[LOBO]

See, nowadays new blogs are poppin up everywhere and all the time. I’m willing to bet at this point there are like fifteen or twenty of them -all industriously ripping off my idea to have an online diary, and paying me, um, zero in royalties.
And I'm fine with that really. There is no real need to thank me ... from the very conception of the concept of “blogging,” I knew it was too great a gift not to share with the rest of Humankind.
-But I cannot, in good conscience, let said Humankind forget the history behind it.
As an example, I invite you to take the following quiz:
v


The other will only write about it.


The other is made of Latex and rubber.


The other is in a DVD my kid made me buy.


The other runs a weapons factory for irate golfers.


The other is somehow cashing in despite "Pet Detective", and Lemony Snicket's "A Series of Unfortunate Budget Surpluses."


(In this case, both answers are correct. I can't tell the difference either.)
Now for any of you that took this quiz and didn’t score like four million points, I think you really need to do some homework. You know, like, “study” or something. Don’t write a blog without knowing the cold hard facts surrounding the glorious history of blogging: it would just embarrass us both.
So where was I?
Oh yeah.
Diesel.

“D,” I says. “You have to scale back the awesomeness of this book. If you’re not careful, they’re gonna make you write another one.”
But Diesel can be pretty stubborn when it comes to advice.
“They wouldn’t dare,” he says smugly.
“D, I’m serious,” I insist. “They made this guy Hemingway write like three books.”

“I’m totally serious.”
“Have they made you write any books?”
“Hell no,” I smirk. “I’m on to those pricks.”
“What’s your secret?” he asks.
“Bad punctuation, grammar … the occasional smattering of misspellings. All buried deeply in unreadable pedantic and wordy nonsense."
I pause.
“I think it’s more of a gift, really.”