Internet entrepreneur. Writer. Editor. Entertainment and technology junkie.

Archive for My Life

Nov
20

The party goes on without me

Posted by: Sarah Warn | Comments (13)

It’s been almost a month now since I left AfterEllen.com, and I’m still getting used to the idea that I don’t have to scour the Hollywood trade sites every night for news, or watch every minor lesbian subplot on TV (although I have to admit, I didn’t mind watching Ella and the model on last week’s Melrose Place).

One of the things that pushed me into leaving was the realization that not only was I burned out, but this was actually hindering the site from being as good as it could be. As most writers will tell you, it takes a certain amount of emotional energy to write analytically, regardless of whether you’re writing a short blog post or a 3-page article (especially if you’re trying to make it entertaining at the same time). Trying to navigate the phalanx of Hollywood publicists, managers, and network executives to get information or an interview takes a toll, too.

Really, the excitement starts to wane after doing almost anything for over 7 years, especially 14 hours a day.

But being burned out meant I was doing less writing and chasing down interviews, which translated to less interesting content on the site — and that wasn’t OK with me.  I wanted the site to succeed, even if that meant I had to leave. (Also, I wanted some sleep, to read books again, and to experience this thing called a weekend that I’ve heard everyone rave about.)

The last month has only affirmed my decision. It’s been great to see all the good things happening on AfterEllen.com since I left — from the interviews Karman and the writers have lined up (many of which haven’t been published yet), to Trish’s Morning Brew column (which I love and wish I’d thought of myself), to the interesting entertainment coverage they have in the works that won’t be published for awhile.

I talk to Karman and Trish a few times a week, but mostly just to answer random technical questions, catch up on the latest lesbian entertainment gossip, or just to say hi.

Turns out, they don’t need me all that much — and I couldn’t be happier (or more well-rested). Now that I get to be a guest at the party, instead of hosting it, it’s fun again! I still tend to automatically scour for typos (a habit that will probably take me years to undue), but now when I read AfterEllen.com’s blog posts and articles, I just get to enjoy them with everyone else.

Not that I have a ton of time to do that, unfortunately — I’m hard at work again, on an entertainment-related site still in development that Lori and I were recruited to run.

Yes, it was a short break. But my new job doesn’t require writing or interviewing anyone.

And for the first time in years, watching bad lesbian movies is entirely optional.

Categories : Business, My Life, My Work
Comments (13)
Nov
05

Playing games with boys

Posted by: Sarah Warn | Comments (7)

When I was a teenager, I spent every spare minute when I wasn’t at school or playing sports reading books, by everyone from M.E. Kerr to Jane Austen to Chaim Potok.

Fast-forward 20 years, and my teenage niece spends all her free time playing video games on her Xbox with her four best friends, who are all boys (she likes having guy friends better because “they’re less judgmental”).

She and her guy friends even ditched their high school’s homecoming dance a few weeks ago in favor of a Halo marathon at her house. And when Halo OTSD was released last month, her aunts bought her a copy after a week of her dropping not-so-subtle hints about how all her friends had the game and she didn’t. (We hate to see her suffer.)

But in other ways, she’s a typical young teenage girl: a straight-A student, a fashion maven who gives me make-up tips, and a huge Twilight fan who has the New Moon countdown app on her iTouch and who thinks Robert Pattinson is the ultimate chocolatey goodness.

All of this has me wondering: how will playing video games shape who she becomes as she grows up?

Will the assertiveness she’s learned and rewarded for in the games carry over into her real life, in any kind of permanent way? Will gaming help her relate better to male classmates and coworkers as an adult? Will she turn out any differently than if she’d spent her free time reading, or playing sports?

Read More→

Categories : Family, Games, My Life
Comments (7)
Oct
29

Alternative Halloween family fun

Posted by: Sarah Warn | Comments (8)

Lori and I have been conscripted by my sister into playing vampires on her Haunted Farm for the next two nights, and I snapped a pic of us at the run-through tonight.

Lori and I are the heads of a vampire family — with our three nieces as our children — and it’s our job to scare kids as they walk by. (So basically, what lesbian moms and their kids do to the Religious Right the rest of the year.)

Spending quality time with the nieces

I offered to frighten the guests by reciting the plots of bad lesbian movies at them as they passed, but was told that would “bore” them, not “scare” them. Clearly my sister’s never seen Bar Girls.

Happy Halloween everyone!

Categories : Family, Just for Fun, My Life
Comments (8)