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	<title>Mission Mission &#187; literary death match</title>
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		<title>This Interview Is Hard: Todd Zuniga on Literary Death Match, SF vs. NY, and World Travel</title>
		<link>http://www.missionmission.org/2008/11/13/this-interview-is-hard-todd-zuniga-on-literary-death-match-sf-vs-ny-and-world-travel/</link>
		<comments>http://www.missionmission.org/2008/11/13/this-interview-is-hard-todd-zuniga-on-literary-death-match-sf-vs-ny-and-world-travel/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 13 Nov 2008 22:30:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Allan Hough</dc:creator>
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		<category><![CDATA[literary death match]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Last month, our friend April Joseph interviewed Opium Magazine founder Todd Zuniga on the occasion of the 2008 edition of Litquake. Tomorrow, Zuniga&#8217;s other creation, Literary Death Match, returns to Amnesia. APRIL (not pictured): Was that rumor about making the Literary Death Match a TV show in fact true? I can&#8217;t wait to attend my [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>Last month, our friend April Joseph interviewed <a href="http://www.opiummagazine.com/">Opium Magazine</a> founder Todd Zuniga on the occasion of the 2008 edition of <a href="http://www.litquake.org/">Litquake</a>. Tomorrow, Zuniga&#8217;s other creation, <a href="http://www.literarydeathmatch.com/">Literary Death Match</a>, returns to <a href="http://www.amnesiathebar.com/">Amnesia</a>.</em></p>
<p><img class="alignnone" src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3241/2954066923_1d2546ce47.jpg" alt="" width="333" height="500" /></p>
<p><strong>APRIL (not pictured): Was that rumor about making the Literary Death Match a TV show in fact true? I can&#8217;t wait to attend my first LDM tonight!</strong></p>
<p>TODD (pictured): Very true, in fact. The thing about <em>Opium </em>and the Literary Death Match and life, really, is trying to do things that surprise and excite.  I love the LDM, in all of its literary oddity, and thought: what&#8217;s next?  The idea of putting together a sizzle video (we&#8217;re taping the 11/11 LDM in NYC, and just taped the <em>Opium7:7</em> launch party at The Kitchen) and pitching it to networks&#8211;here we come HBO!&#8211;seems so insane and impossible, I couldn&#8217;t help but want to try it. I like the idea of: fail? fail better (to slaughter Beckett&#8217;s quote). I just hope some TV exec sees past the obvious &#8220;no one reads anymore&#8221; and sees this as the next Def Poetry Jam, only funnier.</p>
<p><strong>You have been busy, splitting your time between NYC and SF!  And then &#8220;accidentally moving to NY,&#8221; how do you manage?  What keeps <em>Opium </em>running and how have you successfully managed your literary forum during our TV/iPod/instant stimulation generation?</strong></p>
<p>This question has so many tangles, I feel like I&#8217;ll realize by answering it that I haven&#8217;t managed. I&#8217;ve been lucky enough to write about sports video games for 1UP.com and ESPN Video Games, while on a retainer, so that&#8217;s given me the freedom to work wherever, and live in the cheapest possible cities in the world. Though mostly that just means I work 16 hour days with a rare break to watch True Blood and Mad Men. I guess I&#8217;m realizing, trying to answer this, that I&#8217;ll be patting myself on the back, so I&#8217;ll say this: it&#8217;s an incredible privilege to be able to create something like <em>Opium </em>and have people buy it, and to put on the LDM and have so many people show up. We&#8217;re always on the verge of financial collapse, so we&#8217;re going to finally dissolve our LLC and become a non-profit in the coming weeks. So I will hereby invite the entire planet to the fundraiser we&#8217;ll be throwing in SF after the new year.</p>
<p><strong>What was your initial inspiration for <em>Opium </em>and has that changed since you first launched the idea?  How has it evolved?  And your audience: What types of readers does your work usually attract and what do they comment about?</strong></p>
<p>This interview is hard! Maybe it&#8217;s just that I have a sore throat. Such big questions! Anyway, a few factors caused Opium: the death of <em>STORY Magazine</em>, which I loved so dearly, and having a story accepted by <em>McSweeney&#8217;s</em> (online). I was living in Chicago and didn&#8217;t know enough writers, so I started a website because I loved so many writers and wanted to know some of them. I didn&#8217;t know HTML, I didn&#8217;t know what an FTP was, so I just started, an attempt to learn.</p>
<p>My goal was to have it exist for one calendar year, then stop. But it had grown so much, submissions from all over the planet, people putting <em>Opium Magazine</em> in their bios. It was so flattering, such a surprise.  But after that it spun into another cosmos. We had a $99 American Dollar redesign contest, and on and on.</p>
<p>The evolution, though, happened in 2005, when I had more money than I could spend for the first time of my life. So I launched <em>Opium </em>into print (all original stories). Same thing again: planned to do it once, and here I am, brainstorming for issue 8.</p>
<p>As for who we attract: we&#8217;ll publish anything that&#8217;s wonderfully written, surprising, heart-breaking and funny. But it&#8217;s tough to find that all in one story, but what fun when we pluck those out of our overflowing inbox.</p>
<p><strong>What would you say is the tone of this year&#8217;s Litquake and how does it differ from the New York Litquake scene?</strong></p>
<p>Litquake is, hands-down, the most wonderful and vibrant literary event on the planet. It&#8217;s an honor to have <em>Opium</em>&#8216;s Literary Death Match be a part of it, and I love that I&#8217;m slowly moving up the ranks: Year 1 I read at Lit Crawl, Year 2 I was at Barely Published. With this type of progression, it&#8217;s no wonder I&#8217;ve got my eye on being handed the Barbary Coast Award in 2071. But seriously folks!</p>
<p>In terms of NYC v. SF, I&#8217;ve attached one of my cartoons, but SF is insane about books in the best possible way! People pour into readings, they&#8217;re enthusiastic and unselfconscious. In NYC, they&#8217;re nuts about books, too, but they&#8217;re a little bit cooler about it.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.missionmission.org/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/rivalry.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-1776" title="rivalry" src="http://www.missionmission.org/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/rivalry.jpg" alt="rivalry" width="100%" height="auto" /></a></p>
<p>One cool thing: this year we did the first-ever <a href="http://litcrawlnyc.wordpress.com/">Lit Crawl in NYC</a>, a monster undertaking that went off with only a tiny assortment of hitches. I&#8217;ll do whatever it takes to make sure Litquake takes over the world.</p>
<p><strong>I&#8217;ve looked for info about your upcoming book- <em>Passport</em>, and have not come up with much… care to plug it, I mean, discuss any major points, or what that makes it stand apart from other travel stories? From what I gathered last night at the Make-Out Room [during Litquake's "Barely Published Authors" event], your experiences in Latvia and Estonia stuck out the most for you? (I loved the line that I believe goes &#8220;alien beautiful somewhere&#8230;&#8221;) 18 countries right?  How long did you travel around for and are all of the stories from 2004?</strong></p>
<p>I just turned in the first 25 pages of PASSPORT to my agent last night.  It&#8217;s subtitled &#8221; A COLLECTION OF REMEMBERED TRAVEL.&#8221; When I was in SF, right after the <em>Opium6: Go Green (But Save Me First)</em> launch party, I went out, and somehow my passport flopped out of my pocket and I lost it (along with $500 from the party, a cruel blow to <em>Opium</em>&#8216;s meager finances). Losing my passport really hit me harder, though.  I love that thing, and it held 20 countries worth of stamps in it. From trips to Tokyo to Sarajevo to Rio to Stockholm. I&#8217;m writing an essay (well, I&#8217;ve written, and am now fiercely editing) for each city, representing each stamp, trying to remember. It&#8217;s shocking me how much I&#8217;ve learned, how dumb I still am, how the book has evolved. Each essay is under 1,000 words, so its sparse and to the point. How it&#8217;s different is that its effectively a memoir, but with significant gaps in narrative. I only write essays about the city, and my life during my days or weeks in each city. There&#8217;s nothing that happens while in America, where I live 97% of the time. How it&#8217;s not different&#8211;or maybe different?&#8211;is that it&#8217;s ultimate a search for home, the idea of what home is, and in some ways it&#8217;s a love story, about how I&#8217;m trying to figure it out, and can&#8217;t quite.</p>
<p>Here&#8217;s the Tallinn excerpt if you want to use it:</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">I start to pretend a life here, in this alien-beauty-filled somewhere, where my inability to speak the language would serve as short-term protection against the weakest points of whoever it is I might be, my foreignness a freedom from feeling known, from having hurt anyone, ever.  I think that&#8211;which is when Ben hits me across the back with a parking cone. I counter by throwing a discarded bag of McDonald&#8217;s in his face. He shoves me into the side of a car; I shove him into a trash can. This action sends me into the clouds, above the noise of my life&#8211;the collected mental junk, the minor successes, mistimed affection.  My head empties of Sandra, of everyone.  Ben and I, best friends, tackle one another to concrete.  We laugh like we&#8217;re free of it all.  Like there is only joy, like there is only love.</p>
<p>The collection starts with Paris, 2001, and ends with a trip I took in 2008 (though I&#8217;ll wait to say where).</p>
<p><em>Thanks, Todd! Thanks, April!</em></p>
<p><em><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/cynner/2954066923">Photo of Gravity Goldberg and Todd at Litquake 2008</a> by <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/cynner/">*cynner*</a>.</em></p>
<p><strong>Further reading:</strong></p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;"><a href="/2008/09/13/literary-death-match-at-amnesia/">Lael Goes to Literary Death Match</a> on Mission Mission.</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;"><a href="http://www.1up.com/do/my1Up?publicUserId=5379953">Todd Zuniga, The Sports Game Guy</a> on 1up.com.</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;"><a href="http://gothamist.com/2006/02/21/todd_zuniga_opi_1.php">2006 Todd Zuniga Interview</a> on Gothamist.</p>
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