DAY one at The Convenience Store, here goes nothing.”
These nine words are all the exposition readers need to kick off The Convenience Store, an ongoing original series that is fast-becoming an Internet favorite. The series revolves around Eddie, a hapless writer left to his own devices at his banal day-job in a convenience store.
“I think of Eddie as a regular young person who has discovered a dream, but hasn’t yet discovered how to reach it,” The Convenience Store creator Hengtee Lim was quoted in a statement as saying. “He’s stuck in a kind of purgatory and trying to make the best of it.”
A look inside The Convenience Store
SINCE its launch, the story has become a reader-favorite on Twitter, according to people from social fiction app Everyst.
Everyst presents stories that are told through tweets written by the characters themselves, allowing readers to enjoy fictional pieces that are uniquely character-driven. The Convenience Store is one of the leading stories on the app today.
The The Convenience Store is a series inspired by Lim’s experiences working in retail.
“I thought a convenience store location would be funny and relatable,” Lim said. “I was surprised by the things I saw and experienced while on the other side of the customer service experience.”
Yet, even then, the continuous development of the series is not without its limitations.
“My own retail experience only covered enough material for the first couple of episodes, so the creative process now involves asking a lot of ‘what if’ questions and following them to see if they’re funny.”
Telling stories through social fiction
BECAUSE stories on Everyst are delivered straight to the audience, many readers have begun to communicate with the cast from The Convenience Store through Twitter. This is what makes social fiction truly unique: not only can audiences easily digest a single series, but they are now empowered with a way to interact with their favorite characters on a very personal level.
Lim said he enjoys leaving interactions at the hands of his characters, adding: “I leave that with Eddie, Trevor and Shifty.”
“They seem to have it covered without issue. Our readers are a good group who help give Eddie’s jokes a new dimension by riffing on them—this makes it so easy.”
But anyone familiar with the tone of the stories is pretty sure it’s him!
With this unique approach to storytelling, Everyst has empowered young writers such as Lim with a platform to tell exciting and interactive stories.
“Compared to traditional fiction, it’s new and it’s different,” Lim said. We’re still learning how to do it as we go; this makes it flexible, fun and challenging, in equal parts.”
New artist on The Convenience Store
WITH so much attention coming to Eddie’s world, the team began to introduce new artists to its burgeoning roster of talent.
A local artist who goes by the name of Bapogichi is one of the newest additions to the Everyst creative team, working alongside Lim, who’ll begin taking The Convenience Store’s art in a new, more polished direction.
According to Everyst, Bapogichi’s love for illustrating began at kindergarten. Over the years, they continued to foster their craft as an illustrator and soon found an audience online through social-media sites such as Tumblr. Unfortunately, due to pressure, Bapogichi abandoned their love for art in favor of a medical career.
“I thought being a doctor was what I wanted, but that eventually I decided to quit to do art full-time,” Bapogichi said.
Since their transition to a full-time artist, Bapogichi has become one of the most prolific young illustrators on Twitter in the Philippines. The recognition enabled them to begin work on Everyst and soon joined The Convenience Store’s creative team.
“Everyst gives readers a very unique storytelling method. It’s fun, and less pressure on the artist,” Bapogichi was quoted in the statement as saying. “Since there’s a growing demographic of young, nerdy adults in the workplace, I think series like The Convenience Stor’ represents people today quite nicely. It’s relatable!”
Eddie and the future of Everyst
UPON the debut of The Convenience Store, Eddie has become one of the most popular characters on Everyst that also exist on Twitter, Everyst said. His popularity was evident by the turnout of fans at a number of local comic and anime conventions.
“It’s surprising; to be honest,” shared Lim. “I want to think that Eddie is relatable to all of us: we’re trying to reach for what we want and trying to make the most of what we’ve got. Life isn’t easy, but you take the good when it’s there and you keep dreaming.”
This is why so many readers follow Eddie and his everyday misadventures. There’s an Eddie inside each and every one of us who has tasted victory and defeat and lived to laugh about it. Any emotion we’ve felt is easily channeled through his experiences. Combined with the way Filipino audiences passionately connect with characters, it won’t be long before Eddie and his gang of misfits become synonymous with Filipinos coming of age at the end of the aughts.
Image credits: Illustrations courtesy of Everyst