(Post via: Playing D&D With Porn Stars by Zak Sabbath
I Totally need to find a kid to help me with this. Maybe a High Schooler [and I am constantly made aware that blogger doesn't like me using the word "schooler" in an attempt to get me to learn that I should type "high school student" to which I say "Fuck you blogger! These are my word-letter-slabberings, I will have my way with them as I see fit!"] I know. Seeing as the small children I normally interact with are heathens, but I do have hopes for them as The Firstborn is constantly harassing me during my most intimate of moments [replaying Ocarina of Time on the N64 in my boxers for the nth time] and demanding in her stilted, confidence-lacking stutters that she be able to borrow my copies of "Who Framed Roger Rabbit" and "The Nightmare Before Christmas." Perhaps there is potential there. Though I am dubious of The Clever one's motives in everything she does as she seems to know too much though she be only 4.)
I do indeed: get a job.
Our economy is deficient in many fundamental ways and should current trends continue you will be shipped overseas in a melon box to work for a Chinese person long before you reach college age.
Another thing people often ask me is: Can you draw this for me? To which I generally answer: No.
Now it doesn't take an Ivy degree to see we have a classic chocolate-and-peanut-butter situation here.
To wit: I declare and ordain May 29th as International Anklebiter Illustrator Day throughout RPGlandia.
Here is what you must do:
1. Locate a child.
2. Locate two one-dollar bills or the local equivalent.
3. Explain patiently to the child that you--a dungeon master or otherwise appointed administrator of a substantial swath of fictional space--are desirous of illustrations.
4. Explain to the child that you are contracting him or her to provide such imagery at a page rate of 1 dollar per page. (Which believe you me is a sum infinitely greater than many web and print publications currently offer for such services.)
5.
Explain to the child that the deadline is May 28th, thus allowing you,
the client, at least one day to scan and upload the drawing to the
internet.
Note that this may require you
explaining to the child the definition of the word "deadline" as well
adumbrating the process by which days accumulate into months and that
these accumulated months are then packaged and named for ease of public
consumption. I trust that you are up to the task and that they are
probably too young for any of this information to strike them as being
as traumatic as it actually is.
6. After acquiring their informed consent, give them the specific assignments:
The
first drawing can be anything you, the GM, want--you can take a crappy
town you drew and ask the child to redraw it better, you can describe a
treasure the child needs to create and detail, you can have the child
make a dungeon map of their own design. It is none of my concern so long
as it fulfills a need in your campaign.
The second drawing, however, must be a displacer beast.
This is because I have grown jaded and strange over the long years and
so have you and it will entertain both of us mightily to see children's
interpretations of the catlike and inimitable displacer beast erupt all
over the internet come May 29.
Tell them color
is preferable and may get them an extra 25 cents to spend in any way
they please. Glitter, construction paper, play-doh or digital media are
also acceptable.
7. Now we all know freelancers
are chronic whiners without respect for authority. If the child tries
to pass substandard work off on you, print out the following drawings
and shake them in the child's face menacingly, saying "ONE OF THESE
CHILDREN WAS TEN AND THE OTHER WAS ELEVEN!
...IT
IS IMPORTANT THAT YOU BE MORE LIKE THEY ARE! PICK UP THAT SPARKLETUBE
AND GET CRACKING, TOAD! YOUR DROPPED CHEERIOS ARE OF NO INTEREST TO ME,
WE DO NOT DO EXCUSES HERE!"
8. Upload such work
as is produced onto the internet on May 29th. Inform me of the url by
the usual channels or via rapid Clown-O-Gram. No hobo clowns.
9.
If, in the interim, you have seen fit to employ the child further on
campaign work since the initial work order, please upload any and all
projects fulfilled to date on the 29th.
10.
Older children or those possessed of extraordinary skill may be employed
at a higher rate if you see fit--though not too much higher. You must
not create the hope in their minds that they, as freelance creatives,
can expect to work under any but the most animalistic conditions.
Conversely, if the child is exceptionally poor or uneducated, you may be
able to get them to work for only a nickel.
11.
You have my permission to republish this message on your own blog. In
fact, if you intend to participate or would like others to do so, I
encourage it.
If you're extremely clever, you might be able to get them to draw you a whole planet and then wrap it around a globe digitally like so.
No comments:
Post a Comment