![]() New!!: Tao Lin and Almost Transparent Blue Īlternative Literature (often stylized as Alt Lit or Alt-Lit) is a term used to describe a particular literary movement drawing on and/or published on the internet, internet culture, and "a population of people that are connected with one another through their interest in the online publishing world". ![]() Is a 1976 novel, written by Japanese author Ryū Murakami, that features a portrait of narrator Ryū and his friends trapped in a cycle of sex, drugs and rock 'n roll during the 1970s. Expand index (30 more) » « Shrink index Adam HumphreysĪdam Humphreys (born December 15, 1982) is a Canadian filmmaker, entrepreneur, and hall of fame tree planter. Anthony Hall, Star Fucking Hipsters, Stephen Dixon (author), Taipei (novel), Terence McKenna, The Easter Parade, The Lifted Brow, The Mays, The Stranger (newspaper), Thought Catalog, TLB (publisher), Tyrant Books, Word Riot, Zachary German, 1983 in literature, 1983 in poetry, 2010 in literature, 3:AM Magazine. , Noon (Literary Annual), Offbeat generation, Opium Magazine, Post-irony, Rain Taxi, Reed Arts Week, Rhizome (organization), Richard Yates (novel), Richard Yates (novelist), Sarah Lawrence College, Shoplifting from American Apparel, Spork Press, St. Journal, Heiko Julien, I Hate Myself (band), Jacket2, Jared Hegwood, Joy Williams (American writer), Joyelle McSweeney, Juked, Lake Howell High School, List of American novelists, List of Asian Americans, List of Asian-American writers, List of authors by name: L, List of Chinese Americans, List of English-language poets, List of Finnish writers, List of poets from the United States, List of postmodern novels, List of postmodern writers, List of Sarah Lawrence College people, List of short-story authors, List of Taiwanese Americans, Literary Death Match, Lydia Davis, Marie Calloway, Megan Boyle, Melville House Publishing, Miami Book Fair International, Mira Gonzalez, Mochi (magazine), Monkeybicycle, Muumuu House, My First Time (film series), New Sincerity. Ĩ0 relations: Adam Humphreys, Almost Transparent Blue, Alternative literature, Ann Beattie, Audun Mortensen, Autobiographical novel, Bed (short story collection), Blake Nelson, Blip Magazine, Blueprintreview, Borrelia texasensis, Bret Easton Ellis, Canteen (magazine), Deb Olin Unferth, Don DeLillo, Gigantic (magazine), H.O.W. I still want to intern for Jezebel.Tao Lin (born July 2, 1983) is an American novelist, poet, essayist, short-story writer, and artist. I only suggested lurking around the outside of the building and peppering the street with stickers, the door was his idea. Instead of being the Gawker intern who had to scrape Britney Spears stickers off the Gawker door, I was the intern telling Tao to put his stickers around your office. Instead of interning for Jezebel I am now linked on Gawker. In may when my spring semester at school ended I shipped out. I left a comment on his blog, can I be your intern, he replied, yes. I did not write a cover letter or send a resume. Tao seemed less discriminating than the gal gab blog, he was drafting interns in bulk for his army. I decided a militant poet might be a good person to intern for. ![]() Shortly after I started reading his blog the infamous Tao Lin Intern Uprising occurred. I had been reading Tao´s blog actively since February. I sent several follow up emails and got a pleasant thank you note from the team for applying, but nothing serious transpired. Sometime in April, Jezebel posted a wanted ad for interns. ![]() I even like the blogs about porn and Silicon Valley. So, what should we do? Read the email after the jump and weigh in on this crucial Matter of the Youngs. It was her idea for Tao to lurk outside our offices and put his stupid Britney Spears stickers everywhere! But, she says, she'd still like to intern here, specifically at our ladyblog Jezebel. And one of the investors was Tao's own intern! It seems that said lass, detailed in an email sent to us today, had ambitions of working here, at humble old Gawker Media. Yesterday we posted about gimmick-crazed "writer" Tao Lin, who recently raised $12,000 in investors' money for a book that doesn't even exist is "95% finished," according to Tao. ![]()
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