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Posts Tagged ‘Flat Butt Film Fest’

Irrational. Obstinate. Committed foe of paywalls. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

How long can I keep this going?

That’s been the question since August 15, 2012, when Coupeville Sports debuted on the internet.

Back then, I was full of self-righteous fury over having hundreds (probably thousands) of bylined stories erased from existence after the Coupeville Examiner was sold to Black Press, the owner of the Whidbey News-Times and South Whidbey Record.

Feeling sorry for myself carried me a certain distance, then the blog morphed into something more positive.

Now, even after several aborted attempts at walking away from the job, we sit at 8.5 years and 8,058 articles.

I haven’t had a “real job” since I left Christopher’s on Whidbey in 2015, surviving by the slimmest of margins thanks to readers who have donated to the cause and advertisers who stepped up in the early days.

Coupeville Sports is never going to make a profit.

The subject matter is too narrow, and the audience, while parts of it can be found in unexpected places, from Pennsylvania to Brazil, will never be universal.

My ingrained stubbornness contributes to that, as I have held on to two early declarations with a fanatical commitment — no paywall, ever, and ads, once bought, are good for the life of the site.

I had a chance recently to possibly go in a different direction, to return to my journalism roots and work for someone else.

If it had worked out, if I could have gotten past some personal concerns while convincing others that I could commit for a reasonable length of time, it would have likely improved my financial state.

But, I’m stubborn, and apparently still haven’t completely gotten over the erasure of my previous work, so I chose not to pursue that path.

At least I’m staying on brand here, irrational and obstinate to the end.

So, I plug on, pounding out Coupeville Sports, while returning to my days as a “film critic” with the launch of Flat Butt Film Fest – One movie, 100 words back in August, 2020.

853 articles and zero dollars earned — faithful to the brand, ever and always.

Even without games being played, this is the 51st story I’ve published in 2021 here on Coupeville Sports.

Or 50 more than either the News-Times or Record, which don’t have a sports writer since my mentor, Jim Waller, retired in December.

Now, with authorities moving all of Washington state’s counties into Phase 2 of Governor Jay Inslee’s latest COVID reopening plan, games should return to Cow Town for the first time in a year-plus.

Coupeville High School is scheduled to launch spring sports — track, softball, girls tennis, and baseball — next Monday, Feb. 22.

The opportunity for many more stories seems like a sure thing.

My ability to scrape out a meager living, paying rent and such, is less of a sure thing.

It’s the dilemma I’ve built for myself, and one unlikely to fade any time soon thanks to my “business plan.”

How long can I keep this going?

I don’t know. We shall see, I guess.

Still not going to use a paywall, though.

 

Want to help keep me typing away at 2 AM on the shores of Penn Cove, using a computer powered by a hamster on a treadmill?

1) Buy an ad. $50 for the life of the site, plus, BONUS, you get an identical ad on my movie blog. BOGO fever rages.

2) Donate to the cause, through PayPal or by mailing me at 165 Sherman, Coupeville, WA 98239. You are the wind beneath my typing fingers.

 

https://paypal.me/DavidSvien?locale.x=en_US

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Some of my earliest advertisers — supporting Coupeville Sports since 2012.

You help me pay rent, I help you get your business out in front of readers!

With the holiday season upon us, I’m offering a 2-for-1 advertising special through Dec. 31.

Normally, if you give me $100, I give you an ad here on Coupeville Sports, and it’s good for the life of the site.

Which means, those who got in on the ground floor back in August, 2012 have gotten quite a sweet deal.

The lifetime guarantee is still in place, but between now and December 31, if you ante up that $100, you get ads on two blogs, as I’m selling advertising on Flat Butt Film Fest for the first time.

What’s FBFF, you ask?

It’s a return to my video store glory days, where I pump out 100-word reviews of films I like.

I publish five a day, every day — quick bites, with no negative reviews to waste your time.

You can check it out here:

Flat Butt Film Fest – One movie, 100 words

So, $100 gets you ads on both blogs, or, if you already have an ad on Coupeville Sports, $50 lets you get in on the ground floor of Flat Butt Film Fest.

On both blogs, the ads run down the right side of the page on a computer, while camping out beneath the five stories on the main page if you’re using a phone.

If you have a web site, I link to it, so when readers click your ad, they go straight to your site.

Where each blog currently sits:

Coupeville Sports
8 years, 4 months of existence
7,991 stories published

Flat Butt Film Fest
3.5 months
532 stories published

Contact me today at davidsvien@hotmail.com and join the revolution!

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'Merica!!

‘Merica!!

I have never learned my lesson.

Fifteen years as a video store manager and thousands (upon thousands and thousands) of movies later, and I still have never developed that thing the cinema buffs refer to as … taste.

You can have your “12 Years a Slave.” I want my “Rockabilly Vampire.”

Oh, it’s real. Don’t question me on that one.

Anyway, with that established, it should come as little surprise that I chose to spend the 4th of July seeing what questionable films I could come up with to watch for another round of my favorite life-waster — the Flat Butt Film Fest.

Only rules — I couldn’t have seen the films before and I couldn’t spend a penny.

So, no Netflix, no Amazon, no rentals.

Yes to library films and whatever I could scrape up from the floor of YouTube.

We open with “The Weird World of Blowfly,” a documentary about an ornery ol’ dude who had the ultimate bipolar career.

On the one side, he wrote love songs for ’60s R & B groups. On the other, he dressed as a superhero and spit out X-rated rhymes on stage as, arguably, the first rapper ever.

From there, we slide into the forgotten ’70s musical “Toomorrow” (yes, that’s how it’s spelled onscreen), starring a dewy-beyond-belief Olivia Newton-John in a tale of mod college singers being recruited by aliens.

Blowfly to Sandra Dee in 2.4 seconds. Whiplash, meet my neck.

I recover by bouncing through “Batman: Year One,” a quick, crisp animated plunge into the early days of the Dark Knight, then head back into the world of music with “Don’t Stop Believin’: Everyman’s Journey.”

Oh, you know, the you-can’t-make-this-stuff-up tale of a Filipino singer plucked off of YouTube to front a legendary ’70s rock band as they hit the road for a late-in-their-career revival.

Neck, whiplash … you’ve met before.

And it’s back to YouTube for “Sometimes Aunt Martha Does Dreadful Things,” which … words fail me.

Two crooks are on the lam and one, for no reason at all, chooses to dress up like a middle-aged housewife and lounge around the house all day drinking beer and doing some light house cleaning, except when he’s getting super jealous and all stabby.

Delightful. I think that’s the word we’re all looking for here.

Next up, Barbara Eden, Larry Hagman, Vera Miles and a young Tyne Daly in a really well-done ’70s TV movie, “A Howling in the Woods.”

Miss “I Dream of Jeannie” is a jet-setting fashion designer who returns to the town she grew up in, only to find that no one is happy to see her.

Her rich father is missing, her new step brother is a Vietnam vet with drug issues who lounges around the house playing the piano and smiling at all the wrong times and no one wants to talk about the little girl who was murdered and thrown in the lake.

Oh yes, and there’s a dog who won’t shut up, drifting through the woods, his howls haunting everyone. What DID the dog see?

Riding a nice buzz, I skip through “Page One,” a solid doc about the New York Times struggling to stay relevant, than get punched in the nads by “Abar: The First Black Superman.”

One of the few blaxploitation flicks of the ’70s I haven’t seen, it is, frankly, God-awful, and I feel my spirit waning in the wee hours.

My bed calls, and, unlike in my younger days, I see no loss of pride in giving in and calling it a day.

But first, I stumble on “Horrific,” a short film about a farmer going toe-to-toe with a sneaky, goat-eatin’, finger-stealin’ critter, and, in six-and-a-half-minutes of Looney Tunes meets Sam Raimi, it reminds me why I keep watching.

“Show yourself, you little peckerwood!! You took my finger and I can’t abide by that!!”

This rocks, and director Robert Boocheck, I bow to you … and then I stumble off to bed, a goofy smile on my lips.

 

To see “Horrific,” jump over to:

http://vimeo.com/78274444

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