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Love in modern ink

Revisiting the magical world of Wattpad, the online platform that changed publishing

- Words by Jelou Galang Illustrati­on by Alagadngsi­ning

Here’s how the story goes: A 17-year-old girl with bad hair plays trick on the campus out that the girl he’s been talking to actually isn’t the ex-girlfriend he was pining for (the two girls should have the same name), he puts up the condition that they should pretend as lovers until the gangster’s ex comes back to his life themselves falling for each other instead. it’s too familiar. This plot has been read three million times online, became a National Book Store bestseller in 2013, and eventually landed on theaters as a Star Cinema boxPadilla, also known as Kathniel. This is Bianca Bernardino’s She’s Dating the Gangster, which migrating to Wattpad.

And it’s not the only best-selling romantic story birthed out of this online publishing platform. After all, romantic comedies are an irrefutabl­e element in Filipino pop culture. romance and its convention­s. It is as ubiquitous as it can get; Inquirer even hailed rom-coms as the “genre ng bayan.”

For the past decade, a bulk of these stories are created and serialized in one particular, huge corner of the Internet: Wattpad. As it says on the site, Wattpad takes everything we love about storytelli­ng, and transforms it into a social, on-the-go experience. It serves as a space where everyone can create, talk, and be heard.

Ever since its launch in 2006, Wattpad became that vast space tucked in the interwebs where we can pen our own books: characters a click.

Louisse Carreon, published author of A and D and Realize puts it this way: “a social media network of its own—but with stories.” This has been the same for Ariesa Domingo, author of nine Wattpad stories that have been published as a book, including

Seducing Drake Palma and For Hire: A Damn

Good Kisser. For Ariesa and many others, writing wasn’t a viable career, but a hobby: “It wasn’t until I was practicall­y forced by my friend to write a story that I discovered that I actually liked building a world where I can control everything.”

Wattpad, as the platform that appealed to most Filipino writers under a certain niche, contribute­d a huge part in keeping the genre alive and well in the country. For the thenyoung generation of writers that grew up in the Reaching an audience beyond our group of close friends felt far-fetched before, but Wattpad handed us a ticket to accessing an audience that is as big as the rest of the world, along with the wild possibilit­ies that offering our words to them could bring. The platform gave us its own brand of bravery.

According to Ella Larena, author of Ang

Boyfriend Kong Artista and the Kathniel-inspired His Personal Wife, “I made the account to write my experience­s growing up. I incorporat­ed real know it happened to me.”

What used to be a reader’s pipe dream—to have an active conversati­on with the authors of their favorite stories—was solved when Wattpad gave them the chance to leave comments on every chapter of an author’s work. They can even vote for ones they felt for the most. These on the site: A high-rated story would most likely attract more readers as its presence in a user’s homepage would say, “because you voted for this story, here are ones similar to that.”

As Ariesa describes it, “Wattpad is very interactiv­e. You can leave comments, messages, and private messages. It creates a sense of community that allows the writers and readers to bond more. And it’s also very easy to navigate.” encouraged to share their thoughts about developmen­t of the story. Louisse in particular moments. “I’m one of those writers who really like reading comments. They are proof that I‘m making someone feel something.” conversati­on, a form of participat­ion. The writer gets from the reader as much as the latter gets from the former. The continuous positive critique from their followers has encouraged writers to improve their newfound skill as preference, and my own voice. I was able to experiment, see what works and what doesn’t,” Louisse says.

For her work to be discussed, let alone be read, gives Ella validation as a writer. “I was a reader/writer at a teen magazine’s creative corner circa 2009 to 2011. But honestly, I didn't consider myself a writer because I was never the training ground for my writing.”

Not only does Wattpad offer freedom by letting people share their stories to the world, it also opens the doors of publishing to budding writers, who in other circumstan­ces would have

people share their stories to the world, it also opens the doors of publishing to budding writers, who in other circumstan­ces would not be able to get published.

a multiverse exists where writers aren’t given writer, but with Wattpad it’s not scary at all to try another genre because there are audiences for different genres. Whatever I decide to write, I know that there will be at least one person who will read my story,” Ariesa says.

“I feel like [the readers are] my friends, and some of them my kids, because Three Words,

Eight Letters series was published on Wattpad in, I think 2010,” Jade Pitogo, another published author, says. “My readers then were in high school and some in elementary. Now, they are in college and some already have work, and I feel like we’ve grown together. That’s why I am very active on Twitter. I opened my DMs so readers can reach me, and I can personally thank them for reading my stories.” Louisse sees the platform as an expanding entity, “My favorite thing about Wattpad is the community built through it, both locally and internatio­nally,” and Ariesa thinks it “bridged the gap between the writers and readers.”

When Wattpad CEO and co-founder Allen Lau visited the Philippine­s last year, he told the digital marketing solutions company AdSpark Philippine­s that local readers “embraced the future of entertainm­ent, where technology and storytelli­ng come together to empower new voices.” It’s no surprise that Wattpad’s top users are Filipinos—over seven million monthly Wattpad visitors come from the Philippine­s, according to Globe’s website. Globe has funded Wattpad Wattp in the recent past.

In November 2018, Wattpad launched a virtual virt currency program, Wattpad Next, to help he its community of writers get proper compensati­on comp for their work. “This program is part of o our commitment to help writers earn money mone from their stories, monetizing stories both on o and off of Wattpad,” president Allen Lau said. ““Along with opportunit­ies to connect with brands, brand and work with Wattpad Studios to turn directly direct from the fans that have supported them tested in Canada, United Kingdom, Mexico, and the Philippine­s, Ph before having it was launched in the US.

the platform, but also for what its users would want to have. “I think like Youtube, Wattpad can be compensate­d without having to force the readers to pay, since a lot of the readers are students,” Ariesa says. On the other hand, Ella wants underrated Wattpad novels to get more exposure because “sometimes, the best books are the hidden gems.” scrutiny. In a study entitled “Effects of Wattpad on Modern Philippine Literature,” De La Salle University Manila professor John Vladimir Espiritu expressed his disapprova­l of the gender stereotype­s imposed in Wattpad stories, claiming that they can be uneducated, and are banked “on idiocy.”

If you’re an avid Wattpad reader, you would also notice how plots seem to repeat, like young writers pulling out cliché pop culture tropes. There’s the classic Gangster, the Damsel in Distress, the Lead Dies In The End, or maybe the High School Clan Wars.

There’s no longer an original plot, but a good story is made of the nuances the writer communicat­es through setting, language, metaphor, characteri­zation, etc. The study also places a big concern on how the editing goes for these books, as some still appear to have grammatica­l or typographi­cal errors.

Looking back at the purpose of Wattpad’s birth, we would know it has always aimed to cater to everyone, and give opportunit­ies to writers of all levels, and even those who don’t consider themselves writers at all. Readers are treated the same. Think Precious Hearts

Romances, and how it was accessible for us— buy them at arm’s reach, and one wouldn’t need to have a solid literary experience, much more expertise, to appreciate its content.

That’s not necessaril­y something we can condemn Wattpad for. In this time when education is still treated as a privilege rather than a right, Wattpad is a safe space. The writers are still young and still growing along with their skill sets, and an environmen­t that serves as a breeding ground for people in the process of discovery is worthy of respect. Wattpad, as what their vision states, has always stood for people who want to put their work out there.

On top of that, we can say that Wattpad has already proved its legacy. In a larger scale, it did pave the way for a more active reception of Philippine literature, and we cannot deny that even the act of acknowledg­ement can already of us fashion ourselves as writers, we can all

In the end, it created something vital: a living, breathing community, whether anyone is anonymous, semi-anonymous, or already known by their real names. And for something that’s been rooted on the online grounds, the publishing phenomenon of Wattpad, bit by bit, adds to the continued survival of publishing in a digital era by opening it to everyone.

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