The Extra Cool Group! (of people Michael is experimenting on) discussion

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Pertaining to the project > The Top Reviewers List: Are you a pandering vote whore?

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message 51: by Joel (last edited Nov 23, 2010 08:10AM) (new)

Joel (joelevard) getting votes is a nice affirmation, even when it's suspect. like i wrote a good review for this book called kraken and got no votes on it for a day or two. then i went back and added in a cat picture i found that suited the review. this was not an attempt to generate votes but it did, and now that review has 30 votes and is the top review for that book. since then i am tempted to start every review with a large image of a cat to distract readers into voting for me.

(i tried this recently with We3, which really lends itself to cat pictures, after i got one vote (as always, thanks jasmine!) for what i thought was a pretty funny review. it didn't work.)

but no, i have been known to bump reviews i think are funny to encourage votes. sometimes this works but usually it doesn't and it's probably kind of annoying. it certainly makes me feel cheap. more fun when someone finds a random older review and votes for it, or a new review gathers steam far beyond my friends list (The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest is my best one with more than 60 votes). (which karen gets daily, that b.) i'm far from a top reviewer overall, though i am consistently on the weekly leader board lately (once i was #19 and i am #30 for the month i guess?)

in conclusion i am a whore but i don't like to make it obvious.


message 52: by karen (new)

karen (karenbrissette) | 33 comments I AM NOT A B!!!
not for this anyway.

and very few of my reviews are over 60; i just have a lot of reviews. i think i have maybe three over 60.

i mostly stopped floating reviews... mostly. if you want me, come and find me....


message 53: by Mariel (new)

Mariel (fuchsiagroan) I vote if I liked the review. Whoring doesn't bother me. It's not like I'm a horny priest in denial. I vote if I wanna. Um somtimes I'm yay we both like ice cream high five voter.

How do I get more trolls?


message 54: by karen (new)

karen (karenbrissette) | 33 comments have opinions. wait.

they will come.


message 55: by Joel (last edited Nov 23, 2010 08:20AM) (new)

Joel (joelevard) i'm sorry karen, i meant "that bee."

just kidding, that's mean. but i just meant you get like 60 votes a day.


message 56: by karen (new)

karen (karenbrissette) | 33 comments that is because i am awesome.


message 57: by karen (new)

karen (karenbrissette) | 33 comments did you see what i just did that was awesome?? you sorrow, i respond!


message 58: by Joel (new)

Joel (joelevard) yes, but now i just feel cheap. i really am a whore.


message 59: by karen (new)

karen (karenbrissette) | 33 comments this is what happens when you call me a "b'.


message 60: by Joel (new)

Joel (joelevard) so many different words start with B.


message 61: by karen (new)

karen (karenbrissette) | 33 comments Joel wrote: "so many different words start with B."

hmmmmm.....


message 62: by Joel (new)

Joel (joelevard) brain!
beauty!
broad-ranging reader!
brangelina!


message 63: by Joel (new)

Joel (joelevard) hey i apologized for that. no one deserves to be called a Bee.


message 64: by [deleted user] (last edited Nov 23, 2010 12:12PM) (new)

Ways to get trolls:

1. Abandon the book midway in disgust or boredom, write a review about how you abandoned it, citing the fact that it is boring, or disgusting. Apparently, you can't have an opinion about something you "didn't like" - which is what a one-star means - if you didn't experience every awful minute of it.

2. Write a negative review of middlebrow popular fiction about hot button issues, like La Petite's review of The Kite Runner, Meredith's of The Help, or Daniel's of Three Cups of Tea. (I might come back with links, but I'm too lazy right now.) Trolls will call you an elitist, and accuse you of being a stick-in the mud.

3. Write a negative review of books by polarizing and/or canonical writers. Bonus trolls if the primary readers of these authors tend to be more one gender than the other: Joyce, McCarthy, Austen, Roth, etc. Trolls will call you a uneducated plebe, and accuse you of not getting it. Bonus trolls will tell you are a sexist, or a chauvinist. Because you are.

There's other good ways to get trolls, I just can't think of them. Oh! This one is hard to predict: give something that you liked just fine three stars - which means, ahem, I liked it - but have someone freak out that you gave their most favorite book ever only three stars. How could you hurt them like that?

Edit: more bonus points if you can do all of these things at once. Maybe hard though. Some of these books are mutually exclusive.


message 65: by Joel (new)

Joel (joelevard) i did the last one but in this case got yelled at for giving the book only 4 stars.


message 66: by Michael, Sonic the Hegemon (new)

Michael | 183 comments Mod
If I write a review that nobody votes for, I assume there was a technical glitch and nobody at all read it. That might make me arrogant.

It's nice to get votes just because it's a sign that my reviews have entertained people, but I'd much rather generate conversation than get votes. And, when I first made it onto the review board, I paid a lot of attention to which reviews were getting votes, who was voting, etc. Recently, I haven't paid that much attention, just because I don't have enough time on goodreads, and I'd rather be conversating, writing reviews or reading them. There's not enough time to think about votes.


message 67: by David (new)

David (nullnvoid) Bonus trolls if the primary readers of these authors tend to be more one gender than the other: Joyce, McCarthy, Austen, Roth, etc.

Been there, done that with Jane Austen. People got PISSED when I gave her one star. I mean, they were personally offended -- insinuating that I was insulting them for liking Austen.


message 68: by Joel (new)

Joel (joelevard) that's big of you, michael.

please, if you are considering voting for a review of michael's, toss it my way. he won't mind!

(in all seriousness i do agree that a lot of comments is more fun than a lot of votes.)


message 69: by [deleted user] (new)

Only misogynists hate Austen!!!!!!

I can't believe you hate women and, therefore, me.


message 70: by Jimmy (new)

Jimmy (jimmylorunning) | 133 comments I had no idea people did this. I just try to write good reviews because it helps me think about the book I just read and put it into words. If people like my reviews and vote for it then great. If they don't, that's fine too.

Sometimes I see that one of my friends have put a book I just reviewed on their to-read list. This gives me more satisfaction than a vote.


message 71: by Esteban (new)

Esteban del Mal (kidsisyphus) Too late!


message 72: by David (new)

David (nullnvoid) Tell you what: please don't vote for the review now.

The reverse psychology worked on me. +1 vote from me.


message 73: by Mykle (new)

Mykle | 20 comments Brian wrote: "I hate to link to a review of mine in the middle of a discussion about "Are you a vote whore" (especially when I already said "no"!) but the discussion thread on my Twilight review seems relevant t..."

WINNER!


message 74: by Esteban (new)

Esteban del Mal (kidsisyphus) What?

You people must like the passive-aggressive approach; I TOLD you to vote for my reviews waaaay back in comment 31.

Pimpin' ain't easy.


message 75: by MJ (new)

MJ Nicholls (mjnicholls) Love her or loathe her, Austen is responsible for some of the finest free indirect writing in existence. Take any passage from her novels, you'll see prose contoured to every nuance and cadence of her characters. It's really remarkable.


message 76: by Mir (new)

Mir | 51 comments Hmm... is a retart better or worse than a plain tart?


message 77: by Mariel (new)

Mariel (fuchsiagroan) Oooh thanks! I'm going to incorporate all of those in one review. Too bad I've already done all the Austens. Dickens? I'm gonna be a troll whore! Watch out, Chris de burgh.


message 78: by David (last edited Nov 23, 2010 11:51AM) (new)

David (nullnvoid) Oh, and I also vote for any review that mentions me by name in a positive, seemingly sincere light.


message 79: by Kat Kennedy (new)

Kat Kennedy (katkennedy) | 45 comments But I definitely agree that the best way to get a ton of votes is to write a critically strong but funny review of some really popular, usually YA book

Wait, wait, wait!

You mean the 80 votes I got for Fallen

Or the 68 I got for Clockwork Angel

Or the 63 I got for Shiver-

AREN'T because I'm the most amazing reviewer, like, EVER! But because I'm pandering to the masses by writing funny yet critical reviews for books in the YA genre?

No! No! Nooooooo!

Yeah, I actually have to agree with that. I don't even like my Fallen review and the Clockwork Angel one is just a 10 page rant/wank. Usually, the reviews I'm most proud of go almost completely unnoticed.

Though, in my defence, I have NEVER written a review for Twilight.

I think the YA and PNR is the last bastion for snobbery left on GoodReads. As long as people keep pandering to my votewhorish nature, I don't really mind.

By the way, David: You know I've like mentioned you in a positive, seemingly sincere light in ALL of my reviews. You just have to look REALLY hard to find it - but it's totally there.


message 80: by [deleted user] (new)

Mariel wrote: "Oooh thanks! I'm going to incorporate all of those in one review. Too bad I've already done all the Austens. Dickens? I'm gonna be a troll whore! Watch out, Chris de burgh."

I love the idea of a troll whore. That's brilliant.


message 81: by Scribble (new)

Scribble Orca (scribbleorca) | 123 comments I think we should also be considering the pimps. To keep all these various whores in line.


message 82: by Mariel (new)

Mariel (fuchsiagroan) The pimp is the bee!


message 83: by Scribble (new)

Scribble Orca (scribbleorca) | 123 comments Making a bee-line for the trolls and other detritus?


message 84: by Mariel (new)

Mariel (fuchsiagroan) He pollinates all the showiest blooms.


message 85: by Scribble (new)

Scribble Orca (scribbleorca) | 123 comments You're not thinking what I'm thinking, are you? Nah....:D


message 86: by Kat Kennedy (new)

Kat Kennedy (katkennedy) | 45 comments Bee serious you guys!


message 87: by Scribble (new)

Scribble Orca (scribbleorca) | 123 comments 2YZ u R
2YZ 4 Me
ICUR 2YZ 4 Za Bee


message 88: by [deleted user] (last edited Nov 23, 2010 01:42PM) (new)

I prefer vote sex worker. "Sex worker" gestures to the implicit transaction that occurs between reviewer and voter, a transaction that is both calculated and embodied. There is a capitalist sensibly inherent in the Western concept of the "marketplace of ideas"; the term "whore" implies something given away for intangible benefits. A sex worker works, and sex sells.


message 89: by Scribble (new)

Scribble Orca (scribbleorca) | 123 comments Vote gigolo.


message 90: by Kat Kennedy (new)

Kat Kennedy (katkennedy) | 45 comments Or more appropriately, Voteworker for the sake of being both concise and literal in our accuracy.


message 91: by Mariel (new)

Mariel (fuchsiagroan) Manny must be the old whore that has to give it away 'cause his statistics showed that his sex didn't sell.

Me? I've got a heart of gold.


message 92: by Mir (new)

Mir | 51 comments Wait... other people are getting actual sex for their votes? I feel cheated!


message 93: by Mariel (new)

Mariel (fuchsiagroan) I live in Florida so I forget how to vote correctly. If I did, then they went in and had sex with the reviewer I didn't wanna have sex with.


message 94: by C. (new)

C. (placematsgalore) Someone said earlier that the best thing is when someone adds a book to their to-read list because of your review. I'd take that further and say that it's best when someone actually reads a book because of your review. Like when Ceridwen read JS&MN because of my review! And Bram started reading Virginia Woolf because of (I can't call it a review) the quotes I posted from To The Lighthouse! And once, Paul said he would consider trying some fantasy book (can't remember what exactly) because of my review. That's a real compliment, and is worth far more than any number of votes.

I'm a hopeless voter. Sometimes I don't vote because I just forget when I finish the review, even if I liked it, and sometimes I'm just not in the mood to add to anyone's sense of validation. I often stop voting for people because I get sick of how they write, even if their reviews are as good as ever, or because I think they get more votes than they deserve. These days I basically just don't vote - it saves time and effort on soul-searching.


message 95: by Scribble (last edited Nov 23, 2010 01:58PM) (new)

Scribble Orca (scribbleorca) | 123 comments Miriam wrote: "Wait... other people are getting actual sex for their votes? I feel cheated!"

On the votes? Or the sex? Or both? Or the bee?


message 96: by JSou (new)

JSou Miriam wrote: "Wait... other people are getting actual sex for their votes? I feel cheated!"

I need to start writing reviews again.


message 97: by MJ (new)

MJ Nicholls (mjnicholls) I want a brief summary, an unbiased look at how each component of the book fits together, and what it achieves or fails to achieve. Then a personal reaction. (I don't do this myself, but I'll take the sex please anyway).


message 98: by Kat Kennedy (new)

Kat Kennedy (katkennedy) | 45 comments Is there really such thing as an unbiased, objective review though.

Discuss.


message 99: by Kat Kennedy (new)

Kat Kennedy (katkennedy) | 45 comments Is there really such thing as an unbiased, objective review though.

Discuss.


message 100: by MJ (new)

MJ Nicholls (mjnicholls) I'd say so, if you analyse the book on a mechanical level, as a prose doctor.

Still. There's no point rating a book that is technically brilliant on every level five stars if you hated it for whatever subconscious reason.


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