Archive for January, 2011
Savage Investigations: Prologue
0Here it is, kids! As promised on twitter, the rewrite (okay, the re-re-rewrite). I’ve also been thinking about the wisdom of getting so darned excited, I just kinda go off and post things prematurely. I’m gonna work on that, but I’m still gonna get excited! Deal with it…
New! Improved! Now with more dialogue and less expostion! It’ll be easier to make it into a comic that way…
June 15, 2003
It began on a normal day like any other. Ahmed Akbar was a brilliant young man, going off to the school where he was the youngest teacher on staff. He slung the worn messenger bag that contained his lunch and the test results from his students over his shoulder. He kissed his wife, Sanaa, on the cheek and their infant son, Raheem, on the top of his head and went to the front door of their modest two room house on the outskirts of the Iraqi city of Al-Awja.
The door wouldn’t open.
Since the bombings and the American invasion, the door frame had shifted.
Too proud to leave his house by the back door, it had been the same comical story every morning for months now because Ahmed felt it was, “too insignificant a thing to bother with.”
“Ahmed, I swear, you must fix that door,” Sanaa laughed. “It embarrasses me to have to tell our friends to go around back to enter our house.”
“Sanaa, my love, we are lucky to even have a door after what has happened around here,” he reminded her but then added, “I will fix it on our next day of rest. I promise.”
She looked down at the infant in her arms. “Do you hear that, Raheem? Your father will fix the door on Friday. He promised. We will see.”
Ahmed pushed up hard on the latch and to the left and the door opened. “See? I told you I could open the door,” he smiled. “Friday,” he promised and left the house, slamming the door behind him to close it. It shook the china on the shelves and the baby started to cry.
Later that morning, a squad of American contract soldiers were patrolling the neighborhood. This had become a common sight and there didn’t seem to be any cause for alarm.
They came to Ahmed’s house.
Sanaa was sitting in her chair and reading with Raheem asleep in her lap.
The soldiers knocked on the door with their rifle butts and Raheem woke up crying. Sanaa got up to answer the door but she couldn’t open it.
The soldiers, hearing the baby crying on the other side, knocked louder and demanded that it be opened.
Sanaa tried to open the door again but couldn’t with Raheem in her arms.
“I can’t get it open. Please go around to the back!” she cried in her native tongue, which the Americans could not understand.
“You hear that? Sounds like a baby’s crying,” said the squad leader. “We got reports of insurgents in the area and it looks like somebody doesn’t want us to come in. Kick down the door!”
Two men kicked in the door on its hinges, knocking Sanaa backwards. Raheem fell out of her arms and she struck her head on the corner of a table, killing her instantly. Raheem’s neck was broken in the fall and Ahmed Akbar’s little family lay lifeless on the floor.
“Now what?” exclaimed one of the American contractors.
“Well, she seems to be the only one home. No terrorist insurgents here,” said the squad leader. “Let’s get the hell outta here!”
“Yeah,” said one of the men, “the corporation’s not payin’ me enough to get involved in a murder investigation, even if was an accident!”
Rather than trying to offer assistance, they left Sanaa and Raheem on the floor where they lay and ran.
A few blocks away, the leader said, “Okay, that never happened. Am I clear?”
The rest of the squad agreed and nothing more was said or done about it.
After school, Ahmed came home and, seeing the door open, ran inside and discovered that life as he knew it was over. He screamed as he sat on the floor in the pool of his wife’s blood, holding his lifeless family in his arms until the neighbors came.
“Murdered at the hands of the American infidels!” he said quietly at the funeral. “I hate the Western dogs that brought war to my peaceful world. I will strike back!” he hissed between his teeth.
After he said his final goodbyes to his little family, his wife’s uncle approached him.
“I know of a man who can help you to avenge the death of my brother’s daughter and grandson. If you wish, I can have him contact you. Not now, but when your head and your heart are clearer.”
Ahmed looked at the man through enraged eyes and said, “Please. I cannot let this travesty go unpunished.”
A few days later he was visited by a man from a secret organization that was so secret, it had no name, nor seemingly any members that knew about each other. He recruited Ahmed to join the fight, and told him he would be able to get his revenge against the capitalist mongrels that were ruining the world with their vile arrogance, spreading hatred wherever they went. The mild mannered schoolteacher was transformed into a terrible angel whose only mission was to avenge the death of his family.
His handler, known to him only as Kadin, met with him at his house and told Ahmed of their plan for him.
“Right now, there is a young American that we are grooming for a position in the American government. He will start out as a junior banking executive. In a short time, he will get involved in local politics. From there, with our influence, he will become mayor of his city and then governor of his state. From there, he might become a Senator, a Congressman, or even President of the United States,” Kadin told him.
“But what has that do with me?” Ahmed asked. He was becoming a bit perturbed. “How does this American fairy tale have anything to do with me?”
Kadin smiled. “Because, my young friend, that young man I just spoke of?”
“Yes,” Ahmed’s impatience was growing.
Kadin clapped his hands together and exclaimed with delight, “That young man will be you!”
Ahmed’s mouth dropped open. “What? How?”
“We know you are the same blood type, and you possess the correct bone structure and body type. You wear the same size clothing, and even your shoe size is the same as the American. That is why we chose you for this mission. The physical changes you will undertake will be only to your eyes and minor facial features, along with a slight modification to your voice box so you will have his voice.”
Kadin took a photo, an 8 X 10, full face head shot of the American from a folder. He handed it to Ahmed.
“Do you see how alike you already are?”
Ahmed looked at the photo. He did look a great deal like the person in the photo.
Kadin pulled out another photo. It was of Ahmed.
“Put them side by side, my young friend.”
Ahmed held one picture in each hand and brought them together.
“The similarity is astounding. We could be brothers!” he exclaimed.
“Do you see? Now imagine all those things I told you about, happening to you. Can you now see your place in our jihad, impatient one?”
“I think so,” said Ahmed, still a bit dazed at the concept. “Tell me more, Kadin.”
“Once the operations are concluded, and while you are recovering, we will teach you to speak flawless English with intense speech therapy. Your body will be trained to move the way the American does and you will learn all of his mannerisms and other physical traits that make the American unique.
“When your transformation is complete, you will fool even the most sophisticated facial recognition systems. You will become the American.
“The American has no idea that right now he is being monitored and videotaped, even as he sleeps, so that you will be able to study his every movement and facial expression until, with the help of our team of experts, you, Ahmed, will be able to walk and talk and move through the world exactly like him.
“You will replace the American.”
“But how can you just replace a person?”
Kadin placed his hand on Ahmed’s shoulder and said, “It will be easier than you think. The less you know, the better, until the time comes. We have done this before, many times. Do not worry yourself, my young friend.”
Ahmed thought about this.
“And when the time is right, you and others like you will strike a powerful blow to cripple the infidel American machine from the inside. We cannot fail!”
“When do we begin?” Ahmed asked.
“Would right now be too soon?”
“Oh,” Ahmed was taken aback. This was all so sudden. “No, right now would be fine. Can I just be alone for a few moments to say goodbye to the memories of my family?”
“Of course. I will wait for you in the car. Take your time. Come out when you have made your peace and are ready to begin your glorious journey. Bring nothing with you. We will provide everything you need,” Kadin said, and he slipped out the back door.
Ahmed went into the bedroom and picked up Sanaa and Raheem’s pillows and held them to his face. He breathed in the scent of his family one last time. He took his favorite family picture from its frame, folded it, and put it in his wallet.
He heard Kadin start up the car and pull it around front.
He struggled with the front door for the final time and stood in the doorway to his little house, angry tears in his eyes as he remembered the joy and laughter that had once filled this home. Walking out for the last time, he slammed the door.
He heard the sound of breaking china as he stalked away to begin his new life.
So what do you think?
Anyone?
(the sound of crickets, wind blowing…)
Web Host Review: GoDaddy.com
0The Daddy of all web hosts? Yes, in my humble opinion (imho), GoDaddy is great as far as a Web host. We have had sites hosted here for about a decade, and we can attest to the reliability, customer service, and software availability on Godaddy. It’s also as economical as any other Web host out there, depending on your needs.
We have a special right now, where you can have us handle organizing and setting up your Web hosting, e-mail, and any other online services you may need (such as online file sharing, faxing, calendar) for only $199 plus the GoDaddy hosting fees. Contact us at 505-977-8827 if you’d like to get started today, or email us.
That means you can gain the efficiency of our GoDaddy knowledge, as we have worked with their systems for several years. You can get your site set up fast, with any support you need for moving forward. This is a great advantage, since it can take a while to learn about host software, WordPress (if you want to start a blog), and Web design and security at any Web host. We can handle all this for you!
Save 50% Now on Go Daddy SSL Certificates! Only $12.99!
To keep it real, the only down side I have ever experienced is a little bit of need to study how their Web site is organized. Sometimes it is apparent, but sometimes I need to hunt to figure out how to do something. This is better than being limited by services not offered at all.
If I call, their customer service is available 24 hours a day, however. So any difficulties are ameliorated by their strong customer service.
What are the things I have done on Godaddy? Well, here is a partial list:
- Worpress sites
- Web sites and Email (including Web mail) for clients’ domains
- Securing Web sites with SSL
- Online Fax Services / Email Faxing
- Ecommerce & Web Shopping Carts
- Linux/Unix and Windows Web sites
- Web applications (.NET and Java)
- Linking domain names to Google Blogger sites
- Drupal and Joomla Content Management Systems
- Video and audio podcasts
- Online Calendars
- Getting Dedicated Servers for Clients
- Storing large file online
GoDaddy.com Hosting Plans from $1.99 per month! Now with Unlimited Bandwidth!
You can depend on GoDaddy, like any good patriarch 🙂
Shirl Sazynski: Writer and Illustrator
0If you’re interested in genius, you will love Shirl Sazynski’s work! I met her about a year ago through our professional writer’s group in Albuquerque, and find myself very drawn to not only her writing but her art also. You’ll love her blog on her upcoming comic Mistral as well as the rest of the lovely content on her Web site: ShirlSazynski.com.
Writer’s Resource: Miriam’s Well of Current Literary Events and Calls for Submissions
0Shirl Sazynski recommended this resource for current literary events and for writers looking to submit their work. It looks like it is a great blog to keep an eye toward…
Cheers and may the pen be with you!
YouTube Channel for 7000BC, New Mexico Coalition of Independent Comic Artists and Writers
0We created a YouTube Channel for 7000BC, New Mexico’s coalition of independent comic writers and artists. If you like these videos, there are several other artists and writers you may be interested in connecting with at 7000 BC.
To learn more about this organization, you can visit the 7000 BC Web site or visit the 7000 BC Comics YouTube Channel.
We posted the first lesson (three videos) in Making Comics Our Way, a series of lessons in comic creation.
These are only the first in a series of educational, free videos that will be available to the public. Paul Ziomek (overthetopcomics.com) and Chuck Larntz (larntz.com) produced this video and you can view them below, or visit the 7000bcComics YouTube Channel.
7000 BC Comics is in the process of producing educational videos for comic artists and writers. This set of 3 videos comprises lesson one on creating characters. We at larntz.com directed and filmed the videos, edited the videos, provided graphic design, created a Youtube Channel, and published the videos on YouTube.
You can also see more of Paul Ziomek’s work at Over The Top Comics.
Newsletter Design and Development
0We helped a client design and develop an HTML newsletter that they can reuse to keep their clients updated on the latest news from their company. Please view the result by clicking here.
We have a special rate for an HTML newsletter project (design and development–you supply the content), of $500 per project. If you would like some Web/HTML support to get your newsletter in tip-top shape for e-mail distribution backed up by a Web landing page, please contact us.
If you would like a recommendation on e-mail distribution programs, try ConstantContact. For a more robust solution, try InfusionSoft.
SuperMediaStore for Inexpensive CDs, Dvds, and Storage
0Today we bought a thousand white sleeves for CDs and DVDs for about $20. If we go into a brick and mortar retail store, we pay $9 for about 25 or 50 sleeves. So, conservatively, we saved about $160 compared to shopping in person.
That’s what initially attracted us to SuperMediaStore. We figured it was too good to be true, but we ordered some anyway about 3 years ago. When we received them, all nicely packaged and ready to use, we were pleasantly surprised at the quality and speed of delivery.
Since then, we’ve ordered our media for much less money online than we’d pay in person. For example, I am using lightscribe CDs to record audio presentations for individual clients now, and we save a great deal of money by buying in bulk from these folks.
One of the goals of the technology coaching blog is to clue you in to technology services and products we have tested and experimented with. Sometimes, our reviews may reveal weaknesses in a technology source, as well as its strengths. However, in this case, we don’t see any problems at all to report from SuperMediaStore.
SuperMediaStore is a gem we believe you would benefit from, too. So, please visit them and if you click from here, they’ll know we sent you.
Happy archiving!
Meet Ahmed Akbar
0Ahmed Akbar is a character in Savage Investigations, the novel I’ve been writing for 500 years (or so it seems).
This is his origin story…
Ahmed Akbar awoke early that morning. Today would begin the most important day of his young life.
It all began on a normal day like any other. Ahmed was a brilliant young man, going off to the school where he was the youngest teacher on staff. He slung the worn messenger bag over his shoulder that contained his lunch and the test results from his students. He kissed his wife, Sanaa, on the cheek and their infant son, Raheem, on the top of his head and went to the front door of their modest two room house on the outskirts of the Iraqi city of Al-Awja.
The door wouldn’t open.
Since the bombings and the American invasion, the door frame had shifted.
Too proud to leave his house by the back door, it had been the same comical story every morning for months now because Ahmed felt it was, “too insignificant a thing to bother with.”
“Ahmed, I swear, you must fix that door,” Sanaa laughed. “It embarrasses me to have to tell our friends to go around back to enter our house.”
“Sanaa, my love, we are lucky to even have a door after what has happened around here,” he reminded her but then added, “I will fix it on our next national day of rest. I promise.”
She looked down at Raheem in her arms. “Do you hear that, Raheem? Your father will fix the door on Friday. He promised. We will see.”
Ahmed pushed up hard on the latch and to the left and the door opened.
“See? I told you I could open the door,” he smiled. “Friday,” he promised and left the house, slamming the door behind him to close it. It shook the china on the shelves and the baby started to cry.
Later that morning, a squad of American contract soldiers were patrolling the neighborhood. This had become a common sight and there didn’t seem to be any cause for alarm.
They came to Ahmed’s house.
Sanaa was sitting in her chair and reading with Raheem asleep in her lap.
The soldiers knocked on the door with their rifle butts and Raheem woke up crying.
Sanaa got up to answer the door but she couldn’t get the door open.
The soldiers, hearing the baby crying on the other side, knocked louder and demanded that it be opened.
Sanaa tried to open the door but couldn’t with Raheem in her arms.
“I can’t get it open. Please go around to the back!” she cried in her native tongue, which the Americans could not understand.
“You hear that? Sounds like a baby’s crying,” said the leader of the squad. “We got reports of insurgents in the area and it looks like somebody doesn’t want us to come in. Kick down the door!”
Two men kicked in the door, knocking Sanaa backwards. She dropped the baby and struck her head on the corner of a table, killing her instantly. Raheem died in the fall and Ahmed Akbar’s little family lay lifeless on the floor.
“Now what?” exclaimed one of the American contractors.
“Well, she seems to be the only one home. No terrorist insurgents here,” said the leader. “Let’s get the hell outta here!”
“Yeah,” said one of the men, “the corporation’s not payin’ me enough to get involved in a murder investigation, even if was an accident!”
Rather than trying to offer assistance, they left Sanaa and Raheem on the floor where they lay and ran.
A few blocks away, the leader said, “Okay, that never happened. Am I clear?”
The rest of the squad agreed and nothing more was said or done about it.
After school, Ahmed came home and seeing the door open, ran inside and found that life as he knew it was over.
He screamed as he sat on the floor in the pool of his wife’s blood, holding his lifeless family in his arms until the neighbors came.
“Murdered at the hands of the American infidels!” he said quietly at the funeral. “I hate the Western dogs that brought war to my peaceful world. I will strike back!” he hissed between his teeth.
After he said his final goodbyes to his little family, his wife’s uncle approached him.
“I know of a man who can help you to avenge the death of my brother’s daughter and grandson. If you wish, I can have him contact you. Not now, but when your head and your heart are clearer.”
Ahmed looked at the man through enraged eyes and said, “Please. I cannot let this travesty go unpunished.”
A week later he was visited by a man from a secret organization that was so secret, it had no name, nor seemingly any members that knew about each other. He recruited Ahmed to join the fight, and told him he would be able to get his revenge against the capitalist mongrels that were ruining the world with vile arrogance, spreading hatred wherever they went. The mild mannered schoolteacher was transformed into a terrible angel whose only mission was to avenge the death of his family.
His handler, known to him only as Kadin, the confidant, had told Ahmed to go to a clinic on the other side of town to see a doctor for the tests and then he would be spirited away to begin the transformation. He had an eight-thirty appointment. He already knew that he had the right blood type, AB positive, and the correct bone structure, so the physical alterations Ahmed was about to undertake would only be changes to his eyes and other facial features, along with a slight modification to his voice box so he would sound like his doppelganger. Kadin told him the entire transformation would take six weeks and when he looked in the mirror afterwards he would no longer see himself staring back. He would see the American he was going to replace.
After the operations, during the recovery and orientation period, he would learn to speak flawless English and undergo intense speech therapy. His body would be trained to move the way the American did and to affect all the mannerisms and other physical traits that until now were the American’s alone. His physical size and body type, even his shoe size, was already a perfect match. Once the transformation was complete, if they were to stand side by side, they would appear to be the same person.
Unbeknownst to the American, he was continually being monitored and videotaped so that Ahmed could study the American’s every movement and facial expression until, with the help of a team of coaches, Ahmed would be able to walk and talk and move through the world exactly like him.
He stood in the doorway to his little house, tears in his eyes as he remembered the joy and laughter that had echoed off the walls. Walking out for the last time, he slammed the door.
He heard the sound of breaking china as he stalked away to begin his new life.
What do you think? Feel free to let me know…
Thanks,
Be Well,
Chuck
Market Research Diamond-In-The-Rough: Hire People Before You Meet Them
0Contrary to the social pressures we read about when job hunting or looking to market ourselves, I was delighted to read the following on the Advertising Principles Web site today:
“After summarizing decades of research on personnel selection, Meehl (1956) advised that when deciding whom to hire, one should make a decision before meeting a candidate. Another half century of research supported Meehl’s advice (Grove et al. 2000). This advice leads one to focus on information about a candidate’s ability to perform the job. When you meet a person, you are distracted by features that might be irrelevant to the job, such as height, accent, looks, weight, and gender. Thus, some orchestras have applicants play behind a curtain when auditioning, a procedure that has enabled more women to get these jobs.”
To see the full article, visit advertisingprinciples.com
The Advertising Principles Web site focuses on academic research into advertising, and that can apply to our individual lives today as we worry about our abilities to sustain ourselves as writers and creative people—whether we are employees or independent contractors—as corporations shut the doors of the future in our faces. Behind their closed doors, they hoard their capital and profit. Can you picture them with all their dollar bills stacked up to their necks, like hoarders with trash towers interspersed with narrow pathways?
About a decade ago, I sensed there were some rules to the game. There seemed a tacit acknowledgement that if you worked at the jobs that were in demand, like graphic design and programming, you could be included in the corporate world. Now, however, corporate America’s decision making is rife with the constant excuse of the addict: I can’t because I don’t believe I have enough.
So only the most political of human animals tends to have a voice today in our media and in our meeting rooms. It’s disconcerting to those of us who don’t fit that hyper-attractive model, and I admit a point of glee when I realized that, in advertising, the research showed the best way to hire someone creative is to do it sight-unseen, based upon their work—not based upon their statuesque beauty or their charm.
If we were to follow all the rules of job acquisition as per our American job hunting sites, we would wear a navy suit, visit the hair stylist and, if female (as I am), apply copious amounts of makeup. We’d find some new shoes and painfully (for me) attend to building a face and appearance that some corporate manager will find acceptable. We would practice the answers to questions that we can anticipate. We would make flash cards of our three “bullet-points” to convey about ourselves to leave the interviewer with a clear and lasting impression of our fit for the organization. Don’t forget that first impressions are everything!
I would so much prefer to live in a world that judged us by our creative ability rather than our ability to be uber-human and good looking and sexy and also have time to study anything of value beyond personal hygiene. There are some things I will never be able to achieve, and media good-looks is one of them.
What if everything we think we know is wrong? What if, all along, team work and positioning ourselves were not the end-all-be-all things to focus on in life? What if we acknowledge to ourselves that our own creative personalities make us difficult sometimes, and our lack of focus on politics—be they office politics or any other politics—is one of the most beautiful things about us?
(By the way, I think those invested in being ‘politically incorrect’ are as focused on politics as those who commit that purportedly most repulsive of acts—caring about others.)
This article opened up a lot of thoughts about what work means, and what I should be looking for in myself and other whom I hire in the future.