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KYRA DAVIS

New York Times bestselling author of Just One Night

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KYRA DAVIS

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Unisex Bathrooms: A Stinky LA Trend.

What do Firefly, Eleven Nightclub and Boulevard3 all have in common?  If you said they're all LA hotspots you'd be correct. They're restaurants, clubs and lounges respectively. But that's not the similarity that I was thinking of.  What really links these places is their unisex bathrooms.  It seems that in LA there is nothing more chic than men and women washing their hands together after emerging from their side-by-side stalls.

Granted the stalls in these bathrooms are similar to walk-in-closets in that the door to them are floor-to-ceiling, they're roomy and, for the most part, no noise or smell can easily emit from them...until you open the door. But the fact is the men and women are still in the same line together, they vie for the same mirror space and sometimes they have to share the same very long sink with a faucet that looks more like a waterfall than anything else.  It's sort of hard to wash your hands well in these waterfalls but it does look cool and apparently that's what's important.

The weirdest part is that in the many LA establishments that have embraced this new trend the bathroom has actually become a hotter pick-up spot than the bar. Bathrooms are very intimate places and when you're standing in line inside their ecru walls waiting to do your business the guy behind you is more likely to start a conversation with you than he would if you were standing next to him ordering a cosmo.  While at a bar they can easily hide behind a cocktail or limit their conversations to only include the friends they came with.  But men don't go to the bathroom in pairs the way women occasionally do and since a unisex bathroom means that guys actually have to wait in line to pee (not an experience they're used to)  they frequently choose to pass the time by talking to a stranger.  The stranger has to be a woman because guy-code says that men can't talk to other men they don't already know in bathrooms. Don't know what that's about but apparently it's a rule.   The ice-breaker these men choose to use on the women in the room is usually (and predictably), "What do you think of these unisex bathrooms?" 

And my answer to that question is, "I'm not into it."  I'm just not all that receptive to being picked up when I'm in desperate need of a toilet.  And if I'm at a bar and I don't like the guy who's chatting me up I can move but if the guy is in line behind me as I wait for a stall to open up...well there's nowhere for me to go now is there? The truth is that when it comes to public bathrooms I like keeping the sexes segregated. If I wanted to fix my make-up in front of a room full of people I'd have done it at my table. Plus I like knowing that if I do want to adjust my bra in front of a mirror I can do it without a mixed audience.  I don't want the guy who has been flirting with me to take note of how long I was in my stall and I certainly don't want to smell what's coming out of his stall when he swings the door open.  Call me a traditionalist but if a guy wants to pick me up in a restaurant/club/lounge he should do it by pushing alcohol on me at the bar and I don't want to share a mirror with him before the third date.  

But with unisex bathrooms popping up in all the best spots in LA it's clear that I am now forced to face a new world order.  

I guess I'll have to start getting salt on the rim of my margaritas so I can increase my water retention.  Going to the bathroom is just a little too stressful these days. 

Kyra Davis

Bestselling Author of:

The Sophie Katz Mystery Series
and
So Much For My Happy Ending
Order Vows, Vendettas & A Little Black Dress today! Vows, Vendettas and a Little 
Black Dress
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Labels: LA Hipsters, LA hotspots, Sophie Katz

What Would A World Without Borders Look Like?

Yes, I'm referring to the bookstore, not a world where sovereign nations are a thing of the past.  And the bookstore looks so pretty in this picture...if only there were customers inside to appreciate it.  If you're not in the industry you might not be aware that Borders is in a major state of crisis.  In the third quarter of 2010 they posted a $74.4 million dollar loss.  They have about $445 million in trade accounts payable and in December they showed up at the door of the major New York publishing houses with their hand out asking if the houses would be cool with waiting three years to be paid what they're owed.  Theoretically if publishing houses agree to hold off on collecting the debt Borders would have time to refinance with the possible help of GE and avoid Chapter 11.  The publishing industry has been less than enthusiastic.  In fact some publishers have stopped shipping to Borders all together.  And don't expect any A-list authors to be doing signings at Borders...particularly since the chain seems to be firing many of their special events coordinators along with a few regional managers and completely closing down a Tennessee distribution center thereby eliminating 310 jobs in that area alone.  

Barnes and Noble and a few other booksellers are balking at Borders request for debt leniency demanding that if publishers are going to cut Borders a break they need to cut all booksellers the exact same break. Publishers can't afford to do that and for this reason among many others they may refuse Borders request which means the company will have to go into Chapter 11.  But that's really the least of Borders concerns.  If more publishers stop shipping to Borders it's difficult to see how the time afforded them by a Chapter 11 filing is going to help them stay alive.

You can read the details of this unfolding story in articles printed in various different periodicals: The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times and The Los Angeles Times among others.

But not a lot of people are writing about how this will affect the publishing industry as a whole and no one seems to be writing about how or if this will affect authors.  For instance, if Borders does go under who will absorb their sales? Some will inevitably go to Barnes and Noble and independent booksellers but BN is making most of its profits now from their online presence, e-books and e-readers.  I don't know that they are going to sell that many more paperbacks/hardcovers if Borders falls.  If anything my guess is that this will push a lot more readers to turn to e-books.  I could be wrong but the fun of going to a bookstore is being able to walk around and browse and then maybe a novel (hopefully a novel with a bright pink cover) strikes your fancy and you buy that book. But this is dependent on there being a bookstore convenient for you to browse in.  Barnes and Noble has been closing lots of stores over the last year, even in areas where there are no other bookstores.   It's difficult to imagine they're going to open more if Borders disappears.  So if there is not store to browse in and you want a book you're going to have to go online...but browsing online is a little different than browsing in a bookstore.  You will see the books that Amazon and Barnes and Noble are pimping on their home page but you won't see the books that might have been faced out on their designated shelves by an individual employee.  Midlisters will have even less visibility than they have now (and we really don't have a lot of visibility now).  

And what about this debt that the publishing houses aren't going to be able to collect on? How exactly are they going to be making up for that loss? Publishing is not a high-profit game.  My guess is that they're going to have to save by cutting back in areas of acquisitions, marketing and publicity.  The A-listers will still get a decent marketing budget and I don't begrudge them that.  After all, they're the only ones keeping publishing industry afloat.  But I think midlisters and first time novelists are going to have to come to terms with the fact that we are now on the same level as indie rock bands.  We have some followers, some diehard fans, but not enough of either to actually make us a decent living and the only way a "record label" is going to give us more than the time of day is if WE ARE the record label.

Yes, I'm talking about self-publishing again.  For the record, things are looking good for the Sophie series right now but I'm still not 100% convinced that I should put her in the hands of a major publishing house at this point.  Why share the profits with someone who is going to do nothing more than operate as a printing press?  With fewer and fewer stores to distribute to and e-books sales up 165% does it really makes sense to partner with an industry struggling to adjust?  When I asked Facebook followers what form they prefer their books in less than a fourth listed off paperbacks and/or hardcovers as their medium of choice.  Ebooks and audiobooks were clearly a convenience that a lot of people were understandably eager to take advantage of.

I don't have any definitive answers (I really, really wish I did).  But if you're a midlist author with an indie-rock band type following you should at the very least be considering these questions.  Borders closing is a symptom of a much larger issue.  It's an issue that requires the publishers to readjust their thinking.  Authors would be wise to do the same.  



Kyra Davis

Bestselling Author of:

The Sophie Katz Mystery Series
and
So Much For My Happy Ending
Order Vows, Vendettas & A Little Black Dress today! Vows, Vendettas and a Little 
Black Dress
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Labels: Barnes and Noble, Borders, ebooks, midlist authors, Publishing, self-publishing, Sophie Katz
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ALSO BY KYRA DAVIS

Just One Night Trilogy

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Seven Swans A'Shooting

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So Much for My Happy Ending

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Lust, Loathing
and a Little Lip Gloss

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ABOUT KYRA DAVIS

I'm the internationally published author of the Sophie Katz mystery series, and So Much For My Happy Ending. My first Erotic Fiction Trilogy will be released in January 2013.

Aside from that, I'm a single mom; I'm addicted to coffee and True Blood (the show, not the drink). I'm happy with who I am yet I’m always striving to be better; I have more bad hair days than good ones, I love a challenge but I am not fearless, I’m….well…just me.

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