Showing posts with label Roomthinker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Roomthinker. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Plagiarist Beginnings: In League with Clay's Court, and Other Extraordinary Gentlemen


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These are the Confessions of a literary 'one hit' wonder man.

Originally uploaded at Memorial Univerity 

On July 7, 2007, I was fortunate enough to be bored with proceedings at the Carnivore Grounds, sometime between 1 and 2 am. Come to think of it, it was actually 8th July. I have a thing for dates, and the general correlation of numbers to situations.

Why I remember the date, perhaps? Because it was Saba Saba (7-7), a date immortalized by the number of times it inspired dread in my childhood owing to the magnanimous fimbo ya nyayo that clamped down on dissent annually on the date due to its significance in Multi-party politics? I can recall the many times I scaled walls as a kid to escape the onslaught of General Service Unit (GSU) policemen unleashed by Moi's hounds. Ok, that one's a lie. I wasn't scaling walls to escape them, but rather to watch them manhandle women and children - and a few potato sacks - from within the confines of my gated community, aka the ¼ acre plot we shared with 15 other tenants under Lord Landlady's eagle eyes.

But that ain't it. That's not why I recall 7th July 2007 so vividly. It's a less nationalistic reason, that being that my birthday falls on 8th August, aka Nane Nane (8-8) – not really – and the chicita I was wooing then was celebrating her birthday on that day. 7th July. It made for a quite interesting – in my mind – opener to the said woo conversation.

“Your birthday's 7th July? Mine's 8th August! We're meant to be together! [sick]”

Anyway, as I said earlier, I was fortunately – in retrospect – sufficiently bored sometime between 1 and 2am at Carni. Which is how I found myself gravitating away from the chicita, who'd been filling my eardrums to percussive inefficiency with the drole humdrum drones of how her soon-to-be ex was such a pig. Somewhat fortuitously, I escaped to the Dormans stall for a mug of coffee, and happened to end up engaging with one of the few chaps I found grabbing a caffeine fix himself. While the details of how or why this conversation began escape me - despite my being a teetotaler then - it would end up serving as quite the encounter.

We got a-talking about the legal profession with my new-found curious amigo amicus curiae, given he was venturing towards legal study, as was I at the time. After quite the exchange of ideas, banter and whatnots, he would then go on to ask me if I read blogs, and suggest a particular one. Being as I was the archetypal young man then, prone never to ask for directions, I omitted the fact that I had no clue what a blog was, content in the knowledge that my amicus omniscientae Google knew what it was. [Ok, that's the end of the terrible amicus inventions.]

The blog he recommended that I read, was thinkersroom, when he was still on Blogger.com. The blogger whose literary fodder was so good (still is, only less frequent) for so long that he was cited severally by International News outlets long before blogging became every [wo]man's accessory. And ignominiously, the same man whose works were subjected to a poor 'publicity stunt' by none other than Clay Muganda, who reprinted his work on his column in the Daily Nation's pages, citing it merely as 'available on the Internet.'

I was reminded of plagiary, and my own not-so-humble beginnings as I read Nyanchwani's blogpost last week, about how men should never be the good guy to women; one MMK (Media Madness Kenya, perchance?) chided and derided him publicly in the comments section about using two pieces of writing without citing themI stopped myself in my own tracks before I could even consider rising up to judge him. I think it's only fair that I not be so quick to cast stones, given my own glass house being built on its own small foundation of plagiarism.

I. Plagiarised. @Roomthinker. No point justifying it. An explanation, nay – an elaboration of how it happened – I will, however allow myself.

It began when I started, in the second week of July 2007, reading Roomthinker's posts. Boy were they good. I enjoyed them a whole lot. So much so that I started pulling down some of his posts and saving them on my laptop, just in case, for some reason, his blog were to ever go down. As a purveyor of all things literal, that possibility could not be allowed to ever mutate to reality. I was soon in my first year of campus. 2007-2008's PEV happened,and  as I proceeded to my second semester in Varsity, I had a brace of pals – making up the trio of witty, literary musketeers we were – with whom I discoursed everything, from what women know or do not know they want, to what the implications of religion and God's existence – and the lack thereof 'Him' I proposed – meant to life. It was only logical, then, that we would discuss the posts I had saved as copy-pasted word documents on me trusty lappy as well.

A rather unexpected development, however, followed said logic. The posts I had saved on my machine were the only resource I had to share with them of Thinker's work (the Internet, in Moi University Main Campus Eldoret, was a major luxury then, compared to a need for sustenance in the way of supper.) They read the pieces in silence, then congratulated ME for such an affluent degree of sense, reason and wit in equal measure.

I had an option right there. Fess up – technically I hadn't lied yet – to the fact that it was Thinker's work.  Or take the credit for Roomthinker's writings and musings.

Copied from Class Guides

Since we're here discussing plagiary, we can all guess how that option went down.

It doesn't end there though; oh, how I wish.

In 2008, my old lady went to 'rest with the angels' (ironic, that, coming from a professed atheist, no? I tend towards the view that because she believed that's where she'd go, that's where – to her – she is.) My first ever Facebook note was my own lamentation of her passing, and soon I was publishing regularly on Facebook.

I proceeded to post this article lifted off Thinker's blog to my notes, without expressly stipulating that it was 'written by Roomthinker,' or, since I wouldn't actually have known to call him that then, 'initially posted on roomthinker.com by owner.' Immediately, I get a host of comments, especially from womenfolk who liked my writing, telling me how “THIS IS AWESOME!” and I was the “Greatest writer I know!”

Sema conundrum! Especially since the chap who 'introduced me to Thinker,' so to speak, was perhaps the second Facebook friend I added back in 07. Meaning he could read my notes. Cue the cover-up. Edit note settings; exclude @Archermishale from viewing this note!

It was all downhill from there. I did not once say that I wrote the piece, but I did not once correct those who very eloquently thought I had either. At the time, I was writing a lot of Facebook notes, and soon we had moved on to the next good (not “Greatest that ever lived!”) post I actually wrote.

I was also one of a clique of writers, one that has so far produced such success stories as @wagaodongo, @midegaodero and @yenyewe, that was known as Plus254. We had (and still have, somewhat) Facebook groups and pages, campus magazines and at one point even a website, that worked towards building our literary skills collectively. The same piece would go on to be published on our website under one of my past aliases; again, not one word. Having come this far, I figured I might as well be outed by anyone else. I certainly wasn't ready to do it myself.

But unlike Nyanchwani's blogpost, my indiscretions went unnoticed, or at the very least those who noticed weren't as savvy or brazen as the guy who blasted Nyanchwani. Or maybe it was too early in Blogger's days for there to have been an audience big enough to notice, a luxury Clay Muganda's post was not afforded. Neither was Barrack Obama, nor his Deputy Joe Biden, 20 years before him. I like to think that having battled such bigwigs (detest, absolutely, this word and how it's used on Twitter) Thinker had no time to slug it out with juvies.

Today I do not copy anyone's work, and when I base mine extensively on any piece, I am quick to link back to their original work. Thinker included :)

By the time I started out blogging, I'd done academic writing, learnt how to cite works read in writing my journal articles, and basically, matured. I did, however, put up @itsnowrc's post about Nairobi's ChipsFungaz on my blog, a popular post – judging from the close to 7000 hits it's had since. It was well credited, linking back to his site, and I made a point of contacting him randomly on Facebook, informing him that I'd used his piece on my blog. Had he had any reservations, it woulda been pulled down instantly, but as it turns out, he was easy, and I made a new friend to boot.

Why the big effort at elaborating my plagiarism? Well, for a moment as I was writing the piece I did on Mutula's life and death recently, I paralleled the if-by-Mutula fallacy to my own fault start as a writer. Questioned the questionable beginnings based on plagiarism, linking them to Mutula's dark ages, and the rather self-styled writer I now am to his proposed post-Moi renaissance

That thought disappeared as fast as it had shown up; after all, my plagiarist foundations did not defend a despot and legally jargonize the rigging of an election, making billions while at it. It only made me seem better than I was at the time; and I got not one cent out of it! At least Clay Muganda got a couple geez outta Thinker's work, though he did go on to lose his column for a while. The Daily Nation's management, including Charles Onyango-Obbo, handled the matter rather diligently, I might add.

So, to the beginners out there. It's easy to fall into the trap of using other people's ideas and claiming them to be your own. In fact, many creatives out there are afraid to let their work be seen, on the off chance that someone will like and copy it. To the first, I say do the easier and ethical thing, and simply credit your sources. Ignoring the misplaced energies spent trying to cover up your theft, it could save you a cereal bowl full of blushes at best; at worst, you could find yourself in a legal conundrum, what with copyright, trademark and patent laws slowly strengthening in Kenya thanks to institutions such as KECOBO, the Kenya Copyright Board, and KIPI, the Kenya Industrial Property Institute.

To the second, I say learn to put yourself out there as an artist. Sure your work may get copied, stolen, reprinted and whatnots. But you know what I do? I take copycats as a compliment. Copycat killers often are big fans of the original killers' work. It's the same here, only that amidst all the copying, stealing and reprinting, someone out there takes notice of what you're doing. 

And you get the call. 

Meanwhile, the copycat has no idea worth selling, and gets tangled up in his own web of lies eventually. 

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

POWOJune 2012: Lessons in Kenyan Timing

For a long time, any time keepers in Kenya will find themselves having to waste the very time they keep in an attempt to help others keep theirs. It's a sacrifice many an agent of change finds themselves having to make. Greater good and all.

Having had enough of keeping time, especially with morning events in Kenya, I try to be logically late. If it says 9 am, then any time before noon 9:10 to 9:20 am is usually a safe bet. When you have no idea how to get to Pawa254, however, and your only connection of State House and anything YMCA is the men's hostels next to the University of Nairobi hostels, things obviously begin to get a little interesting.

Add to that mix a free-spirited pal of the femininely wily kind - whose idea of 'am awake and ready' is 'give me 90 more minutes to act out the entire season of America's Next Top Model.' Just like that, 9:20 becomes 10:45.

Google maps, anecdotes and lack thereof them later, we check into Pawa254...

The Pawa254 Ubuntu space where the #POWOJune2012 was held, Saturday 16th
The colourful warmth of the space hits you first, then you turn left and accost a life-size Obama staring you down. The draperies let in ample light onto the bright polished linoleum, as an undergrowth of graffiti and fancy hair about yay high begins to materialize. Creatives, Simon says...


On stage sits a gathering of bravado and brainpower so intense it could stoke up an atomic bomb. For the sake of clarity, NSIS, that was a joke. An explosive one, I might add.

Panelists (L to R): Room Thinker, Okoiti Omtata, Maddo and Muki Garang.
Seeing as Inspector Bauer is now possibly on his way from the NSIS HQ, I'll try avoid the tickling time bombs and get down to the lessons POWOJune delivered...and, I might add, leave the cyber before they track me down.

Kenyan Timing Lesson 1:

Thinker would probably reiterate the above comment, and add that if you're going to blog anonymously, you might as well forget about telling your friend that 'I am Yule Mbois...na usishow msee...!'

So if you're gonna use art to protest, remember that there are certain risks that come with it, risks that you must be prepared to deal with. Online, it's easier to protect your trail, but as Boni put it, offline you need to be street savvy and realize that while 'we need more offline protests than online protests', ukishikwa, 'co-operate. The police can beat you to a pulp when there are  no cameras'.

Cartoonist Maddo, had his own taste of the safety stick, or lack thereof it, with an email from one ataq'kenya430@gmail.com (AK43), stating, among other things, that 'your termination is imminent.' The contract AK43 was referring to here being life. Notice the lack of insurance after life.

Kenyan Timing Lesson 2:
Okoiti Omtata is one wise and passionately driven patriot. You could sense the conviction he had in a better Kenya, endlessly oozing the sort of ideology that justifies the phrase 'Science is organized knowledge, wisdom is organized life.' Just off the top of my head, here's a couple:
  • The right to choose [leadership] implies the right to reject it.
  • They [Kenyan leaders] have the cake and the knife. It's about time we took back one.
  • We do not fight [for a better Kenya] so that we can become the oppressors. Emancipation, and not liberation, is what
  • You can become Kenyan by losing direction...
  • We are spectators in our own tragedy. They say that it will take a certain degree of madness to change the world.
  • Only a hungry Kikuyu will fight a hungry Luo.
  • When spider webs unite they can tie a lion
  • Carpet bomb every heart in every hut [until change 'devastates' us all]
  • Why take the people of Bondo to Nyeri for cultural weeks and vice versa? Who will get on a bus [in a state of election violence] from Bondo to take the war to Nyeri?
The list, clearly, is endless. Omtata also spoke of a newly formed party, the Justice and Development Party. There's a more exhaustive piece on POWO's site.

Kenyan Timing Lesson 3:
Let me, in the interest of your time, now explain why these are Kenyan Timing lessons. Because this was a FREE forum. State of the art facilities. FREE food...ok one of the three is a lie, but the point is, I thought the event was to start at 9am...and got there at 10:50. I was lucky, judging by this piece, to realize that the event had only just started when I got in, what with Muki Garang's Maisha Yetu being on screen when I got there.

Moral of this lesson? I got there, in my mind, one and a half hours late for the event. The last time I attended POWO, in May of last year, it was at the iHub, and started at 9 am, hence my confusion. Notice 3 things, though.
  • Kenyan timing is all about a lack of initiative. To be on time. To do more than simplistic slacktivism from the safety of our keyboards/ pads. To quote Muhammad Ali (or the right-side wall of the Pawa254 conference hall, not sure which) 'he who is not courageous enough to take risks will accomplish nothing in life...'
  • I still showed. Why? Because I simply could not afford not to.
  • You could have shown. Question is, why did you not? Next POWO's on August 18th. 
Clear that space. The amount of insight that simultaneously pours into you at POWO is worth the 2 or so hours. It's exactly the sorta environ creativity demands...and so does change.

Above and below: Powerful shots from Pichamtaani

















Raya Wambui captures the audience with her affective poetry...
Boniface Mwangi and Ndanu