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Voting Discussion: We're Screwing In Light Bulbs AIFG!  

We open it up, we talks the talk, we votes, we shuts it down. This thread is to free up Bureaucracy for daily details as we hammer out the Big Issues towards a vote. Open only when a proposal has been made and seconded according to Buffista policy (Which we voted on!). If this thread is closed, hie thee to Bureaucracy instead!


Kristen - Oct 05, 2004 8:34:34 am PDT #4439 of 10289

I'm a little concerned about adding threads for shows that don't have a full order yet. I mean, Jack & Bobby has been picked up for a full 22 but, last I checked, Veronica Mars and Lost were both still waiting for a pickup on the back nine. And I don't think either is really a lock at this point.

As for lumping Lost and Alias together in a JJ thread, I don't think it's necessarily a bad idea. My concern, again, is what happens if Lost doesn't get picked up? Then we have a thread just for Alias and I've never felt like there was a huge amount of Alias dicussion, aside from the Watch and Eyeroll Posts.


Lyra Jane - Oct 05, 2004 8:46:50 am PDT #4440 of 10289
Up with the sun

I'm a little concerned about adding threads for shows that don't have a full order yet.

That's why the proposal says that if the show is canceled, the thread is closed. I would hope we would only use the "extraordinary circumstances" clause if there really was something special going on, on the level of an imminent movie. And even then, I hope we could close the thread until the movie was closer to a release date. (Not saying this is what we should do with Firefly -- jossverse programs are obviously a special case -- but it is a good step going forward.)

I'm not sure how we would handle a combined Alias/Lost thread if Lost was cancelled, but we could deal with that when the time came.


Nutty - Oct 05, 2004 9:00:48 am PDT #4441 of 10289
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

FWIW, I do think it might be worth thinking about waiting to start creating threads, since Alias is in a lot of ways on the bubble (which is why it's starting in January this year). Then again, although Lost may not be picked up for all 22, its ratings are pretty good. Then again again, this past two weeks have been basically all premiere all the time, and I tend to prefer to find out whether a show has legs (and consequently, whether those legs have any discussionworthiness in them.)

I find it's kind of hard to shut down a thread when a show is cancelled -- it seems there is always a little more discussion to be gotten out of the existing episodes. Anyway, the Firefly threads were kept alive long after cancellation, and before formal movie announcements, on the strength of unreleased episodes and DVDs. Is there a way to institute a thread Sudden Death on cancellation that doesn't make people go bananas?

Lots of shows seems perfectly able to fit within Natter without too much obtrusive whitefont. For years now a select few have been describing and/or mocking a number of Thursday night shows on Friday mornings, without comment from the peanut gallery. (ER and Without a Trace successfully; TAR and Survivor may be more disruptive.) So, I do think it's worth remembering that only Disrupt-o-matic shows really need separate threads.

Of which I think the OC should be one, even though 90% of the whitefont seems to be OMG!!TEHSETHISALLMINE!!1!!


Lyra Jane - Oct 05, 2004 9:17:03 am PDT #4442 of 10289
Up with the sun

Is there a way to institute a thread Sudden Death on cancellation that doesn't make people go bananas?

I'm not sure. But if we don't try to establish that policy, my fear is that we'll eventually get to a point where we have 50 threads for cancelled shows, and everything currently on the air is in Natter. The few posts generated by a show no longer in production could probably be swallowed by Natter, or another TV thread, relatively easily. Remember, we wouldn't be saying, "Don't talk about Alias," just "Alias doesn't get its own thread anymore." I think we could cope with that. (Disclaimer again, because I don't want anyone to feel like I want to get my grubby little hands on the Boxed Set, Firefly or Wonderfalls threads, let alone Buffy or Angel; this provision would apply to new threads only.)

Maybe we could add another item on the ballot, asking people if they want to wait to start the threads until after the November sweeps? I feel I've heard that from a few corners, and it might be a workable compromise.


Topic!Cindy - Oct 05, 2004 9:18:13 am PDT #4443 of 10289
What is even happening?

Lyra, for your "whatever else people suggest," I'd like to throw in Joan of Arcadia. There are a bunch of us who watch it, but I'm not sure how many (it may not end up being chosen).


Kristen - Oct 05, 2004 9:21:26 am PDT #4444 of 10289

That's why the proposal says that if the show is canceled, the thread is closed.

Which might work if the show was cancelled within two weeks of opening the thread. But I fear that, if get a few months into it, the post-cancellation/thread-closure talk will turn into the old "subcommunity! subcommunity!" argument.

Then again, although Lost may not be picked up for all 22, its ratings are pretty good.

They were great for the premiere. But it's not a good sign that only 55% of the people who tuned in for Part 1 of the pilot were interested enough to tune in for Part 2. If it holds steady for the next few weeks, ABC will probably ride it out. But if it continues to bleed viewership, I'm not so sure about it's future. Which brings me to...

I tend to prefer to find out whether a show has legs (and consequently, whether those legs have any discussionworthiness in them.)

This. I think it's important to give a show a few weeks and see what happens before bringing to the table a proposed thread. Maybe it will be cancelled. Maybe the third episode will suck so hard no one want to talk about the show anymore. Maybe it won't suck and it won't get cancelled but after another week or two the new show smell will wear off and discussion will quiet down considerably.


Nutty - Oct 05, 2004 9:26:19 am PDT #4445 of 10289
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

Good point, Lyra Jane. Actually, I do agree with you, that "It's not you can't talk about it; you just have to talk about it in Natter" is a way of instituting a Sudden Death thread closing. I just wonder whether people will get sour grapes about it if/when it does happen. Just as Atlantic Canadians morphed from a show-thread to a people-thread, and squawked when it was suggested it be closed, I wonder if other show-related threads mightn't eventually consider themselves a community.

I think this is less likely to happen on young shows that get cancelled before they've completed a season. So, possibly academic for now, but it may eventually become an issue.


Lyra Jane - Oct 05, 2004 9:31:55 am PDT #4446 of 10289
Up with the sun

if get a few months into it, the post-cancellation/thread-closure talk will turn into the old "subcommunity! subcommunity!" argument.

I get the fear, Kristen. I just don't see what we can do about it, unless we want to either leave all threads open forever, which is obviously unworkable, both in terms of bandwidth and as a community. I'd like people to know going in that the thread may be closed, rather than feel like it's suddenly being sprung on them.

I think it's important to give a show a few weeks and see what happens before bringing to the table a proposed thread.

I hear that, and I'm trying to figure out how to best word a ballot item that will allow people to express that view. It could be something like:

5. When should these threads, if any, be started?
a. Now. now. now.
b. In November, after we have a chance to get more of a sense of whether they will hold our interest.

If the b's have it, we can do a gut check on the original results after sweeps.

I need to get back to work. I'll check in again later.


Lyra Jane - Oct 05, 2004 9:38:06 am PDT #4447 of 10289
Up with the sun

I just wonder whether people will get sour grapes about it if/when it does happen.

Oh, probably. And if it's to a point where it could tear apart our community, we could decide that constitutes "exceptional circumstances." I just hope it doesn't come to that point.


Topic!Cindy - Oct 05, 2004 9:41:50 am PDT #4448 of 10289
What is even happening?

if get a few months into it, the post-cancellation/thread-closure talk will turn into the old "subcommunity! subcommunity!" argument.

I get the fear, Kristen. I just don't see what we can do about it, unless we want to either leave all threads open forever, which is obviously unworkable, both in terms of bandwidth and as a community. I'd like people to know going in that the thread may be closed, rather than feel like it's suddenly being sprung on them.

I share Kristen's fear, but (if I were writing the proposal, and I'm not), I'd just spell it out. "In the event that the show is canceled, it will be closed. If the board experiences problems, and we need to close threads, this thread will be as vulnerable as any other, and will not be saved by claims that it is a sub-community."

I think we should do that for every new thread, now and forever (amen) though. We have Natter, Bitches, UnAm, and Atlantic Canadians. I'd like us to actively discourage amnesty on the basis of subcommunity for any other threads.