Life in Pink
A shot from an estate sale in North Hollywood. Follow me on Instagram for more photos from my life in L.A.
Buy My Book I About | Blog I Newsletter I X I Instagram I LinkedIn I Consulting I Email
A shot from an estate sale in North Hollywood. Follow me on Instagram for more photos from my life in L.A.
Buy My Book I About | Blog I Newsletter I X I Instagram I LinkedIn I Consulting I Email
Recently I noticed that a few years back someone vandalized my Wikipedia page. Instead of the entry stating I was a journalist and writer, it had been revised to state I was a "prostitute, journalist and writer.” (The issue has since been fixed.) Obviously the person who did this is an idiot; they didn’t use the Oxford comma.
Buy My Book I About | Blog I Newsletter I X I Instagram I LinkedIn I Consulting I Email
I’ll be reading from Data Baby: My Life in a Psychological Experiment at Book Passage in Corte Madera, CA, on Sunday, January 28, 2024, at 1 pm. [This event has been rescheduled for April 27, at 11 am.] There’s more information here, and you can buy Data Baby here.
Buy My Book I About | Blog I Newsletter I X I Instagram I LinkedIn I Consulting I Email
A detail from REPRESSIA (decline) at LACMA. Follow me on Instagram for more photos from my life in L.A.
Buy My Book I About | Blog I Newsletter I X I Instagram I LinkedIn I Consulting I Email
“Ultimately, Data Baby serves as a thought-provoking commentary on the modern reality of constant surveillance and the ways in which our lives and choices are influenced by those who observe us, wielding power through the information they gather.” Read the rest of the review of my book on CyberNews.
Buy My Book I About | Blog I Newsletter I X I Instagram I LinkedIn I Consulting I Email
A few scenes from a recent Wednesday. Follow me on Instagram for more photographs from my life in L.A.
Buy My Book I About | Blog I Newsletter I X I Instagram I LinkedIn I Consulting I Email
The writer at 4
This is part 1 of “Fuck You, Pay Me,” an ongoing series of posts on writing, editing, and publishing.
1. Get lucky. Be born. Have English professor parents. Be read to a lot. Learn to read. Read a lot. Go to a weird kindergarten that lets you sit in a box all day, reading books. Be taken to the library. Be taken to bookstores. Watch your father write books. Spend a lot of time on your own in your room, reading books. Cultivate an expansive imagination. Make up stories in your head. Listen to your father crouched down on the floor next to your bed making up bedtime stories that you’ll wish you could remember as an adult but can’t. Decide books are your friends.
2. Look for the helpers. Go to grade school. Go to high school. Bond with various English teachers along the way who tell you or suggest to you or make you feel like you are a good writer and think to yourself: Maybe I am. Drop out of high school in your senior year to the disappointment of pretty much everyone. Attend community college. Transfer to U.C. Berkeley as a junior. Major in English at the same university where your father is a professor. Fall in love with James Joyce. Fall in love with William Faulkner. Fall in love with Jacques Lacan. Consider becoming a writer.
The writer in Austin, Texas
3. Write a lot. Get accepted to a graduate school master’s degree program that is 50% literature and 50% creative writing. Move to Chicago. Make friends with other writers. Read more. Write more. Pen academic essays and short stories in which strange things happen. Graduate. Return to the Bay Area. Have your father die. Realize that you want to be a writer, now that your father (the writer) is dead. Start an online magazine about post-feminism with your friends from graduate school. Interview a porn star. Get invited to a porn set in Los Angeles. Move to L.A.
4. Find a niche. Become a sex writer. Write about the porn business. Appear on TV. Write for glossy magazines. Get hired to be a reporter on a Playboy TV show that’s basically “60 Minutes” on Viagra, a gig that takes you around the world and results in you visiting the Playboy Mansion three times. Date a famous comedian who dumps you. Date an artist who makes fire-breathing robots. Start one of the first sex blogs, which is called The Reverse Cowgirl; the tagline is: “In which a writer attempts to justify the enormity of her porn collection.”
5. Sell out. Leave L.A. for reasons you’ll be unable to understand later. Move to New Orleans, Louisiana. Publish a collection of short stories with a small publisher. Identify Hurricane Katrina is on its way to where you live and leave. Move to Norfolk, Virginia. Sell freelance articles, generate blog posts, and try to write a novel about the porn business but fail repeatedly. Move to Austin, Texas. Become a copywriter. Get hired to be the voice of Pepto-Bismol on social media, something at which you are good. Wonder what you’re doing with your life. Feel unsure.
The writer in Naples, Florida
6. Give up. Move to Chicago, Illinois. Get married. Get breast cancer. Feel like maybe you’re going to die, or maybe you’re not going to die, but either way the chemo makes you feel like you’re dying so what’s the difference. Survive. Write for the Forbes website. Try intermittently to stop writing about sex because you’re married and it seems unseemly. Keep writing about sex anyway. Move to Naples, Florida. Become extremely unsure who you are or what your life has become or what you’re going to do next. Get divorced. Move back to L.A.
7. Try again. Pick up the pieces of your life, attempt to arrange them into something else, and identify it looks like a mess. Start a strategic communications consulting business that you describe as “I tell C-suite guys what to do.” Decide that you’re going to write the memoir that you were trying to write when you were married, which is about how you were a human lab rat in a 30-year longitudinal study of personality starting when you were a kid. Apply for an investigative reporting fellowship at U.C. Berkeley, which is where the study was conducted, so you can research the book. Tell everyone you’ll never get the fellowship. Get the fellowship.
The writer in an experiment room
8. Face your fears. Move back to your hometown. Rent an in-law apartment in a house that’s less than a mile from the house in which you were raised. Start your investigating. Visit the preschool where you were studied. Explore the building in which you were studied. Take a selfie in one of the one-way mirrors through which you were spied on in an experiment room. Begin to wonder how this experience of being studied shaped the person you became. Wonder if people are who they are or if life changes people and if the latter is true, can writing the story or your life change you, too?
9. Write a book. Return to L.A. after the fellowship ends. Craft a book proposal about your human lab rat life. Acquire a literary agent. Sell the book on proposal to one of the big publishing houses on the other side of the country. Watch as the pandemic descends on the globe. Debate the point of writing anything, seeing as the world is coming to an end. Spend a long time writing the book. Have your mother die. Write your mother dying into your manuscript. Hire a freelance editor who helps you finish the book and whom you refer to as your “book doula.” Wait for the book to be published.
10. Believe in yourself. Get the book published. Appear on some book lists. Get some good book reviews. Have an article about you and your book published in a newspaper in which your photograph appears. Promote your book on social media. Do some interviews about your book. See your book in some bookstores. Thank people for buying your book. Hold your book in your hands and experience a mix of pride at your hard-won accomplishment and the clarity that it is far too late for either of your now dead parents to acknowledge it. Put the book on the shelf in your living room. Consider what to do next.
The writer in The New York Post
11. Question everything. Turn into the living embodiment of that meme in which a dog is sitting in a room that is afire and the words say: “This is fine.” If this is a midlife crisis or an existential crisis or some other sort of crisis, it is the quietest crisis ever, a kind of imploding. Who are you and what are you doing and is this who you are supposed to be? These are the same questions you have been asking yourself for a long time, and you still don’t have the answers. Interviewers want you to give them a happy ending to the story of your life when they ask you about your book, but this is your reality. Life goes on.
12. Start all over. Think about how over two decades earlier, you stood on the set of a porn movie and thought: I should write a novel about this. Think about all the times you have tried to write it and failed. Try to write it again. Fail again. Try writing it another way. Fail again for a second time. Think of another way to write it that is new, an idea that sounds like a terrible idea because maybe no one will read it because it’s so totally out there. Think about how the way you shouldn’t do things is exactly how you should do things. Try writing the novel that way. Love it. Keep writing it. Feel better. Keep going. You’re a writer now, after all.
Buy My Book I About | Blog I Newsletter I X I Instagram I LinkedIn I Consulting I Email
“If X is a raging erection, Threads is the blank, phallus-less space between a Ken doll’s legs.” Read the rest of my latest Reverse Cowgirl newsletter: “Threads Is the Least Sexy Social Media App in Human Existence.”
Buy My Book I About | Blog I Newsletter I X I Instagram I LinkedIn I Consulting I Email
The New York Post has a profile on me and the investigative story behind my new memoir, DATA BABY: My Life in a Psychological Experiment: “How One Woman Tracked the Researchers Who Tracked Her for Decades.” You can buy DATA BABY here, order a signed copy here, and read more about it here. (Photo credit: Roger Kisby)
Buy My Book I About | Blog I Newsletter I X I Instagram I LinkedIn I Consulting I Email
A mural and trees at a Burbank gas station. Follow me on Instagram for more photos from my life in L.A.
Buy My Book I About | Blog I Newsletter I X I Instagram I LinkedIn I Consulting I Email
Wrote a Book featured my memoir DATA BABY: My Life in a Psychological Experiment in their “Celebrity Book Club Picks for December 2023” list. Emma Roberts’ and Karah Preiss’ Belletrist chose DATA BABY as their December pick. Who did Reese Witherspoon, Jenna Bush Hager, and “GMA” pick? Find out.
Buy My Book I About | Blog I Newsletter I X I Instagram I LinkedIn I Consulting I Email
The bookshelf at Poke Acupuncture. Follow me on Instagram for more photographs from my life in L.A.
Buy My Book I About | Blog I Newsletter I X I Instagram I LinkedIn I Consulting I Email
Thrilled to have Emma Roberts’ and Karah Preiss’ Belletrist select DATA BABY: My Life in a Psychological Experiment as their December pick. You can join Belletrist here and follow Belletrist on Instagram here.
Buy My Book I About | Blog I Newsletter I X I Instagram I LinkedIn I Consulting I Email
A vintage furniture store in North Hollywood. Follow me on Instagram for more photos from my life in L.A.
Buy My Book I About | Blog I Newsletter I X I Instagram I LinkedIn I Consulting I Email
The Next Big Idea Club has named my new memoir, DATA BABY: My Life in a Psychological Experiment, one of “The Top 50 Psychology Books of 2023.” You can also read and listen to me talk to The Next Big Idea Club about “Lessons Learned From Growing Up as a Test Subject.” You can buy DATA BABY here.
My Book I About | Blog I Newsletter I X I Instagram I LinkedIn I Consulting I Email
A couple billboards on Sunset Boulevard. Follow me on Instagram for more photographs from my life in L.A.
My Book I About | Blog I Newsletter I X I Instagram I LinkedIn I Consulting I Email
Recently, I did some revamping of my Gumroad store and added a new product. On Gumroad, you can book a strategic communications consulting session with me through my consultancy: The Fixer; order a signed hardcover copy of my new memoir, DATA BABY: My Life in a Psychological Experiment; or buy my digital short story, “The Tumor.” If there’s something else you’d like to see added to the store, let me know.
My Book I About | Blog I Newsletter I X I Instagram I LinkedIn I Consulting I Email
Thank you to Anna David for recommending my new memoir, DATA BABY: My Life in a Psychological Experiment, on KATU’s “Books to Give as Gifts” segment. You can buy a copy of DATA BABY here.
My Book I About | Blog I Newsletter I X I Instagram I LinkedIn I Consulting I Email
“In 2017, I wrote a fictional short story about a male porn star.” Read the rest of my latest Reverse Cowgirl newsletter HERE. Don’t forget to hit it the pink button at the bottom of the newsletter to subscribe.
Buy My Book I About Me | My Blog I My Newsletter I X I Instagram I LinkedIn I Hire Me I Email
I’ve gotten some requests for autographed copies of my new memoir, DATA BABY: My Life in a Psychological Experiment, and now you can buy signed books directly from me through my Gumroad store. In a starred review, Publishers Weekly called my book “a fascinating debut memoir” and “gripping stuff.” Kirkus Reviews deemed it “An intelligently provocative memoir and investigation.” Book Riot says it's "really, really interesting." To learn more about my experiences as a human lab rat, read my essay for Slate.
Buy My Book I About | Blog I Newsletter I X I Instagram I LinkedIn I Consulting I Email