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Saturday, February 12, 2011

How to Succeed

I got to see a live college production of How To Succeed in Business Without Really Trying on Friday night, with reviewer Julie Kistler of the theatre blog, A Follow Spot.  You can read her charming review here.  It's always a thrill to see such talent in young people, and I wish them well in their careers.  At which I know they'll really try!

This is a musical that spoofs the business world in a good-natured way, showing how a window washer can rise to the top of a big American company, how easily incompetence can reign for a time, and how heads can roll!  Fortunately J. Pierpont, the get-ahead-fast window washer, has real gumption and will be headed for politics soon.  American politics, in a capitalist society.

And that brings me to a comment I got recently on my quitting-my-job blog entry, that I chose not to publish.  My first impulse was to publish it--why not?!--it was cleverly written and made its points well about bosses being kings and employees being peons, but it ended with an insult and was signed with a humorous but fake name.  That is, the commenter claims to have met me, but doesn't own up to a real identity.

I guess in my blog you can't get personal if you won't be a real person, or acknowledge common humanity.

And I guess that means I'm still queen here.

Ever since I read Shakespeare and Company, by bookstore proprietor Sylvia Beach, after reading two books about literary feuds, I've been wanting to quote this generous and tolerant comment: "Wars between writers blaze up frequently, but I have observed that they settle down eventually into smudges."

I'm sure this feud, too, will settle down into a smudge soon enough.

6 comments:

  1. Kathleen, I agree completely that a person should use their real name when commenting. Good for you for not publishing it!

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  2. Thanks for being such good company at How to Succeed. What fun!

    I also deleted a comment I felt was mean-spirited and "in disguisish." Yes, I made up the word "disguisish." I don't care! Shady, I guess, is what I mean. Trying to pretend to be something it clearly wasn't. And I felt, basically, IT'S GOOD TO BE QUEEN!

    It's my blog and I can delete whatever comments I want, for whatever reason I want.

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  3. I got another one! With another cute pseudonym. And just as mean-spirited! Must be a real feud. And a real smudge.

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  4. I can't speak to the current day mean-spiritedness, but I find it so interesting that Beach from her close view of such things found that they died down. I wouldn't have thought so, as some of those feuds are legendary. Perhaps it's often more of a performance piece?

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  5. “Anonymity is the enemy of civility.”

    Seth Godin

    (whose book my husband is currently reading)

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Go ahead and comment, and I will publish it after I get an email notification! Thanks!