I was reading a
fanfic musing over at
shapinglight's journal. I started to respond, but it was getting a little long-ish, so I decided to do a post instead. It's an interesting read in general, but this question in particular stood out to me:
Which leads me to wondering why it is that the Buffyverse is still the only fictional world invented by other people
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Which is also not so accurate for me, because I just wrote a Thunderfrost story in 13 chapters! XD So, I guess I'll say that the Buffyverse is like a home. You can travel all around the world and actually like so many places, but there is no place like home.
(Ps: I'm still writing a big Buffyverse story, so I'm still really involved with fanfics on BtVS)
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For instance, I mentioned "Boss", the first season of which I was really blown away by. The second season? Not so much. It felt like it shot its whole load in those first eight episodes, and there was nothing really of interest left to tell. Cue gratuitous sex scenes, brainless melodrama and illogical intrigue. It's not really bad, now, just average. Then again, maybe average is the worst sort of thing to be when it comes to art.
With Buffy, the seven-season journey felt paced almost exactly right (I'm actually working on a little graphics project right now to try to illustrate why I think that is).
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Unlike you, I had already done fanfic before BtVS came along (as I’ve observed elsewhere, I was writing fanfiction before the term itself was invented) … but with certain caveats. My first exposure to the phenomenon was by accidental acquaintance with a trio of girls in California who were recreational Trekkies and wrote stories to go along with that; and, yes, those stories were happily and unapologetically of the “me and my girlfriends on board the Enterprise” brand. I wrote in response to those tales, doing the same kind of shameless self-insertion. It was fun and never intended to be anything other than fun, but I cut my writing teeth in those exercises, and still remember ( ... )
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I do know that I'd never even considered writing fanfiction at all before 2006, and never considered writing it about anything else. I'd written...
In my case, some short fiction, comics, and essays that got published in various places. Oh and that one quickly abandoned rip-off of The Hobbit when I was eleven. Heh.
I didn't get much enjoyment out of the writing itself, and at times it was excruciating.
Like you, writing for me is, um, not fun. There is a Robert Crumb comic that sums up the experience for me: Hippy gnome Mr. Natural is faced with a sink full of dirty dishes. He sighs, pushes up his sleeves and washes them, cussing a blue streak and snarling the whole time. At the end, the dishes are gleaming, the sun is shining through the window, and he says with a smile, "Ahhh. Job well done!"
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I just conducted some sciencematifical tests, and have determined within a 97.9989% certainly that I am "not specifically you." I know, I was also surprised, but we can't argue with Sci Ants!
There is a Robert Crumb comic that sums up the experience for me: Hippy gnome Mr. Natural is faced with a sink full of dirty dishes. He sighs, pushes up his sleeves and washes them, cussing a blue streak and snarling the whole time. At the end, the dishes are gleaming, the sun is shining through the window, and he says with a smile, "Ahhh. Job well done!"
Yes! I recall this one, and that general vein in his stuff. It's interesting... some of the artists I disagree with the most (like Crumb and Douglas Adams, to take two examples), are also among my favorites. WHAT IS UP WITH THAT, YO?
(rhetorical question)
(unless, that is, you have a good answer)
(EDIT: and as long as that answer isn't "42")
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And, possibly, some of it may have to do with how well a support community is already established. My discovery of online Buffy came midway through Season 3, by which time there were thousands of fics and discussions and tropes and developments and fic-typings already established. I could evaluate and navigate and decide within the context of things that had already been explored to some extent by others before me.
Some of it, though, can’t be quantified. ( ... )
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I love every word of this.
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I'm not so well versed in Whedon's latest activities, but I do agree that he is, if nothing else, a very talented storyteller. It will be interesting to see what he does with his newfound celebrity, if only to compare it to fellow directors like Peter Jackson (who I think is similar in his rise from dark horse clique to Hollywood superstar) or Sam Raimi (who I think is similar in his small bore approach and project trajectory).
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Oh man, my intellectual love for Dollhouse knows no bounds. I feel almost the exact feels for Caprica (a Jane Espenson-run show) as for Dollhouse, and probably for the same reasons. Those themes of identity, selfhood, and technology were like catnip to me. Those were good TV times!
I'm kind of hoping for the created family of Firefly and the edgy audacity of Dollhouse
I'm trying not to get my hopes up about S.H.I.E.L.D., but then you say stuff like that! Guy! *hopes with you*
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Okay I always feel that I have to acknowledge people who found Dollhouse unwatchable, because I can understand that reaction (I cannot watch L&O:SVU because it is always women and children as victims... it just makes me upset and angry). But really I agree w/you:
"Those themes of identity, selfhood, and technology were like catnip to me. Those were good TV times"
There was so much about Dollhouse that was amazing, fascinating, and fun (and not like anything else on TV). I'm hoping that Joss will be free to push the envelope in S.H.I.E.L.D.! He might have more latitude because ABC is owned by Disney, and they want to have his work w/Marvel to succeed. And because it is a Sci-fi world and you can always get away with more stuff in that genre (like with Caprica).
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