In a message dated 2/17/01 2:11:01 AM Eastern Standard Time,
N.Faulkner(a)tesco.net writes:
<< What about all those people who never become fans of anything? Presumably
they see at least something of the shows that generate fandoms, but
presumably not in any way that leads them on to become 'real' fans.<<
I'm assuming that you mean people who never become fans of anything 'in
particular'. If they weren't fans of anything at all, they would be mundanes,
not fans. It's long been recognized in the SF community (apart from just
'media' SF fandom) that there are all different degrees of fannishness, and
they've even designated names for some of those degrees. For example, a fan
who isn't particularly devoted to any one author, universe or show but simply
hangs around because he loves the milieu of fandom and fans itself is called
a "ffan". Don't ask me how it's pronounced!
>> Yes, but are they on their own enough? One of my all-time favourite
series,
A Very Peculiar Practice, had excellent writing, captivating characters and
very well defined relationships between them. Fannish potential next to
zero. (Maybe someone has gone and written the further adventures of Bobby
Buzzard, but it's not like there's a thriving and visible VPP fandom
presence.)<<
Some shows are great, but just don't generate a fandom. Some shows generate a
fandom, but don't compel much in the way of fanfic. Some shows are fan
favorites and generate tons of fanfic. And there are even some shows where
the show itself is oddly detached from its active fandom and fanfic (ie:
PROFESSIONALS). I don't know what makes that rainbow, but I don't know if
there would be any point to bottling it if one were to figure out the colors.
Here in the US, the producers wouldn't buy it. They don't want to produce
what we want. They want us to like what they produce. And the 'we' they want
is a specific desirable demographic that will go out and buy the Mountain
Dew, Pringles Chips, 1-800 dialing and Tostitos they push during every
commercial. The crowd that has disposible income and no bills to pay yet, no
family to save for, no resposibilities.
>> None of which I've seen, one of which I've never even heard of. Still,
that's my fault for not having a telly. (But of the two I know a little
about, Stargate and Buffy, I know I would never make an effort to watch them
even if I had the opportunity.)<<
Ah, Neil; you truly are in an unusual and rare fannish category--a media fan
with vey restricted media input.
>> Ah, so there *is* a tension. I pull my theory back from the tubes. You
might not find it hard to 'ignore elements of the plot' (which by your own
admission don't 'make sense'), but they still need to be ignored,
marginalised, supressed, or somehow prevented from interfering with the
elements that you do like. If you couldn't do that, then maybe you would be
pushed away from the show, too far away to relate to it fannishly. I'm
still hypothesising, I freely admit, but that does seem to be what is
happening here.<<
You seem to be smooshing together 'tension' generated by plot and character
elements, and 'discomfort' generated by errors in the internal logic of a
show. I maintain that fan devotees of a particular show go into denial of
those errors of logic and don't think about them again, all of their
attention devoted to the stuff they love: delicious character conflict;
chemistry; plot twists and irony; continuity and internal logic within the
show; humor and pathos; hurt and comfort etc. etc. They aren't held
spellbound as fans by dissatisfaction that a mask is never sufficient to
really hide the identity of a superhero, or that starships couldn't possibly
be designed 'that way', or that the character was holding a book in one shot,
and the book was across the room a moment later. At least, if I interpret
your proposed theory correctly, that is...
>> A possible list of (provisional) qualities that might be inherent in a show
likely to induce fannish response (I supose almost any show might generate a
fannish response in somebody somewhere, but some seem to do so more than
others):
(1) the need for an active suspension of disbelief (pre-requisite of all SF
and fantasy shows). This widens the potential range of plot possibilities,
not all of which are going to be realised by the show as broadcast.<<
Yes, by all means...*deliberately generated* suspension of disbelief.
>>(2) episodic structure, a succession of closed stories (though not
necessarily without a broader story arc to hold the series together). This
creates interstices between broadcast episodes which can be seized upon as
missing moments requiring elaboration (unlike say the continuity of most
soap operas).<<
Yep. There *has* to be some continuity. The one thing the STAR TREK producers
did take to heart was that the continuity and consistency through the TREK
universe was very near and dear to the fan's heart. They have a 'bible' of
TREK continuity for the writers of the series; in fact, you can actually see
this bible laid out in the form of a 'history timeline' at the STAR TREK
EXPERIENCE attraction in the Las Vegas Hilton. It's fantastic, and flanking
it is a continuous display case, many yards long, filled with actual costumes
and other 'artifacts' from the corresponding part of the timeline as you
pass. It's an incredible monument to a fandom.
>>(3) multiple authorship, different writers responsible for different
episodes, and their individual authorship recognisable for the episodes they
write (eg the differences between a Chris Boucher ep and a Ben Steed one).
This might invite fannish intervention because it gives the impression that
anyone can 'have a go' and write their own contribution.<<
Good point. I suppose realistic lives often have that element of randomness
about them that might suggest multiple authorship; maybe the original
inspiration for the notion that there is a pantheon of gods out there, not
just one orchestrating everything!
>>(4) exagerrated character definition (I would say that all the regulars in
B7 and Trek can be considered 'exagerrated', whereas in Who they're little
more than puppets danced around by the 'Idea as Hero' plot) to clarify the
nature of the antagonisms between them. This also gives viewers a clear
handle on which to base their response to any particular character, and
might also act to suppress either ambivalence and/or disinterest. (Though
it's perfectly legitimate to argue that a show full of uninteresting
characters is a pretty crap show.)<<
Well, some folks like crap, ya never know. But the differences you mention
automatically generate chemistry and conflict, the meat and potatoes of
really intense fandom. Add elements like interesting and/or attractive
protagonists, unexpected plot elements and irony, angst and development
within the arc of the series, and you might have a nice fannish show
simmering...what you referred to as synergy, Neil.
Anyone have more to add to this recipe?