Lulu

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Revision as of 23:24, 29 December 2016 by Hurtful Truth Level (talk | contribs)
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The Lulu listing for Sonichu 1, as seen in November 2015

Lulu is a website which offers self-publishing for authors. Customers can also order books directly from the site.

In September 2015, Chris began selling printed copies of the Sonichu comic on Lulu.com[1], as well as offering autographed versions through Etsy (by ordering the comics from Lulu, signing them, then shipping to the buyers).

Business strategy

A few weeks later, he changed the Lulu listings to private. He then edited the book listings on Etsy with the following:

**Please note: This is the ONLY way to order the book; I have the books printed through Lulu.com. And each copy sent from me will be shipped in a plastic Comic Book Sleeve with cardboard lining, inside a large envelope. My price here covers shipping from there to me, and then to you. Thank you.

When asked, Chris stated that he had to do it that way because of the haters[2].

This shady business arrangement likely left Chris with less profit. When it was publicly visible, the Lulu listing for Sonichu 0 had a price of $9.99. On Etsy, he charged $10, with a $5 shipping cost. If he paid a $3.99 cost (the same shipping price for a similarly-sized comic to a U.S. address) for Lulu to ship to him, that left a $1.02 difference between the shops, and he would have used more than that to cover shipping from him to his customer[3]. Chris may have realized that the arrangement was impractical, since he lowered the Lulu price for Book 1 to $4.11, shortly before making it private.

Ban and assault threats

In December 2015, Chris was banned from Lulu for selling fan fiction[4]. In true Chris fashion, he responded by threatening Lulu’s executives with physical violence[5], despite the fact that he was on probation for an act of violence against a GameStop employee.

Chris's anger against Lulu is reminiscent of his grudge against Mary Lee Walsh. Both were figures of authority who told Chris the cold truth about him being wrong on some of his most beloved notions and refused to budge. More than a decade separates the two, yet Chris has learned nothing on conflict resolution since then.

I feel like asking if someone would go to Lulu.com's building and punching the executives there for causing all of this distress and upset upon me.

Merp slurp me wop filkin gee duop he cho.

He elaborated further on his threat, saying to a Kiwi Farms user[6]:

Well, find their building and punch an executive into caring.

I don't necessarily mean that literally, but I feel so off that it's hard to think clearly. But I feel like I would want to do that if I could.

Post-ban

Chris was able to continue selling comics, supposedly through Ka-blam, according to a post he made in January 2016[7]. However, no copies of books ordered through Ka-blam have turned up, and books ordered after his banning still had the Lulu logo, according to a customer who ordered books in February[8], even though Chris had claimed to be out of stock in December.

The fact that Chris was able to continue supplying comics from Lulu implies that he simply rejoined the site under an alternate account.

Creativity killed

Throughout 2016, Chris continually used Lulu as a scapegoat, casting blame on the ban to explain why he was unwilling to work on the comic that he had been paid over $1,000 to do.

In February, he said the following in response to a troll who contrasted his desire for a fan to send him a PS4 with his failure to work on the comic[9]:

I have to be in the right mind set in order to draw and create. Between my ADD, from the bleeding autism, and the stresses of life, including finances and keeping the household above water with the sales and keeping up with the orders, plus the publisher problem last December having weighed me down not helping either, not to mention my Fickle Internal Clock changing my sleep schedule from being a Day Person into a Night Person, and back and forth over and again... It gets frustrating to me. And that is why I needed the time to recover.

In December, after a full year had passed since the ban, Chris was still holding his grudge[10]:

HERE'S the bugger that bit my ass bad and killed my creative groove a year ago. Thanks a Lump, tattle-telling Internet Trolls/Haters. You lot are Not helping anyone.

It is illogical for Chris to place the blame for his loss of creativity squarely on an event which happened in December 2015.

Chris actually stopped work on the comic on October 25th, long before Lulu banned him in early December.

As stated above, he had solved the publisher problem by 7 January 2016, when he posted, "I am capable again of selling and printing my books." He also had motivation enough to release Books 3 and 4, in January and February.

In addition, Chris mentioned to Arthur Spatchcock in February 2016 that he had some ideas for new Sonichu pages.

Chris might simply have a case of writer's block. In November 2016, he said, "And since last December with that mess with Lulu, I feel the feeling has to be fresh and staying hot. I have been unable to find that feeling again."[11]

See also

References

External links

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