"How I Wrote This Article" Article

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When someone is contractually obligated to churn out regular humorous articles, they occasionally reach an inspirational dead end. Sometimes, to deal with this, they write an article about how they can't think of anything to write.

"Couldn't think of any lyrics!

No, I never wrote the lyrics.

So I'll just sing any old lyrics.

That come to mind, child."
—This Song Is Just Six Words Long, Weird Al Yankovic

Stephen Fry mentions in the book collection of his articles that every humor writer is allowed one and only one of these.

Almost always a form of Self-Referential Humor. See also Writers Block.


Examples:

  • Adaptation is this in movie-form -- it's a film telling the story of adapting a book into the screenplay of what eventually becomes the film you're watching.
  • FoxTrot: "This is my fourth sentence. This is my fifth sentence. This is my second paragraph..."
    • Jason calls his essay "a running first-person account of the process of writing a nine-hundred-word essay."
  • Here's another: [1].
    • For the record, that is an "incomplete" article on writer's block with a footnote which details (with references) the many reasons why the paper is unfinished.
    • Also this.
  • Dave Barry does this every so often.
  • This is how Under The Hood begins in Watchmen.
  • In the song "Boat Drinks" Jimmy Buffett sang, "I should be leaving this climate/I've got a verse but can't rhyme it."
  • "This Is the Title of This Story, Which Is Also Found Several Times in the Story Itself".
  • In Breakfast of Champions, Kurt Vonnegut's narration frequently goes off to explain what he was going through when he was writing it.
  • Calvin and Hobbes: Hobbes ended up writing this story for Calvin after he tried time traveling two hours into the future to retrieve his completed story, only to find it hadn't been written yet. Unfortunately for Calvin, the class loves it, but it makes him look like a laughingstock.
  • Weird Al Yankovic's song "This Song Is Just Six Words Long" is about this.
  • Belgian novelist Herman Brusselmans uses this trope on occasion, often as an introduction. The first sentence of De kus in de nacht (The kiss in the night) is as follows: "As usual I have nothing to say and I will do so for about 600 to 650 pages, we'll see."