I signed up to Twitter a few years ago, got
bored and began ignoring it. Then I had an important book published (important
to me), so I went back on Twitter recently.
I found it a much angrier place, full of people ranting. Of course, I knew that. I’d read all about
it. But it really came home to me one day when I watched the Eurovision Song
Contest with Twitter beside me. It was hilarious - properly funny – to read
everybody’s online bon mots while watching the performances.
I found Twitter genuinely entertaining that
night and the next morning I was eager to join in the fun again. I went back on
the phone, searched for #Eurovision once more, and stared, shocked, at a stream
of bile. An Israeli artiste had won it, you see - a lovely larger-than-life
woman who sang about female empowerment. So there was a lot to attack on all
fronts, it turned out. The comedians had gone and, overnight, Twitter had
become a showcase for dark and vile ideas.
Despite the nasty underworld of anger
bubbling under the Twittersphere surface I stayed on it, and mostly confine my
Twitterfeed to authors, publishers and creators of various kinds.
Because of that I find I get a lot of:
“Yay! My/our new book is out!” tweets.
I hate the word Yay. It’s childish. It’s fake-sounding. It has no punch. It’s
mimsy! (That’s a good word). It makes my top lip curl and I feel
slightly less friendly.
But I can’t have it both ways. I was going
to say: “Yay? Cut that out!” but actually it’s positive enough, isn’t it? We
authors can get annoying on Twitter, with our publicity-seeking and general lovey-ness, but we’re pretty much a positive force
for good, I think.
So carry on saying ‘Yay’ if you want to. I'm glad to to be connected with you.
5 comments:
Love the sound of your latest book, Moira, so yay for that!
I do so agree!
I use Yay a lot, mainly because it only takes up three letters.
I do use the word. It uses up fewer characters than “Hurray!”. I mostly follow authors and artists too. So, what’s your Twitter handle?
My twitter handle is @moiraworld. I always get the @ and the # mixed up, as you can see in the blog! Maybe we should all think of funny 'blastoff' words to counteract our repetitive yay tendencies. I feel; kindly towards 'Whoop, whoop!' myself.
Post a Comment