The Secret Diary of Lizzie Bennet (11 page)

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Authors: Bernie Su,Kate Rorick

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #General

BOOK: The Secret Diary of Lizzie Bennet
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“You might want to also consider going to VidCon,” she mentioned. “To gain other vloggers’ perspectives for data.”

“Charlotte and I are talking about it—we really want to go.” VidCon is a huge convention about web video, and it would be an incredible opportunity to meet people in this new
industry—and luckily, it’s in California, only a couple of hours’ drive away.

“Okay. I’ll sign off on the thesis topic,” Dr. Gardiner declared.

I’ll admit, I squeed.

“But—” She held up a hand, halting my glee. “I want to give you a warning. You’ll be letting strangers into your life, your world, for almost a full year. And your
videos have gotten more popular than I think any of us expected.”

At this point I’ve posted twenty videos and I have over 100,000 views each. That’s two million views. And we’ve even made a little money, what with YouTube advertising. Not a
lot—but maybe enough to buy some VidCon tickets?

So yeah, I’d say we exceeded expectations.

“You need to be mindful of what you put out there, and how it’s affecting the people you involve,” Dr. Gardiner continued. “Your sisters, Charlotte Lu . . . even the
people you talk about but we don’t see. You’re not dealing in theoreticals anymore. These are real people. There will be consequences—some good, some not so good—for having
their lives exposed via your lens.”

“But you just said that when I talked about something real—my family’s money problems—it gave the videos depth and resonance.”

“True. You still need to be honest. But you also have to figure out how far the contract you have with your audience extends.” She smiled at me. “It’s a fine line to
walk, and it’s one you’re going to have to figure out.”

I thanked Dr. Gardiner, and wished her a happy summer before I left.

On my drive home, I thought about what Dr. Gardiner had said. And she’s right. What I do and say on the videos has affected me, and the people around me. For people like Jane and Lydia, it
means some notoriety—but I would never put anything involving them on the videos that they didn’t want seen. And Lydia especially doesn’t seem to mind the notoriety. In fact,
she’s thriving on it. She has gotten so many Twitter followers since I started these videos. Hell, since the video that she posted ON HER OWN this morning with Charlotte (and you’d
better believe I’m gonna have a talk with both of them about that later) even Lydia’s new cat, Kitty, is getting a record number of Twitter followers.

It’s a little surreal.

For myself, it’s startling to realize that my professor has been continuing to watch my videos and will know everything about my life in the upcoming year. Everything. As well as all my
classmates—it’s sobering to walk into a classroom and realize everyone there has seen you in your pajamas because you wore them on camera. And there are a lot of faceless other people
who know my business, too. That’s part of having a message people engage with.

But those faceless people have been so supportive. The feedback, the commentary, has been immensely gratifying. It’s like being told that yes, maybe I am cut out for this industry. Maybe
my voice does matter in the grand scheme of things.

I have a lot of ambitions and dreams for what I want to do with my life: I want to be able to effect change. To make at least my small corner of the world better in some way. To inspire and be
inspired. (I would also like to find a way to get paid for it.) It may seem silly and grandiose, and not at all the practical thinking that my generation is told we need to overcome our lack of job
opportunities and our belief in our specialness. But it’s how I think. And every time people online contact me and say they like my videos and it makes them feel not alone, I feel kind of
like I’m doing it.

So, I
do
have a contract with my audience, and well-meaning warnings aside, I do have to honor it.

I have to be as real and open as possible with them. And hopefully, they’ll continue to watch.

T
UESDAY
, J
UNE
19
TH

One of the more enjoyable aspects of being on summer vacation is my lack of schedule. Oh, trust me, I’m still doing a lot of work, but I’m not beholden to a rigid
class structure. Instead, my only parameters for when I get work done are the hours the library is open. Thus I can indulge in the occasional sleeping in, linger over a cup of coffee in the morning
. . . and I can get the mail.

I
love
getting the mail. It’s a personal quirk. It’s so much more satisfying than checking my email in-box, because I have to wait. The postman has to bring messages to me.
Could it be a missive from a friend or relative? A check that will solve all my problems?

No. Usually it’s just bills and catalogues—but I have hope for a real piece of mail in my lifetime!

And today I was rewarded for my efforts, because today came a letter . . . on pressed paper. With a Netherfield return address.

“Lydia,” I said, upon quietly entering her room. All right, perhaps I barged in and forced her out of bed. “Is this what I think it is?”

Blearily, she took the envelope from me. When she read the return address, she smirked and ripped it open.

“Lydia!”

“What? It’s addressed to the Bennet Sisters. I’m a Bennet sister, too.” She scanned the card. “Formal invitation, very nice. This is gonna be swank.”

“I can’t believe that you got Bing to actually throw a party, for no reason other than you asked him to.”

“Hey, there are benefits to extracting promises from people when they’re buzzed, and then stalking their street until they get home and you can casually run into them and demand they
fulfill said promises.”

It’s hard to argue with that logic.

“Still—let’s not tell Mom,” I said. “For a little while at least. The less time she knows about the party, the less time she has to scheme.”

She shrugged, handing the card back to me and then springing out of bed like a chipmunk on a sugar high. “Whatever. Oh! But I get to tell Jane!” She turned contemplative. “I
wonder what I’ll have Jane wear?”

“What you’ll
have
Jane wear?” I asked. “She’s pretty good at picking out her own clothes.”

“For like, work, and looking classy or whatever. At this party . . . Jane is gonna step up her sexy game.”

“She is?”

“Once
I
get through with her.” Lydia winked and was out the door. I could hear her humming dubstep under her breath on her way to the bathroom.

I’m not worried about Jane’s wardrobe. She is far better at controlling/indulging Lydia than the rest of us—even our parents. She’ll wear only what she wants to. But I
have to admit, I am sort of dreading the party.

Jane and Bing are rolling along merrily, but that can be a little . . . exclusive. They can be in their own little bubble. And I’m sure that the party will be great, but with George
Wickham out of town, it’s not like there is anyone that I’m looking forward to seeing. Add to that, I don’t know what I’ll have to contribute to any conversation.
Let’s face it, Bing—while great and open—and his friends attract a certain type of person. The rich and driven kind. Who’s likely to be at this party? Not just locals like
me. Med school friends, maybe. Prep school and Harvard chums. Wealthy family friends. Caroline’s elite crowd. Darcy.

What do you talk about at a party when school’s out for summer, and you have no job and an uncertain future? It’s a recipe for awkward.

But awkward or not, when an invitation arrives on embossed card stock, you can’t ignore it. I’m enough of my mother’s daughter to know that.

W
EDNESDAY
, J
UNE
27
TH

We’re going to VidCon! Charlotte made it happen. Somehow she contacted them, pointed them to our videos and views, and they sent us tickets!

But it’s not just us going. They also sent Jane a ticket—and Lydia, too.

Jane’s happy to go—she’s happy to meet people who like the videos, and she’s going to meet with her work’s LA-based flagship branch, just to see the place and come
face-to-face with some of the people she talks on the phone with all day long.

Lydia is also happy to meet people who like the videos . . . and to see if she can get said people to buy her drinks during the convention.

I’m not speaking on a panel or anything (what would I talk about, anyway? How to leverage your mother’s insanity for tens of dollars and the occasional gif-set?), but I’m going
to try to learn as much as I can (half of the programming is for people who want to make videos, not just watch them) and hopefully meet some cool people.

“We should bring some business-type clothes, too,” Charlotte said, raiding my closet and pulling out my sole suit jacket. “We need to be presentable.”

“Presentable? We’re not street urchins.”

“This is not only an opportunity to learn—it’s going to be an opportunity to network. There will be dozens of new media companies there. And in another year we are going to be
looking for jobs. Probably at these very same new media companies.” She pulled out a jean jacket I haven’t worn since seventh grade. “What about this?”

“No. Jane would kill me.”

“Oh? Jane’s survived your mother with enough strength left over to kill you?”

“Barely.” I snorted.

Bing’s party went off without a hitch. And it was actually more pleasant than I expected. I shouldn’t have worried—of course Bing’s friends are as nice as Bing himself
(with a certain notable exception), and nobody wants to talk about their real lives, anyway; we’d much rather talk about music and art and the latest Internet meme. So, obviously my bout of
nervousness was just a momentary lapse into hereditary drama.

The
real
drama was the fact that Jane didn’t come home with us. She didn’t come home until the next morning.

And Mom was
livid
.

Not because Jane didn’t come home until morning—but because Jane came home at all.

What did she expect? That a date that lasts until dawn is an unequivocal proposal of marriage? I’m half shocked that Mom didn’t have Jane’s belongings already packed up and in
the trunk to take over to Netherfield.

But when Jane came home, after being told that she was neither engaged, pregnant, nor cohabitating, Mom just tightened her lips and went into the kitchen, unwilling to look at or even talk to
her daughter. She just changed the subject by vaguely commenting that the cabinetry was looking outdated.

What Mom didn’t seem to notice is that Jane came home . . . different.

She was lighter, somehow. Glowing. And no, it wasn’t a glow that comes from sex. Because according to her she didn’t have sex:

But it was more like all the little steps that she had been taking with Bing—the tentative getting-to-know-you, getting-to-like-you dance—had led up to this. She was no longer slowly
falling. It had happened. She was there.

I could hear Jane through our shared bedroom wall. She was on the phone with Bing, telling him about what she was packing for VidCon. She was laughing, her voice itself smiling. Whatever
happened that night deepened everything. For Jane, at least. One assumes for Bing, too.

Oh, my God. I think I witnessed my sister fall in love.

Strangely, I can’t help but feel a little . . . sad. I don’t know why, though. Jane’s in love! Jane’s happy! That’s a fantastic thing! But it also means change is
coming. Jane doesn’t belong to just us anymore.

But I couldn’t be sad at that moment. Because I was picking out panels I wanted to attend from the VidCon schedule on my laptop, and Charlotte was picking a truly hideous peacock-blue
pantsuit my mother got me upon college graduation out of my closet. (Because every proper young lady needs a peacock-blue pantsuit for “interviews, dear. We want you to look your best for
those—especially if the interviewer is a handsome, successful man.”)

“No!” I said, horrified. “Not unless you want potential networking opportunities to think I time-traveled here from the seventies.”

“Hey—as long as potential networking opportunities remember you.” Charlotte grinned, throwing the pantsuit on the pile.

“You’re as bad as my mother.”

“I can live with that.”

I laughed. See? It’s hard to be sad when this time tomorrow . . . we’ll be at VidCon!

S
ATURDAY
, J
UNE
30
TH

Vidcon was Amazing! And yes, that capital “A” is intentional.

I learned so much. I met people—people!—who watch my videos. I saw Driftless Pony Club perform and laughed my ass off while Hannah Hart spoke.

I MET HANK GREEN.

And it wasn’t all just fun and games and fangirling over YouTube vloggers and buying awesome not-ironic-therefore-ironic T-shirts from the exhibit hall. As per Charlotte, we did actually
“attend some educational panels and participate in networking events.” The industry panels were all about how to grow and sustain an audience—how to best use the tools available
to us (seems like everyone is working on a shoestring on the Internet) and how to market most effectively. We learned about the future of storytelling from Loose-Fishery, the biggest transmedia
company around, and saw another talk about multi-communication platforms from a designer at an app company called Pemberley Digital. And I know to the layperson (aka Lydia, who camped out in the
hallway and set up her own mini autograph-signing station until the event organizers told her to stop) it seems boring, but I was deeply intrigued. And Charlotte? Charlotte was
fascinated
.

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