Tag Archives: Editors and Staff of Mr. Blog’s Tepid Ride

The Astounding Blogger of the Year Award

2 Jan

January 2, 2013

Over the course of 2012, it has been the honor of the Editors and Staff of Mr. Blog’s Tepid Ride to receive a great many awards and nominations for a variety of blogging awards, some of which you see published below. And we are especially grateful to have been nominated more than once for each of these awards. I am now a multiple Versatile Blogger Award-winning blogger, as well as a multiply Inspiring Blogger and even a double Blogger of the Year.

vers

very insp

And so forth and so on, yadda yadda yadda. These are all pretty harmless, if somewhat silly. There is no real award, there are just people who make up “awards” and give them to their friends who make up awards and give them to their friends who gave them awards in the first place. Let’s say what they really are- ploys to drive up traffic, since each comes with a silly set of rules requiring the “winners” to answer 5 to 10 silly questions about themselves (“When did you first begin blogging?” “Which flowers bloom in your imagination?”) and then pass the “award” on to 10 or 12 other bloggers, who pass it on the 10 or 12 more, etc  etc etc.

It is the blogging version of a chain letter.

But they are really no big deal and they make people happy and if someone wants me to be the Motivation Blogger Award winner, than far be it from me to complain. But to foist this on 10 other unsuspecting bloggers and make them slough it off to another 10, each of whom has to answer a set of ridiculous questions is not something I want to be a part of. There is enough unwanted spam in the world.

So it is in this spirit, or perhaps in direct contraction of it, that I announce that Mr. Blog’s Tepid Ride at bmj2k.com, Your Daily Dose of the Absurdities of This Absurd World, has both created and awarded to itself as the first recipient, the Astounding Blogger of the Year Award.
 PHONEY BLOG AWARD

Thank you, thank you, please be seated. I am humbled by your applause, and your standing ovation? Well deserved, I admit.

What makes this award special is that every time you are nominated, you are entitled to another Whitman Mayo. As you can see, I have been nominated nine times. And even better, I have twice been decorated with the Golden Crown Whitman Mayo. Truly, none have been so honored since the dawn of time.

This award represents the pinnacle of the blogging arts.

As a condition of the award, the winner of the Astounding Blogger Award promises not to foist it upon any other person or site.

However, that shouldn’t stop you.

Pick five sites that you feel deserve this made-up award and post a link to this very page so that they may claim their award and proudly display it on their site. But there’s a catch! Each “winner” must answer the questions below and post them on their site.

1- How does Cthulhu affect your everyday life?

2- Who would win in a fight- Kirk or Picard?

3- Which flowers bloom in your imagination?

4- You see that thing last night? What’s up with that?

5- Do you really want to live in world where men wear meggings?

That’s it. Simple, right? So go on out and pick five sites that you feel embody the history and the majesty of the Astounding Blogger Award and give them the honor of this prestigious decoration.

As for me, I’m off to write my acceptance speech for Cattle Rustler Blogger of the Year.

Blank Award:

PHONEY BLOG AWARD blank

Whitman Mayo:

circle mayo small

Gold Crown Mayo:

circle golden mayo with crown small

Introduction by The Author

28 Nov

November 28, 2012

     Introductions are sometimes harder to write than the books they introduce. Firstly, since they usually appear in later editions, the book it is introducing is well-known enough to need no introduction. What can you say about the book that the book itself does not say? Secondly, is anyone really interested in reading about how the book came to the author while daydreaming his way through his morning commute, or through divine inspiration, or from a conversation with his nephew? And lastly, knowing that introductions are often skipped by readers (and who can blame them, introductions being the self-serving ramble they usually are) it is tempting for the author to skip it altogether and somehow con, trick, or otherwise get some unsuspecting author friend to write. That of course has its own problems: A- you will likely have to write an introduction for him in the future and B- you can only ask for the favor once.

     Oh the woes of a successful author.

     When the first edition of Mr. Blog’s Tepid Book came out in 2007 I never expected it to do nearly as well as it has done. That edition certainly had no introduction, and the only quote on the dust jacket was provided by a paid endorser. (That’s one of the secrets of the book trade- those quotes you read on the backs of books? Very often they are written by people who have never read the book but have gladly accepted a large check for a couple of lines dashed off by their agents.) Back then I scarcely expected the book to sell well. I didn’t expect it to sell at all.

     I was making a living as a high school English teacher and not enjoying it. Like most English teachers, or English majors, or anyone who uses words for a living, I dreamed of writing The Great American Novel. You see, an English degree is not the most useful degree you can earn. English majors do not earn the big bucks. English majors do not become late-night celebrities. Sometimes they go on to become obscure bloggers but more often than not, they are dreamers. And writers. No one with an English degree does not want to write. I assume that physics majors have the same desire to find the Grand Unifying Force, or whatever the physics equivalent of the Great American Novel is.

     So like other wannabe-literary greats I worked during the day and wrote during the night. I’d teach class, grade papers, and write. Was that a life? Looking back, I can’t say that I enjoyed it much. I simply always had the confidence, the totally misplaced confidence, that it would all pay off in the end. I sacrificed a family, a wife, kids. I sacrificed advancing my career, pay raises, better classes to teach. Writers have to write.

     So I wrote. I wrote funny letters to the editor of my local paper. I wrote short fiction for tiny magazines. I wrote one- and two-line jokes and sent them in to Readers Digest. They didn’t pay but all I wanted was to see my name in print and brag that I was “published.” But through it all I also wrote Mr. Blog’s Tepid Book, the third edition of which you hold in your hands.

     It was hard. I had no one to share it with. I had no one to bounce ideas off. I trusted my instincts and took chances that perhaps I would not be so quick to do had I had a better sense of self-preservation. (Would I have written chapter six had I actually met Robin Williams? Probably not. But I’ve met him since and he was a good sport about it.)

     Everyone assumes wrote Mr. Blog’s Tepid Book was an overnight success. In one respect it was: Once it took off in 2010 it took way, way off. But the overnight success was 1,086 days in coming: the book was three years old at that point. It has been out of print and forgotten. Only the fact that it turned out that a certain Gubernatorial candidate (and while I am under the terms of a settlement not to name him, I am sure you remember him well enough) plagiarized a short section and the national media got a hold of the book did it gain first notoriety and then some degree of fame on its own merits.

     This third edition of Mr. Blog’s Tepid Book has some significant changes from the two previous editions. It has a snazzy blue cover, it fixes the mis-credited photos of Godzilla and Liz Taylor (sorry!), and has an all new ending to chapter seven (“The Big Ape in the New Millennium: Fur and Cyborgs”).

     I thank you all, for not only purchasing my books and supporting me over the past few years, but more importantly, for sticking around and reading this introduction!

Bmj2k
Brooklyn, NY
November 2012