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#Novel Memphis
unsafescapewolf · 1 year
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"Wherever an altar is found, there civilization exists...The most shameful errors and the most detestable cruelties soil the annals of Memphis, Athens, and Rome, but all the virtues together honor the barbarous cabins of Paraguay" - Joseph de Maistre, The St. Petersburg Dialogues
Necro Maria by Billelis
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thingswereadtoday · 17 days
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biff-stallion · 7 months
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count-mecha · 2 years
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Memphis Comic Expo 2022 is in the books. Had a great time this year, the first year back after a break.
Expo pictures are from the final hours on Sunday. There were way more people present on Saturday but even on Sunday there was a decently large crowd.
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Signed books/collectibles: Everyone I got something signed by were super cool people. Especially James O'barr. Venom Lethal Protector and Spider-Man 2099 had always been a really early part of my comic collection, so it was great to meet the artists after obsessing over those books as a kid. Dan Brereton personalized my Nocturnals book. Denys Cowan signed my The Question #1 (a sentimental book that I was introduced to by friends) and Mark Waid signed my Daredevil #1, a book that's pretty special to me and was one of the few series I stuck with when I started picking up comics on a semi-weekly basis. There were some things I forgot to bring (like my Sozo Maika books) but I'm overall satisfied with everything anyways.
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Comic pickups: I already blew through most my budget getting collectibles and things signed so I didn't do a whole lot of digging for comics this year. Of course I managed to grab a lot of manga-centric stuff. Especially stoked on the Adam Warren Dirty Pair run find.
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a-dose-of-memphis · 9 months
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hsr memphis wooo
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bestie's vacation in a place where its on a brink of chaos
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also additional doodles
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lilianeruyters · 1 year
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Tara M. Stringfellow || Memphis
Women’s Prize for Fiction 2023 Longlist Memphis is the story of the women in the North family, told by Joan. Her story is the main one; the perspective of some of the other women gets mixed with hers in separate chapters however, which results in a broader perspective of the family history. Interlaced with many important moments in Black American history. The story starts when Joan, her mother…
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michael-kiggins · 1 year
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My debut novel will be released from Running Wild Press on 9/1/2023. It's available for preorder everywhere, and there will be both e-book and audio versions available, but here's where I'd suggest getting it. A synopsis will follow this paragraph, but if this sounds like your kind of book, you can read the first few chapters here.
And the Train Kept Moving follows the misadventures of Bryan Meigs, a 26-year-old gay man whose thoughts are dominated by his OCD. It’s 2003, and between settling for a dead-end job and drinking too much, Bryan’s life has stalled out in Memphis, Tennessee. In the year since getting dumped, he has cut himself off from dating entirely and most of his friendships.
During a chance encounter at work, Bryan meets a handsome man named Adam. Ignoring his instincts, Bryan decides to go on a date. Although he is hoping for an escape from the rut of lonely hangovers, Bryan’s morning-after arrives with bloody sheets, a battered body, no memory of the night before, and no signs of a used condom.
Wherever Bryan turns for help, his few friends downplay his concerns or question the version of events he knows to be true. These and other betrayals fuel his desire to track Adam down and make him admit what he did. If only Bryan can do this, it will prove he has been right all along. During his search, he will navigate parts of Memphis that most tourists never see—a world of gay clubs, late-night dives, an adult bookstore, and cruisy park trails—all set against the backdrop of a time when both homophobia and the fear of contracting HIV were much more rampant.
Throughout this transgressive literary novel, Bryan will be forced to confront childhood traumas and reckon with brutal facts about who he really is. In light of these revelations, Bryan faces a choice: will he let others define his truth, or will he write his own story?
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fallingtowers · 2 years
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when people are talking about those ugly-ass boring-looking corporate-memphis covers they’re putting on romance novels now and they’re like “well at least they aren’t putting half-naked men all over them anymore........” like wow shut the fuck off. are you even listening to yourself. “ohh i’m so glad novels don’t come with their own lovingly realized oil paintings on the cover anymore” that’s how you sound. good grief. be quiet for 100 years.
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knightwriter2 · 1 year
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Jack and Jill in Junior High
I am in the process of writing the rough draft of another novel, You’re the One: The True Story of Jack and Jill (see blog post “Current Project (So Far).” In the meantime, I thought I’d share an excerpt from time to time. I invite any feedback. This is a rough draft and your comments will help me develop the novel. The following is the second post excerpt. * * * Jill and I attended school…
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Back-to-school tips for LGBTQ+ youth from a QUEER TEACHER!
It's that season, y'all! 🍎✏️ So we asked queer 8th grade English teacher Sarah from Memphis, TN what tips she would share with LGBTQ+ youth going back to school:
Look for supportive adults.
Is there a teacher always sporting a pride pin? Are there safe space posters hung up in their classroom or pride flags displayed? These are strong indicators that adult will affirm and uplift your identity. If you are unsure but want to test the waters, ask an adult what their pronouns are. Judging by their response and if they return the question, something small like this can help you determine if they are a safe person. 
Find a queer-affirming club(s) at your school. 
Does your school have a GSA or diversity club? Consider joining to build a supportive community and form connections with people you can relate to. If your school does not have a pre-existing club, consider finding an adult advisor to help and start your own GSA. Find more tips on how to do so here: https://gsanetwork.org/resources/10-steps-for-starting-a-gsa/
Trust your gut.
If you don’t feel safe in a situation, trust your instincts. If possible, remove yourself from the environment and ask for help; know that it’s ok to not share your identity with everyone, especially if you feel they are not a safe person. Conversely, if someone does make you feel safe and loved, believe that feeling too. You are in charge of who gets to know you.
Check out YA books exploring queer identities.
An amazing way to learn more about queer experiences is to read about them. There are countless young adult novels and graphic novels that can help you better understand yourself and others. Titles like The Lesbiana’s Guide to Catholic School by Sonora Reyes, Taproot by Keezy Young, Out of Character by Jenna Miller, and Mooncakes by Wendy Xu and Suzanne Walker are all great stories to explore. For a more comprehensive list of LGBTQ+ YA books, visit https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/15/books/review/lgbtq-ya-books-authors.html
Seek social support.
What would life be like without friends? Although you may not click with everyone at your school, you are not alone. LGBTQ+ people are everywhere, even if it’s hard to see sometimes. Find friends who support your identity or are a part of the community as well! 
Remember! You have every right to be exactly who you are.
You are the only person who can define your identity. The terms you use to refer to yourself can evolve over time, or can remain the same, but as long as it feels right to you that’s perfect. Believe yourself, and do not doubt your worth. Growing up is a difficult process but remember, it gets better. 
Read it on the blog itgetsbetter.org too!
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arimiadev · 3 months
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(you can read this article down below or on my blog!)
How to Sell Visual Novels at Conventions
Or, “how do you table at an anime convention and actually get people to stop by your booth and actually get interested in visual novels????”
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Picture this – me, someone who’s never been to California nor flown alone arrived to the Hyatt at the San Francisco Bay, being greeted by several online friends I’d known for years but never met in person. After a great time walking around the surrounding Burlingame area and meeting back up with the rest of our group, we had to actually put in some work for the day.
That is, setting up our booth for the convention starting the next day.
We unpacked box after box, taking turns standing around with our hands on our hips and heads tilted wondering “how the hell are we going to set all of this up?”. I decided to make it my job to set up our keychain display. All I had to do was get a copy of each keychain we had and pin them up – we even had a box from prior conventions that had a single copy of (most) of our keychains, for displaying. But as I opened more boxes, I found more and more keychains…
After threatening to change the password on their Vograce account, I found we had 10+ boxes of merchandise for niche visual novels that we were trying to sell at a vtuber convention. Not an anime convention, not a gaming convention, a vtuber convention! Going to bed that night, already tired, I was sure there was no way we would make a profit…..
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…And yet, we made more on Friday than they had for the entire convention in 2023. By Sunday, we had made more than double that, having sold items to over 100 customers with most purchases around $40 each. We weren’t selling fanart, we were selling a majority completely original art.
We lived the dream of a lot of indie developers – we sold physicals of our indie games and people bought them. But how did we do it??
a little context
Some background – OffKai Expo is an annual vtuber-oriented convention in Burlingame, California, a suburb of San Francisco and just 15 minutes away from their airport. If you don’t know what a vtuber is, just go watch my oshi Gavis Bettel. In 2023, Studio Élan had a booth at the convention as it’s somewhat local to some of our members. We decided to have another booth at the convention for 2024 and I offered to work at it (what’s a booth without a marketer?).
The only anime convention I’ve ever been to was the local one in Memphis, namely Anime Blues Con, but those are….lacking, to say the least. Not much to do, very limited artist alley, waning attendance (which was already small to begin with), barely any new artists nor sights year after year… I’ve always wanted to go to a convention outside my area, to say the least.
But how did we manage to make the weekend successful?
conceits
What we did won’t be entirely replicable for most devs reading this, but there will be some insights and takeaways that I’ll highlight that are applicable to anyone wanting to table at conventions and sell their games.
Our table was for Studio Élan x VirPro – it was a joint table between our yuri visual novel studio and our indie vtuber friend streaming group, Virtuality Project. We sold some merch for VirPro, but I’d estimate that was no more than 20% of our sales – we still would have made a profit even if we weren’t selling that merch.
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this table held our limited VirPro merch. we were able to hang our Élan prints on the wall behind it thanks to our friends at Studio Nekomata allowing us to tape our prints to the backside of their display. we also had a Miho cutout, but she didn’t want to stand up this weekend…
However, it is important to note that Studio Élan is not a new studio. We’ve been around for years, have 15k followers on Twitter, and have several visual novels released. We’re not extremely well known, as we are within a niche within a niche, but we aren’t unknown either. Some people actually cosplayed our characters at the convention! It’s definitely possible some locals came to OffKai Expo just to see our booth & panel (we also held a panel on Saturday where we announced 2 new games).
Another thing to note is that we have a stock of merch from running an online store and having held Kickstarters before. Specifically, we have physical copies of almost all of our games as well as artbooks, soundtracks, clothing, and more. We had tons of keychains and 11×17 prints, sure, but we also sold a lot of merch that is much harder and more expensive to produce.
So, tl;dr, things we had going for us:
We are established developers with a following & released games
We have a sizeable amount of merch already made for our online store, including physical games & artbooks
We were boothing with our indie vtuber friend group and selling their merch on the side
But our main problem:
We were boothing at a vtuber convention, not an anime or gaming convention
Now, with all of that out of the way….
convention standards
First off, let’s look at some basic things you can expect while tabling at a convention. (for the purposes of being specific to visual novels, when I say “convention” I’m only referring to anime & gaming-adjacent conventions—OffKai falls under this as vtubers are both anime & gaming-adjacent)
At a convention, you will typically be selling in either the artist alley or the dealer’s room, which are both referred to as the vendor’s hall. For small conventions, these two may be the same area. The artist alley is typically for artists selling keychains, prints, and more. The dealers room is for vendors that sell larger merch or have more items to sell – this can include artists but also includes people selling imported items (such as anime figures) and companies.
Conventions have a set amount of hours that the events go on and the vendor’s hall is usually not open the entire time. These rooms will usually open in the morning, around 10AM or so, and allow vendors an extra hour for fixing things before opening every day. For OffKai, we had to stay at our booth for about 8~ hours every day, except for Sunday. Sundays are always the shortest days for 3-day conventions, as the convention will usually wrap up around dinner time (if not earlier).
Vendors get time the night before the convention starts (usually Thursday night, with most conventions I’m referencing being Friday-Sunday events) to set up their booths. It took us around 3 hours to fully set up our booth, with 4 of us working on it. Setting up your booth will go a lot smoother if you do a trial run before the convention.
Every convention I’ve tabled at or known a vendor at provides vendors with at least 1 table and a chair. More chairs are usually easy to get, you just need to ask staff before the vendors hall opens up.
tip 1 – bring a friend
Conventions provide tables and chairs, but they don’t provide helping hands! You’re probably going to need help unpacking and setting up the table, but you’ll definitely need to take breaks during the convention for the bathroom, food, and more. You can’t just ask staff to sit at your table and you can’t just hide everything while you’re gone. Bring a friend to help out!
If you have to go alone, make friends with the people boothing next to you and ask them to watch over your table if need be. Be sure to keep your money and payment processors with you if you ever have to step away. And bring snacks & water!
our merch
Like I said, at Élan we have typical merchandise for our visual novels like keychains and acrylic standees, but we also have physical copies of our games for PC & consoles, artbooks, soundtracks, and more.
We had these types of merch:
Acrylic & wooden items
Keychains
Standees
Pins
Print media
PC discs
Console discs & cartridges (Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4 & 5)
Artbooks (game artbooks, limited edition anniversary artbooks)
Soundtrack discs
4×6 prints (CGs, key artworks)
11×17 prints (key artworks, exclusive convention artworks)
Clothing & fabric
T-shirts (4 designs, 1 color each)
Hoodie (new collaboration design, for all of our games)
Scarf (new collaboration design, for 1 of our games)
Fabric flags (key visuals)
Misc.
Grab bag (misc small items)
$5 bin (misc small items)
Pencil bag
Mousepad
Enamel pin
Plushie (limited Makeship leftovers)
Some of these were items we’d never sold before such as the hoodie, scarf, and 11×17 prints. Some of them were also much more of a hassle than others.
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In terms of storage and cheapness to make, prints and stickers are by far the winners (we didn’t sell stickers at OffKai but plan to in the future). Prints are basically the best thing you can sell for production cost:profit, as a 4×6 print can cost you $0.20 but sell for $5+ and an 11×17 print can cost $0.60 and sell for $15-20.
On the other hand, t-shirts can be some of the most difficult merch to work with. They take up a lot of room (we had at least 2 boxes of just shirts/hoodies) and require you to have multiple different sizes. The plushies were great & easy to sell, but at the same time they cost a lot per unit and take up even more space than shirts.
The physical copies sold great, but the cost to produce & room to store them makes them unwieldy for most developers. I would recommend them over more bespoke merch like clothing, though—several people came to our booth, having never heard of our games, and left with a physical game. CD discs rather than DVD cases are much easier to store and can be handmade, although ours are manufactured.
tip 2 – be selective with what merch you make & bring
Unless you’re lucky enough to have a convention down the street from you, chances are you’re going to have to travel to the convention. That means packing everything up, possibly shipping it, etc…. You need to be picky with what you bring if you don’t have multiple cars to throw it all in.
My merch recommendations:
4×6 prints
Ours were $4-5
Dirt cheap to print, easy to store
Easy for people to buy because of the low price point and ease of carrying
Idea – these are so cheap to print, at the very least print some of your key visual & logo to hand out to people for free
Stickers (die-cut or sticker sheets)
Dirt cheap to print, easy to store
Easy for people to buy because of the low price point and ease of carrying
Idea – some conventions won’t allow you to hand out free stickers. For conventions that don’t, I would sell either singular die-cut stickers or sell them in packs
Keychains
Ours were $12-15
Cheap to print, not very hard to store
At this price point people want to have an attachment to the characters before buying
Idea – if your game is relatively unknown but you still want to print keychains, consider packaging them with something else like the game or a sampler CD of the demo / soundtrack
Physical CD disc games
Ours were $30
Not cheap to print, not very hard to store
People will buy copies of games they’ve never heard of because it’s an interesting item to own and seen as more value than a digital copy (even if physical is more expensive)
Idea – it doesn’t cost much to get a 50 pack of CDs, the cost comes from the packaging and time to make the entire thing. If you don’t have a finished game yet, consider printing your demo out on CDs in paper slips to hand out for free
our booth
Now that I’ve talked about basics for conventions and what merch we sold, what did our booth actually look like?
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We didn’t have a pre-convention trial run, so we were essentially winging it. With all of the merch I outlined, could you believe we crammed all of the display copies on 1 table, 2 shelves, and 1 clothing rack?!
Our main focus was making sure each of our physical games were visible. After all, we were at a vtuber convention where most attendees didn’t know us, so we wanted to have a way to show off our games. We spent a lot of real estate on showing individual game copies and having brochures spread out.
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tip 3 – have an idea of how you’re going to display things before the convention
We also brought several items to display merch. For keychains & pins, we had a simple corkboard leaning on a photo stand / easel. For acrylic standees, we had a clear nail polish stand. For physical copies, we had photo stands and bookends. For clothes, we had a small clothing rack. For physicals, we had 3 small bookcases. These were all extremely helpful, but they are added costs and more things to carry to the convention.
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here’s a better look at our 2 bookshelves. the purple ladder one was at the back of the booth highlighting some items and storing various artbooks & bundles and the smaller one was at the front left of the booth by the VirPro merch, basically in the walking aisle
The corkboard and various photo stands were must-haves, regardless of what you’re selling. A corkboard makes it easy to display anything on it, whether it’s keychains, stickers, mini-prints, announcements, posters, and more. Photo stands were also super helpful for propping our corkboard on but also showing off individual physical copies.
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this was me trying to arrange the corkboard and acrylic stands. photo stands and art easels can in handy!
Along with the display stands, we also brought some decorative items like pink table clothes and flowers. These aren’t required, but help make your booth more noticeable.
A few miscellaneous items I plan on bringing to our next convention are a hand sanitizer dispenser, a small air purifier, and fliers. I always keep hand sanitizer on me, but it’s easier to use it when it’s in a convenient bottle and place. Several of us got sick after the convention (despite me wearing a mask), so I’m also bringing a small air purifier to keep some germs away from the table. I also want to bring small fliers for our upcoming games—while brochures are wonderful, I want something that’s easy (and cheap) to hand out to anyone who looks at our booth, not just the people we talk to.
tip 4 – be aware of merch thieves
We arranged our table in a way that we didn’t have to worry much about people stealing merch, though that is a problem at some conventions. As you might’ve noticed from the pictures, our smaller items like the keychains are at the far back of the booth, right beside where we sit. That allowed us to keep a better eye on it.
Rather than sitting behind our tables, we arranged our booth to be where people would walk inside it. This allowed us a way to talk to people easier. We also made sure to hide our card readers, phones, and more when any of us left the table, though this was easy because we almost always had 2-3 people at the booth at any time.
my advice
If I were an indie dev looking to booth at a convention and had the time and spare change, I would if it were close enough to drive to and the booth cost under $500. Unless you’re an established developer or have a popular artist working on your project, it’s hard to justify that cost.
tip 5 – don’t forget to budget for…
booth costs
extra badges (most booths come with 2 free badges)
hotel
travel
food
merchandise manufacturing
any shipping fees (your luggage, merch, etc.)
display items, extra things for your booth
While you may find a booth for $250, you also have to remember the travel fees, cost of food, all of the extra items you’ll need aside from merchandise, and more. A $250 booth for a 3-day convention could easily end up costing you $2,000+, and that’s if you don’t pay yourself or coworkers for their time at the booth!
If you’ve never been to a convention before then definitely go to one as an attendee before becoming a vendor. Get a feel for the place and have some fun, even if it means you won’t be able to booth there for months or a year.
tip 6 – be sure to bring…
Some kind of handout for people with your game & logo on it (fliers, business cards, brochures, etc.)
Small stationary merch for your game (4×6 prints, stickers, etc.)
Corkboard to display things on and something to prop it up
A way to take card payments and cash for change
Hand sanitizer
Pen/pencil and sticky notes
Clamps
Tape
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this is the inside of our old brochure! it details our different games and highlights some upcoming titles
I’d also try putting your demo on CDs to hand out to people who seem really interested if you can. CDs are pretty cheap to get now, and even if you just get a 50 pack that can run you around $12, which ends up being $0.25/CD. Not a bad cost for getting a potential fan, if you hand them out only to people who are really interested or package them with other merch and sell them.
Your main effort if you’re not an established developer, however, will be awareness. Talk to the people who stop by your booth. Tell them hi and explain to them what you make. I had several people clearly not understand what visual novels were, but I had many more who became interested once I mentioned we made these games. “Wait, you actually made them?!”
tip 7 – talk to people!!!
People at conventions think art is cool. They think indie games are cool. Be honest with them and show them your hard work. Yeah, this means you have to put on your extrovert cap for the weekend. Just don’t treat it like you’re a car salesman—you’re a game dev first and foremost and enjoy this line of work so much you want to share it with strangers at conventions. Let that shine through in your words.
All in all, conventions are stressful, tiring, and a lot of fun when they’re run well. If any of this sounds interesting to you and you find a convention close enough to you or one that will be relatively cheap to attend, I recommend trying it out.
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OffKai Expo was so, so much fun and I’m so happy I was able to attend. It was a well run convention, our booth did amazing, I got to meet actual fans IRL, and I was able to finally see a lot of my online friends in person. I was scared leading up to it but I’m so glad I pushed myself to go. Having an in-person panel there where the room was almost full absolutely blew me away—I kept asking “do they know what room they’re in? Did they get lost?” If you came to our panel or booth, thank you!!
— Arimia
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hooked-on-elvis · 6 months
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SOMETIMES FANS COULD BE A LITTLE INCOVENIENT ALRIGHT... EP TREASURED THEM ANYWAYS.
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To illustrate the story, pictures of Elvis with fans in 1957.
CONTEXT: Graceland, Memphis, Tennessee during Christmastime 1957 -- One day, Elvis and his gang were driving down the gates on their way to the Rainbow Skating Rink. Arlene Cogan was sitting on the passenger seat next to Elvis, who was driving his big black limousine while other friends were on the back seats and a few more on the line of cars following them close behind.
Elvis eased the long limousine into the swarm of fans around the front gate. He stopped directly by a girl in a wheelchair and rolled down his window. He reached out his hand to her and she touched it. "How you doin', darlin'?" he said with a big smile. She said something but all the talking around her drowned it out. People began shoving pieces of paper through the window at him. The caravan of his cars behind us stopped, headlights in a curving line down the hill. Elvis didn't carry a pencil or a pen. People gave them to him and he wrote his name and handed them back. Every kind of piece of paper came through the window. Torn out pages of books. School notebook paper. Department store bills. Novels. Pictures. Candy wrappers. Autograph books. And everybody was asking questions about Elvis' tours, his movies, his girlfriends, his Christmas plans - everything. Girls kept telling him how "gorgeous" he was. Elvis looked across at me. He shook his head. "Can you believe all this?" he said. Girls even stuck their arms through the window for him to write his name on. Elvis was not annoyed in any way. He just loved it all. "If it wasn't for these people," he said, "I wouldn't be where I am today. I'll never forget them." A bare, dirty little foot came through the window. It nearly hit Elvis in the face. There was a pen stuck between two toes. Elvis took the pen, wrote his name on the bare leg and shoved the pen back between the toes. The leg withdrew through the window. Elvis rolled up the window. "Thanks," he said. "Merry Christmas." Fans stayed pressed up against the window. From the other side they stared curiously at me and tried to see who else was sitting in back. Elvis eased the limousine forward through the crows and out on the highway and headed north. The caravan of headlights followed him. "It's unbelievable," he said. "It never ceases to amaze me."
Excerpt "Elvis, This One's for You" by Arlene Cogan; Chapter 4: "A Call From Memphis"
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vintage1981 · 11 months
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Actress and Author, Lara Parker, of Dark Shadows, Passes at 84
Lara Parker, who found the role of a lifetime at just 28 years old when she was cast by Dark Shadows producer Dan Curtis as the beautiful, vengeful and altogether evil witch Angelique Bouchard Collins, died October 12 in her sleep in Los Angeles following a battle with cancer. She was 84.
Her death was announced by producer Jim Pierson of Dan Curtis Productions, on behalf of Parker’s family.
“I’m heartbroken, as all of us are who knew and loved her,” said her Dark Shadows co-star and longtime friend Kathryn Leigh Scott in a statement. “She graced our lives with her beauty, talent and friendship, and we are all richer for having had her in our lives.”
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Parker was born Mary Lamar Rickey on Oct. 27, 1938, in Knoxville, Tennessee. Her father, Albert, was an attorney, and her mother, Ann, was active in civic groups.
She graduated from Central High School in Memphis and attended Vassar — she roomed with Jane Fonda there — and Rhodes College in Memphis, where at 19 she served as Wink Martindale’s assistant on his WHBQ-TV show, Dance Party. She then earned a master’s degree from the University of Iowa.
Parker, who also authored four popular Dark Shadows-related novels from 1998-2016, arrived on the supernatural soap opera in 1967, not long after Canadian actor Jonathan Frid had been cast as vampire Barnabas Collins. Frid’s storyline changed the show from a moody, Gothic Jane Eyre-type serial into a flat-out horror show.
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During breaks in production, Parker acted on Broadway in September 1968 in Woman Is My Idea, which lasted just five performances, and in the early Brian De Palma film Hi, Mom! (1970), starring Robert De Niro.
And toward the end of the daytime serial, she and fellow castmembers including John Karlen, Kate Jackson, David Selby and Grayson Hall appeared in the poorly received MGM film Night of Dark Shadows (1971).
In 1972, Parker relocated to Los Angeles and went on to appear on episodes of such shows as Medical Center, Kojak, The Rockford Files, Police Woman, Kolchak: The Night Stalker (as a witch) and The Incredible Hulk, where she played David Banner’s first wife in a flashback sequence in the pilot.
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In her later years, Parker turned to writing and teaching — her novels include Angelique’s Descent (1998), The Salem Branch (2006), Wolf Moon Rising (2013) and Heiress of Collinwood (2016). The books proved popular among Dark Shadows‘ still-devoted, conventions-attending fan base, as well as devotees of romance and horror genre novels.
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Parker kept in touch with her co-stars including Scott, Selby, Roger Davis, the late John Karlen and others throughout her life, particularly once the conventions became annual events in the late 1980s through the 1990s and up to the 50th anniversary celebration in 2017.
Many of the original cast, including Parker, recorded a series of Dark Shadows audio dramas in the 2000s released by Big Finish Productions. They also reunited for a “Smartphone Theatre” Zoom-style, Covid-era performance of A Christmas Carol in 2021 and, on Halloween night 2020, a YouTube/Zoom Dark Shadows cast reunion.
Parker is survived by second husband Jim Hawkins, daughter Caitlin, sons Rick and Andy, and their wives Miranda and Celia; and grandson Wesley.
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missmaywemeetagain · 1 year
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Exciting news, my babies! 💗
As many of you know, I want to be a professional writer. I love telling stories and brightening your days by making you all feel all the feels, so much so that I feel called to do it more than I am now. I 100% could not have gotten where I am without your love and support of me and my fics! I also want to get my writing business off the ground, expand my audience, pay my bills, and be able to provide y'all with the stories you love, so...
I'm starting a Patreon! 🎉
This feels like a HUGE step (and I am very nervous but this past year has been all about following my gut and taking risks, so here we are)!
The plan is to have different tiers/levels that people can join depending on the benefits they want.
I have some ideas of what I want to provide, but I'd love to hear from YOU what you're interested in for different levels!
Here are some ideas I'm rolling around for different tiers:
Early access to fics (this one is for sure at all levels!)
Exclusive-to-members Scarf Universe stories
Alternate Pink Scarf/Broken Glass chapters (from different character perspectives or new/expanded/deleted scenes)
New stories/series (related & unrelated to EP)
Pink Scarf Alternate Universe requests/stories (like a What If...series)
Scarfie Discord
Merch
And (hopefully!!) benefits related to novels I want to publish in the future!
(And don't worry. This does NOT mean I'm going to stop posting here on tumblr. I will always be here! I just may not post ALL of the fic things here...)
You are my OGs. My special darlin's. I want your input! Please let me know in the comments and reblogs what above sounds good to you or if there is something you don't see here that you'd like to!
I'm so excited and can't wait to hear what you think!
💗Madi
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(I'm adding my Taglist cuz I don't want y'all to miss this!)
@atombombbibunny @yesimwriting @uselessbutinteresting @mirandastuckinthe80s @dark-as-love
@domaniquessidehoe @im-lame-irl @allybrooke05 @hangmanswhore
@jazmin2211  @kvcssghbjbcd @coldonexx @dudinhahoff @whatstruthgottodowithit @tiredbuthappy  @amiets2  @saintmagx
@kvcssghbjbcd @butlersluvbot @babydollie43 @vainbimbo @meladollsims @wstelandbaby @dre6ming @normatural @ash-omalley @xcallmetaniax @galvz-42 @thejezebel @fullmetal-falcon @robinismywife @dre6ming @seaweedbrain00 @amiets2 @mslizziesblog @heisatroubleinapinksuit @calusussss @dont-feel-so-good-peter @rainydayz101 @pizzaisrelationshipgoals  
@liaaacantwrite @kittenlittle24 @kaitaesupremacy @butler-trouble @eliseinmemphis @russian-soft-bitch  @tattywood 
@sassanoe @re3kin @thella @suspiciousmidge @hiddlepiddlediddlewiddle @carolinesbookworld @juggernort @aesthetic-lyss @stitchattacks @donnamarie23
@lacyluver @littlebitofgreen @paigevis @bugg06 @xhannahbananax03 @artlover8992
@18lkpeters @frozenhuntress67 @girlblogger2002 @kendralavon7 @misspresley @elv1s-is-pretty
@be-my-ally @whositmcwhatsit @vintageshanny @ellie-24 @thatbanditqueen @powerofelvis @from-memphis-with-love
@precious-little-scoundrel @stylespresleyhearted @prompted-wordsmith @crash-and-cure @elvisgf @ohjustpeachy1 @lookingforrainbows @fic-over-cannon @godlypresley @ab4eva @whatstruthgottodowithit @elvisabutler
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doubledyke · 3 months
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thanks for tagging me @repurposedmeatlocker that's so nice
last song: gangsta forever by tommy wright III (there are a couple of great memphis horrorcore playlists on yt that i sometimes listen to at work 👀)
fave place: i don't know that i have a favorite place per se, but in general i've come to really enjoy being outdoors. in the right conditions anyway. being out in the woods alone or with 1-2 other ppl, especially on a chilly night, is really nice if you're well prepared.
fave book: it's been a while since i read a novel but the book i used to always list as my favorite as a teen was push by sapphire. oh i read uzumaki a couple months ago if that counts 🌀
fave movie: lol i'm outing myself here moth as the anon from months ago that asked your opinion on napoleon dynamite, cuz yeah that's my favorite movie. i remember watching it over and over as a kid when it first came out. love it so much.
fave show: outside of eene, it's obviously gonna be any and all of tim & eric's shows. or golden girls.
fave food: love me some indian cuisine!!
tagging: @greetingsfromuranus @littlevirginboy360 @hermes-running @hsboo03 @shriggisick @yun6una <33 (i believe some of my other pals were already tagged)
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