I prefer larger or more obscure words in an effort to be precise. Thus there is an inherent structural impediment to this blog’s success and popularity. The casual reader does not want to work for their information. They would prefer their information presented simply and easily even to the point of not being precise, accurate or true. Lists with an arbitrary number of steps to achieve a goal are a wonderful way to meet this desire.

    This simplicity plays right into the anti-intellectualism that runs rampant in American culture. Experts are shunned for folksy folk who are just like us. The irony that we would not trust ourselves to do whatever task we are entrusting this non-expert to do is largely missed. Their down-home, just like me, style implies that anyone can do what they do. Perhaps if they are just like me they are an expert, because, well, I know stuff.

  3. Write about your Mistakes
    I write about perfection or at least the attempt to attain it. Warts and all blogging brings with it an anti-intellectual ideology that anyone who can sign up with blogspot can become an expert on kitten pictures or international finance with no experience or qualifications. People with less than a year experience write about freelancing. Only recently do I feel on the verge of qualified to talk about such things. I have been freelancing for five years.

    Writing as an expert about a topic for which you are not an expert gives you room to make mistakes. Those mistakes become the basis of new blog posts about how you will do better in the future. My personal favorites are financial advisory blogs that get the math wrong or frugality blogs whose authors continually fall off the wagon and spend their money on unnecessary wasteful expenses.

  4. Use Humor
    With the exception of this post, and even here it is dry sarcasm (really more sardonic than sarcastic) rather than humor, I would prefer to stick with a clear and rigorous discussion of the topic at hand. Joking about is a great tactic to endear your readers to you and bring them back. With this blog I have chosen to engage in some rather severe critical thinking about topics of interest to me and projects I am working on. I leave the humor to Facebook.
  5. Light Colored inviting design
    No.

Employing a tactic of many successful bloggers I will close with a few questions, thus inviting you to join in the discussion in comments. Was this useful? What is your experience with blogging?

Solar Sunday Addendum

Monday, June 16th, 2008

Lego History

Saturday, June 7th, 2008

Link

Gary Gygax, RIP

Friday, March 7th, 2008

ultimate_game

Felled

Monday, January 14th, 2008

its the end of the beginning of the end

Friday, December 21st, 2007

Party in a Jar

Friday, November 9th, 2007

This is your brain on crank

Monday, July 9th, 2007

Oh don’t ask why

Sunday, December 17th, 2006

In an act of Theatre blogger suicide I will now be publicly disagreeing with George Hunka and risk the wrath of this masterful mind and quick witted wordsmith. George says today that:

To say that every theatrical production must have an element of “fun” or spass, and then to drag Shakespeare and Brecht and Beckett and Bernhard and others down to our own professional purposes, in support of our own need to be distracted . . . , is to befoul their work, disavow their pain.

Simply because “fun” is a tool used by corporatist structures to gain and maintain power does not mean that there is anything inherently wrong with it. Fun, I would argue, is in fact a fundamentally necessary quality in art. Pretension without relief just gets boring. And I suspect that Mr. Hunka would agree with this as he has quite the sense of humor both at the bar and through his well wrought characters.

Perhaps the problem comes down to what we mean by fun. George, it seems, is struggling against mindless commercial entertainment. The kind of fluff that does nothing more than causes small green rectangular pieces of paper to change hands quickly. But there is another kind of fun, a powerful and transformative type of play that could get lost were one to simply disregard the whole and focus only on the void. That fun is the kind that acts in counterpoint to tragedy and suffering. A kind of divine play. This is the morbid humor of the gatekeeper in MacBeth or the pathetic antics of Vladamir and Estragon. This kind of desperate humor is necessary in the midst of a world filled with so much suffering.

Brecht was a brilliant comedian. The playfulness he brings to his texts serve to play up the tragic point he is making. Kurt Weill truly is the ideal composer for his texts as he too can make tragedy a rollicking good time. Much like the Wilson/Burroughes/Waits collaboration The Black Rider where the sadness come out through the punctuation of play.

The work of filmmaker Jim Jarmusch is a perfect example of this important and necessary kind of fun. His films are serious entertainment. They make you think and question. But the also entertain. They are fun. They are filled with humor and play, not as an accident or an aside, but as a fundamental aspect of their dramatic makeup.

Children are filled with play and wonder at the world. The newness of everything excites them to extremes. As we grow older we become accustomed to the world and forget about its wondrous possibility. We forget to laugh, sometimes going days without laughter. We forget to play, taking everything so seriously. And we forget to have fun.

We forget this fundamental and necessary aspect of the soul. In forgetting this, we forget our Selves. We leave parts of our Self behind and forget who we are and where we come from. Fun, play, these things remind us. They remind us that the world is an absurd place filled with humor. They remind us that the world is to be enjoyed. They remind us that even in the worst of circumstance we can laugh.

Take the A-Train to Fashion

Thursday, August 17th, 2006

New “research” for my zombie musical set in the 80′s.


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