Why are we so worried about Instapoetry?

Have you ever seen a large, Viking-like dude reduced to a blubbering mass of regret and self-doubt? Drop by the house this morning. 10 bucks per gander.

Now, you’re more likely to know Macias as r.m. drake, the New York Times-bestselling poet with 1.9 million followers on Instagram. He has published 14 collections of poetry, has a number of celebrity followers, and his poems have been repeatedly shared by the Kardashians. While working at Univision, Macias wrote in his spare time. In 2012, he started sharing his work on Instagram – taking short excerpts, typing them on to handmade paper with his 1940s Royal typewriter in lower case, and signing off with “r.m. drake”. He would photograph the page and post the result, such as: “the best kind/of humans are/the ones who/stay”. By the end of 2014, he had over half a million followers and quit his job to write full time.

Cowboy poetry?

Eh, throw it on the pile. We’ll figure it out later.

Todd Nakamura says you don’t need much equipment to be a cowboy poet. An instrument can help — but if you need to plug it in, you’re probably not one.

….

What is the genre?
It’s very simple. Like, there might be a guitar. There might be a harmonica. It’s all the instruments that you might have found on the range back in the old days.
A lot of the new country music is all about percussion and horns maybe and amplifiers and electric guitars. Most of our stuff is done acoustically.

A Canadian cowboy poet named Nakamura. What an amazing time to be alive.

Interview: Ann Patchett

A favourite in this house is interviewed and speaks on success and failure.

It was a funny thing to throw a book out. People seemed much more upset about it than I was. Some people said, It must be like a death! It was nothing like a death. It was like burning a cake. You know that feeling? Oh, hell, I burned the cake. Then you cut the cake open and eat the little pieces in the middle that aren’t completely ruined, then you bake another cake. It’s not what anyone wishes for, and it’s hardly the end of the world.

The sweatshop workers have spoken!

A group of Amazon employees pushing for change within the all-consuming retail amoeba seem to have scored a victory. At last report, Jeff Bezos was probably instructing his emotionless assassinbulters to “release the hounds.”

The Amazon Employees for Climate Justice group only came together last October, when the group managed to present a shareholder resolution at the company’s annual shareholders meeting. That resolution, which asked that Amazon use its unfathomable weight to support innovations that would reduce its carbon footprint and combat climate change, did not get passed. Thousands of employees later signed a letter to Bezos making similar demands, however. While the letter was circulating, Amazon announced Shipment Zero, a plan to bring its carbon emissions to zero at an unspecified date in the future.

Certain that “Amazon could do better,” says Naidu, the group planned today’s protest. They announced their intentions a few weeks ago, perhaps hoping that Bezos would preemptively respond to their three demands:

1. Zero emissions by 2030: Pilot electric vehicles first in communities most impacted by our pollution
2. Zero custom Amazon Web Services (AWS) contracts for fossil fuel companies to accelerate oil and gas extraction
3. Zero funding for climate denying lobbyists and politicians

What to expect when you’re expectant

What should you expect (and not expect) out of an MFA. (Answer: a fruition of your investment in the pyramid scheme that leads to a teaching job at a tiny liberal arts college in a town with more flavours of latte than pickup truck gun racks, but still, I’d take that.)

I teach in a graduate art school. I teach in a graduate art school where I used to be a student, and where I think a lot about giving my students as much value, as much strength and confidence as writers, as I can give them as each new semester starts. There has seemed to me perhaps no greater impediment to students’ learning than when they expect a workshop to give them things it does not have the capacity to give.