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Fug Girls get ‘Messy’ with young-adult follow-up

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Just in time for summer beach reading season, professional celebrity skewerers the Fug Girls are back with another young-adult sendup of Hollywood celebu-spawn. We caught up with Go Fug Yourself bloggers Heather Cocks and Jessica Morgan to talk about their ‘Messy’ new book.

Jacket Copy: In your young-adult debut, ‘Spoiled,’ a vacuous blond ladder climber goes Manolo a Manolo with her surprise half sister. In ‘Messy,’ she continues to spar but with a different female character. What is it about rivalry that appeals?

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Heather Cocks: It isn’t so much about rivalry as outsiderness. In ‘Spoiled,’ Molly was a geographic outsider. In ‘Messy,’ we get someone who’s emotionally an outsider. Those are the kinds of feelings that anyone can relate to. A lot of teen rivalry is feeling you’re different from someone else and being judged for being different. I don’t know any teenage girls who look back on that time and say, ‘What a wonderful, magnificent time of personal growth.’ Usually you’re thinking of the girl who made you feel like an idiot.

JC: Like ‘Spoiled,’ your new book is a takedown of celebrity culture. But, like your blog, it’s a takedown that unfolds in the blogosphere. Why did you want the rivalry to center on a Hollywood insider blog?

Heather Cocks: There’s definitely the idea that the Fug Girls are writing a book, so there’s a fun wink to how we met and got started. The reason these books even exist is because we have this blog. People often assume that we ourselves are anonymous because we don’t put our pictures on the website and we have facetious bios we put up. My picture is from Joan Collins when she was on ‘Dynasty’ and Jessica’s is Shannon Doherty from ‘90210,’ so people see that and assume we’re trying to stay anonymous and sometimes disbelieve we’re women or that our names are really Heather and Jessica because they’re cheerleader names you would cherry-pick to write a blog like ours. That brings up the whole idea of whether you can believe what you see on the web. It was a fun way for us to deal with identity issues. [Updated June 6, 2012, 8:51 a.m.: The original version of this post said the Fug Girls don’t put their fiction on their blog. They don’t put their pictures.]

Jacket Copy: How is writing young-adult fiction different from your blog, especially writing as a team?

Jessica: Heather and I are very comfortable writing together because we’ve been doing it for eight years. Our posts on Go Fug Yourself we write ourselves, but our work for New York magazine and other freelance we do together, so it feels like a natural extension. Logistically, we had a very detailed outline and then we traded.

JC: Why did you even want to write fiction for teens?

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Heather: It’s such a different muscle from what we do on the blog because it’s creating something new as opposed to riffing on material. To have a picture that’s your base is different from creating the world yourself. We both watch a lot of CW and ABC Family. We’re very soapy people. We read a lot of young-adult because there’s so much really well-written fiction for young adults. God knows the number of times we mention ‘Sweet Valley High’ on our website. It felt like a really natural arena to step into.

JC: What’s so great about your books is that the humor from your blog completely translates. What makes fashion and celebrity culture so fun to make fun of?

Jessica: We sort of see Go Fug Yourself as the online version of sitting around with your friends watching the Oscars. It’s a virtual coffee klatsch to sit around and say, ‘What is she wearing? What is he thinking?’ We intend it to be good-hearted, but I also think if I had all these resources -- all the money and the stylist and the trainer and the time -- I would look fantastic all the time. There’s something confounding when someone who has all the resources to look amazing all the time sometimes looks totally insane.

JC: Brick was such a narcissistic, movie-star dad in the first book. Without spoiling ‘Messy,’ does he step up in book two?

Heather: One of my favorite scenes is when Brooke achieves a measure of professional success early in the book and she tells Brick and they have a little moment together. Anyone who read ‘Spoiled’ knows she’s very much driven by wanting his attention. Brick in this book becomes a little more involved in her life, so I think people will be happy to see him spending some time. But he just finished work on ‘Avalanche,’ his epic snow movie shot in Key West.

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-- Susan Carpenter

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