Hey Matt:

I forget who said it and where I heard it, but there is at least one writer who 
says that writers write for an ideal reader. This ideal reader that doesn't 
really exist but writers write for him all the same. This ideal reader is one 
that understands all of your references and sees the point of all your pointed 
jokes. He is able to discern your tone and your connotations as well as the 
explicit meaning of what you say. In short this ideal reader can see what you 
have in mind, but he's not mind reader. He can only understand what you think 
IF you put it on the page, of course.

I think that's a very interesting idea and it probably goes both ways. The idea 
is about the writer imagining his ideal audience but it's also about being a 
really good reader. With some effort, one could almost become an ideal reader 
like this. If you learn as much as you can about the author and his 
interpreters and then read that author's work carefully and repeatedly, you 
could get pretty close to this ideal. You can decide to make yourself worthy. 

I like the idea for the way it flatters the reader too. It says, in effect, 
"you are smart enough to understand everything I say." It says, "I trust you 
and respect your intelligence." It says, "there is no reason to think that i 
have to spoon-feed these ideas to you or otherwise condescend." It says to the 
reader, "I can talk to you because you're well informed and the sky is blue in 
your world too." This ideal reader is neither baffled nor bored by your level 
of discourse. That's who you're writing for. Seems to me that this would apply 
to just about any kind of writer. It works if you're an amateur philosopher, a 
dramatist, or a stand-up comedian. 


Took my wife to see some comedy a few weeks ago. We sat in the center of the 
first row, which means you're likely to become part of the show even if you 
don't want to be. I'm a huge fan but there was a couple sitting right next to 
us that had never even heard of the comedian (Marc Maron). Maron knew this just 
by looking at us and he had great fun showing off his ability to read his 
audience. He says to me, "You know me, right? You get me, right?" "Oh, yea. A 
know you a little too well," I said. Then he said to the guy sitting next to 
me, "But I can tell by your haircut that you and I have absolutely nothing in 
common and you came here tonight having no fucking idea who I am, am I right?" 
The guy nodded yes. Maron then went on to make all kinds of guesses about the 
guy and all his guesses were bull's eyes. 


Writers rarely enjoy this kind of instant feedback and so they can never become 
that skilled at reading their audience, but I think the principle is the same. 
Some people just aren't going to get you no matter how smart they are. There is 
the issue of temperament too, and this has very big consequences in terms of 
whose going to find you appealing, interesting or even entertaining. Maron 
freely admits that his comedy isn't for everyone. In fact, he has very little 
respect for the "broad" comedians who try to appeal to everyone. In fact, he 
hates that kind of mediocre bullshit. He thinks that comedians are in the 
truth-telling business and doing it right means doing it your own way. The 
"truth" has to come out of your own life, your own experience and feelings. In 
other words, nothing excellent can be produced through imitation or by trying 
to fulfill somebody else's idea of what a comedian should be. You're not really 
a comedian, he says, until you find your own voice. If you
  speak with your own voice and your audience still understands all your 
references and all your pointed jokes, you've won. Take a victory lap and call 
your mother. 



                                          
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