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Day 14: In your own space, talk about what you think the future 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.

This one...

I miss the days of Yahoo groups, when Stargate fans could and would chat for hours, discussing eps, characters, fics, dispensing challenges, getting dozens of responses for every post. I miss all of the myriad Stargate sites that have disappeared over the past few years. I miss seeing the stars at conventions, seeing all the thousands of fans wait in long lines for autographs. It's an era that's over, and that is difficult to accept.

My fandom is aging. As am I.

I'll never leave Stargate fandom, but my fics, my discussions, are fewer. I have a core group who continue to do re-watches and discussions, who will always have a read of something I write, but the excitement, the immediacy of fandom has passed on to a gentler, nostalgic vibe. After all, real life situations of health and family care have changed quite a bit since the show (SG1) aired in 1997 (22 years ago, how did THAT happen?). We've changed, the internet has changed, so fandom has changed.

I'm grateful for AO3, for Dreamwidth, even for Facebook and Twitter some days. Who knows what the next big thing on the internet will be. But, my hope is more wistful than anticipating. Wondering.

What worries me is that, back in the day, the internet brought us together. We gathered on-line, became friends, family, brothers and sisters - and then we made plans to meet in real life. To touch hands, to look into each other's eyes, to connect more thouroughly. But it seems our younger society does not use the internet that way. They prefer distance. To stay in their homes and rarely venture out. Order food. Order clothes. Talk to a doctor. Physical presence is considered drudgery, a chore, and a hated chore, at that.

Interaction on the internet is also more problematic. One misspoken (typed) word can get you treated as a criminal. One accusation is enough to black-list any artist. One tongue-in-cheek tweet can get you shunned and cursed at. Honest discussion, with people that can disagree sincerely and yet respectfully is all but eliminated. Feelings are hurt by the lightest breeze of discord.

Media is also changing. The characters are less compelling. The remakes are horrendous. The writing is awful. I cannot think of a new fandom I've been interested in for quite some time, not one that hasn't fizzled out because of what I just mentioned above. They treat my old fandom loves with scorn and dismissal - making parodies to mock them rather than homages. My fandoms are old, like me, I guess. While others are excited about GoT or Vikings, I feel like that curmudgeonly old grump who lives on the corner and yells at the kids to get off my lawn!

On another day I might be more hopeful for fandom. I do hope fanfic writers write - safely posting for the joy of others. I hope fanartists create. Poets versify. Meta-analysts do that thing. I hope there will always be a place to come together, like this, a place ruled by grace and compassion and empathy. A place for teens and moms and old curmudgeons like me to celebrate fandom in all of its odd, mismatched beauty.

marzipan77: (Default)
Day 12- In your own space, create your own challenge. Leave a comment in this post saying you did it. Include a link to your post if you feel comfortable doing so.

Inspired by another Snowflake, I challenge myself - and any other fanfic/fanvid/fanart creators out there - to give us that scene between Hawkeye and Loki. The one after that famous shot where a very angry archer has his bow trained on the injured villain amongst all the Avengers. The sneaky one where Clint sneaks into his prison cell to confront him about Phil's death. Or the scene where Loki preens, tempting Clint to kill him for what he's done. Any of the above or anything else you can think of. I'd love links to any of the Gen fics/vids/art you create, but do your own thing, people.

Hopefully, I'll post my own later.

marzipan77: (Default)


Day 11: Describe your process for your creating your art.

There was once a song that we sang around the campfire on youth retreats. It began like this: "It only takes a spark to get a fire going, and soon all those around can warm up in its glowing." That's how my process starts. A spark, a tiny match lit that lights a candle, and then a Teal'c's roomful of candles, and then a Guy Fawkes's Day of fireworks.

And then a fizzle.

Fizzle. Fizzle. The gas range set on low. Simmer, simmer, simmer. Flare.

Okay, enough fire analogies.

An idea breaks through the minutiae of my brain. It could happen while I'm watching an episode, while I'm chatting with my fandom friends, while I'm reading someone else's story, looking at an icon, or, possibly, while I'm dreaming or in the shower. The idea flitters around my brain for a while. If it doesn't spark into another flame within a week or so, it flops around on the beach before sinking into the sand. If it catches, if it quickens, then I won't be able to get rid of it until I start working on it.

Sometimes I start writing right away. Get the words on the page and figure out the plot and dynamics and climax later. Those stories take shape quickly, the candles all burning at both ends. But, oftentimes, they fizzle. Fizzle in the middle. I find middles more difficult than both beginnings and ends.

This is where the gas range comes in. This is the time where I have to step back and turn down the fire and get out my tools (Scrivener, Excel, my notebooks) and plan out the rest of the story. Outline. Figure out exactly where I'm going and what I'm going to need to edit and write to get there. What do I want to leave the reader with? How is this story answering the questions I voiced in the early chapters? Letting the characters grow? Resolving the crisis?

Other times, the research comes first. When writing for SG1 in particular, I do a lot of research. Inventing a new Goa'uld, finding her/him in mythology, figuring out how this god or goddess fits into the Stargate universe. Making sure I don't step on any canon – and there's a heck of a lot of canon. 'Apron Strings' was a research-heavy story. But, still, even with these stories, there usually comes a time when I have to stop and reassess.

For my original fiction, the process is the same, but drawn out much longer. My spark of an idea for my first fantasy novel took six years to flame into a cohesive story. It took long conversations with my first readers. A lot of denial before acceptance of their criticisms. The editing took two years and resulted in a story I didn't expect. Working on editing the sequel now while I research agents and draft query letters.

There's another flame that sparked a week or so ago. It's found a half-dozen heavily scented candles stuffed into a box in the basement and is trying to create some kind of Write-Me Sacred Circle to get my attention. No matter how often I tell it I don’t have time for it, it's not going away. Time to make some notes.

*Note: A Plantser is a cross between a Pantser and a Planner. A Pantser writes by the seat of her pants, planning nothing. A Planner, as you might have guessed, plans everything out first.
marzipan77: (Default)
Day 10 Create a fanwork. Leave a comment in this post saying you did it. Include a link to your post if you feel comfortable doing so.

The fanworks I create are stories. Stories are processes. I'm not able to create one on the fly - I know some authors can, but that isn't in my bag of tools.

I am working on a new series on AO3 called The Ascended Chronicles of an Interfering Archaeologist
Interfering Daniel

The first story (SG1/Harry Potter) is finished and posted and I'm currently working on the second, where Daniel visits the world of NCIS. It's a departure for me, utterly AU, with lots of deus ex machina bits from our favorite blue-eyed ascended one. I'm happy to post a link to the second part when it's finished, but, realistically, it won't be within the duration of the Snowflake Challenge.

PS: Snowflake is a great challenge. Fandom joining together to post, to review, to share - don't feel it's too late to take part if you haven't - all days' challenges are completely open for contribution. I'd love to see some old friends and new posting again.

marzipan77: (Default)
Day 8 of the Snowflake Challenge - Rec Yourself

I took a dive into a new fandom this year, Harry Potter. I'd read the beginnings of a story written by Athy and up for adoption and it sparked something. What if an adult stepped up and did away with Voldemort? And what if that adult was Harry Potter? How much suffering could have been eliminated? How many people could have been saved?

A Good Man's Life

My writing for NCIS has changed a lot over the years. Once, I was angry and dark, dragging the reader through layers of abandonment and betrayal. Today, I hope I've grown. My latest NCIS fic is a Criminal Minds crossover. Yes, it's about team betrayal, but, more than that, it's about healing. About how characters should have been treated in real life.

A Fine and Private Place

My mother fandom is SG-1 and always will be. I've written quite a few stories over the years, some long and involved and some short. Most of the older stories are still only on ff.net (Marzipan77). This one is a bit different. It's a behind-the-scenes look at Legacy, filling in some holes and allowing one certain character to become a little more than a fandom-hated villain.

Phone Calls From John the Baptist

marzipan77: (Default)
Stretch yourself is the theme of Day 7. I don't usually post pictures, so here are some pics that, I hope, give rise to questions about Hollywood's horrible use of female characters.

Picspam of death )

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Day 6 - A Fannish Wish List

First and foremost, I wish for more gen fic. Stories that aren't built around any romantic/lustful pairing. I've never been one for love stories, not even as a teen. Many are, many love pairings and ships, love it when there's the slow burn and the culmination. And why shouldn't they? But I'm more interested in friendships, in mentorships, I want to see brothers-in-arms dealing with personality and situational conflict, I love a good "grudgingly acknowledging the other's gifts" fics. These fics in my favorite fandoms (SG-1, NCIS, HP, Leverage, Hawkeye) are few and far-between.

Second, I wish for more Hawkeye. Hawkeye has become a bit player in the Marvel Machine, but he's my favorite character. There have been a few excellent stories where his recovery after Loki's brainwashing is handled well - I'm looking at you, scifigrl47 - but most have been written with the premise that Clint and Phil were romantically paired. Where is the 'he was my best friend, the guy who rescued me from a life of crime, and he died because I was compromised' fic? If it exists, please rec it!

My last wish is for time. Time and active muses and health - physical and emotional - for the fanfic writers out there. So many have dropped away because of real life, we've lost touch, lost that excitement of connecting with each other, of talking about our fandoms. I wish for peace and active imaginations. I wish you'd experience the thrill of sitting down to make time with the characters, to see what other stories they have to tell. I wish time in your schedules so that you want to pick up that WIP that has been languishing for years as you raised your children or took care of your aging parents. I wish all these things for fanfic writers everywhere - no matter the fandom, the ship, the situation. May 2019 be filled with wonder, with sparks that light your imagination, and with stories.

I wish the same for me.

That Moment

Jan. 3rd, 2019 05:41 pm
marzipan77: (Default)


Day 3 of the Snowflake Challenge urges us to share a favorite piece of original canon (a TV episode, a song, a favorite interview, a book, a scene from a movie, etc) and explain why you love it so much.

I put this off for most of the day, my mind whirling with possibilities. I spent the day thinking, putting the fandoms closest to my heart in some kind of order. Stargate SG1. Harry Potter. NCIS. Avengers. Leverage. The Man from U.N.C.L.E.

I couldn't.

My fandoms are important to me for very different reasons. The Man from UNCLE was a first fandom, when I was a girl. It is nostalgic, the character of Ilya one of my first crushes. I reminds me of that warmth in my heart, that excitement, every time the show came on.

Leverage was Christian Kane. Hilarious. Hot. His interaction with Hardison made me smile. Damian Moreau was his "moment."

Avengers is Hawkeye. Jeremy Renner in all his latex-clad glory. His is a character I wanted more from, so fanfic was a gift. His moment? When he comes back from Loki's control to find out that Phil is dead.

NCIS has always been Tony DiNozzo and his untapped potential. While Gibbs' character became more and more overbearing and "superhuman", at the same time, he became a vigilante that I could not support. Tony was the underdog, never allowed to be the hero, even when he dived into the Anacostia to save Gibbs and Maddie. I felt for him. NCIS stories that explore his history or heroism, how he changes his mind and stands up for himself - and to Gibbs - are satisfying to read and to write. Tony's moment? Trapped in the morgue with a killer, he saves the girl.

Harry Potter came around when my daughter was young and we discovered his world together. And Severus Snape will always be our favorite character. Always.

But, finally, SG1 is family. It's not just about the show - it's about the friendships, the family I've made through our love of Jack and Daniel and Sam and Teal'c, of Janet and Hammond. Of Bra'tac and Jacob.

So, here is my moment, the one I settled on when dwelling on this idea. In the first episode of Stargate SG1, Children of the Gods, Daniel has lost his wife, he's lost his Abydos family, and he's returned to Earth after more than a year of living on another world. He's standing, alone, in the concrete tunnels of the SGC, utterly bereft. Until Col. Jack O'Neill comes along.

There's a moment, here. A moment when these two characters' eyes meet. They worked together to save themselves and an innocent population on an alien world a year ago. These two very different men - one on his last, suicide mission because of his dead son, one with nothing to lose, betting everything on this new future - found their connection. And then said good-bye for, what they believed was forever. Here, in that tunnel beneath Colorado Springs, Jack and Daniel find that connection remains. Daniel reaches out to Jack, empty, grieving, at a loss, and Jack reaches back, offering a room, a shoulder, the understanding of another man who has lost everything.

Boom. That's the moment.

It's Jack and Daniel. Always and forever. That connection, that friendship. It's what makes this series my heart-fandom.
marzipan77: (Default)


The Best Fanfic I Read (or re-read) in 2018

All Gen. Talk to me about Potter and Snape's animosity. Write me a tear-jerker. Give Tony a backbone. Nearly send me off the road when my best friend reads to me about ducks as we're driving to our happy place. These are the stories I lingered over in 2018. Thank heavens for fanfic writers.

Moment of Impact by suitesamba on AO3 - Harry Potter
Moment of Impact

Digging for Bones by Paganaidd on AO3 - Harry Potter
Digging for Bones

Culture Clash (or the one with the ducks) by Jb(sg1jb) on AO3 - Stargate SG1
Ducks!

Perfect Storm by TrekCat on AO3 - NCIS/Sentinel Fusion
Perfect Storm

Lost and Found by AnyaMcL on AO3 - NCIS
Lost and Found

The Hogwarts Potions Professor by seekeronthepath on AO3 - Harry Potter
Potions

Crossing Streams Series by Tallulah_Rasa on AO3 - Marvel, NCIS, SG1, MFU, etc.
Part 1

Bushido by lembas7 on FF.net - Stargate SG1
Bushido

Valedictory by Lerah99 on AO3 - NCIS
Valedictory

Knowing Better by BlackEyedGirl on AO3
Knowing Better
marzipan77: (Default)


Coffee on the table. Water for a chaser. Tunes in my headphones. My phone beside me to keep tabs on my fandom ladies. Me, typing away on my laptop, discovering a new story taking shape, colors and characters filled in along the way. That's my every-day happy place.

I have special ones, too. That cabin in the Smoky Mountains, sitting in the rocker on the porch and looking out at the peaceful morning sky, waiting for my dear friends to wake up and join me. We'll talk and laugh, drink a little, watch a lot of SG-1, talk Jack and Daniel, cry over Janet and Sha're and Charlie, yell at the screen while Jonas cowers in the corner and lets Daniel die.

It's been a crazy crowded room in a downtown Atlanta hotel, watching actors and actresses talk about things that happened behind the scenes. It's been small panels run by fans for fans all about fannish things. It's dressing in corsets and cogs or BDUs and boots or pirate hats and swords. It's always losing at the trivia contests but laughing and smiling and having the time of our lives. It's Will Wheaton telling us how great it is to be a geek.

It's that connection, deep down, over thousands of miles, reaching past differences in age and race and color and upbringing and language and philosophies of life that might break other, more shallow friendships. The connection of fandom.

That's my happy place.

June 2022

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