alexcat: (Default)
alexcat ([personal profile] alexcat) wrote2014-01-12 12:11 pm

Day 12 - Fandom Snowflake Challenge

Day 12

In your own space, talk about what you think the future holds for fandom. What are your hopes and dreams for fandom? Do you have any predictions about what the next five years holds for fandom? Leave a comment in this post saying you did it. Include a link to your post if you feel comfortable doing so.


Fandom, in and of itself, is a strange beast, one that I knew nothing at all about until I was in my late 30s. I grew up and still live in a rural area. I was born before VCR’s and am old enough to have seen Star Trek all the way through when it originally aired. The only Batman I knew was Adam West and I still tend to love him the most.

I didn’t know that there was such a thing as fandom until we got the internet in the late 90’s. My daughter loved the musical CATS and we both got into that. I admit that was more like groupies than fans though so I count Babylon 5 and LOTR my first fandoms. It was only after I began writing fanfiction that I learned that there had been fanzines and conventions even in the 60s. I began writing Real Person fiction and stayed with it for quite awhile. I am quite good at the steamy slash PWP.

In April 2002, I began LOTR Adult Fiction at Yahoo because I got tired of all the sniping and infighting over RP fic/character fic and I made a place that was conducive to both and gen, het and slash as well. It finally became Of Elves and Men.

I am still only involved in fandom online. I do not travel to cons and I have no interest in cosplay or anything of that nature. Fandom to me is friendship and a passion for the object of fandom. And writing. Always writing. But even that has changed. Fandom is moving away from journals and blogs to archives and places like Tumblr and I admit that I can’t make heads or tails of it. I see much of the personal going away and the friendships not happening like they did before.

I don’t see the writers being shut down though not for lack of trying on the part of TPTB. I don’t know what venue will be the next one because even though we operate in the open, we are all still a little hesitant sometimes about being outed as fanfiction writers. We are usually maligned as lonely, pitiful losers who have nothing else to do. Nothing could be farther from the truth. Fanficcers are more diverse than most groups and that’s what makes us so much fun. We are young, old, rich, poor, female, male, all nationalities, all races…on and on.

Some shows and movies give credit to their fans. Supernatural often does that, even having the boys read fanfiction sometimes. I find that endearing. On the other hand, the creators of BBC Sherlock seem to have decided to insult their fans with their very stereotypical loser ‘fans’ on the show. We have become ‘the fourth wall’ in some shows on tv. The sheer number of conventions shows that the writers and the actors are beginning to understand that fandom is a force to deal with.


Where is fandom going? I don’t know that answer. I hope that it endures in a form in which I am able to participate. I think the whole experience is life enriching in many ways… it gives us all another place to belong and for the most part, a very friendly one.
sjh2009: (Default)

[personal profile] sjh2009 2014-01-12 05:25 pm (UTC)(link)
As I mentioned in my own post, I believe that as long as we are active in fandoms they will continue, it's only when people start getting apathetic and not posting feedback to fics or responses to posts that things will die down. And we need to be positive with authors and artists, if something isn't our cup of tea it doesn't mean that there's anything wrong with it, it may be just what someone else wanted and I agree, we all need to respect that. Too many great authors and artists have been pushed out of a fandom because of criticism simply because a small group of people didn't like their work.

If writers don't think people are reading will they continue to share? There are so many talented authors and artists in fandom and I certainly wouldn't want people to think I wasn't reading or appreciating something they've taken the time and trouble to share with me.

In the NCIS fandom I actually had the chance to fly out to Washington DC to meet up with a group of LJ friends and we had a blast. I've met up with many Stargate online friends at conventions both here in the UK and in the US. I wouldn't have met any of these wonderful people, either online or in person, without fandom.




sjh2009: (Default)

[personal profile] sjh2009 2014-01-15 11:20 am (UTC)(link)
This is beautiful, I absolutly adore it, the colouring is just gorgeous too. Please thank your friend for me and thank you too for allowing me to share it :)

*hugs*
peoriapeoriawhereart: Cartoon Stantz post-kafoom (Dangerous and good to know)

[personal profile] peoriapeoriawhereart 2014-01-13 04:45 am (UTC)(link)
I write for one set of reasons and I post for another set. Sometimes the reasons for writing are enough that I do so and then post, even knowing that maybe just one person will read it. Other times, I don't have enough reasons to write if the reasons for posting aren't there.