Why couldn't Giles have shackles like any self-respecting bachelor?

Xander ,'Beneath You'


Fan Fiction: Writers, Readers, and Enablers  

This thread is for fanfic recs, links, and discussion, but not for actual posting of fanfic.


Consuela - Sep 24, 2004 7:29:44 am PDT #9018 of 10000
We are Buffistas. This isn't our first apocalypse. -- Pix

I hate you.

t pouts


Dana - Sep 24, 2004 7:35:01 am PDT #9019 of 10000
I'm terrifically busy with my ennui.

Right place, right time.

She's so damn cool. This seriously couldn't have happened to a more deserving person.


Anne W. - Sep 24, 2004 7:36:50 am PDT #9020 of 10000
The lost sheep grow teeth, forsake their lambs, and lie with the lions.

Anne, I have links to good resources/archives for these fandoms, and I'll happily dig into them this weekend. When I'm not at work.

Thanks, shrift!

I cannot wait to see what Shalott's novels are like.


Theodosia - Sep 24, 2004 8:29:14 am PDT #9021 of 10000
'we all walk this earth feeling we are frauds. The trick is to be grateful and hope the caper doesn't end any time soon"

Nutty and I had a nice conversation with Shalott at Worldcon, I hadn't known about the series or I would have congratulated her.


Nutty - Sep 24, 2004 8:38:42 am PDT #9022 of 10000
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

(I forgot that she'd written that story, as we happened to be talking about vidding and how different it is from fic. I met her again a different day, and her husband gave me this hilarious pulp crime reader -- first chapters of trashy novels being put back into print for the trashy edification and joy of readers everywhere.

(At the vid show she did, someone failed to propagate broadly the information that the Star Trek episode showing would not be till 6:30, so halfway in the room filled up with, er, an atypical audience for vids. She laughed later about showing "Razzle Dazzle" and a lot of heads starting to nod: "Ah, THIS I know how to think about!" She tried not to scare them too much with her selections.)


Consuela - Sep 24, 2004 8:44:01 am PDT #9023 of 10000
We are Buffistas. This isn't our first apocalypse. -- Pix

I've been having thoughts lately about vids, and accessibility of same. Because I've shown some to some people and gotten some nonplussed responses. And I wonder how much of that is due to the increased sophistication of vidding, the new tools and the symbolism/thematic stuff going on that isn't evident on a first viewing.

It feels like there are very different audiences for some kinds of vids, and that a lot of vidders are mostly talking to each other.

Which isn't, I admit, all that different from the ficwriting community, where the stories that get the most applause aren't necessarily as accessible to the average fan-on-the-street. But it feels like a difference that is growing in magnitude somehow.


§ ita § - Sep 24, 2004 8:55:16 am PDT #9024 of 10000
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Were the people you were showing them to in fandom? Or "just" fans?

I figured stuff that looked like even slightly like a music video would be more accessible, rather than less.

The only non-fan I've shown vids was a filmmaker, so he was quite fascinated.


Katie M - Sep 24, 2004 8:57:48 am PDT #9025 of 10000
I was charmed (albeit somewhat perplexed) by the fannish sensibility of many of the music choices -- it's like the director was trying to vid Canada. --loligo on the Olympic Opening Ceremonies

It feels like there are very different audiences for some kinds of vids, and that a lot of vidders are mostly talking to each other.

I agree, to a point. I've seen some really interesting conversations about Vividcon vids versus Escapade vids and so on, and I think the kind of thing that comes out of Vividcon is on average less accessible to your average viewer. Of course, it tends to have more depth, too, so that's your tradeoff right there.

But a lot of the folks who I think of as the creme de la creme of vidding are about the vid more than they're about the source, which I think leads to less-accessible stuff. I saw a couple of people in Vividcon reports saying that they were disappointed the audience hadn't been more open to vids from source that isn't traditionally fannish--I'm particularly thinking of a couple of people saying that about a Deadwood vid. Which is... well, I had no familiarity with the source. And you can carry that off sometimes, but my response to that vid was "crap, look at all the bearded white guys who I can't tell apart," and if I can't even get a grip on the story being told--which I couldn't--I can't get a grip on the vid. (Unless it's a "look, pretty pictures!" vid.)


Nutty - Sep 24, 2004 9:01:39 am PDT #9026 of 10000
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

I think that there is a huge difference between watching a vid for a show you know, and watching a vid for one you don't. I'm often left with a "Pretty... but mystifying" sense, when I watch vids for shows I don't know; whereas I know the symbol system, the relationships, the emotional and visual "syntax" of other vids before the vid starts.

For example, the K/S "Closer" video is disturbing because it's a wilful misinterpretation of the text, that still works. If you come from Darkest Manitoba and don't know a thing about Star Trek, you'd probably find it less disturbing on the textual level (although still plenty disturbing on the plot level). It's one of those especially sophisticated vids that tells a story in pure visual format, so that it is still comprehensible to the ST-ignorant, but I imagine it's a lot more meaningful the more you know the situation of that meaning.

A vid that doesn't have that specific story sensibility would be even harder for the non-fan to grasp, because there's so much more work in pulling meaning out of the choices of edits.


Dana - Oct 04, 2004 8:38:37 am PDT #9027 of 10000
I'm terrifically busy with my ennui.

In case you're still wondering how the world will be ruled after the apocalype:

There was a time after the debacle and during the very confusing period that followed, when it was thought the former Nations of the World could be reestablished and repopulated. Given the small amount of people left in the Planet as a whole, less than 10,000, it proofed more feasible to bring everyone together and completely readjust humanity to individually fit each person. After much discussion and examination of the facts, it was decided King Paul’s realm was the least affected portion of the globe and thus the perfect Utopia. The Subjects straggled in from parts unknown, they were incorporated into this new society, the dome was finished and on this day the New World was born. Jubilation ruled throughout.

***

The young man was despondent and beyond himself with grief

He's so far beside himself, he's beyond himself.

Michael didn’t answer, then his father added, “Every vile containing her memory has been reinserted into her Michael, but she has only fluttered her eyes once.”

Maybe it's because you've been inserting viles into her Michael.