Justin Myers is a journalist who for a long time wrote under his pseudonym The Guyliner. I first started reading his hilarious writing back in 2012 when his blog posts started getting published on the Huffington Post. He has written for Gay Times, GQ and the Guardian. His first novel, The Last Romeo, was published by Little, Brown in Spring this year.
We talk about writing non fiction and how his fiction has some similarities to his journalistic career.
His book The Last Romeo tells a story of the character James - his long relationship with Adam ends, decides to try out the dating scene for the first time, writing about his exploits for a small, loyal audience under a secret identity: the Last Romeo. An account of a date with a closeted celebrity boosts the blog’s popularity, not to mention its notoriety, and soon James finds himself reluctantly internet-famous, and dealing with the associated perks and pitfalls; the fans, trolls, and haters, who all want to know one thing: who the hell is Romeo?
We talk about what it's like coming out as your real self from behind an anonymous blog and how to use your experiences for a novel. We also talk about age and I like this quote from Justin: "There is no new rule that once you hit 35 or 40, you are suddenly no longer interested in new things around you or new stuff."
#350 Meg Mason: The Sorrow & Bliss of Writing Novels
#349 Tom Chatfield: How To Think (& Make Sense Of The World)
#348 Jenn Romolini: Embracing Your Inner Weirdo
#347 Tara Brach: Trusting Your Goodness
#346 Poppy Jamie: The Personal Brand vs Reality
#345 Eric Zimmer: Act Your Way Into Right Thinking
#344 Mo Gawdat: Engineer Your Path to Joy
#343 Caroline O'Donoghue: The Joy Of Writing For Young Adults
#342 Ian Leslie: How To Disagree Better
Bruce Daisley (REPLAY): Do We Have To "Love What We Do"?
#340 Alex Holmes: Masculinity & Mental Health
#339 Catherine Gray: The Power of The Very Personal
#338 Natalie Lue: How Do We Achieve "Deep Work"? (3 of 3)
#337 Natalie Lue: Making Your Own Career Ladder (2 of 3)
#336 Natalie Lue: The Myths Of Being Your Own Boss (1 of 3)
#335 Sam Baker: On Finding Yourself After 40
#334 Gaby Roslin: Genuine Positivity vs Faux Positivity
#333 David Speed: Creating For Yourself First (Not Social Media)
#332 (BONUS) Maggie Alphonsi & Nick Read on the Healthy Hybrid Workplace
#331 Adam Brazier: Comparison Can Be A Good Thing
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Happy Place
Soundtracking with Edith Bowman
Hoovering with Jessica Fostekew
Pollyanna
The Turn of the Screw
The Big Interview with Graham Hunter
Who Hurt You?