Thursday, October 17, 2019

Stylistic Superiority: Thoughts on Approaches to Writing







It's funny to me, that there would actually be people out there who would shit all over so-called "pantsing", IE "Writing by the seat of your pants", not doing a ton of planning, just sitting down and letting the story flow out of you, and evolve as you write it. Why? Because SO many writers, including a whole hell of a lot of very well known and successful writers, are "pantsers".

I can't tell you how many times I've read successful writers say that "my stories write themselves", "this is this character's story, and they're just telling it to me", or expressing how their own stories, even though they may come up with the core concepts and put a lot of thought into the overall story, will regularly surprise them, as they're writing it. That the story will go in directions or create moments that they had never even thought of. I know for a fact that this has happened to me in my own writing. I've written chapters and gone on entire arcs within a story, that I had not originally foreseen, but that just came out as the story was unfolding.

But here's the thing. There is nothing wrong, at ALL, with "pantsing". In fact, to be perfectly blunt, I'd go as far as to say that that is the more traditional, artistic approach to writing. Meaning, that I'd also be willing to wager that MORE of the most well known, most successful authors of all time than not, people like H.G. Wells, or Mary Shelly, or Mark Twain, or Ray Bradbury, or Stephen King, etc. etc. etc., have been "pantsers".

That isn't to say that there is anything at all wrong with being a "planner", someone who sits and meticulously plans and plots out a story. JK Rowling, at least to some extend, did that with Harry Potter. But I do not think that one approach or "style" to writing and story-building, is "superior" to the other. Being a "planner" is NOT better than being a "pantser", any more than being a "pantser" is better than being a "planner". It's all about you, the person, the creator, and what feels write to you, and what works best for you. And frankly, I feel if someone is trying to sell you on one way being "inferior" to another, they're full of shit. 

There are writers, I guarantee you, that couldn't "write by the seat of their pants" to save their lives. But there are probably also "pantsers" who simply couldn't bring themselves to sit and elaborately plan. Because it doesn't work that way for them, just as the opposite is likely true. A certain amount of planning is good for ANY story. But then again, some of the very best, and likely most famous stories of all time, were sat and wrote spontaneously, with zero planning whatsoever.

And if you ask me, someone who would shit all over planning because they happen to be a "pantser", or conversely a "planner" who shits all over "pantsing", is just an asshole. Just because Bob Ross had a very specific, and successful, way of painting, didn't mean that he would ever dream of telling painters of OTHER styles that their way is shit, that you HAVE to paint like him if you want to paint good pictures, and if you don't paint like him you're doing it wrong. Why? Because he wasn't an asshole. And if you're a writer, who actually wastes your time trying to tear down other writers, and other styles and approaches than your own? You're an asshole. Because no self-respecting artist, of any field, should waste their time and energy, let alone show such enormous disrespect. Art is intensely personal, it is literally self-expression, first and foremost. And especially with something as personal as art, what works for one person, may not work for another.

The best approach to writing, is literally whatever works best for YOU, the individual writer. There is no "secret sauce" or magical technique to becoming a great and successful writer. The core of fiction writing is one thing, as far as I'm concerned: being able to tell a good story, and CARING about the story you're telling. Everything else is secondary to the story, and anything that doesn't serve the story, is extraneous. Yes, it is absolutely essential that you have your fundamentals down, know how to competently and clearly write, how to properly form sentences and paragraphs, how to spell words, etc. It also doesn't hurt to have an idea of HOW to tell a good story. But there is no secret formula to telling a good story. You're either able to, or you're not. So if you feel you have a story to tell, and feel strongly enough about telling it? Then take your shot, take a crack at it. Are there ways to refine and improve and evolve your art, your ability to tell that story? Absolutely. But at the end of the day, approach and style are just details. One approach is not superior to another. It's whatever works for you, whatever serves your story best, whatever helps you TELL that story best. 



Tuesday, May 7, 2019

Jamal Lewis: More Than Worthy of the Hall










It is ridiculous how much Jamal Lewis gets overlooked as a Hall of Fame candidate, even though he clearly belongs. Here's another article, talking about 12 RBs who have "cases" to be enshrined someday, and Lewis is not listed among them. Even though he has the one thing that, by my count, NONE of those listed ever got: A ring.

Not only did Jamal Lewis win a Super Bowl, but he did so as the featured back and primary offensive weapon of the 2000 Baltimore Ravens. As a rookie. In fact he set an NFL Record for first rookie to have 100 yards rushing in a Super Bowl. And if he hadn't suffered a freak injury in the 2001 offseason, he might very well have helped the 2001 Ravens repeat as SB Champs, with that same D largely intact.

In addition to his SB rookie record, and the fact that he actually HAS a ring, Jamal Lewis also has 10,000+ career rushing yards, which believe it or not puts him in pretty exclusive company. A little over 2000 of those yards came in 2003, when he won Offensive Player of the Year, on the back of a 2000+ yd. rushing season, which saw him come just 39 yards shy of Eric Dickerson's single season rushing record. He surpassed the likes of OJ Simpson, Barry Sanders, and Terrell Davis. Until Adrian Peterson surpassed him in 2012, he held the #2 single season record. He is still #3, and is one of only 7 RBs in NFL history to rush for over 2000 yards.

Again, that exclusive company, the 2000 yd. club, the 10,000 yd. club, the rookie SB record, being one of only so many RBs who have ever actually WON a SB ring, and more, should have already put Jamal Lewis in the HoF. He was a big player, who was an absolute wrecking ball on the field, with a hard and punishing running style that not only hurt his opponents, making him one of the hardest men in the NFL to bring down, but it also took its toll on his own body. Jamal Lewis gave his body and future health to the sport, as this Bleacher Report article illustrates. 

His straight ahead, bulldozing style, caused him to get numerous concussions over the years, and that's not including ones he got before the NFL. Jamal Lewis is a man who fights everyday, struggling with very real brain damage, and the very real possibility that it will only get worse over time. He's a man who gave his all, everything he had, to the NFL, to the sport of American Football. And that, along with his accolades, should make him worthy of enshrinement. 











So why isn't he in the Hall yet, when he retired in 2010? Why wasn't a 10,000 career yd., 58 career rushing TD, 2000+ yd. Offensive Player of the Year, former Super Bowl Champion, a so-called "First Ballot Hall of Famer"? Meaning getting voted into the Hall the first year you're eligible (players are eligible five years after retiring from the NFL). Why isn't a player who is, as the stats show, literally one of the best and most dominant running backs in NFL history, already enshrined with the league's most prestigious honor? Lesser players, without his accolades, without his ring, are already in. Other players who lack his accolades and ring, including some in that NFL.com list, will almost assuredly one day get in. And to me, the real question isn't just "WHEN will Jamal Lewis ever get put in the HoF?", but rather "WILL he ever get put in the HoF?"

It surely isn't a matter of deserving or having earned it. He did, in spades. As far as I'm personally concerned, the only thing that even slightly diminishes his career, is the fact that he wasn't able to play his entire NFL career as a Baltimore Raven. Ironically, he spent his final three seasons, from 2007-2009, with the very same AFC North rival Cleveland Browns that he made history against. In his 2003 OPOY season, He gashed the Browns for 500 of those 2066 yds., setting the single game rushing record of 295 yds. in one of the two contests. That mark also stood until Peterson surpassed it by one yard in 2007. And I say that in light of his unfortunate 2004 suspension and jail-time, stemming from what essentially was a case of entrapment, and a crime Jamal has vehemently denied ever committing. Even in the face of that four game suspension, he still rushed for over 1000 yds. in 2004. 

I'll admit, that as a long-time Baltimore Ravens fan, having watched that 2000 Super Bowl that he (and the team) dominated, the only offensive shut out in Super Bowl history in point of fact, I am a tad biased. But the fact that Lewis is one of my favorite players of all time, doesn't diminish what he accomplished in his career. In his prime, he was easily one of the Top 3 best RBs in the entire NFL, next to the likes of Ladainian Tomlinson and (former Raven and fellow 2000 SB winner) Priest Holmes. In 2012, the same year they finally won a second Super Bowl, the Baltimore Ravens put Lewis into their own Ring of Honor. An honor that he absolutely deserved, being their franchise All-Time Rushing Leader. Now it's time to put him in the NFL Hall of Fame where he also belongs. 

The 2019 class has already been picked, and Jamal isn't part of it, though fellow Raven Ed Reed is (as a "First Ballot" inclusion, which Reed deserves). But in the next few years, I hope the 48 member committee responsible for choosing players for enshrinement each year, will do the right thing, will get beyond any possible league politics or anything else that could be holding him out from inclusion, and put one of the game's best players, where he so rightfully and deservedly belongs.