My instant reminder to myself that my life doesn't suck, 2023 edition (and gosh i need that reminder sometimes). In case you'd like to check out my IG (it's mostly horses and mountain hikes), here you go

Product Placement

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
we're not kids anymore.

Janaina Medeiros
Keni
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will byers stan first human second
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

shark vs the universe
art blog(derogatory)

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JVL

titsay
wallacepolsom
styofa doing anything

Love Begins
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@mariapurttt
My instant reminder to myself that my life doesn't suck, 2023 edition (and gosh i need that reminder sometimes). In case you'd like to check out my IG (it's mostly horses and mountain hikes), here you go
yes yes Miles, go piss Irina off, i wanna see her in action
#OTD in 2009:
Laura: “Hello, this is Laura Roslin. I'd like you to give a message to Mayor Adar. Tell him that I will be joining his campaign. Thank you. All the way to the end. No matter what. All the way to the end.”
#BSG #BattlestarGalactica #Daybreak
The way this scene wrecked me better than Laura's actual death O_O
requested by @lolcat76
@professortennant don’t hide those gems in the tags 🤣🤣
#this version of them#where they’re actively antagonizing each other#is my FAVORITE#I love that they mellowed#but the hate sex between them in this version…………delicious I’d give my first born for a fic where Sharon lets him know what she thinks of his salty nuts… *hint hint*
they should normalize saying "I'm thinking of you fondly but don't have much to say and frankly I don't even really want to talk rn but you have appeared in my thoughts and it's nice"
I've been writing fanfiction since 2001 and editing fan videos since 2006. I feel old 😱
On Fan Fiction and Comments
So, I have recently posted a chapter 2 of a fic. Which has me a nervous wreck for reasons. While I watched the hits to double with not a single comment that would be any sort of asurrance of all the anxieties I had about it doubled as well. Like nothing. Just the hits and a couple of kudos (new readers?). So of course, my mind goes to "everyone hates it, I should delete it all, I should delete the whole account and disappear from the internet." Yes, I know, I have issues. But that is not the point.
At the same time, I am writing my thesis and read all these books written by academics, which talk about how fan fiction is a community experience, about works in progress and negotiation between the author and the audience. Those books are mostly from 1990s and 2000s.
The community-centered creation of artistic fannish expressions such as fan fiction, fan art, and fan vids is mirrored in the creation of this book, with constant manipulation, renegotiation, commenting, and revising, all done electronically among a group of people, mostly women, intimately involved in the creation and consumption of fannish goods. As the examples above indicate, the creator of meaning, the person we like to call the author, is not a single person but rather is a collective entity. (...) Work in progress is a term used in the fan fiction world to describe a piece of fiction still in the process of being written but not yet complete. This notion intersects with the intertextuality of fannish discourse, with the ultimate erasure of a single author as it combines to create a shared space, fandom, that we might also refer to as a community. The appeal of works in progress lies in part in the way fans can engage with an open text: it invites responses, permits shared authorship, and enjoins a sense of community.
—Karen Hellekson and Kristina Busse, Fan Fiction and Fan Communities in the Age of the Internet: New Essays (2006), p.14
It makes me sad. Because for many years, we didn't have a nice, big archive for all the fan fiction that would be easy to use. Where any reader could leave a comment and their thoughts on the story without even needing to have an account (if the author enables guest comments). Yet, people choose to consume the story as a fast food meal, moving on to the next one, not realizing that someone wrote that in their free time and wanted to share it and talk about it . I know I am hardly the first one pointing that out. Hits are not engagement. when I see like 300+ hits and then 40 kudos and 8 comments (that overlap with the kudos), as a writer I think "oh, so the remaining 260 people who clicked the story hated it". I realize that not every story is for everyone. I realize writers are not entitled to feedback. But consider this:
Readers and writers engage in power negotiations in a variety of ways, not only in terms of competing interpretations but also in the actual pro-cess of presenting, reading, and providing feedback to stories. Feedback, the reader’s comment to the author describing the positive and negative as pects of the story as well as its affective qualities, is often the only currency writers have in fandom. Writers can control feedback to some degree, be it through begging or blackmail as they hold parts of their stories hostage to a certain number of comments. Posting in parts not only may force the readers to enter a dialogue with the writer but also allows the writer to control reading practices.
—Kristina Busse, Framing Fan Fiction: Literary and Social Practices in Fan Fiction Communities (2017), p.37.
Yes, feedback is the only thing the author gets for their effort. If there is none, then it is understandable why a fan fiction author could get to the mindset of begging for it in the notes, or blackmailing that the next part is not coming unless there is at least 10 new comments from 10 different people. To make the decision where to post and why, is the only power they have.
Fan authors also control readers by controlling access by locking journals so only selected people can read them, password protecting websites, or posting to private mailing lists.
—Kristina Busse, Framing Fan Fiction: Literary and Social Practices in Fan Fiction Communities (2017), p.37.
Consider the quote above. Recently, I learned from a friend in a different fandom, that a fairly new author felt there was no interest in her story. So she decided to stop posting it to AO3 and announced on Twitter that she would only send the next parts to people privately upon requests, basically, going back to all good private mailing lists. She got a lot of requests from people who didn't leave any kind of feedback on a single published chapter. They didn't know it was important.
What I am trying to say is...
the writer is part of an interactive community, and in this way, the production of fan fiction is closer to the collaborative making of a theatre piece then to the fabled solitary act of writing.
—Francesca Coppa, ‘Writing Bodies in Space’, in Fan Fiction and Fan Communities in the Age of the Internet, p. 242
...and when people don't interact, it becomes a desperately lonely place to be. When you are a regular writer, you see reviews of your books, the sale numbers and all that. Fan fiction writers don't have that. All they have is the community they hope to discuss their stories and ideas with.
Maybe, as a reader, you want to say "but I am intimidated to interact with the author, you wouldn't interact with a writer of your favourite book."
...fandom does not preserve a radical separation between readers and writers. Fans do not simply consume preproduced stories...
Henry Jenkins, Textual Poachers: Television Fans and Participatory Culture (1992), p.46.
Do not separate yourself from the writers. Do not simply consume. Please. I beg of you.
All of this!!!
Yes, authors are not entitled to feedback. At the same time, readers are not entitled to new stories/artworks or to them being posted at intervals they feel are convenient.
Fan works are created by people who, for the most part, have full-time jobs, families, school and other obligations. Many of them are also struggling in ways that readers might not know. They're keeping the fandom alive with their work, their time, their dedication without getting compensation. All they ask for (explicitly or not) is a genuine connection with their readers to achieve that feeling of community that prev mentioned.
Fandom used to be like that. I, for one, miss the times when you would talk about your favorite characters at length and come up with scenarios to fill in the blank spots that canon left. That's what I try to do in my stories, and it hurts and discourages me when people don't seem to care. In that, prev is very much not alone.
If we wanted to write stories for anonymous masses, we'd publish books and get paid for our trouble. There are a lot of stories that can easily be reworked a little to be published commercially. Instead, we choose to post them for free in the hopes of finding that community that academics keep mentioning. If you treat fan fiction and fan art like Instagram or TikTok posts where merely viewing the "content" is enough to reward the creator, you will find yourself in a world where people no longer want to share their work. If you keep your discussion about specific fan works confined to private groups, you deprive the creators of those works of that feeling of community they seek.
I think we all have to remind ourselves that fandom is a community activity. Otherwise, it's just watching TV. What turns individual people watching a show into a fandom is the constant exchange with like-minded people. Fan works are a vital part of that, especially once the show is no longer on air. But without people actively engaging with fan works, their creators, and other readers, it is just individual people reading something.
Fandoms die when community dies. Don't let your fandom die. Give your creators some love. Believe me, they do want to talk about their works, they do want to hear your unhinged theories or your flailing, key-smashing rants about your favorite characters.
Agreeing with everything above, I think we're missing out the bit where fellow ficwriters - who absolutely know how important commenting on WIPs is - choose not to comment on the other ficwriters' stories either. So the issue lies much deeper than we can grasp.
I can't imagine reading something and not wanting to say something about it. To the author? To other people who are reading it? To discuss it? Reading books (and I read a lot) I feel like exploding, so inevitably try to pull my friends into reading the same thing. Reading fanfics is even more emotional. How do people just not feel anything while reading. No yelling into a pillow, really? No gasping for air and no OMFG THEY DIDN'T moments? 😳
If someone has time to read, they have time to share their thoughts on it, even if it's just abracadabra of an emotional mess. Untill this day I haven't heard a single person givee a reason why they chose not to.
The tiny Sharon Raydor moments that are the reason she feels so real. Mary did an amazing job making this character impossible not to fall for.
Sometimes I have to pinch myself to make sure I'm not hallucinating that this is where I live.
Nothing personal (but everyone has a breaking point)
Where Sharon turns out to be alive after her funeral.
An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
A fanfic where Sharon Raydor turns out to be alive after season 6.
THEY MAKE ME SO HAPPY!! OMG IT’S TODAY!!
Sharon Raydor didn't die, and it's a fanfic
An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
sometimes your favorite fanfic isn't a fanfic at all but the insane DM's between you and your equally freaky mutual
Who has clocked the feelings between A & S?:
Other than all of the shippers writing the beautiful fanfics that are keeping me sane until season 7 here are who I believe may have caught on to this amazing ship that has yet to sail 🚂
#1 Good Ol’ Gerald:
Regardless of how you feel about the notorious 🥸 this bro totally clocked A & S’s budding feelings. A said she wouldn’t follow him to the lakes because she needed to be there for Helen and Mr. Farnon; Gerald said he always knew this would happen. Based on this and the unspoken beef S and Gerald had for eachother (I mean come on S’s rat is named Gerald for crying out loud!) it totally seems like he saw something between them.
#2: Pony Gal Susan:
Although Susan was only seen briefly she seemed to know S pretty well…. She obviously seemed a little jealous and uncomfortable during this exchange when she asked how S & A know each-other and why A is back. When S kicked her to the curb it was a little obvious as well 😬
3. Literally Anyone on the Train Platform:
All one of those patrons had to do was turn their head to see two lovers embracing after three years apart- ‘nuff said.
4. Tristan the Bird Boy Farnon:
Tristan knows S & A probably better than anyone since they have been surrogate parents to him for so many years. I find it hard to believe he doesn’t have some inclining as to the feelings they have for one another. If I walked in and saw my brother caressing the housekeeper’s pinny I would sure hope he was in love with her otherwise that is just creepy… 😶🌫️ Also Tris is who brings up the fact that S is acting worse since A left than when Evelyn died… I think he done clocked ‘em.
5. The Incomparable James and Helen Herriot:
First of all, James has probably spent the most time with S these last three years and he experienced S’s crash out on the hill while searching for Fly. Helen and A are close pals, I find it hard to believe she wouldn’t notice a little something brewing between the two. Also, you know these two lovebirds are pillow talkin’ about their pals and strengthening an argument to clock the feels.
6. Wee Jimmy:
POV you are 5 years old and you walk in on your Godmother-Auntie Audrey caressing your Godfather-Uncle Siegfried’s cheek… You are 99% sure they are married anyway… You don’t even need to clock what’s has already been canon since your birth.
7. The Alderson Clan:
Jenny and Richard are chatting it up with Helen and James over at Heston all the time. Richard flat out called S out at Jenny’s dinner asking what is he going to do without A. Obviously they know about S’s breakdown without A and have come to conclusions.
8. Our Main Man Richard Carmody:
Carmody may have been inebriated when he spilled the fact that S called A “quite quite remarkable” but he is very intelligent and did a lot of research on “pair bonds”. I bet all the money in the bank that he clocked the feels when he sobered up.
9. Girl’s Girl Maggie:
Maggie has know the Farnons and A for a long time and her and A seem pretty close. You can see her knowing look in this GIF when she tells Mrs.H- “It’s not always just about what he wants”. Maggie is too polite to pry but she clocked em’ a mile away.
10. Jess, Dash and Lucky the Fox:
We all know animals can sense way more than people can. 🐶 🐶 Jess and Dash know their people better than they know themselves, they sense the love that hasn’t been realized yet 💕 Also are you kidding me that fox was the only witness to this adorable moment, he may have thought it was a fever dream momentarily but he knows what’s up!
Anyone I missed?? I had fun with this 😂 please pass this on to the writers to remind them this can be a blatant love story now… we all know what is up.
The way I kept editing this fanvideo in my head in commute and in my sleep for the past couple of months, I'm so happy it's finally out of my system 💪 Laura Roslin character study.
This is how villains are made 😈 If you enjoy it at least half the way I enjoyed editing it, I'm happy.