Why Ask Why?

From 1995 till 1997, I wrote a humor column, “The Gad About Town,” for a great weekly newspaper in Sullivan County, New York. (I still read it online.) It held the distinction of being the only column in the newspaper that did not generate even one letter from readers. Another editorial columnist, a genial elderly man, wrote the most innocuous weekly pieces and received the most vituperative letters disagreeing with everything he wrote. I admired that this only amused him.

I did create one controversy, once: our music columnist used his own space one week to disagree with me and take me to task about something I had written the week before. Since he could have written a letter to the editor complaining about me and also submitted his usual column, but chose to sacrifice his space to rebut me, I became skeptical about his music suggestions. (I believe he is still writing for the paper and I am here, writing for no pay two decades later, so I think we can safely say that he won in the long run.)

The “Gad About Town” column held one other distinction: It won an award, which was the only award for which I have ever even been nominated. To this day I toss out the phrase “award-winning writer” every chance I get. (“Could you hand me the salt?” “I’m an award-winning writer. Yes.”)

Thanks to the supportive WordPress community, this blog has won 16 awards in the 20 months its has been here.

When I decided to create the blog that you hold in your virtual hands—and thank you for visiting and reading it—I also decided to name it after that old column, as no one has taken up the name at either my former employer or anywhere else. Or so I thought. A little research revealed that someone now owns the domain name “gadabouttown dot com,” and, as per this name, its owner writes about the many things that interest him today there. (That is of course what a gad about town is and does: a gadabout shares observations, sometimes talking, sometimes writing, sometimes even listening.) This is the reason my blog is entitled, “The Gad About Town,” emphasis on “The,” and poses no competition to that writer’s work.

(The owner of the other web site posted four things in May 2013 and has not posted since.)

One of the other “Gad’s” earliest entries concerns his selection of the name “Gad About Town.” My first column in 1995, I recall, was itself about choosing the name “Gad About Town,” which I selected from a long list of none simply because my first deadline was almost an entire minute away and a title was needed above my 800 words, which were written about not having a name for the column that was about to be published. (I even offered a clip-out and mail-back-in name-this-column contest, which earned zero entries and thus solidified my not-first, not-really-my-choice choice of “Gad.” I have just now decided to remember that in my second column I declared that everyone who didn’t enter was a winning non-winner.) (I had no prizes to offer, anyway.) (Tap-tap. Is this microphone on?)

Thus, my “Gad” column provided me with a great opportunity to learn to write with little feedback. Up until then, everything I wrote was for a professor’s eyes or an audience’s ears.

“To learn to write with little feedback.” That sounds like a witticism, but really it was valuable to learn to not assume an audience, or to write everything as if it is a letter to a loved one. (Hello, Jen.) What I have been writing for the last two years is some of that letter. Some of all of me.

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The WordPress Daily Prompt for November 3 asks, “Why do you blog?”

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7 comments

  1. Relax · November 3, 2015

    I thought you were leading up to announcing a blog-name change. I’m glad you’re not, but I would know who “Mark Aldrich” (the award-winning writer) is, with or without the “Gad.” And I would tune in!

    Liked by 1 person

  2. wscottling · November 3, 2015

    One of my biggest blog fears is that I’m “talking” into a vast, dark, empty auditorium. For what it’s worth, I’m here, and I like the name of your blog, it’s one of the things that drew me to read you in the first place. 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

  3. loisajay · November 3, 2015

    I do manage to throw that around, also: Why yes, I do know an award-winning writer. Do you? Oh, pity. I do love your style of writing, Mark.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. genusrosa · November 4, 2015

    You’re an insightful writer with a subtle wit–I love that in a blogger. (And hello Jen…thanks for inspiring this guy to write!)

    Like

  5. Pingback: A Muse to a Talent to Amuse | The Gad About Town

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