Forum Transcripts

The Interview in Nonfiction and Fiction 11/30/05

Event start time:

Sat Nov 26 23:13:37 2005

Event end time:

Tue Nov 29 13:31:22 2005



Legend:
Questions from the Audience are presented in red.
Answers by the Speaker are in black.
The Moderator's comments are in blue.

guestspeaker

testing

guestspeaker

123

mary rosenblum

Hello, all.

mary rosenblum

I hope you had a lovely Thanksgiving and aren't too 'shopped out' after the weekend. :-)

mary rosenblum

Malls are a great place to people-watch this time of year. Good place to study body language, store up details that will help bring characters to life later on in your stories.

mary rosenblum

Try a mall food court. :-)

andi

my thanksgiving was good in October

mary rosenblum

Ah, yes, you all in Canada are way ahead of us. :-)

geezer

Mary , did you see the pictures of the green Golden Retriever puppy?

mary rosenblum

I heard about it. They've been engineering green cats, so I'm not surprised they tried a dog.

mary rosenblum

The cats have jellyfish genes inserted, as I remember.

mary rosenblum

They have some that glow in the dark, too.

mary rosenblum

Bioluminescent genes...that may be the jellyfish gene...Can't remember now.

geezer

Supposedly this one is natural

mary rosenblum

You'll have to show me a DNA analysis before I believe THAT, geeze.

mary rosenblum

This is the Tuesday Forum with me Mary Rosenblum LR Web Editor, fiction and nonfiction writer. Today we’re talking about the interview. If you’re new here, remember that you need to click on the Ask a Question button or the word bubble next to the red question mark at the top of the screen, or use the ask a question icon in order to ask a question. Your regular send bar won’t reach me! You can also type /ask in front of your question to reach me.

mary rosenblum

I wanted to talk about interviews today because it's something you use for both nonfiction and fiction...

mary rosenblum

and learning to do a good interview is a very worthwhile skill.

mary rosenblum

In nonfiction, it allows you to bring expertise to an article where you have no personal expertise...

mary rosenblum

and since most nonfic editors want 'original source material'...ie, they don't want a lot of internet and library research...

mary rosenblum

the interview is usually your easiest route to original source material.

mary rosenblum

You can do it via email, snail mail, phone, or in person.

mary rosenblum

And most of the time, unless you are asking someone who already gets a lot of media attention, the person you ask will be delighted to cooperate.

mary rosenblum

I think we all want our fifteen minutes of fame. :-)

gwanny

how do you go beyond the simple 5 W's and an H?

mary rosenblum

You mean, what where when why and how?

mary rosenblum

Oh yes, and who?

mary rosenblum

LOL

mary rosenblum

Well, that's where novice interviewers generally run into difficulties...

mary rosenblum

because while someone may be thrilled the first time you ask for that interview, by the third 'just a couple more questions' you tend to get snapped it.

mary rosenblum

You simply do not know what to ask before you have 'written' the piece, be it story or article.

mary rosenblum

No, I don't mean you have to have a completed first draft...hard to do if your interview is the core for that draft!

mary rosenblum

But what I do mean is that you need to know what questions to ask before you sit down to do the interview.

mary rosenblum

You need to decide on your slant if this is for a nonficiton article.

mary rosenblum

And it's a good idea to come up with three or four slants, so that you can use that interview multiple times for different magazines.

mary rosenblum

THEN make a list of all the questions you need to answer for that particular slant.

mary rosenblum

If you just do the general questions, you'll come up with a great slant later and then realize you asked the wrong questions.

greenfaile

Should you provide a list of questions to the interviewee? How many questions would you think reasonable? We don't want to wear out our welcome.

mary rosenblum

That really depends, green.

mary rosenblum

If you're doing a phone or face to face interview, you will get a sense of when you need to conclude the interview.

mary rosenblum

Your subject will get restless.

mary rosenblum

But if you're sending a typed list of questions, I'd keep it to something that your interviewee...

mary rosenblum

can answer in a half hour maybe.

greenfaile

I would think we should leave the person with the knowledge we may like to contact them again. If we think of more questions that is.

mary rosenblum

Always ask. Nearly everybody will say 'fine'...

mary rosenblum

but people ARE busy and it's very easy to tell if someone is asking you...

mary rosenblum

things that he/she should have asked the first time.

janecj333

I've always thought it important to steer your interview with the answers you get from your expert...don't remain a slave to your prepared list because the expert will take you in directions vital to her/him

mary rosenblum

This is why I prefer a phone or in person interview, jane.

mary rosenblum

If you have to use a typed list, you are stuck with what you have prepared.

mary rosenblum

If you are chatting, you should be prepared to follow interesting paths even if you didn't intend to.

mary rosenblum

Get your important questions answered, but try and follow that interesting path that opened up. You never know where you'll end up. Might be better than what you planned.

mary rosenblum

This is the Tuesday Forum with me Mary Rosenblum LR Web Editor, fiction and nonfiction writer. Today we’re talking about the interview. If you’re new here, remember that you need to click on the Ask a Question button or the word bubble next to the red question mark at the top of the screen, or use the ask a question icon in order to ask a question. Your regular send bar won’t reach me! You can also type /ask in front of your question to reach me.

sallyk

What was your toughest interview? How did you handle it?

mary rosenblum

Lessee...I'd say the Klamath Falls Sheriff's department, Sally.

mary rosenblum

I had someone who was very suspicious of my motives, they were coming in for some metro area media heat about the meth lab problem down there...

mary rosenblum

and I really really had to work to get any rapport established at all, and it was real minimal.

mary rosenblum

Usually I do quite well in that kind of situation but I just got someone who didn't work.

mary rosenblum

I got my basic questions answered, but not much more.

mary rosenblum

Happens.

mary rosenblum

Sometimes you and your interviewee just don't click.

greenfaile

how about if you want two sides to an issue? Dueling Experts. Any suggestions on how to do that?

mary rosenblum

One good way is to give on expert a list of questions and then give the answers to your dueling expert.

mary rosenblum

You can give the whole set back to the first expert for rebuttals for that matter,

mary rosenblum

then use the ones that work for your article.

mary rosenblum

OR...you can give both experts the same questions and compare answers.

mary rosenblum

You see that a lot in newspaper pieces where two opposing experts are quoted.

mary rosenblum

Usually they are both responding to the same question.

paminnapa

I find with interviewing its good to ask an opinion question...lets them know you care what they think. Also can break the ice

mary rosenblum

Interviewing is all about rapport.

mary rosenblum

If you can relax with your interviewee, get that person to relate to you, you'll find out SO much more.

mary rosenblum

Being interested in what that person does, genuinely interested, not just reading from a list of questions, is the best way.

mary rosenblum

And of course, your personal people-skills are going to determine how successful you are.

mary rosenblum

And that is much less important, of course, if you are doing a by mail interview.

mary rosenblum

There, you really focus on your questions.

mary rosenblum

You have to craft questions that invite the interviewee to expand, to tell you more than you asked for, to express his/her opinions.

mary rosenblum

You really want to avoid questions that can be answered with a yes or no, that's for sure!

mary rosenblum

I use interviews mostly for fiction.

mary rosenblum

I use 'em to obtain realistic details and information that will assist the story.

mary rosenblum

I particularly like to interview experts in the science I'm working with...

mary rosenblum

becuase they will often tell me about research that is ongoing and hasn't made the journals yet.

janecj333

as much as editors frown on researched pieces, it's just as much of a problem finding credible 'experts'. Everyone has an opinion, and what's accepted today as fact by some may be hotly contested by others, making interviews pointless, it seems

mary rosenblum

Not at all, Jane.

mary rosenblum

Every expert is contested by someone. If your editor thinks this particular person is a quack...

mary rosenblum

she may reject your proposal.

mary rosenblum

But if she finds the subject interesting and this is a credentialed expert, so what if someone disagrees?

mary rosenblum

If you go back an look through some of the anthropological articles in such esteemed mags as National Geographic, you'll find, over the years, that information presented in one issue...

mary rosenblum

was considered to be incorrect some years later.

mary rosenblum

That's why you query first. :-)

mary rosenblum

Saves you time and the disappointment of telling the person you interviewed that you don't have a publisher.

greenfaile

Where do you seek out your sources?

mary rosenblum

Under whichever rock they inhabit, green. :-)

mary rosenblum

If I know someone who knows someone who can give me an intro, I try that.

mary rosenblum

If I don't, I call 'em up and ask for a half hour, giving my reasons.

mary rosenblum

Or I go knock on the door.

geezer

I'm surprised (or maybe not) that editors don't like research. I don't like magazine articles because they seem so shallow.

mary rosenblum

Oh, you misunderstand me, geeze.

mary rosenblum

Editors DEMAND good research. But they are not going to pay you a buck a word or better...

mary rosenblum

to give the reader information that he/she could go find on the internet for herself!

mary rosenblum

And people like to hear it 'from the horse's mouth'. They like those quotes.

mary rosenblum

As to shallow, well, most of the popular mags including the news mags are mainly for entertainment.

mary rosenblum

The slant is very narrow, the information is very superficial.

mary rosenblum

Even the science mags, like Science News, Discover, Scientific American are like that...

mary rosenblum

I use 'em to find the original sources, the journal articles that believe me are NOT light reading.

mary rosenblum

Those are not narrow!

mary rosenblum

oops...they ARE narrow, they are not shallow.

mary rosenblum

This is the Tuesday Forum with me Mary Rosenblum LR Web Editor, fiction and nonfiction writer. Today we’re talking about the interview. If you’re new here, remember that you need to click on the Ask a Question button or the word bubble next to the red question mark at the top of the screen, or use the ask a question icon in order to ask a question. Your regular send bar won’t reach me! You can also type /ask in front of your question to reach me.

greenfaile

lol...Have you ever had to deal with a PR person and how do you get past that?

mary rosenblum

I haven't green, but I've never had reason to try and interview someone who is enough of a celebrity to have a PR person. :-)

mary rosenblum

Usually I'm talking to scientists, university profs, cops, dog handlers, what have you.

janecj333

it would be nice if credentials were an accurate indicator of skill, but that is not always the case

mary rosenblum

Nope. That's why you have to decide if this person is an expert or if he/she has something interesting to offer to the reader.

mary rosenblum

If it worries you too much about whether or not this person is speaking God's Truth, I'd avoid interviews! Darned hard to tell. :-)

tolkienlvr

Mary, RE: interviewing minors -- If a teen agrees to be interviewed and quoted and the parent also has verbally agreed, how important do you think it is to get the parent's consent in writing -- legally?

mary rosenblum

Gosh, tolkien, I'm not sure of the legalities here, but your editor probably will be.

mary rosenblum

I've never gotten a release form for any interview. For photos, yes.

mary rosenblum

It never hurts to have an okay in writing in this litiginous society!

mary rosenblum

And come to think of it...I have been interviewed a lot and have never signed a release form for an inperson or phone interview...

mary rosenblum

or an email interview that I can recall.

sallyk

Do your editors have their own photo release forms?

mary rosenblum

None of mine ever have. I just type something up if I get a photo...

mary rosenblum

I give Mary Rosenblum permission to use my photo in conjunction with my interview and a line for the signature.

mary rosenblum

That assures 'em I won't post it anywhere but with the interview.

mary rosenblum

This is the Tuesday Forum with me Mary Rosenblum LR Web Editor, fiction and nonfiction writer. Today we’re talking about the interview. If you’re new here, remember that you need to click on the Ask a Question button or the word bubble next to the red question mark at the top of the screen, or use the ask a question icon in order to ask a question. Your regular send bar won’t reach me! You can also type /ask in front of your question to reach me.

mary rosenblum

But it doesn't limit me to a single use if I use the interview multiple places.

justme

Have you ever had occasion to interview crime victims or law

mary rosenblum

I've interviewed quite a few people in law enforcement justme...

justme

professionals during investigation of an open case

mary rosenblum

(the other half of Just's question)...

mary rosenblum

and yes, I did ask about open cases...

mary rosenblum

but in that case, I was using the material as background and would not be writing about a particular case.

mary rosenblum

They were very open with me.

mary rosenblum

Even the DEQ...probably the most suspicious group I ever approached!

mary rosenblum

But once they decided I wasn't a terrorist or a wacko, they were VERY forthcoming.

justme

Did they require you to sign a nondisclosure form

mary rosenblum

No just, but these weren't cases that I was going to write about specifically.

mary rosenblum

And I was using them as fiction background, I wasn't acting as a reporter for our local paper.

tory

DEQ?

mary rosenblum

Department of Environmental Quality ... I gather a lot of people hate them.

andi

what is a release form really needed for

mary rosenblum

You need a release form to prove to your editor that this person has given you permission to use his/her image publicly.

mary rosenblum

If you are quoting an interview, the permission is implied. :-)

mary rosenblum

But it wouldn't be a bad idea just to have a release.

mary rosenblum

Now I know Nonfiction pros who have had more than one case where an interviewee...

mary rosenblum

decided after the fact that he/she did not want the interview published.

mary rosenblum

And they simply pulled it.

justme

How about witnesses to criminal activity

mary rosenblum

I have, just. But I would never use someone's real name.

mary rosenblum

And again, my interviewing is not as a news reporter.

mary rosenblum

That is an ENTIRELY different universe from either popular nonfiction or fiction interviewing.

mary rosenblum

There are rules of conduct there and I don't know 'em. Never worked for a newspaper as a reporter. :-) Not what I do.

justme

Sorry, I guess I'm in the wrong field

mary rosenblum

Depends on what you want to do, just.

mary rosenblum

Journalism is not the same as magazine nonfiction.

mary rosenblum

The style is different, the 'rules' are different.

mary rosenblum

Best way to learn that is to get a job on a newspaper.

mary rosenblum

This is the Tuesday Forum with me Mary Rosenblum LR Web Editor, fiction and nonfiction writer. Today we’re talking about the interview. If you’re new here, remember that you need to click on the Ask a Question button or the word bubble next to the red question mark at the top of the screen, or use the ask a question icon in order to ask a question. Your regular send bar won’t reach me! You can also type /ask in front of your question to reach me.

mary rosenblum

Sigh, we've got a Pacific storm coming in. If I vanish, my cable went down.

janecj333

Mary, give us the scoop on how you initially approach a potential interviewee

mary rosenblum

Well, it's pretty much the same way, only easier now, since I have quite a few books published I can show, to prove I'm really doing waht I say I'm doing. :-)

mary rosenblum

But even when I didn't, you call up the person, explain you're a writer...

mary rosenblum

explain why you'd like to interview them.

mary rosenblum

If you can, ask the person if you could interview them in the future and then go send out queries...

mary rosenblum

so you know where you'll send it.

mary rosenblum

But if you don't have clips yet, you're just hoping to sell this...

mary rosenblum

just tell the person you'd like to interview for a particular magazine...

mary rosenblum

I have never had someone ask me if I was sure it would be published. :-)

mary rosenblum

The general public doesn't usually understand how publishing works. They just assume it will be. :-)

mary rosenblum

If you don't sell it, and they want to know when it will be out, you just say, you're really sorry, but they didn't go for it, or it got bumped... (white lie but you don't want the person...

mary rosenblum

to feel he/she is being personally rejected).

mary rosenblum

Always make sure it is at THEIR convenience.

mary rosenblum

And state the time you need...

mary rosenblum

I usually ask if I can buy the person lunch and do the interview then.

mary rosenblum

Or I'll ask if I can have a half hour.

mary rosenblum

And then I have my questions ready to it only takes that half hour...

mary rosenblum

and often I spend much longer because the person is enjoying it and has the time to spend.

mary rosenblum

This is the Tuesday Forum with me Mary Rosenblum LR Web Editor, fiction and nonfiction writer. Today we’re talking about the interview. If you’re new here, remember that you need to click on the Ask a Question button or the word bubble next to the red question mark at the top of the screen, or use the ask a question icon in order to ask a question. Your regular send bar won’t reach me! You can also type /ask in front of your question to reach me.

sallyk

What personal skills should one cultivate to be a better interviewer?

mary rosenblum

Be engaging. ACT relaxed. (You won't be at first. I am now. :-))

mary rosenblum

Be interested in what they do.

mary rosenblum

And most importantly, LISTEN to their answers.

mary rosenblum

Use that bit of revealed interest to ask more questions along this line if it's a profitable direction for your research.

andi

do they mind if you use a recorder or just write as they talk

justme

Do you find subjects uncomfortable with a tape recorder

mary rosenblum

I always ask if I can use one.

mary rosenblum

Rarely do they say no. I do have to say, that I have not used a tape when...

mary rosenblum

interviewing law enforcement people unless I know them personally.

mary rosenblum

They are much more careful about what they say if it's on tape, I"ve found. :-)

mary rosenblum

I just use a pad and pen for that.

mary rosenblum

And if someone relaxes, decides he trusts me, I learn a lot that I don't think he'd say on tape. :-)

andi

i wouldn't remember much if I didn't have it recorded

mary rosenblum

The flip side of this is learn to take COHERENT notes.

mary rosenblum

I learned that the hard way.

mary rosenblum

You look at those scribbles two weeks later and think...waht does THAT mean?

mary rosenblum

Now I write fast, kind of my own shorthand, but in detail.

tory

And the "what does that mean" seems to always be a critical bit!

mary rosenblum

Oh, of course!

mary rosenblum

And something you dare not guess about either, sigh.

justme

Not exactly like writing without a light in the dark during

justme

a murder or something

mary rosenblum

Almost that bad at times, just!

mary rosenblum

If you've established a rappor with the person, if she is opening up, talking to you like you're a friend, not thinking about the fact htat you're recording this...

mary rosenblum

you really don't want to remind that person! :-) So it is a bit like writing in the dark...

mary rosenblum

since you're smiling, keeping eye contact, reacting to what they are saying as you also try to record it.

mary rosenblum

Talk about rubbing your head and patting your stomach at the same time! Whew.

mary rosenblum

Another trick I learned the very hard way...

mary rosenblum

in this case, go home and RIGHT NOW transcribe those notes.

mary rosenblum

You won't lose as much.

mary rosenblum

Or...something else I do...get in your car when you leave and start recording your memories and impressions on tape...

mary rosenblum

to back up your written notes later.

mary rosenblum

That's where I record visual details.

mary rosenblum

I don't waste time on them while I'm interviewing, but if I need the details of the surroundings, I do them afterward.

janecj333

off topic...:)...Mary, the Pacific storm has brought us snow, just now! Are you getting any yet?

mary rosenblum

Ah, up in the hills about 2000 feet, jane. I"m at 1000so it's hard rain right now.

mary rosenblum

Brace yourself if this is heading your way!

mary rosenblum

This is the Tuesday Forum with me Mary Rosenblum LR Web Editor, fiction and nonfiction writer. Today we’re talking about the interview. If you’re new here, remember that you need to click on the Ask a Question button or the word bubble next to the red question mark at the top of the screen, or use the ask a question icon in order to ask a question. Your regular send bar won’t reach me! You can also type /ask in front of your question to reach me.

mary rosenblum

One reason I do interviews for fiction research and highly recommend it...

mary rosenblum

is that you will get an insider's view of whatever you are researching.

mary rosenblum

Every person in every career has their own insider idioms, they own way of looking at what they do...

mary rosenblum

and you can create enormous verisimilitude with a very few of these 'inside' details.

mary rosenblum

It is worth the time and the cost of the lunch to get 'em.

janecj333

we're basically at sea level

mary rosenblum

Ah, but you're in the cold eastern side of the state, Jane.

mary rosenblum

I'm over here in the coastal rainforest. (Well, actually the Columbia Gorge, but it's still warmer).

t green

Mary, I don't know if you've covered this... how do you do a phone interview?

mary rosenblum

That's sort of the same as doing a face to face, t.

mary rosenblum

You have the ability to change the questions and pursue a new slant if things get interesting.

mary rosenblum

I much prefer it to an email or mail interview, although I'm much better at asking provocative questions now. :-)

mary rosenblum

It will cost you if it's long distance...especially if your subject likes to talk. :-)

mary rosenblum

Set up the time at their convenience of course.

mary rosenblum

Remember...the interviewee is always doing you an enormous favor. You're going to get paid, he/she is not.

mary rosenblum

Be polite, be charming if you possibly can, be impressed with what they do, be genuinely curious about their cool line of work... be interested.

t green

I did one phone interview. Lucky me... when i called the first time, he was busy... and then called me back... his dime

mary rosenblum

Wow, that was nice of him. :-)

mary rosenblum

I don't do that. I know who's getting the check. LOL

andi

get to know them first kind of thing

mary rosenblum

Yep.

mary rosenblum

Thjats

mary rosenblum

That's hard when you first start interviewing.

mary rosenblum

You're nervous, stiff, you feel like this person will see right through you...

mary rosenblum

know you're an unpublished author and throw you out!

mary rosenblum

But the more you can make this person the center of your attention the better.

t green

Scientist... calling from work... he was an expert with interviews... and i was just a fumbling beginner. he was very patient with me.

mary rosenblum

Oh, nice guy.

mary rosenblum

I've had a couple of those. :-) One for a radio show...I ended up kind of nudging him to ask questions because..

mary rosenblum

he hadn't done this a lot and was having troubles.

mary rosenblum

I had a recent email interview...not yours Gwanny...where I added comments of my own. Same reason. They had left out some questions that should have been in there. :-)

t green

But... the interview made my article stronger. It was for an assignment at ICL.... actually. I did sell the article just recently :-D

mary rosenblum

Cool, t. Yes, interviews do sell. You just have to find the magazine where they fit.

mary rosenblum

Genearlly, I go into an interview with a limited number of things I really want and need to know.

mary rosenblum

And then let the interview sort of find its own way around that.

speckledorf

I do a lot of email interviews and always leave time for follow up questions. Just in case I need more info or they mention something cool I want to know more about.

mary rosenblum

That's right, speck...all yours are email, aren't they.

mary rosenblum

You can get really good at asking questions that invite your guest to go off on interesting tangents. :-)

mary rosenblum

Leading the witness....

mary rosenblum

Actually, if you want a good example of strong interview skills, listen to the NPR interviewer Terry Gross.

mary rosenblum

She doe Fresh Air, you'll find it on your local station...

mary rosenblum

and I learned a lot of interview technique from listening to her.

mary rosenblum

These are edited of course, they're not live, but even so, you can see how she follows up on unexpected topics...

mary rosenblum

and how she uses questions to take the interview in the direction she wants it to go.

mary rosenblum

I do a little exercise whenever it's on and see how long it takes me to figure out her slant. :-)

janecj333

Mary, tell us how you use interviews in your fiction

mary rosenblum

I use interviews a lot in fiction to give the piece reality.

mary rosenblum

There are small details...slang words, a certain perspective, behavior, visual details...

mary rosenblum

that are only known by the people in a particular career..a cop, a laboratoy tech in a biomedical facility, a landscaper...what have you.

mary rosenblum

If you don't know those insider details, your version of what that microbiologist or landscaper does...

mary rosenblum

is pretty much what the average reader's version is...the surface stereotype.

mary rosenblum

If you can add those reality bits as I call them, the insider stuff, this seems REAL to your readers.

mary rosenblum

It isn't the same superficial vision they have.

mary rosenblum

And of course, if someone IN the field reads it, they appreciate the reality.

mary rosenblum

I have often found that the insider details were strong enough to actually change my plot and send the story in a new and stronger direction.

mary rosenblum

Worth the time and effort in my opionion.

info

in a sense, isn't an interview sort of like being here at forums? I mean we all ask questions because we are truly interested in the answers, and sometimes those answers lead us to more questions.

mary rosenblum

Exactly.

mary rosenblum

And for fiction interviews, I am intensely interested in that 'insider' mind set.

mary rosenblum

That is mostly what I am after.

janecj333

how kosher is it to use an interviewee's sentence word for word, something of really piercing truth, as a character's dialogue?

mary rosenblum

Nothing wrong with that as long as it's not something that will get the person in trouble...

mary rosenblum

with his co workers (since he will have told 'em about the book and they'll all be waiting to see what you did with the details!).

mary rosenblum

I know I"ve used someone's exact words before at least a couple of times.

mary rosenblum

I doubt that person even remembers saying that particular sentence. :-)

mary rosenblum

In the context of the story it doesn't stand out as someone else's quote. Or it wouldn't be there!

tory

do you thank all your interviewees in the acknowledgment or notes of your books?

mary rosenblum

Absolutely! At least for the novels.

mary rosenblum

You can't do that in short fiction, alas.

mary rosenblum

But I do send 'em copies of the story.

mary rosenblum

I got a lot of research help for the novel coming out next year from Bradley Edwards about the space elevator design...

mary rosenblum

and from Greg Bear who passed on a LOT of human evolution research to me.

mary rosenblum

They get BIG thanks from me.

mary rosenblum

Well, this has been a fun Oregon hour...glad I"m inside today!

mary rosenblum

Do interviews. It takes a while to get comfortable with the form, but then it yields a LOT...

mary rosenblum

whether you're doing fiction or nonfiction.

mary rosenblum

See you all tomorrow morning !

mary rosenblum

Stay dry!

mary rosenblum

Or warm for those of you with the frozen version of rain, out there!

geezer

Please don't send the rain down here! We're having a parade!

mary rosenblum

Geeze it seems perfectly happy to batter us here in the upper left hand corner.

mary rosenblum

I'll post the transcript in the usual place...

mary rosenblum

Writing Craft ...forum Transcripts.

mary rosenblum

See you all tomorrow!

 

Return to Forum Transcripts