OK. It has come to my attention that with as difficult as it is to have us all even be AWAKE at the same time much less have all of us be off of work, with no other social obligations, and have us all be at home with internet connectivity, no computer problems, no pets demanding affection, and no other distractions to devote the *2+ hours necessary to devote to a real-time discussion... that the idea as it stands is from a logistics perspective wholly unreasonable and just a little bit dumb.
*Alex, Andrew, Ashley, Excal, Gatewalker, me, (Fudo??, Laggy??)... 6 (8??)... twenty minutes a workshop (minimum, if we want to have any constructive criticism and ideas arise from any of this)... yeah, 2 hours a session easily, unless we rotated stories workshopped. I don't know about you, but a large part of my interest in this is to kick me in the pants to write something, ANYTHING, and give me frequent deadlines, so that doesn't really work.
So, to put it short, we got problems.
My instinctual solution to this problem was, as I mentioned in my previous post, to write up my own critique of each individual story and mail it out to everybody. We could all do that, but that would be very dumb for very different reasons. For one, a lot of the e-mails could be pretty repetitive if they held the same criticisms. But, more importantly, they lack the reason why in-person workshops are much more effective: discussion. From discussion between the story's audience can arise new ideas that no one person who read the story could have come up with on their own, and these new ideas are often much more fruitful for the author than any individual's opinion could ever be without having them bounce off of each other.
But, guys. GUYS. GUYS!! There is a solution. What medium combines the ability to have people with disparate schedules submit their opinions AND the ability for audience members to have a discussion and bounce ideas off of each other?
Hint:
You're posting on it.
I propose that for the writer's group, we create a new subforum on the RPGDL. Basically, a new writer's forum. We all have a deadline to submit a work of writing to everybody else in the writer's circle. We all have some time to read one another's writing, and then discuss it on the new forum. This combines the advantages of real time discussion with the flexibility of the e-mail into something we can actually use to facilitate this program.
There is more that I would like to address, in particular setting some ground rules for how we discuss each other's stories, especially with the forum format I just proposed. That said, for now I think we should just address the way we handle this, and see if anyone else has a better idea than what I have just suggested.