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Category: Writing

Score a Victory for the Grownups

Posted on April 11, 2010April 12, 2010 by Dot

Everyone knows it’s against the law to discriminate in hiring. I’m not saying it doesn’t happen, I’m saying it’s against the law. An employer can’t refuse to give someone a job because of race, creed, ethnicity or age . . . and probably lots of other reasons I’m not aware of.  An agency I worked for once included in the hiring policy the promise to not discriminate against anyone for their “political stance during the Viet Nam Era.” I’m not sure that would be an issue nowadays, unless someone is running for public office.

But, I noticed a small article this week on the AARP Magazine website (www.aarpmagazine.org) regarding a court victory against age discrimination. This is a direct quote from that website:

A major legal victory, won by AARP Foundation attorneys and television writers, may affect age-discrimination cases for years to come. For nearly a decade, a group of 165 writers ages 50 and up – with the support of the  AARP Foundation litigation department – has argued in court that TV studios conspired to shut out older writers via a so-called “graylist.”  Now, in a landmark settlement, the studios have agreed to pay $70 million in damages to thousands of writers.

“The network told me I didn’t know how to write for young people,” says Tracy Keenan Wynn, 65, who won an Emmy for 1974’s The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman. “Shakespeare wasn’t 15 when he wrote Romeo and Juliet. Writers get better with age.”

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Write What You Know and Vice Versa

Posted on March 14, 2010March 15, 2010 by Dot

One of the first things aspiring writers are told is: Write what  you know.  And if you’re going to write about something, learn all you can about it so you will be able to “write what you know.” Many novelists set their stories in their own stomping grounds, their home state, territory they are familiar with. Anita Shreve’s novels are based in New Hampshire, John Grisham writes about the courtroom.

The question comes, though, what of those who write in the science fiction or fantasy genres? These people write about something no one knows.

J.R.R. Tolkien (Lord of the Rings, et al) drew maps and pictures of the lands of Middle Earth, the Cracks of Doom and Shire. By the time he wrote his novels, he knew the land he had invented as well as I know North Texas.

Ann Rice (Interview With A Vampire) tells that when she wrote this novel, based in her home city of New Orleans, she was experiencing spiritual battles. She told a television interviewer that during that time she felt very much like someone from another world trying to find her way. She knew the feelings a vampire might have and she wrote those feelings. After she returned to her Catholic faith, she studied the life of Jesus with intensity. She has since written two novels about the life of Jesus, Christ the Lord: Out of Egypt and Christ the Lord: The Road to Cana.

So, writers out there, write what you know.  You know a lot more than you think  you do. Take your feelings and experiences and give them to your character.

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Lexophiles

Posted on August 28, 2009August 28, 2009 by Dot

Lex = word; phile= to like or be attracted to.  This word is not in my dictionary, but it should mean a person who loves, likes or is attracted to words. Not to be confused with a lexaholic, which would be a person who exhibits and obsessive need for or interest in words.  So for the lexophiles or lexaholics out there, here are some word plays.

Police were called to a daycare where a three-year-old was resisting a rest.

To write with a broken pencil is pointless.

We’ll never run out of math teachers because they always multiply.

A dentist and a manicurist fought tooth and nail.

A chicken crossing the road: Poultry in motion.

A boiled egg is hard to beat.

When she saw her first strands of gray hair, she thought she’d dye.

Acupuncture: a jab well done.

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Poking the Muse

Posted on June 29, 2009June 29, 2009 by Dot

If there’s such a thing as writer’s block for me, it’s when I try to write about something I don’t know or something I don’t want to write. I’ve been most successful with opinion pieces and fiction, so blogging should be a piece of cake. Yet, though I pledged to post three times a week, sometimes I come here and I’ve got nothing. (It’s my fear that this fact is apparent to you.)

I’m more than half-way through a novel I hope will be published in 2010 and I’m a bit stuck. I can visualize how the story will end, but can’t seem to get the protagonist moving in that direction. Other writers whose opinions I value, suggest I write the ending and fill in the blanks later.  I’m willing to give it a try, though the left side of my brain, that just loves chronological order, has a problem with that. 

Though I find it uncomfortable, I have to admit that is the extent of my suffering for my art. I don’t write because of some inner compulsion. I just like to put words on paper and hope someone finds them interesting, or amusing or inspiring. Thank you for reading.

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When Shared, A Challenge Can Be Fun

Posted on June 11, 2009September 17, 2017 by Dot

The AntennaEvery happening in life, be it defeat or victory, a challenge or a walk in the park, reaches a whole new dynamic when other people get involved. This is the blessing/curse of growing up in a large family, and the benefit of having a host of friends. Thus the party atmosphere the day we installed an antenna on the roof of our house in Denison, Texas in the spring of 1951.

The house we bought during the post war housing shortage was somewhat small for our family of eight to occupy. Originally it had only two bedrooms and one bath. As soon as feasible, Dad remodeled it to accommodate a master bedroom, boys’ dorm and girls’ dorm. We were lots of people living in a diminutive house, but that didn’t stop friends of all ages from dropping by regularly to see if anything fun was going on.

One weekend, my dad brought home a used 13-inch television set. If we liked it and if it got good reception, he told my mother, it would soon pay for itself with money saved from movie tickets and popcorn.

We placed the television set in a central spot in the living room and turned it on. Snow. Dad adjusted the contrast and fiddled with the vertical and horizontal hold buttons. Was the shadow that moved across the screen a person? A horse? Or ghosts?

Much of the problem was that we lived in a town near the Red River, half way between Dallas and Oklahoma City. The FCC, in its wisdom, had licensed stations in each city to broadcast on Channel 4. Often the feed from WKY-TV in Oklahoma City would interfere with reception from KRLD-TV in Dallas.

“The signal is too weak,” Dad declared. “We need an antenna.”

The next Saturday a delivery man deposited a large metal contraption, along with an array of poles and wires, in our back yard. The plan was to install a 25-foot latticed tower on top of the roof and run a lead-in wire down the rod and through the window to the back of the television set. Guy-wires attached to the apparatus would hold it steady. The antenna should allow us to receive a clear, strong picture. Bring on “Mr. Peepers” and Milton Berle!

Brothers, friends, boyfriends, and fiances all gathered to be a part of the activity. Curious neighbors soon joined the crowd. A television set was still a bit of a curiosity in our town. A few homes featured a small antenna fastened to the eaves. The ambitious effort involved in setting a large arrangement of metal rods on the roof would be a sight to see. Females were sent inside to the safety of the house and the he-men set to their task.

Once during the process, the workers on the housetop lost control of the pole and it came crashing down into the middle of the back yard, striking fear into the hearts of stouthearted men on the ground. This was repeated at least once. Finally, before any lives were lost, Dad announced Plan B. The workers stuck the latticed pole into the ground, wired it to the gutter, and secured the antenna. This whole arrangement was only slightly taller than the one attached to the neighbor’s eaves.

Ah, but the task was not complete. The antenna must be oriented to the channel we most wanted to receive. This was accomplished by stationing one of the boys on the edge of the roof to manually turn the antenna. Likewise, persons were posted in the yard, at the back door, and in the living room in front of the television set. Through a series of echoing instructions, the wire structure was finally pointed to bring in the best picture possible – for a receiver seventy miles from the TV station and in the flight pattern of a nearby Air Force Base.

Whether Dad’s promise of the set paying for itself ever happened, I couldn’t say. I suppose the teens and tweens that gathered enjoyed the novelty of the small box that poured forth comedy and drama. But according to general consensus, the most fun had been installing the antenna.

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Dot Hatfield

Dot Hatfield

Dot Hatfield is a member of the Arkansas Writers Hall of Fame and a Certified Lay Speaker in the United Methodist Church. She is the author of 7 books.

Dot’s Books

  • Worth the Candle
  • Did Anyone Read My Story?
  • An Ordinary Day
  • R.I.P. Emma Lou Briggs
  • To Find a Home
  • The Last To Know
  • Every Day a New Day

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