Photo credit: KK / Brno Daily.
On Saturday, June 29, 2019, Brno Daily published a story titled “Br(u)no: The Onset of Summer”. It was about summer coming and it was an introduction to a year of weekly columns. The headline was meant to be slightly confusing: do anything you can to get people’s attention when you start something new.
For next 52 weeks (50 Saturdays, one on the following Sunday, one on the following Wednesday, plus a couple of Wednesday attempts to be funny during the COVID-19 quarantine period) Bruno in Brno columns appeared in Brno Daily, constantly looking for an angle that would be interesting for the readers of an online English-language newspaper in the second-largest city in the Czech Republic.
Sometimes it failed miserably.
More often, the column got people talking. After all, something has to stick when you throw 50,000-plus words against the wall.
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The Bruno in Brno column was designed to be a snapshot of an expat life in Brno, something that readers would recognize and something to which they could relate.
Here are some things that I have learned about the readership of Brno Daily:
• Never Write About Holidays. I thought that Valentine’s Day would be a good jumping off point to write about the evolution of local restaurant culture. Apparently not. Thanksgiving and Halloween are completely played out. Christmas may have some interest, but not much, unless you complain about hot alcohol.
• No Sports. I had always wanted to give women’s basketball and men’s basketball some extra play, especially at the beginning of their seasons. Big mistake. I don’t even think the team members read the stories. The HC Kometa article, at least, got some interest.
• Use a Broad Brush. To get any number of readers, there always has to a general hook. Spurning a Czech pop star, apparently, does not have enough universal interest. Writing a commencement address clearly didn’t attract the professional class.
• Nevertheless, Even Obscure Topics Interest Someone. It’s weird, though, because no matter the topic, people always seemed to mention it to me, oftentimes months later. It is nice to make an impression.
• Too Much Personal Information — From the beginning it was uncomfortable to use “I” and the first-person narrative tense. It seems self-serving and arrogant. Why would people care? Yet, apparently, they do. Over the winter, I ran into a friend whom I hadn’t seen for a long time. I asked him how things were going. He told me, then added “I already know how things are with you: I read about it every week.” I do worry about writing about my kids, and always photograph them carefully.
• Stay Positive. The column was to be a way to appreciate the great city in which we live. Politics and criticism would be fantastic to write about, but they would alienate people. Of course, topics that I thought were conservatively down the middle — like the one about Sept. 11, 2001 — proved to be controversial enough to inspire some uncomfortable comments.
• Be Annoyed Sometimes. Bruno in Brno was designed to shine a light on pleasant parts of local life. But, everyone once in a while, Grumpy Br(u)no columns helped to balance things out a bit by complaining about Christmas, being annoyed by local coffee culture and losing a board game to your kids. They clearly struck a chord.
• Tap into a Large Facebook Following. The most popular Br(u)no column was the interview with Napoleon: the American actor/educator Mark Schneider. Attempts to get into pop star fan clubs or sports team online social groups never amounted to much. At least random people still find the stories through key words and browser searches.
• Sometimes Things Can Get Dark. Looking back, there were some times that got quite pessimistic. You can go home but you can never go back again. Whoa! Mr. Good Times. The series of quarantine columns, which turned out to be quite popular, were actually tough to keep upbeat.
• Writer’s Block Doesn’t Exist. I rarely struggle for ideas. Sometimes, however, it is tough to match the zeitgeist. And motivation can be lacking at the end of busy weeks.
In any case, I have dozens of solid ideas that will be good enough for another year. I hope you like them.
Here is a list of all of the Bruno in Brno columns for the last year, in chronological order:
JUNE 2019
June 29 — Br(u)no: The Onset of Summer
JULY 2019
July 6 — Br(u)no: Kozaty Počasí
July 13 — Br(u)no: Finally Getting to Be an Uncle, or What to Do with Teenagers in Brno
July 20 — Br(u)no: Explaining Brno’s Phallus-like Chronometer (to Teenagers)
July 27 — Br(u)no: The Heart of the Two-wheel World
AUGUST 2019
Aug. 3 — Br(u)no: The Foreign Invasion for the CzechGP
Aug. 10 — Br(u)no: The Mythology of Brno
Aug. 17 — Br(u)no: The 500-kilometer Rule
Aug. 24 — Br(u)no: Here Come the Krojsters
Aug. 31 — Br(u)no: Continuing the Evolution of Musical Taste
SEPTEMBER 2019
Sept. 7 — Br(u)no: Explaining Sept. 11 to a New Generation
Sept. 14 — Br(u)no: Kometa Pride
Sept. 21 — Br(u)no: Jak se maš?
Sept. 28 — Br(u)no: A Consistent Source of Brno Sports Success
OCTOBER 2019
Oct. 5 — Br(u)no: The Start of a New Basketball Era
Oct. 12 — Br(u)no: You Can Go Home, But You Can Never Go Back Again
Oct. 19 — Br(u)no: Parking Made Simpler but Not Less Annoying
Oct. 26 — Br(u)no: The Night To Live Your Fantasies
NOVEMBER 2019
Nov. 2 — Br(u)no: How to Celebrate a Birthday in Brno
Nov. 9 — Br(u)no: 1-1-1-1
Nov. 16 — Br(u)no: The Velvet Revolution Through One Faraway Mind
Nov. 23 — Br(u)no: Teaching Turkey
Nov. 30 — Br(u)no: Talking to Napoleon
DECEMBER 2019
Dec. 7 — Br(u)no: Bumping into a Legend
Dec. 14 — Grumpy Br(u)no: When will Christmas Finally Be Over?
Dec. 21 — Br(u)no: Holiday Fishmongers
Dec. 28 — Br(u)no: Fireworks
JANUARY 2020
Jan. 4 — Br(u)no: Can You Teach an Old Dog New Tricks?
Jan. 11 — Br(u)no: Take Off Those Shoes
Jan. 18 — Br(u)no: A Day Without Earphones
Jan. 29 (Wednesday) — Br(u)no: The Inadvertent Sexual Tension of Czech
FEBRUARY 2020
Feb. 1 — Br(u)no: The Sensory Confluence of Reggae and Memory
Feb. 8 — Br(u)no: Make Your V-Day Reservations Now
Feb. 15 — Br(u)no: So It Goes
Feb. 22 — Grumpy Br(u)no: Just Give Me a Normal Cup of Coffee
Feb. 29 — Br(u)no: What Should We Do to Make Today Special?
MARCH 2020
March 7 — Br(u)no: International Women’s Day, or The Day That Wives Go to the Local Bar
March 14 — Br(u)no: Life in the Time or Coronavirus
March 21 — Quar [Br(u)no] antine: What to do While Stuck at Home
March 25 (Wednesday) — Grumpy Br(u)no: Don’t Tell Me Not To Not Get Angry!
March 28 — Br(u)no: Life Continues Through Self-Quarantine Week 2, Alcohol Helps
APRIL 2020
April 1 (Wednesday) — Br(u)no: When Can We Laugh Again?
April 4 — Br(u)no: Face Masks Become All the Rage, Quarantine Week 3
April 11 — Br(u)no: Being Inside Brings Out Big Thoughts, Quarantine Week 4
April 18 — Br(u)no: How Life Has Changed During this Pandemic? Quarantine Week 5
April 25 — Br(u)no: Some Perspective. Quarantine Week 6
MAY 2020
May 2 — Br(u)no: Remember Those Who Rise to the Challenge, Quarantine Week 7
May 9 — Br(u)no: The Numbers Tell the Story. Quarantine Week 8
May 16 — Br(u)no: The Great Awakening
May 23 — Br(u)no: Close to Home
May 30 — Br(u)no: The Circus is in Town
JUNE 2020
June 6 — Br(u)no: America Doesn’t Have 13 Months. No Beer for You!
June 13 — Br(u)no: Ladies First