5.22.2008

OverExposed

File this one under "as long as everyone else is talking about it."

Emily Gould's cover story for this weekend's New York Times Magazine, which approximately ten media-internet-incestuous people have been holding their breath about for, like, months, is up on the Times' site. So, you know, I read it. It's already got 350+ comments, some snarky statistical analysis from NYMag's Intelligencer, and the requisite, barely civil Gawker coverage. But since the otherwise more circumspect Belle Lettre mentioned it, I figure I'll get in the mud too.

Here's how I feel: I don't get why the Times published this. It it's got three of the four P's of a college admissions essay: passive, past tense, peppered with navel-gazing. It's missing the fourth P: point. She never steps outside herself to make a broader societal point. She doesn't stand as a synecdoche for some secret social world that people are dying to get a look at. Perhaps most notably, she doesn't really undergo as much of a radical transformation as she seems to think she does, as she seems to premise the whole raison d'etre of her article on.

More than anything else, though, reading this piece feels like sitting in on Emily's intake session with her new therapist: it's a gloss of the psychological highs and lows of the last 3 years in the life, and it's told in such a tired voice that you get the feeling she's learned nothing--about the world, about love, about privacy, about herself--from writing this. "Here's how I felt then," she says. "And then I felt like this. And then this happened, and I felt like that. And now I feel this way, which makes me think back on that thing like this, even though back then I felt like that."

The thing is, Emily is a good writer. Anyone who read her when she was on Gawker knows that she is funny and smart, and there are some real gems of phraseology here in the Times piece ("I still felt unmoored in the way you can only feel after a breakup, as if you’re the last living speaker of some dying language" -- yessss). But Emily Gould is also a bad writer, in the way that only good writers can be bad, as might have been learned a while back by certain people who might have an unhealthy tendency to googlestalk everyone they've ever met, read about, heard about, or invented as a potential fictional character, as those people might have read her personal blog and learned that, sadness and rejoicing, it is not only me who, while able to be wry and pithy when commenting on the world, is unable to be anything but absolute crap when it comes to telling the world, in any serious way, about her own life.

Whenever I try to do that - write in a meaningful way about me, my life, and I - whether it's "I care about this issue" on RSGo(cue the dawning knowledge that this post is shamefully self-referential, if you haven't already figured it out and turned away in disgust), or it's an email to my friends on the rich topic of "holy crap, guys, I do not know how to handle the aftermath of the argument I just had with my mom/boss/boyfriend/self" - it comes out wrong. Wrong wrong wrong. It's stilted. It's ponderous. It's unfunny, unsparkley, uninteresting, un-worth-it.

Why? It's a forest-for-the-trees thing, and it's a taking-the-self-too-seriously thing, but I think more than anything else it's because I want to believe, in this very essential, existential way, that my quotidiana matters. That even if folks aren't caring about how I have these omg-deep emotions, that they ought to. That there is inherent value to others in knowing what I feel.

This is the key, I think. As my eminently wise roommate Mia said to me yesterday, when I onanistically expounded on how competitive I feel about my relationship whenever I hear that another one of my friends has gotten engaged: "Every couple thinks that. Not to be insensitive." And as she said later in the evening, when we were talking about a friend's inability to end a toxic relationship: "She needs to realize that everyone you fall in love with is going to be the person who understands you better than anyone else. She'll feel the same way about the next guy."

Which is to say: Within reason, everyone feels everything. What we feel is rarely unique, rarely unable to be replicated. So when someone is trying to write about anything - for an audience, to a reader - the value of attempting to explain and enlighten lies not in what you felt, but in how you tell us about it. People loved Emily Gould when she was being snappy and withering and self-deprecating and crass and sullen, because it is hard for us to look at our own lives and be those things. So she did it for us, on Gawker and on Heartbreak Soup, and it was riveting.

But here in the Times piece she misidentifies the location of her suffering's value. Emily Gould's highs and lows don't have the potential to be important merely because they were experienced by Emily Gould. They are - or they could have been - important because they are experienced by absolutely everyone, but Emily Gould gave us the promise of a candle to illuminate the intensity, deepen the tragedies, heighten the absurdity. Unfortunately, she didn't make good on that promise. Her article in the Times is just as self-regarding, as plodding, as boring as the eighth grade entries I made in my real journal - not the fake one that I tarted up with the expectation that someday, once I was suitably famous, it'd be published and adored.

In the pages of the Times, Emily is just like us. She's telling it by rote, as it happened, as she felt it. She's mired in minutiae that matter only to her, painting broad strokes over months and weeks and days. But we don't want that from her -- we don't need that. We have enough of "just like us" already, with us in our heads, wherever we go, all the time.

14 comments:

Anonymous said...

ahahaha it was completely an intake session, you are so completely right

Mariel said...

Thanks for writing this, Helen. You hit on all the points of thought of while I was reading it today. I guess if I was forced to come up with a reason of why NYTimes decided to even publish this was to give adults some sort of insight into why young adults blog. Sadly, Ms. Gould gives them the answer throughout her essay and that is that she is deeply mired, entrenched, whatever, within herself. Leaving us, as well as herself, with little to no answers and a truly boring 10+ page read.

Marcin said...

As it happens both the NY Times piece and this were too long for me to read in full (Although my lack of attention to you was driven by my unwillingness to read beyond the first page of the NY Times article).

Having gotten to your bit about you, I have to ask: when have you ever blogged about your emotional life? I don't remember it. I also don't recall finding any personal chatter with you boring. What is up with this piece of self-accusation?

helen said...

anon - thanks. :)

mariel - if that's the case (and it may be), fooey on the Times for picking such a ridiculous illustration of the uses of the medium.

Marcin - I make it kind of a point not to talk about my emotional life on here. Not just because of who might be reading (hi, Mom! hi, boss! hi, potential future employers!), but because of an interesting twist: my pathological need for attention/appreciation/reassurance winds up translating into a reluctance to share with the world things that I don't think will be met with praise. So unlike Emily, who shares everything because thinks her every move and thought is worthy of public scrutiny, I share very little, because I think very little is.

But um. That just now was kind of an emotional reveal, wasn't it?

Leila said...

Thank you. That is all exactly correct. Here's what I don't understand: how on earth did this become a Sunday Magazine cover story and not a Modern Love column?

helen said...

leila - I'm going to go with word count being the major differentiator here.

Marcin said...

YOUR MOM IS AN EMOTIONAL REVEAL

(Trans.: Not so much. It's not like posting about how your emotions are hella crazy right now.)

helen said...

Dear Diary, OH MAN MY EMOTIONS ARE HELLA CRAZY RIGHT NOW. Someday they will make a movie about me.

Marc Fishman said...

I guess I'm not en vogue as it were. The article while boring, seemed no worse then the rest of the human interest dreck that exists in most popular media.

Speaking on the identity of self through blogs, etc... I guess if you remember back to my art making days (the "fine" art kind, not the comic book kind) you will recall all I dealt with was the (mis)conception of self. I embrace the ideology that for a good deal of time, we are the center of our own universes.

Thanks in part to the confounding social networks and free blog sites out there, those of us with nothing to talk about (see: me) end up blogging idiocy. Those of us with opinions not of the self-reflective (see: you) SHOULD write outwards.

For the rest of us...we should just take a page from Harvey Pekar instead, and leave our lives with the funnies.

RW said...

I do not care about Emily Gould. I have no need to read her article. But this- "Which is to say: Within reason, everyone feels everything. What we feel is rarely unique, rarely unable to be replicated. So when someone is trying to write about anything - for an audience, to a reader - the value of attempting to explain and enlighten lies not in what you felt, but in how you tell us about it", was perfectly said.

Belle Lettre said...

I have no idea who you are, how you came across my weird little law/academia blog, but your essay was amazing, and I thank you for it. And the link! A friend emailed this to me, and I'm going on the law teaching market in a couple of years. I occasionally refer to the fact that I have a partner, and that we face work/life balance issues, and how ironic, because I write on work/life law (family and medical leave; pregnancy discrimination). But that's usually it, really. Still, I got really, really nervous when my friend emailed this to me. And then I read it, and thought "phew. well, at least I don't do _that_." But "that" is a shifting target depending on how circumspect you are as a personal blog-maintaining academic. There's a lot that I do that most academics wouldn't, and so...ah well, I have no idea. I am thinking I should just stick to law blogging. Sigh.

Witt said...

Right ON! This post says exactly what I was thinking when I read the NYT article (or rather, the first five pages of it, because I gave up midway through).

I especially appreciate your illustration of how people can flail about when they try to write about their own real, personal experiences. So true.

Above all, I mourn the waste of real estate. How many people read the Sunday NYT? And what other thoughtful, valuable, constructive words could they have been reading instead? Yeah.

But it's comforting to see that someone else not only sees the problems, but cuts right to the heart of them.

Anonymous said...

You write, "She's mired in minutiae that matter only to her". But why is your default position to be bored by the minutiae of other people's lives? Is this just a function of some kind of limitation, imposed by biology or culture, that keeps you/us from caring about *everyone* -- something we must resign ourselves to as part of the human condition, and something that writers must take into account for the sake of prudence and success? In this case, it seems that we should be saddened by our knee-jerk "who cares?" reactions, even if we are resigned to them. They would reflect nothing but an inhumanity and lack of empathy that we happen to be cursed with but should view as a weakness.

Or do you reject "caring about everyone" as an appropriate ideal?

Michael in Astoria said...

All the Emily Gould hoopla has kind of stunned me -- first I was stunned that her essay actually appeared in all its long-windedness in the NY Times Magazine, but initially I at least though "well it's relevant to contemporary culture because people blog, people experience this kind of conflict over what they reveal online," etc. And I'd never heard of Emily Gould, so I was kind of just processing her take on things.

But then I watched the Jimmy Kimmel clip. And I read Josh's article about her (both of which she clearly was inviting us to do -- hell, Josh's site is linked on her website). And then I heard about the NPR appearance.

And now she creeps me out. It seems like she hasn't learned anything from these experiences she's been writing about in the NY Times, other than to try to increase the potential audience for her public mosh-pitting.

I'm glad I don't know her personally, because I'd be afraid to say anything near her. On the other hand, you, Helen, are the coolest. :)