Wannabe Girl Writer vs. Mommy Blogger

Meet the New Kids On the Block book

By Jae-Ha Kim
jaehakim.com
February 2, 2014

So, this just happened: Someone contacted me, asking me to write about one of their clients. I turned them down, because — frankly — the aforementioned client isn’t a good fit for my column.

This someone, then proceeds to get defensive and says, “Oh, really? I thought you’d need stuff to write about and it’d be good for you since we usually don’t work with mommy bloggers.”

Wha? Did you just try to dismiss me as a mommy blogger?

First of all, I WISH I was a better mommy blogger, ‘cause I don’t have enough time to devote to my blog.

Second of all, would she have referred to a male journalist who also happens to have a blog as a daddy blogger? Hell to the no!

Third of all, I’ll do just fine without your client — who’s not an actual celebrity — seeing as how I write a celebrity column for one of the largest syndicates in the world. That’s right. I’m patting myself on the back here.

Yay! Me!

But this reminded me of an incident a long time ago when I was (relatively) young. I wrote a book about the New Kids on the Block (NKOTB). They were the One Direction of their time. The book, which was aimed at tweens and younger, did really really well. It peaked at No. 7 on the New York Times Bestseller list and gave my parents something to brag about.

Someone once asked if I was embarrassed of the book.

I said, “No, why would you ask that?”

And she said, “Because you never talk about it.”

Laughing, I said, “I don’t talk about it because it’s out of print. If it was still in stores, I would be promoting the heck out of it, ’cause book sales are a good thing.”

Anyhow, shortly after the book was released, my friends in Los Angeles called me. They told me that a writer had reviewed the book in one of the LA weeklies. He didn’t tell his readers that the book was for kids. His point of reviewing the book, basically, was to make fun of the book and me. In his review, he called me a “wannabe girl writer.”

Wannabe. Girl. Writer.

His comment was condescending on so many different levels. He chose to put me in my place by referring to me as a “girl,” when he knew full well that I was a grown woman. Would he have slammed a male author as a “wannabe boy writer?”

And regardless of whether he liked my writing or not, I was a published reporter.

Meh. In reality, the review didn’t impact my life in any way.

A couple decades passed. And then I received a message from that same reviewer. Only now, he was asking me to write about his new book (see the first comment below).

Huh.

I didn’t take him up on his offer. Was I being spiteful? No. Worse things than that have happened and I’ve still maintained professional relationships with those people, even though I don’t trust them any further than I could throw them.

However, this guy — who is doing quite well in his career — had written an incredibly xenophobic article that I found smarmy and repulsive. That, coupled with the fact that his book did nothing for me, was the reason I took a pass.

Also, I write primarily about celebrities. Now, I might’ve made an exception if he were a daddy blogger…

© 2014 Jae-Ha Kim | All Rights Reserved

17 thoughts on “Wannabe Girl Writer vs. Mommy Blogger”

  1. Asking people to write about your own book isn’t very classy. But in an age where taking a photo of yourself in a bathroom mirror and posting it on your Facebook wall is acceptable, I’m going to give this a shot anyway.

    My first book, Man Made: A Stupid Quest for Masculinity, came out May 15. It’s about how having a son made me panic and feel like I wasn’t manly enough to properly raise him. So I became a boy scout, did three days of boot camp at Fort Knox, learned how to hunt, rented a Lamborghini for three days, and went a round with UFC Champ Randy Couture. I also did a bunch of other stuff.

    The book is also going to be a major motion picture that I’m sure never gets made:
    http://insidemovies.ew.com/2012/04/16/shawn-levy-acquires-man-made-book-for/

    Does any of this sound interesting to you? As part of the book I traveled to more rural parts of the country when I learned how to build a house and hunt, so we could talk about that. I’ve also just done a lot of traveling for reporting, so I’m sure we can find something there, too. Plus I have videos of me doing all this man stuff, if you would want to put that up on your site.

    Thanks for considering it,
    Joel

    1. What a weasel! I can’t stand him in general. Smarmy is the perfect word to describe him. He was fangirling so badly over George Clooney one time and it was embarrassing. He should be ashamed of himself for that Time article. What a jerk!

  2. Some day I hope to have as thick skin as you! You’re amazing! I am sure one of my cousins had this book when I was a kid!! It’s totally cool that you wrote it and fuck anyone who tries to put you down

      1. Well, now that I’ve flailed over that. Man…. you really did show that guy. I can’t believe that attitude though. Ugh.

  3. I know you blogged about all sorts of impt issues here…but omg you wrote a book about NKOTB?!?!? And it’s not in print anymore?!

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