Sunday, August 9, 2020
Two households, totally unalike in dignity
âTwo households, totally unalike in dignityâ¦â .fluid-width-video-wrapper iframe, .fluid-width-video-wrapper object, .fluid-width-video-wrapper embed { bottom: 0px !important;h top: 0px !important; left: auto !important; position: relative; padding: 0 !important; } .fluid-width-video-wrapper { height: auto !important; width: auto !important; bottom: 0px !important; top: 0px !important; left: auto !important; position: relative; padding: 0 !important; } Juliet Capulet, portrayed by Chelsea R. â15 and photographed by Emily K.-L. â16. About a week ago I sat down with one my best friends Chelsea R. â15 to talk about one of her favorite classes, Writing for Social Media, and the universe it comes from. I deeply respect Chelsea for building a career out of her true passions, even though the road hasnât been paved, and I wish Iâd known older her when I was a younger me. Iâm excited to be able to share some of her insights with you. I also hope her online work can be a helpful distraction for those of you who are waiting on more college admissions decisions (and/or maybe happen to like Sherlock). Lydia: Okay. Who are you and what are you doing in my house? Chelsea: Um, well, Iâm Chelsea. Iâm a junior in course 21E. 21E is something that not a lot of people know exists. 21E (Humanities and Engineering) and 21S (Humanities and Science) are the joint majors; theyâre the majors where you squish humanities and science disciplines together. My joint major is between comparative media studies (CMS) and course 6, computer science. I am in your house because you, uh, invited me here. #RtweetsJ L: Tell me about your Writing for Social Media class. C: Writing for Social Media (CMS.613/21W.751) isâ"I donât know where else you could find a class like it. Itâs about social media strategy as well as producing stuff for social mediaâ"and âstuffâ is all kinds of stuff. The first portion of the class focused on projecting an image out into the Internet. The focus was looking at how other people personalized their social media images and how brands did it. Then we had to create our own goals and tweet at least five times a day to project some kind of image. I made one focusing more on my goals of eating healthy and keeping fit during a stressful semester. Weâre all figuring out how to project a consistent image online. The posting has to be regular, which is really important when it comes to social media. The second phase of the class is adaptive Internet stuff. We are doing group projects that adapt some kind ofâ"I think all three of the groups are adapting some kind of extant thing and making it into a Twitter, uh, thing. One group is doing the first season of Battlestar Gallactica. The characters of Battlestar Gallactica are going to be tweeting as if they are going through the first season of Battlestar Gallacticaâ"but with Twitters. Itâll sound very, very familiar if youâve ever heard of fanfiction. In a way, it is fanfiction, but there are constraints that Twitter offers as a medium for storytelling that make it a very different environment. And then in the third phase we get to do whatever kind of creative project we want butâ"againâ"Twitter. Right now weâre all hard at work on our adaptive projects. Those will post throughout March and through the first week of April. L: Tell me about your particular adaptation and the creative work that you are putting into it. C: Itâs a group project, so itâs me and itâs two other students, Gustavo and Taylor. And theyâre both wonderful. We decided to adapt Romeo and Juliet for Twitter. Immediately you go, âOh, Romeo and Juliet, everyone knows that story!â But there is a reason itâs still around and weâre still talking about it, and we continue to study it in school. We are bringing it to Twitter. We tossed around a couple of ideas. Thereâs one kind of Twitter adaptation that was exemplified by, like, Mad Men roleplayers on Twitter. Mad Men is set in the sixties, and in the sixties you donât have Twitter. That doesnât really matter! Theyâre tweeting, from the sixties. We considered doing that with Romeo and Juliet but then we decided to sort of update it instead. Of course there have been updates of Romeo and Juliet. We wanted to do something different, so we changed the conflict around a little bit. And the way weâre going to tweetâ"the way weâre going to treatâ"L: [laughter]â"C: their Twitters is as if theyâre actual people going about their actual lives. They tweet about their days and they tweet about whatâs happening to them and if some super-dramatic thing is happening in the plot they will not be online to tweet about it. Because thatâs not how real life necessarily works. (Um, it does work that way for some people.) The fight scene between Tybalt and Mercutio? If Romeoâs trying to get in the middle of them to stop them from fighting, heâs not going to be tweeting about itâ"âOMG guys, cut it out!ââ"heâs going to be conspicuously absent for a period of a couple of hours. If he is being accused of murder he is going t o be conspicuously absent for a very long time because he does not want anyone to find him. One of the questions that we sat down and we asked ourselves was, why Twitter? Of course the obvious answer is because we have to use Twitter for this project. But there should be another reason behind doing any kind of storytelling on any social media platform. Why this platform? What affordances does this platform have and what limitations does it have that make it ideal for telling this story this way? We wanted to get the Internet involved. The thing about Romeo and Juliet is obviously itâs a very secret relationship: itâs kept from parents, itâs kept from the eyes of authority. Where do teenagers keep things from other people? The Internet, right? So thatâs the direction we decided to go. Of course we also made a few other changes. We aged up Juliet. She is now a high school senior. Applying to college! Well, sheâs waiting to hear back from colleges. Her parents want her to go abroad to the University of Paris. Sheâs not sure about it. But she is actually growing up in a college town, fair Verona City, USA. The university in the town is Montague State University. They have a lot of frats and rowdy frat boys. One of the rowdy frat boys is Romeo. If these two people met in real lifeâ"first of all, they wouldnât. Julietâs father is the mayor and he does not want her hanging around these college boys. He doesnât like them very much. They cause a lot of public disturbances. L: As college boys do. C: As college boys do. But online, if they find each other and start talking, there are no limitationsespecially if their names arenât on their profiles. Well, their last names. And their fraternity affiliations. You understand. Thereâs nothing to get in the way of that relationship blossoming online, whereas real life factors would have kept them from ever even meeting. L: I think itâs beautiful that in the same way that Twitter facilitates the relationship of Romeo and Juliet in this adaptation, Twitter and social media facilitate the storytelling and the connection between fans and these stories. C: The thing about telling a story on any form of social media is that it allows the potential for interactivity. The characters in Romeo and Juliet in this adaptation are not just going to be following each other. Theyâre going to be citizens of the world. If people talk to them, they might talk back. No promises, but itâs possible! You know, um, Mercutio, who is, a crazy character, is gonna follow, like, Kim Kardashianâ"L: [laughter]â"C: and Miley Cyrus, you know. L: I follow Miley Cyrus and Kim Kardashian. C: You follow Miley Cyrus and Kim Kardashian. Um. His profile is really funny, by the way. His, um, profile picture is a little bit inappropriate. His display name is Mercuti-YOOOO. L: [laughter] C: So, uh, definitely check that one out. That is probably my favorite of the bunch. And Taylor, whoâs primarily responsible for writing tweets for him, is very funny. Not only can people talk to the characters, we as writers have to dig into what they do on a day to day basis because people donât only tweet when dramatic things are happening to them. Hopefully that should flesh out the characters and make them more relatable to a wider audience. CMS L: How did you arrive at CMS? How did you find yourself gravitating toward it? C: CMS as a department has an incredible amount of variance in it. A lot of people gravitate towards CMS because thereâs a lot of things in there about video gamesâ"writing for video games, making video games. What Iâm interested in is fan cultures, Internet studies, and things like that: writing for the Internet. Itâs definitely a department that I recommend people check out. People arenât necessary aware of their options when it comes to picking a good concentration or even a minor. Thereâs a lot of opportunity at MIT to open up and explore things you havenât explored yet. I think CMS is a great department for that. I wish Iâd realized it existed when I was a freshman. When I came to MIT I was determined to be course 6, which was so silly in retrospect because I always wanted to write and I kind of wanted to be a novelist. But I was a very practical 18-year-old and I also wanted to make sure I could feed myself. I came to MIT with the intention of majoring in in 6-3, graduating, finding a programming job somewhere. And coding during the day and writing at night and being able to feed myself and never having to really worry about that. L: Still kind of my plan. C: Yeah. L: [laughter] C: The thing that I realized as I took my GIRs my freshman year and I took 6.01 (Introduction to Electrical Engineering and Computer Science I) was I couldnât really envision a future for myself that was structured like that. I looked at the writing department and, you know, the writing department here is stellar, but there was still a part of me that was, like, âOh, donât you want to make sure that you can eat?â Of course there are plenty of people who graduate with creative writing degrees who can feed themselves, so I started to look at the other things that MIT had to offer and I came across comparative media studies and the class list and the major structure. I was looking at the classes, and I just said, âWow, this is everything I like to do for fun! but as a major! I can study the things I like to do for fun!â Something that I would recommend to everyone is to pursue something that you really love, because it will make your life so much more meaningful. Internships L: Could you tell me about how this connects to some of the work youâve been doing outside of your classes? C: Since itâs a relatively new thing that Iâm pursuing, Iâve only done a couple of internships. I did two internships in LA this summer. One for a PR company, one for a production company, both in their digital departments. I came into that fresh off of taking Fans and Fan Cultures (CMS.621/CMS.821), which is another excellent CMS class that I really recommend. L: What did you do there? C: I worked a little bit on transmedia stuff for the production company. Transmedia is telling stories across different platforms. I ended up doing tie-in stuff for one of the series they were helping produce. For the PR company I did a lot involving developing digital strategies for the companys clients. They were two very different experiences; they were very different work environments. But I learned a lot there, I made a lot of connections, and it actually led directly to the internship I did last semester and which Iâm continuing to do this semester. It was different from what my course 6 friends did over the summer. Most of them were at, you knowâ"one of my friends was up in Seattle at Microsoft, and living in a house and getting paid an exorbitant amount of money working at Microsoft and I was sleeping on an air mattress on my cousinâs floor in her one-bedroom apartment, in Hollywood. Um, andâ"L: Sounds so romantic.â"C: living off of my savingsâ"so romanticâ"and money Iâd won in a writing contest at MIT the previous semester. Uh, super romantic. Definitely. I feel like itâs one of those typical East Coast girl goes to Hollywood, tries to make it experiences except I wasnât trying to become an actress. L: Could you tell me a little about the internship that youâre continuing this semester? C: Iâm working for this company called The Alchemists. They work on transmedia production, transmedia strategy. Theyâve done stuff for Coke and they did a series of commercials for Marvel Comics. Theyâre currently working on a Hulu exclusive series called East Los High about teenagers in LA. Iâm mostly helping them with their social media outreach right now. Their companyâs all about expanding properties onto other platforms and theyâre trying to get more of themselves online, too. Iâm kind of the Tumblr intern. Tumblr is the platform I probably use the most. (Or it was, at least until I had to start using Twitter at least five times a day for Writing for Social Media this semester.) Iâve been writing, Iâve been helping them update their Tumblr, Iâve been writing blog posts for the Tumblr, generally about fans, fan cultures, social media, and how the powers that beâ"as we call themâ"interact with social media. I did one last week about the show Hannibal, and how Hannibalâs Tumblr is just so on point. Itâs exciting. Iâm learning a lot. And itâs generally pretty manageable with all of my other responsibilities this semester. The Field L: Could you tell me about storytelling through social media and how itâs changed fandom? C: Fans have been telling stories online for a very long time. Iâd say even some of your casual readers probably know about FanFiction.netâ"that would sound familiar. Archive of Our Own is the current, uh, quality archive out there. Roleplaying has also always been a big thing. Forums, LiveJournal, uh, and you could call those I guess media facilitated storylines because I think of roleplaying as interactive writing thatâs kind of more on the spot. I run a blog with a co-author, Sethâ"who is amazingâ"that is a work of fanfiction but itâs interactive because itâs on Tumblr and the plot is moved forward by question answering. So people submit questions to the characters, the characters will answer, and sometimes theyâll just answer in a way thatâs funny or meaningful, and sometimes theyâll say something and it opens up a whole new door into a plotline. And itâs awesome! When youâre chronicling charactersâ daily lives itâs a lot easier to fill in the gaps. On a TV show thatâs a crime procedural you mostly only see crime procedural stuff. Youâll sometimes get a few minutes of character backstory and looks into what they do every day but not much. Now if the show completely changed course and became, you know, focused on the domestic lives of characters, obviously that would not be what that show would want to do. Through social media itâs possible to get more of a look into the gaps that the original story doesnât fill in. Fans do this, but like, official powers can also do this. Like, itâsâ"itâs very effective. It makes your characters seem like theyâre actual people living in the modern world. I know that for East Los High one of the characters had a vlog and one of the characters who cooked had their recipes posted online. That makes the world seem real: by bringing it onto the Internet, or onto whatever other platform, youre forced to expand the world. And it forces you to expand your characters, too. L: Could you tell me about some of the successful uses of social media by companies that do storytelling? C: Go look at The Alchemists. Theyâre awesome. Also, one of the primary examples of this is of course The Lizzie Bennet Diaries. Are you familiar with The Lizzie Bennet Diaries? L: No. C: Okay, so The Lizzie Bennet Diaries is a little bitâ"we drew a little bit of inspiration from this for our Romeo and Juliet Twitter project. Itâs an updating and an adaptation of Pride and Prejudice. The main medium through which the story was communicated was YouTube vlogs. Lizzie Bennet had a YouTube channel, and she would do vlogs, and she would invite other people from her life to come on to the vlogs, and, you know, updated versions of the events from Pride and Prejudice started happening. You could just follow the YouTube account and it would totally be fine. You would get a complete story. If you wanted a more complete story, all of the characters had social media accounts. Some of them had Twitters, some of them had Tumblrs, and they interacted with each other. So it wasnât just the vlogs, which I believe came out twice weekly, that told the story. You could watch the vlogs and you would get a complete story. But for a more complete story you could go and read Elizabeth Bennetâs Twitter. You know? Casual. There are some other properties that have successfully expanded into social media, not from a storytelling perspective but from a fan galvanization perspective. Whether or not youâre interested in telling stories online, I think everybody should be getting on that train. Online presences are so important, especially when youâre trying to reach the key demographic that most movies and TV shows want to reach (young people). The traditional television format and traditional movies, the way weâre used to them, is not always the way that itâs going to be. More and more things are ending up online and things that would have been indie are ending up with wider audiences. As things get progressively disseminated, itâs going to be increasingly important to draw people in. Again, online storytelling is a really good way to do this. Itâs something that makes you stand out to fans. I think that more and more storytelling is going to move online. Not necessarily through social media but, you already know, binge watching through Netflix is a thing. Amazon Prime and Netflix and Hulu and all their exclusive online series. I think theyâre only the beginning of the trend. Life Plans L: Tell me about your dreams and plans for the future. C: Theyâre a little undecided as of yet. I have an idea, and the idea is that I really want to go into this stuff. Iâm passionate about storytelling, Iâm passionate about the digital, and so digital storytelling is really about the best of both worlds. I do want to tell my own stories. I love writing. I would love to write a novel. L: It really feels like youâve already written several. C: Doesnât it? It does to me, a little bit. The answer is yes. I feel like they wouldnât be considered novels because a lot of them are either published online or theyâre derivative worksâ"fanfictionâ"or theyâre both. I undertook an extremely expansive project with Seth to fill in the gaps of the TV show Sherlock. That was the question and answer blog that I mentioned. People would come in and they would ask questions to Watson and Holmes, and I would respond as Watson and Seth would respond as Holmes and we would shoot the response out there into the world. And sometimes if that wasnât enough to explain what was going on with them we would write thousands and thousands and thousands of words to fill in the scenes. L: The blogâs actually gotten very popular, hasnât it? C: Yeah, the blog has a lot of followers. I donât want to brag. L: You can brag. Itâs okay. C: The blog hasâ"we hit 14,000 a few days ago. Itâs really exciting. Itâs sad because Iâm also having a little bit of trouble finding time to update regularly with my crazy semester schedule but weâre working on it still. Because the new season of Sherlock came out, that means there is new stuff to exploreâ"L: New gaps to fill in. So many gaps!â"C: Letâs not get into that! But we did give the entire second season of Sherlock this treatment. And I donât even know how many thousands of words we wrote in total. We had probably something like 800 questions and answers, along with a number of prose interludes, and the prose interludes could run thousands of words long. There were 16 what we would call interludes. There were four or five flashbacks, which could be about the same length. There were several transcripts from telephone conversations. All this, um, itâs basically an insane amount of writing. And it was collaborative between Seth and me, and also between us and the fans. Because the people who read the blog submit questionsâ"you know, one of them submitted a question from a character we had not even considered incorporating into the story but who became a major player just because someone sent an ask. L: You donât usually have the power to change the story as youâre reading it. Thatâs really special. C: I think itâs a way to give back to the people who read. Because they can make a huge difference. I think that a lot of successful people have already sort of figured that out. You know, be good to your fans and theyâll be good to you. But this takes it to a whole new level. Itâs okay to not have 300% control. You can still have a vision. You can still follow that vision. But your vision always has room for alterations. And improvisation. And thatâs what makes it fun. Thatâs what weâre hoping to do with the Romeo and Juliet project. We do have a general outline for how the events are going to go and be adapted. But if someone starts talking to Juliet about physics class, you know, they can talk to Juliet about physics class. Sheâs in AP Physics. L: Can you help me with my physics homework, Juliet? C: Yeah. You know, and then Juliet can talk to someone about Gaussâs Law. It could happen! Itâs not bound. Itâs a flexible storytelling environment. You guys should all read! You should all read Romeo and Juliet. You know, follow the blog! Read the story. If itâs not your thing, just drop the story. If it is your thing, you know, ask Juliet about your physics homework. Tell Romeo heâs being silly mooning over a girl he hasnât met in real life. Uh. Recommend some music to Mercutio. Send him pictures of big booties. Donâtâ"donât publish that. He likes the booty. I mean, but theyâreâ"theyâre here to be followed but theyâre also here to be talked to. And you never know! They might reply. Follow and interact with the charactersâ Twitters here: @swansongjuliet Juliet: living in ruins of a palace within my dreams @dontcallmenurse Rachel Nurse: my name is rachel nurse and im not a nurse. if you need a nurse dont even talk to me. call an ambulance. @RomeoDreamsBig Romeo: A lover, not a fighter. @merctwerk Mercuti-YOOOO: Mu Omicron Nu brother. Only twerkin sometimes but always stealin yo girl. @BenVolioIV Benjamin Volio IV: The only sane Mu Omicron Nu brother you will ever meet. @MayorCapulet Mayor Capulet: The official Twitter of Peter Capulet, Mayor of Verona City. @MontagueStateU Montague State: The official Twitter of Montague State University. Alternatively, follow the syndicated list here or a daily digest of tweets on the Tumblr. Have fun!
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