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The Diamond Club—an erotic literary experiment

Justin Young and Brian Bushwood, of the NSFWshow podcast, were intrigued by the success of the erotic novel Fifty Shades of Grey. They were particularly impressed with how many books were selling well for no other reason, apparently, than that they looked Fifty Shades of Grey. So they decided to conduct an experiment — to find out whether an ebook could succeed simply by resembling Fifty Shades of Grey.
They came up with a title for their novel, The Diamond Club. They also sketched out a rough outline of a plot:
When Brianna Young discovers that Roman Dyle, the man she built a relationship and a multi–million dollar company with, has gotten married to another woman behind her back, she embarks on a journey to realize her dreams of professional and sexual revenge for everything she had endured at the hands of Roman.Brianna seeks her romance from The Diamond Club, an exotic gathering of the Bay Area's most attractive and interesting people, from angel investors and airline pilots to world–famous chefs and dubstep artists.
They singled out three qualities their novel would need to succeed:
- a cover that looked like 50 shades of grey
- lots and lots of sex
- characters with trendy jobs.
Finally, and this was a key part of the experiment, they asked all their listeners to buy the book, priced at an affordable 99 cents, in order to push the book into the top 10% at iTunes. Their theory was that once the book broke into the top 10%, momentum would take over, and people (who weren't listeners of their podcast) would buy the book simply because other people were buying it.
It looks like their experiment has succeeded. The book has been hovering around in iTunes Top 10 List. It's also available for the nook and kindle. Reportedly, it's already earned Young and Bushwood close to $20,000.
Similar literary experiments have been conducted before. Back in 1968, Mike McGrady and his friends at Newsday first proved that a crowdsourced book could become a bestseller with their sex-filled novel, Naked Came the Stranger.
And even earlier, in 1956, deejay Jean Shepherd and his listeners proved that publicity alone could create demand for a (non-existent) book — I, Libertine.
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Categories: Literature/Language, Sex/Romance Posted by Alex on Fri Aug 10, 2012 |
Comments (1) |
| More from the Hoax Museum Archives: | |||
Boy oh boy did I predict this or what? The public follows trends in literature just as if it were fashion. Good for these guys for figuring it out and proving how gullible readers are.
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Posted by ms Burton in California on Sat Aug 11, 2012 at 08:47 AM
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Comments: Page 1 of 1 pages



