substitute: (binky)
[personal profile] substitute
I wrote once before about the strange personal ads I saw when I worked at the Los Angeles Reader years ago. One of my duties at first was typing in classifieds, partly because I was junior and partly because the classififed ad system was also used for the entertainment listings and capsule reviews I had charge of.

Reading last week in The Slacktivist about a proto-blog on paper in a college library reminded me of another oddity at the Reader: the free classifieds.

We had the usual personals and ads, but anyone could send in a card with a few sentences on it and it would be put in the free classifieds section. Nothing in the real classifieds categories could go there, and nothing commercial, but it was free and almost totally uncensored.

The result was a tiny, paper-based social network. Anonymous confessions a la Postsecret were common. "Missed connections" as seen in Craigslist also showed up.

And, inevitably, a running cast of characters turned the free classifieds into a forum. They all had nicknames. Some of them disliked each other. There were running gags and pranks. Occasionally someone would depart in a huff and return. Flame wars went on for weeks. And periodically we had to drop one of the ads because of some violation of policy, and the residents of the free zone would call us tyrants and rage for weeks.

Some members of the group met in person sometimes. I don't think it went very well.

Working at the paper added another dimension to the experience. We could see by the postcards which people had multiple characters, for example. The same was true for personals. There was one sixtysomething couple who were regulars (as one person) on the boards, and had two other recurring ads: an appeal for a cute young woman to form a threesome with them, and an ad offering 24-hour prayer and spiritual counseling for free. Only we knew that these were all the same people.

These weirdos prepared me perfectly for my later adventures on BBS's and the Internet. Perceived anonymity, role-playing, multiple false personae, flame wars, socially inept people forming dysfunctional communities, and outsized complaints about censorship? Nothing new! I already knew about the Greater Internet Fuckwad Theory, the perils of sexual encounters in a virtual world, trolls and flamewars, and the dissociative and fraudulent nature of virtual personalities.

As I was writing this I thought: hey! I wonder if our parent the Chicago Reader still has these? Our classifieds were an exact copy of their much more successful section.

It appears that they do. They're called Bulletin Messages there, and there are definitely some similarities, and this one in particular looks very much like one of our old regulars. There are obvious differences, but something of the same character is present.

I miss the original, though. There were only 20 or so characters that recurred, and it was a little porthole into a very weird tank of fish.

(no subject)

Date: 2008-01-11 08:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] vanbeast.livejournal.com
awesome story :)
From: [identity profile] autodidactic.livejournal.com
Damn! Even before BBSes!

Tell me allllll about the old, bad days Unkie Substitute.... :)

This is not a warning.

Date: 2008-01-11 10:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fengi.livejournal.com
I used to have a collection of my favorite bits from the Reader's free message classifieds. I think it was called "Personals" at some point because the Reader called their personal ads "Matches".

The psuedonyms and memes in that column were something I followed in the same manner we trace such things today, except very very slowly.

My favorite were the ones from "Guy Who Loved Too Much" who wrote bitter little sentences of classic Nice Guy resentment at the girl who dumped him for several months before peope started parodying him with "Guy Who Lunched Too Much" and "Guy Who Lurched Too Much". Since the pace was weekly, in print and disposable, I suppose any unintiated reading the section years in would find an utterly arcane world of layered in-jokes, interspersed with prayers and thanks to St. Jude. These days, people would grasp it immediately.

To me the Craigslist Rants and Raves page is essentially that section on crank. If only Craigslist would impose a word limit on RnR you might get the poetic weirdness of the old form.

Given the modern tendency to fetishize such things (see Found magazine) I'm surprised no one has made book out of the old Readers ads. Just page after page of those little exchanges, slowly evolving and collapsing.

(My subject line was the favorite phrase of a personals regular).

(no subject)

Date: 2008-01-12 04:09 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tuliphead.livejournal.com
I used to read the Phoenix New Times when I was in high school; this might've been before they became a giant company that bought out a lot of indie publications in other cities and bent them to their will. Anyway, at that time, the back page of the NT was similar to what you describe: peppered amongst the psychic, sperm donation, and free STD testing ads were cryptic personals that were clearly a message to a specific reader, and other personals that read like porn star resumes and the responses to them. My friends and I always used to get a kick out of reading these out loud to each other in outlandish put-on accents. "vell-hung tarzan zeeks jane to make jungle-qveen dreamz come true! zaw you over zee tomatoes at lucky's on zhurzday, und it vazn't ze firzt time ve locked eyez! take zee chanzzz and call me!"

So true!

Date: 2008-01-12 06:24 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
I worked on classifieds at the Chicago Reader and you are so right -- especially this part:

"These weirdos prepared me perfectly for my later adventures on BBS's and the Internet. Perceived anonymity, role-playing, multiple false personae, flame wars, socially inept people forming dysfunctional communities, and outsized complaints about censorship? Nothing new!"

The personals section was like a moderated forum, because we could just throw out the (rare) incomprehensible or excessively stupid messages. One big difference was that in print we enforced a 30-word limit, which forced the writers into a certain poetic economy that I fear has been lost in the Web age.

If I remember right, the personals crowd in Chicago held a couple of get-togethers that were pretty successful. One of our most productive and best-known contributors -- I'm sure I will remember his pseudonym momentarily -- sold me the Compact Oxford Dictionary that he'd got for free by signing up for the Literary Guild (?) book club. I paid him 30 bucks, I think, When he came to the door I was able to say "You're [Forgotten Pseudonym]!, which I knew because I worked in the office and saw his postcards. I was a little disappointed, he looked relatively normal.

The personals section dwindled down to almost nothing when we (1) started printing "Matches" ads, which siphoned off some of the sexual energy and also probably confused some readers, and (2) started cutting down the space we devoted to personals as paid classified ads crowded out the free. But you're right, it seems to be reincarnated on the "Bulletin Board" section of the Reader's online classifieds. The opportunity to be heard in public without identifying yourself has got to be one of the Basic Human Urges.

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