This is mostly relating to the HP fandom and recent events regarding the saleability of fanworks, but some of the points regarding fannish entitlement interested me with regards to Atlantis fandom.
These points are made here in this post.
1. Non-canon fill-ins.
Interviews, blogs, things that don't actually happen in the show. Are they canon? Are they not? Anyone whose OTP/pet theory has just been crucified in an interview/blog entry and who has aspirations to being a canon-thumper will say that information outside of canon, even if given by the creator(s) is non-canon. Anyone whose OTP/pet theory has been confirmed by an interview/blog entry is going to claim it is.
And for a canon that is created by multiple people where the out-of-canon fill-ins are also created by multiple people (ie. a television show like Atlantis), it gets doubly confusing! Especially where they are deliberately performing the blog version of the Dance Of The Seven Veils - don't reveal everything at once, let the layers come off slowly.
"After a certain point, you have to either throw up your hands or go crazy, and some people choose the latter."
Although I guess the definition of 'going crazy' varies from person to person...
2. Balkanization
'Balkanization' is the habit people make of only talking to those who share the same opinions as themselves. When you have a big enough group of people who want canon to imitate their version of fanon, who needs canon anyway?
I think that 90% of the Elizabeth- and Shweir-fans onf my f-list unfriended me after the 14th January 2007. I wasn't distraught over Elizabeth's departure, see? I'm not exactly one of the more popular John/Teyla fans, either - mostly because I don't think that John/Teyla is a special relationship that is better than any other possible relationship for the pairing: I just like it.
"If people disagree with you, you can just call them wrong, make your own space, and ignore them. So, naturally, when the AUTHOR disagrees with you, you stick with the same pattern--decide they must be crazy and go your own way."
Replace 'the AUTHOR' with 'Joe Mallozzi' and it pretty much reads for SGA fandom.
I haven't been around much lately and I haven't been reading the f-list (busy with the overseas trip). This just caught my attention and I figured I'd pass it on as food for thought.
Time to get ready to head off to the Moulin Rouge!
These points are made here in this post.
1. Non-canon fill-ins.
Interviews, blogs, things that don't actually happen in the show. Are they canon? Are they not? Anyone whose OTP/pet theory has just been crucified in an interview/blog entry and who has aspirations to being a canon-thumper will say that information outside of canon, even if given by the creator(s) is non-canon. Anyone whose OTP/pet theory has been confirmed by an interview/blog entry is going to claim it is.
And for a canon that is created by multiple people where the out-of-canon fill-ins are also created by multiple people (ie. a television show like Atlantis), it gets doubly confusing! Especially where they are deliberately performing the blog version of the Dance Of The Seven Veils - don't reveal everything at once, let the layers come off slowly.
"After a certain point, you have to either throw up your hands or go crazy, and some people choose the latter."
Although I guess the definition of 'going crazy' varies from person to person...
2. Balkanization
'Balkanization' is the habit people make of only talking to those who share the same opinions as themselves. When you have a big enough group of people who want canon to imitate their version of fanon, who needs canon anyway?
I think that 90% of the Elizabeth- and Shweir-fans onf my f-list unfriended me after the 14th January 2007. I wasn't distraught over Elizabeth's departure, see? I'm not exactly one of the more popular John/Teyla fans, either - mostly because I don't think that John/Teyla is a special relationship that is better than any other possible relationship for the pairing: I just like it.
"If people disagree with you, you can just call them wrong, make your own space, and ignore them. So, naturally, when the AUTHOR disagrees with you, you stick with the same pattern--decide they must be crazy and go your own way."
Replace 'the AUTHOR' with 'Joe Mallozzi' and it pretty much reads for SGA fandom.
I haven't been around much lately and I haven't been reading the f-list (busy with the overseas trip). This just caught my attention and I figured I'd pass it on as food for thought.
Time to get ready to head off to the Moulin Rouge!
no subject
No matter how large the group that yells that 'x is canon', unless x is based on fact as opposed to subtext it is still 'interpretive canon' - a divergence in the opinion of what canon is based on a difference of perception.
2. Balkanization, or in SGA's fandom, Guerilla Warfare, is a big problem of fandom and leads to too much entitlement for people to scream about what/who is right and what/who is wrong. The fact that people argue over this in something which they fail to see as a matter of interpretation irks me.
no subject
Errr ... I kinda agree, kinda disagree.
I think you're absolutely right that "canon" is strictly the facts of what's shown onscreen (or written in the books). In order to get anything out of it at all, the reader/viewer is going to have to provide their own interpretation. The whole process of reading a book or watching a TV show is viewer-interactive in that way.
BUT! I know this puts me at odds with a majority of fandom, but I do believe that the author/creator/official writer's opinion on the characters carries more weight than J. Random Fan's opinion. It's not actual canon in the same sense that what's shown onscreen is canon, but ... I think there's a HUGE load of fannish entitlement in the idea that my opinions carry the same weight as the author's.
It's still massively wanky to use the author's intended subtext as a hammer in arguing one's own point of view -- "The author said so & so are a couple! HAHAHA! In your face, Draco/Dumbledore shippers!" But, IMHO, the worst of the fanwars are fueled not by over-reliance on canon and author subtext, but selective reliance on it -- which is, in turn, driven by the mentality that we can pick and choose those aspects of canon that suit us, and that we're entitled to our selective view of canon as the ONE TRUE PATH OF THE WORLD. The idea that the author is just another fan and if he/she disagrees with me, then he/she is wrong ... that seems like fan entitlement at its worst.
no subject
See, I can see your point in a way, because an author's opinion comes from a place of knowledge J. Random Fan doesn't have. However, I think when it comes to a piece of finished work, while the extra knowledge is valid, once something is viewed it is open for opinions of all. Authorial intent and actual opinion on a scene are totally different beasts. It really doesn't matter what the author intended if the majority of the reader/viewership sees it in another light - in fact, you could content it could be considered bad writing (and direction in the case of TV shows) on the author's part if they had specific intent and fandom en masse saw something totally different.
I agree with you that using authorial intent for purposes of justifying interpretive canon is wank. But I honestly see no purpose to crushing someone's way of viewing something. Regardless of what someone says, a person is going to see what they read/watch how they want to see it. And no matter how much people poke at the beehive, it isn't going to change the views of people, just piss them off.
As to JoMo - I don't value his opinion any day of the week because he is one of the biggest sources of entitlement in the fandom. He thinks because he works on the show he has the right to belittle whomever he pleases. I think he's an atrocious human being and I cannot respect his behaviour in the slightest.
But, IMHO, the worst of the fanwars are fueled not by over-reliance on canon and author subtext, but selective reliance on it...
Selective anything is the cornerstone of fandom wank, whether it is selective reliance on source, or selective hearing/reading in debate. It is all about what each reader/watcher wants to see and how many people who share that opinion that they can get to dogpile to justify said opinion. Especially when, forbid, someone happens to think something totally contary to what the masses do.
As someone said recently, fandom wank isn't just about disagreeing with something. It is also the act of being SEEN to disagree with something.
The idea that the author is just another fan and if he/she disagrees with me, then he/she is wrong ... that seems like fan entitlement at its worst.
The thing is, there is no right and wrong. Even the author stating intent doesn't make them right, and it doesn't make the person with the other perception wrong. The biggest annoyance of fandom entitlement is the assertion that others must be wrong if they don't agree.
no subject
Yes.
Ultimately, the viewer (or reader) has to personalize what they see. They have to personalize it and internalize it to emotionally invest in it. Emotional investment is what makes them fans.
If there is no internalizing, or personalizing, there is no inevestment, if there is no investment there are no fans. If there are no fans, there is no fandom, fanbase, or money going in.
Authorial intent can matter, sure, but ultimately you want people to make it their own. That means they have to apply themselves to it. Their filters, their experiences, their way of thinking. That's not bad. That's fantastic.
no subject
But I totally agree with what you said. Investment is what makes people fans, and if people can't find their 'something' in a show, then it is not for them.
Though I'm eternally astounded by people in the SGA fandom who actually don't have anything in the show to be invested in but their anger at the things they don't like. That shit really isn't healthy.
no subject
Also, I seriously doubt that you seeing things differently means you're wired wrong. It means you're not them. It happens to everyone. (I totally *don't* see my fandom's major ship. Like, at all. So, go figure.)
no subject
On the issue of 'wired wrong', it was gallows humour. I have a mental illness and I like to poke fun at it. I know what you are saying though. Though I'll be honest, when it comes to SGA, my pairings are borne out of fanon love of the idea rather than me actually seeing it in the show.
no subject
Well, not even the belief that others are wrong, but the need to convince them (and everyone else) that they're wrong. I mean -- I'm opinionated, I argue, I debate, but I try not to be a total wanker about it. (Actually, I'd started writing a much longer post regarding authorial intent and deleted it ... because I know that mine is very much a minority opinion in fandom, and I don't think there's much to be gained by trying to argue you, or anyone else, around to my point of view. I'll gripe about it in my journal if I feel the need to vent; otherwise, I'm not interested in being an evangelist.)
Mallozzi -- he cracks me up. I actually have bucketloads of respect for the man for the way that he handles the amount of crap he takes on a daily basis. If the fans are dumb enough to poke at him, he pokes back hard, and I like that. But then, I have a longstanding fetish for smart, sarcastic bastards. (I married one, in fact!)
no subject
no subject
And that too. Though I've observed a lot of this is done in a passive-aggressive manner rather than directly. With little digs, or exclusion zones.
I'm opinionated, I argue, I debate, but I try not to be a total wanker about it.
And there is the problem. The line between 'debate' and 'wank' is actually very thin in fandom because of entitlement. I'm a firm believer in people voicing their opinion - it's a basic right. But it goes back to what I said earlier - for some people it's not just voicing an opinion, it's being seen voicing one.
I think most decent people aspire to state their point without causing denigration. The problem is, there are always that minority who don't even have to try to cause wank, and in an area so volatile, it doesn't take much to turn even the most well-intentioned person who normally talks intelligently into a Grade-A wanker.
I actually have bucketloads of respect for the man for the way that he handles the amount of crap he takes on a daily basis.
You know, I totally hear that, because yeah, I do admire him that because there are some right asshats posting on his blog. His pictures, although not always brilliant, are nice to see. However, his comments about large numbers of people who watch the show he works on really bug me and I really cannot get around the way he insults groups of fandom for their opinions.
To be honest, I actually stopped reading the content of his blog and just look at the pretty pictures. Not that there are many at the moment.
BTW, I'd have been interested in your comments on authorial intent even if I hadn't have actually agreed with it.
no subject
I didn't get the impression you'd have gotten offended; you seem to have your head screwed on straighter than that. *g* But it wasn't really a road I felt like going down, especially in someone else's blog and entirely tangential to the main point of the original post. I usually try to keep from doing that unless it's a situation where discussion of the issue has specifically been invited by the OP. Keeps my (and everyone else's) blood pressure down, I'm sure! And, no, this isn't meant as a criticism of you or anyone else for doing that; it's just that I have been easily sidetracked by potentially inflammatory topics in the past and I am, slowly but surely, learning not to have a quick trigger-finger on the keyboard.
And yeah, I agree with you that most people are pretty reasonable most of the time; it's the flameworthy minority that spoil it for everyone. (Also, I suspect that even most reasonable people have an inner flamer lurking within, when something really pushes their buttons. Unfortunately those button topics are different for everyone, and nearly everything is guaranteed to tick off someone.)
no subject
I have so much to say on this subject, but not here.
The premise of fannish opinion being equal to (or as it reads in many cases - superior) to that of the author is such an alien idea to the culture I live in (and I'm not talking about British culture) that I still find myself baffled by it. I understand it from an intellectual POV, but that's it.
That's not to say that I never disagree with the author/s. I do - but it's generally minor, and (most of the time - I have my slippages) I deal with it by not making it an issue.
no subject
no subject
Hee -- "JoMo" That made me laugh out loud. I've never seen him called that before.
no subject
no subject
2. Lol, yes Joe Mallozzi in that quote pretty much does read for SGA Fandom. :p
3. Have fun at the Moulin Rouge!!
no subject
I think it's extremely difficult to be unbiased in something you care about (even a tv show). Obviously fans invest in the tv show and so they care about it. When dealing with emotions, things can and will get messy. I admit that I have Sheyla vision on whenever I watch SGA. So I notice Sheyla moments more and other ships tend not to take presidence in my mind. This is where the whole subtext comes into play. If you ship a certain couple, you'll be on the look out for subtext that supports your ship.
I agree with
lol. I'm enjoying the SGA discussions going around on LJ.
no subject
and because it's especially RPF and RPF is a very murky grey area in and of itself, it's really hard to distinguish canon from fanon and subtext. and with someone like pete wentz, who sometimes deliberately and very often blurs that line between fantasy and reality, it's very hard to distinguish what's fact and what's fiction.
no subject
Well, no. Many people will, sure, but I think quite a few have a position that doesn't change based on what the author says. I don't believe that anything outside the books/show/film (depending on which fandom you're talking about) is canon. If they say something I agree with? Still not canon. I love the fact that Dumbledore is gay, but when it comes down to it, it's not in the books and therefore it's not canon, sorry to say.
no subject
I love *lots* of the cut bits from my current fandom, but that doesn't mean they're canon. They mean they're bits I love that still aren't canon. I don't understand the fascination with canon 'validation' for things like ships, anyway.
We're fandom. We make shit up and use the canon to support it. Why does it *being* canon, or not, have this much power?
*here from metafandom*
He, I was to use the same example. I mean, I do find Grindeldore subtext in the books but... anyone can disagree with me because it's not canon.
no subject
A: They can, and have contradicted what is on the screen, and what they have said before, or what other people in the creative team have said before.
B: If the writers intended to convey canon or subtext, they had hours and hours to do so, and if they weren't able to convince the audience of it, then they weren't doing it well, and trying to explain it otherwise and after the fact is just lazy.
I'll give you one example of the above which has formed my opinion.
Xena - certain writers, and some actors kept on insisting that Xena and Gabrielle's relationship on the show was just 'close friendship', this lead to some derision amongst the fans, and the small minority who didn't believe there was romantic love between the two would say 'See, writer A said they were just friends, so deal'. As if the writers opinion were the last, and final word on the subject. Not to mention there was contradiction between the writers right from the beginning on the nature of the relationship on that show. Later on, all the writers, and most of the actors said that yeah 'there was something going on between Xena and Gabrielle' well no kidding! I decided it was just easier to decide myself.
Also, from what I've heard, Mr Malozzi is a special little soul, with entitlement issues which can rival many fans I've seen. If anyone is trying to prove their case on what he says, they lost it automatically for me. I've never really been that keen on the TPTB of SGA. Which is why I try not to pay attention to them, it ruins the squee.
no subject
Concerning "what is canon" - in a TV based show, I believe it is the show - full stop. This is what most people have access to. I hold that DVD extras (interviews, missing scenes, commentaries etc) are apocryphal, but are "more equal than others" as they are widely available to all, but at a cost - and some people are just not interested in them. Interviews, blogs, Cons, etc are not as widely available - and as many contain spoilers, may be actively avoided by certain fans - I think these are apocryphal - they can be used and I would encourage their use, but knowledge of them should not be assumed (as with the DVDs). Also what comes out in interviews is often contradicted in canon. I think novels, unless they are written by creators/writers of the show (and no, Shatner, you DO NOT count!) or are endorsed by them, are not canonical in any way. They are fan fic published in book format. Novelisations - are different - if they've been written in close conjunction and consulation with the creators/writers - I see these as equal to an interview etc.
no subject
IMO whatever the writers want to communicate they have to put into the text itself. They can't just expect people to be informed about all the secondary information.
no subject
Anyone whose OTP/pet theory has been confirmed by an interview/blog entry is going to claim it is.
Well, not everyone.
One of my favorite pairings ever in the BtVS fandom was confirmed by interviews with one of the writers (and, I think, one of the actors). Since I refuse to accept anything else from interviews as canon--it may be neat, I may get a story idea out of it, I may like reading fic about whatever it is, but I don't treat it as canon, and I'll ignore it whenever I like--then I decided it would be totally hypocritical to claim that my pairing was canon by those same rules.
(I did use the interview to argue against someone who said "anyone who pairs Y and Z is clearly a moron, because there's no way that's even hinted at in canon," but only on the grounds of, "If the subtext was intentional, it's not 'stupid' to see it.")
no subject
Replace 'the AUTHOR' with 'Joe Mallozzi' and it pretty much reads for SGA fandom.
Ooo, so true. Probably why I so rarely read anyone's meta these days. I just don't think I'm rabid enough to get involved in fandom these days. It would take a lot for me to boycott (and with so much love for Teyla and Ronon lately, that just doesn't look likely). I think that they could actually recreate the 'Happy Days' jumping-the-shark scene (with the addition of a puddlejumper pulling the leather-jacketed Fonze) and I would still watch Atlantis as long as the core characters/plots/schemas are kept intact. :D Now, does that make me crazy or sane?
no subject
No matter how large the group that yells that 'x is canon', unless x is based on fact as opposed to subtext it is still 'interpretive canon' - a divergence in the opinion of what canon is based on a difference of perception.
2. Balkanization, or in SGA's fandom, Guerilla Warfare, is a big problem of fandom and leads to too much entitlement for people to scream about what/who is right and what/who is wrong. The fact that people argue over this in something which they fail to see as a matter of interpretation irks me.
no subject
Errr ... I kinda agree, kinda disagree.
I think you're absolutely right that "canon" is strictly the facts of what's shown onscreen (or written in the books). In order to get anything out of it at all, the reader/viewer is going to have to provide their own interpretation. The whole process of reading a book or watching a TV show is viewer-interactive in that way.
BUT! I know this puts me at odds with a majority of fandom, but I do believe that the author/creator/official writer's opinion on the characters carries more weight than J. Random Fan's opinion. It's not actual canon in the same sense that what's shown onscreen is canon, but ... I think there's a HUGE load of fannish entitlement in the idea that my opinions carry the same weight as the author's.
It's still massively wanky to use the author's intended subtext as a hammer in arguing one's own point of view -- "The author said so & so are a couple! HAHAHA! In your face, Draco/Dumbledore shippers!" But, IMHO, the worst of the fanwars are fueled not by over-reliance on canon and author subtext, but selective reliance on it -- which is, in turn, driven by the mentality that we can pick and choose those aspects of canon that suit us, and that we're entitled to our selective view of canon as the ONE TRUE PATH OF THE WORLD. The idea that the author is just another fan and if he/she disagrees with me, then he/she is wrong ... that seems like fan entitlement at its worst.
no subject
See, I can see your point in a way, because an author's opinion comes from a place of knowledge J. Random Fan doesn't have. However, I think when it comes to a piece of finished work, while the extra knowledge is valid, once something is viewed it is open for opinions of all. Authorial intent and actual opinion on a scene are totally different beasts. It really doesn't matter what the author intended if the majority of the reader/viewership sees it in another light - in fact, you could content it could be considered bad writing (and direction in the case of TV shows) on the author's part if they had specific intent and fandom en masse saw something totally different.
I agree with you that using authorial intent for purposes of justifying interpretive canon is wank. But I honestly see no purpose to crushing someone's way of viewing something. Regardless of what someone says, a person is going to see what they read/watch how they want to see it. And no matter how much people poke at the beehive, it isn't going to change the views of people, just piss them off.
As to JoMo - I don't value his opinion any day of the week because he is one of the biggest sources of entitlement in the fandom. He thinks because he works on the show he has the right to belittle whomever he pleases. I think he's an atrocious human being and I cannot respect his behaviour in the slightest.
But, IMHO, the worst of the fanwars are fueled not by over-reliance on canon and author subtext, but selective reliance on it...
Selective anything is the cornerstone of fandom wank, whether it is selective reliance on source, or selective hearing/reading in debate. It is all about what each reader/watcher wants to see and how many people who share that opinion that they can get to dogpile to justify said opinion. Especially when, forbid, someone happens to think something totally contary to what the masses do.
As someone said recently, fandom wank isn't just about disagreeing with something. It is also the act of being SEEN to disagree with something.
The idea that the author is just another fan and if he/she disagrees with me, then he/she is wrong ... that seems like fan entitlement at its worst.
The thing is, there is no right and wrong. Even the author stating intent doesn't make them right, and it doesn't make the person with the other perception wrong. The biggest annoyance of fandom entitlement is the assertion that others must be wrong if they don't agree.
no subject
Yes.
Ultimately, the viewer (or reader) has to personalize what they see. They have to personalize it and internalize it to emotionally invest in it. Emotional investment is what makes them fans.
If there is no internalizing, or personalizing, there is no inevestment, if there is no investment there are no fans. If there are no fans, there is no fandom, fanbase, or money going in.
Authorial intent can matter, sure, but ultimately you want people to make it their own. That means they have to apply themselves to it. Their filters, their experiences, their way of thinking. That's not bad. That's fantastic.
no subject
But I totally agree with what you said. Investment is what makes people fans, and if people can't find their 'something' in a show, then it is not for them.
Though I'm eternally astounded by people in the SGA fandom who actually don't have anything in the show to be invested in but their anger at the things they don't like. That shit really isn't healthy.
no subject
Also, I seriously doubt that you seeing things differently means you're wired wrong. It means you're not them. It happens to everyone. (I totally *don't* see my fandom's major ship. Like, at all. So, go figure.)
no subject
On the issue of 'wired wrong', it was gallows humour. I have a mental illness and I like to poke fun at it. I know what you are saying though. Though I'll be honest, when it comes to SGA, my pairings are borne out of fanon love of the idea rather than me actually seeing it in the show.
no subject
Well, not even the belief that others are wrong, but the need to convince them (and everyone else) that they're wrong. I mean -- I'm opinionated, I argue, I debate, but I try not to be a total wanker about it. (Actually, I'd started writing a much longer post regarding authorial intent and deleted it ... because I know that mine is very much a minority opinion in fandom, and I don't think there's much to be gained by trying to argue you, or anyone else, around to my point of view. I'll gripe about it in my journal if I feel the need to vent; otherwise, I'm not interested in being an evangelist.)
Mallozzi -- he cracks me up. I actually have bucketloads of respect for the man for the way that he handles the amount of crap he takes on a daily basis. If the fans are dumb enough to poke at him, he pokes back hard, and I like that. But then, I have a longstanding fetish for smart, sarcastic bastards. (I married one, in fact!)
no subject
no subject
And that too. Though I've observed a lot of this is done in a passive-aggressive manner rather than directly. With little digs, or exclusion zones.
I'm opinionated, I argue, I debate, but I try not to be a total wanker about it.
And there is the problem. The line between 'debate' and 'wank' is actually very thin in fandom because of entitlement. I'm a firm believer in people voicing their opinion - it's a basic right. But it goes back to what I said earlier - for some people it's not just voicing an opinion, it's being seen voicing one.
I think most decent people aspire to state their point without causing denigration. The problem is, there are always that minority who don't even have to try to cause wank, and in an area so volatile, it doesn't take much to turn even the most well-intentioned person who normally talks intelligently into a Grade-A wanker.
I actually have bucketloads of respect for the man for the way that he handles the amount of crap he takes on a daily basis.
You know, I totally hear that, because yeah, I do admire him that because there are some right asshats posting on his blog. His pictures, although not always brilliant, are nice to see. However, his comments about large numbers of people who watch the show he works on really bug me and I really cannot get around the way he insults groups of fandom for their opinions.
To be honest, I actually stopped reading the content of his blog and just look at the pretty pictures. Not that there are many at the moment.
BTW, I'd have been interested in your comments on authorial intent even if I hadn't have actually agreed with it.
no subject
I didn't get the impression you'd have gotten offended; you seem to have your head screwed on straighter than that. *g* But it wasn't really a road I felt like going down, especially in someone else's blog and entirely tangential to the main point of the original post. I usually try to keep from doing that unless it's a situation where discussion of the issue has specifically been invited by the OP. Keeps my (and everyone else's) blood pressure down, I'm sure! And, no, this isn't meant as a criticism of you or anyone else for doing that; it's just that I have been easily sidetracked by potentially inflammatory topics in the past and I am, slowly but surely, learning not to have a quick trigger-finger on the keyboard.
And yeah, I agree with you that most people are pretty reasonable most of the time; it's the flameworthy minority that spoil it for everyone. (Also, I suspect that even most reasonable people have an inner flamer lurking within, when something really pushes their buttons. Unfortunately those button topics are different for everyone, and nearly everything is guaranteed to tick off someone.)
no subject
I have so much to say on this subject, but not here.
The premise of fannish opinion being equal to (or as it reads in many cases - superior) to that of the author is such an alien idea to the culture I live in (and I'm not talking about British culture) that I still find myself baffled by it. I understand it from an intellectual POV, but that's it.
That's not to say that I never disagree with the author/s. I do - but it's generally minor, and (most of the time - I have my slippages) I deal with it by not making it an issue.
no subject
no subject
Hee -- "JoMo" That made me laugh out loud. I've never seen him called that before.
no subject
no subject
2. Lol, yes Joe Mallozzi in that quote pretty much does read for SGA Fandom. :p
3. Have fun at the Moulin Rouge!!
no subject
I think it's extremely difficult to be unbiased in something you care about (even a tv show). Obviously fans invest in the tv show and so they care about it. When dealing with emotions, things can and will get messy. I admit that I have Sheyla vision on whenever I watch SGA. So I notice Sheyla moments more and other ships tend not to take presidence in my mind. This is where the whole subtext comes into play. If you ship a certain couple, you'll be on the look out for subtext that supports your ship.
I agree with
lol. I'm enjoying the SGA discussions going around on LJ.
no subject
and because it's especially RPF and RPF is a very murky grey area in and of itself, it's really hard to distinguish canon from fanon and subtext. and with someone like pete wentz, who sometimes deliberately and very often blurs that line between fantasy and reality, it's very hard to distinguish what's fact and what's fiction.
no subject
Well, no. Many people will, sure, but I think quite a few have a position that doesn't change based on what the author says. I don't believe that anything outside the books/show/film (depending on which fandom you're talking about) is canon. If they say something I agree with? Still not canon. I love the fact that Dumbledore is gay, but when it comes down to it, it's not in the books and therefore it's not canon, sorry to say.
no subject
I love *lots* of the cut bits from my current fandom, but that doesn't mean they're canon. They mean they're bits I love that still aren't canon. I don't understand the fascination with canon 'validation' for things like ships, anyway.
We're fandom. We make shit up and use the canon to support it. Why does it *being* canon, or not, have this much power?
*here from metafandom*
He, I was to use the same example. I mean, I do find Grindeldore subtext in the books but... anyone can disagree with me because it's not canon.
no subject
A: They can, and have contradicted what is on the screen, and what they have said before, or what other people in the creative team have said before.
B: If the writers intended to convey canon or subtext, they had hours and hours to do so, and if they weren't able to convince the audience of it, then they weren't doing it well, and trying to explain it otherwise and after the fact is just lazy.
I'll give you one example of the above which has formed my opinion.
Xena - certain writers, and some actors kept on insisting that Xena and Gabrielle's relationship on the show was just 'close friendship', this lead to some derision amongst the fans, and the small minority who didn't believe there was romantic love between the two would say 'See, writer A said they were just friends, so deal'. As if the writers opinion were the last, and final word on the subject. Not to mention there was contradiction between the writers right from the beginning on the nature of the relationship on that show. Later on, all the writers, and most of the actors said that yeah 'there was something going on between Xena and Gabrielle' well no kidding! I decided it was just easier to decide myself.
Also, from what I've heard, Mr Malozzi is a special little soul, with entitlement issues which can rival many fans I've seen. If anyone is trying to prove their case on what he says, they lost it automatically for me. I've never really been that keen on the TPTB of SGA. Which is why I try not to pay attention to them, it ruins the squee.
no subject
Concerning "what is canon" - in a TV based show, I believe it is the show - full stop. This is what most people have access to. I hold that DVD extras (interviews, missing scenes, commentaries etc) are apocryphal, but are "more equal than others" as they are widely available to all, but at a cost - and some people are just not interested in them. Interviews, blogs, Cons, etc are not as widely available - and as many contain spoilers, may be actively avoided by certain fans - I think these are apocryphal - they can be used and I would encourage their use, but knowledge of them should not be assumed (as with the DVDs). Also what comes out in interviews is often contradicted in canon. I think novels, unless they are written by creators/writers of the show (and no, Shatner, you DO NOT count!) or are endorsed by them, are not canonical in any way. They are fan fic published in book format. Novelisations - are different - if they've been written in close conjunction and consulation with the creators/writers - I see these as equal to an interview etc.
no subject
IMO whatever the writers want to communicate they have to put into the text itself. They can't just expect people to be informed about all the secondary information.
no subject
Anyone whose OTP/pet theory has been confirmed by an interview/blog entry is going to claim it is.
Well, not everyone.
One of my favorite pairings ever in the BtVS fandom was confirmed by interviews with one of the writers (and, I think, one of the actors). Since I refuse to accept anything else from interviews as canon--it may be neat, I may get a story idea out of it, I may like reading fic about whatever it is, but I don't treat it as canon, and I'll ignore it whenever I like--then I decided it would be totally hypocritical to claim that my pairing was canon by those same rules.
(I did use the interview to argue against someone who said "anyone who pairs Y and Z is clearly a moron, because there's no way that's even hinted at in canon," but only on the grounds of, "If the subtext was intentional, it's not 'stupid' to see it.")
no subject
Replace 'the AUTHOR' with 'Joe Mallozzi' and it pretty much reads for SGA fandom.
Ooo, so true. Probably why I so rarely read anyone's meta these days. I just don't think I'm rabid enough to get involved in fandom these days. It would take a lot for me to boycott (and with so much love for Teyla and Ronon lately, that just doesn't look likely). I think that they could actually recreate the 'Happy Days' jumping-the-shark scene (with the addition of a puddlejumper pulling the leather-jacketed Fonze) and I would still watch Atlantis as long as the core characters/plots/schemas are kept intact. :D Now, does that make me crazy or sane?