Playing Santa changed Bob Rutan profoundly

(esquire.com)

23 points | by Lightbody 3 days ago

2 comments

  • peteforde 1 hour ago
  • saaaaaam 36 minutes ago
    Esquire writing is so weird. It’s genuinely like a relic from another age.

    “ They drank tumblers of Irish whiskey filled to the brim, illicit pours they secured with ten-dollar tips to a curvy Dominican bartender.”

    “ For the price of three beers, he told me his story.”

    “ In the two decades since the show aired, a hundred thousand American Spirits had yellowed Bob’s fingers and turned his voice to gravel.”

    When I read things like this I find it very hard to take the wider message seriously, because it feels like writing-as-cosplay, the writer inhabiting a caricature of “hard bitten” and inserting that at the forefront of the piece.

    Very odd.

    • somenameforme 13 minutes ago
      Why must it be a caricature? Many successful writers are some rather extreme people, which is probably part of the reason why they're successful. Reality is, as always, far stranger than fiction, and a lifetime of exceptional experience is the writer's palette.
    • suddenlybananas 34 minutes ago
      Everyone is just pretending to be something. The people writing in the 60s were also apeing a style in just the same way.

      Personally, I liked the writing.