Rob Delaney is one of the luckiest people in the Twitterverse.
Well, aside from all the insiders who made billions of dollars via the company’s recent IPO, of course.
Never mind.
We’re talking profiting the old-fashioned way, by slaving for almost three years to produce that thing that is printed on paper and bound between two hard covers -- you know, a book.
Despite all the years in the making, the narrow tome somehow hit store shelves the same week the micro-blogging company went public. And the Twitter IPO provided the perfect hook for
hyping the book “Rob Delaney: Mother. Wife. Sister. Human. Warrior. Falcon. Yardstick. Turban. Cabbage.”
So Delaney, a 37-year-old stand-up comic, most recently known for bombing
last spring in an appearance on Jimmy Kimmel, might make money off of Twitter after all.
Certainly, his book’s hilarious title is a dead-on parody of the pretension of some
Twitter users who think they are so out-of–the-box fascinating and multifaceted that they defy all classification. (Thus the mother/sister/wife/warrior who mistook herself for a hat, or even
bled into the category of a cruciferous vegetable.) After all, how do you hold a moonbeam in your hand? I agree that this phenomenon needed to be brought to our attention.
And lest a browser
not pick up on the Twitter reference in the title, there’s that large blue circle on the cover that reads (with no apparent punctuation, or irony) “Funniest Person on Twitter Comedy
Central Comedy Awards.”
But the idea that the book might be a Twitter how-to -- as in teaching others how to profit by it-- is misleading.
By now, Delaney’s reputation on
Twitter has grown so much that he has nearly one million followers. But the book itself is actually an unbalanced hybrid. At times it’s a really heavy (and well-written) memoir about being an
addict and alcoholic, hitting bottom at 25, when he blacked out and drove his car into the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power building. He was pretty seriously broken, and for a time
unable to use his arms and legs. He had to go through a court date, rehab, and a halfway house. He’s recovered, and that’s the strength of the book, which is then wrapped in much lighter
chapters, the usual magazine-essay, dudecentric, stand-up comic fare about masturbation and wetting the bed, growing up as an upper-middle-class white kid in Marblehead, Mass.
That obsession
with bodily function is also a mainstay of his tweets, pages of which punctuate the chapters: "Starbucks bathrooms are EXCLUSIVELY for terrible diarrhea, right?"
He does mention the Twitter
thing right up front in his introduction, before the chapters about his life with the French titles, like “La Mer” and “La Sexualite.”
He explains that around the time
he got on Twitter, “I was in debt and adding to it every month.” He’d submit scripts to TV shows, and get his material back with the comment “Good Stuff!” but no
employment offers.
So he decided, since no one was paying him anyway, “Fuck it! I’ll give it away for free!
He started tweeting, using a photo of his hairy-chested
self in a Speedo, that looks nothing like the photo of the suited-up, GQ-model-like, Euro-thin and waxed guy on the cover.
“I realized that my favorite tweets to read were the
ones that made me laugh,” he writes. “Tweets of no informational value were that ones that made me happiest. If I wanted to know what someone did every waking moment, I would keep them in
my basement, not scan their Twitter timeline.”
He adds: “I decided to show the people who were kind enough to become my Twitter followers that, whether or not they necessarily
thought I was funny, I had a work ethic and liked to write jokes all day, every day… My silent motto when people started stealing my jokes on Twitter was, ‘Go ahead and take ‘em
motherfucker. Here come five more.’”
In December of 2010, an editor at the estimable publishing house Spiegel & Grau, who was unknown to him, tweeted him, “Would you
please write me a book?”
And the rest as they say, is history.
And with his finished book, Delaney indeed becomes a prime example of how this online “idea economy”
(aka, “we can’t pay you, but you’ll get tons of exposure”) works.
“You have to remember, Twitter pays no one’s bills. It can lead to opportunities, but you
still have to get up every day and work,” he writes.
It’s a tough lesson, but not one without hope.
Dude’s a warrior, I tell ya, and a yardstick.