Author of Teen Paranormal Fiction

Tag: social media

Take Care When Taking a Political Stance

or: choose your battles wisely

At some point in time, we’re all tempted to do it: to add our voice to a political discussion. Sure, we may think we have the best of intentions, but more often than not, that interaction will end up blowing up in our faces. Keep in mind that as authors, we have to behave like public figures, and not like kids in a chat room with a chip on their shoulders.

Some may think that lending opinions to the Twitter trend of the day will help gain followers, but I’d strongly encourage you to sit out of the debate. Your reputation and credibility is on the line.

 

Research Before You Post

A knee-jerk reaction to a politically motivated post does more harm than good to your reputation. Spur-of-the-moment posts often lack one key factor: research.

 

Even Homer researches

Take for instance The Tenor’s member Remigio Pereira’s world-wide gaf: displaying an “All Lives Matter” sign and hacking apart the Canadian National Anthem to get his political view across. Although deep down inside, Mr. Pereira may have meant well, unfortunately he forgot to research what the phrase “All Lives Matter” really meant. As a result, he pissed off a civil rights movement, angered an entire country (well, as mad as us Canadians can get), and gained an unceremonious boot from his job as a result.

If you’re going to lend your thoughts to the hot topic of the day, do your research first. Making an uninformed post will hurt your credibility and give your readership the impression that you really have no clue what you’re talking about.

Be Careful Choosing Sides

When it comes to politics, there is no ‘correct side’ to choose. Your readership will also be split between the two sides of a debate just as the rest of the populace is split throughout your country. Taking a side can alienate your readers on the other side of that decision.

An excellent example is the Trump vs. Clinton presidential race in the United States. Throwing your support behind one candidate will literally turn off the other half of North America and possibly other parts of the world from being interested in your work. Each candidate has their strengths, but each candidate also has their glaring flaws. Remember that. Holding the Hilary Clinton sign may peg you as a supporter of healthcare reform that comes with an outrageous price tag. At the same time, waving the Trump flag may peg you as a hater of immigration and religious diversity. There is no right side to any political debate. If there was then there would be no political debating. Mind blown yet?

I-Had-The-Perfect-Meme-For-This-But-Hillary-Deleted-It-Funny-Hillary-Clinton-Meme-Photo

Keep Your Cool

And if in the end you really-really-really have to make that post, then make sure you keep your cool doing it. Attacking the opposition, calling other posters names, and cursing once again brings you down to the level of that uninformed kid who just wants talk to be heard. The internet is full of trolls already, and you don’t want to be associated with their ilk.

Troll-lol-lol

So remember: think before you post and make sure to act your age! Speak about issues as if speaking about them in real life. Ask yourself: “what if my boss read this post”, or “is this how I would want people to view me?” before pushing that submit button. And as always, happy writing!

– Rissa

My First Vlog!

Or: A comedy of (frustrating) Errors

Getting into the digital realm is not too difficult; the age of social media almost demands it. As part of getting all my social ducks in a row, so to speak, I decided to make a video post on YouTube introducing myself. Dependent on how that goes, I’m planning on doing several more videos to start a vlog. All in addition to this blog, my two websites and the half-dozen other social media outlets I maintain. Um … what am I getting myself into?

First Comes Un-Love

Ulead. You have been unfriended.

The love is gone. Unfriend.

All went well at first; I already had a camera – a Canon Rebel Ti. I procured studio lighting, found a relatively clutter-free corner of my house as the location. There, I sat down, stared into the camera and went totally blank. Crap, I thought. This is a lot harder than it looks.

Sixteen-and-a-half torturous minutes later (most of which was spent with me laughing my ass off), I managed to record my first video. I was so excited to get to editing it!

In a previous life, I did video editing. Left over from that short-lived career was a video editor called Ulead VideoStudio. I knew this program inside and out. We were like best buds. Through editing the long and painfully awkward video I just filmed, I went to export the file only to come to a rage-inducing realization: my video editor was frickin’ hooped!

Then Comes Rage

Ulead has Stopped Working

Take that, Ulead! Now, we must Kung-Fu fight!

A series of unfortunate events thus rendered Ulead completely useless, and my four duel core processors could not save me this time. An upgrade to Window 10 and raw MOV files proved to be doom for both the program and my mental stability. Ulead crashed continuously; I couldn’t export more than five clips at a time. Video that survived past the five-clip mark was cursed with an off-sync audio track, thus turning my video into a badly dubbed foreign film. Panic! Horror! I may have even cried a little.

Then Comes Rissa in a Straight Jacket!

Timelines

It’s like a secret code to decrypt my insanity!

Thoroughly chafed around the edges, I nursed my downtrodden-ness with half a box of Oatmeal Cream Pies and did some research. Little did I know, there were a slew of completely free video editors out there to soothe my wounded pride.

Enter Lightworks on its shining white steed, here to sweep me away from the cursed land of poorly constructed videos. Lightworks had a very steep learning curve as it’s a non-linear editor whereas Ulead was linear; half an hour of watching tutorials online, and I manage to piece together a test file. It took another few hours to figure out what the heck I was doing.

Then came the painful task of transferring all my marked video from Ulead to Lightworks… via paper. By hand! Nasty!

What took me 16 minutes to shoot, about 2 days to edit (because I’m slow), and another week to finally complete is now available, in all its awkward glory, on my YouTube Channel. It took 45 clips to make a mere 3 minute video, but ya know what? I’m freaking putting it up anyway because it took me nearly two weeks to edit!

Lightworks NLE Editor

Lightworks! My Hero!

Well, now I know what not to do, both in the filming and in the editing of future videos. The next vlog post should be smoother. Though, I think I will take a break from all that frustration for a little bit.

I think I need a drink.

  • Rissa

 

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