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The period came along with the rain, so feeling less irritable and cranky. No longer feel as if a monster is inside me clawing at my insides trying to get out. I envy people who aren't sensitive to the weather. I, unfortunately am, hence the reason I do not live in areas of the country where it rains about 70% of the time.

Social Psychology continues to fascinate. Been reading The Social Animal by Elliot Aronson, Ninth Edition for class. Clarified a few things.

One there is a difference between having an opinion and an attitude about something. Opinions can be easily changed, attitudes however are incredibly difficult to change. An opinion is what a person believes to be factually true - ie. New York is hot in the summer and there are approximately 12 million people lieving in NYC.
Opinions are primarily cognitive - they take place in our heads rather than our hearts. They can also be changed by good clear evidence to the contrary.

An attitude on the other hand is an opinion that contains an evaluative and emotional component. These aren't necessarly logical and can be influenced by numerous variables. ie. Our opinions about the characters and relationships on the TV show Buffy The Vampire Slayer or in regards to Spike and Angel are "attitudes" not opinions.



I was thinking about this while reading the chapter on mass communication, propaganda and persuasion and realized something interesting. Before I came online in 2002, I enjoyed the character of Angel, but had grown tired of the series due largely to the baby storyline. People online persuaded me to give the series another chance and I did, finding myself intrigued by the characters Wes, Lilah, Angel and Connor. As time wore on however, my interactions with others online caused an attitude adjustment, after a period of time I found myself beginning to dislike the character of Angel and oddly enough the actor portraying him. I liked the character fine if I was not interacting with any of the fans and if I did not discuss him. But whenever I read anyone's post or any fan's interest in the character or a fanfic centered on the character - I found I despised the character and had a completely negative attitude. Not necessarily logical so much as a gut reaction. According to studies conducted by social psychologists we can be persuaded to dislike or like something based on the "attractiveness" of the person doing the persuading or commonality of interest with that person. For instance, in one study, participants were told the Neo-Nazis favored a certain trival item - people found themselves rejecting that item because Neo-Nazis favored it. This tends to work with more trivial items that don't require a great deal of thought, although it can work with more important ideas as well. Is it possible that my opinion of a television character was influenced by my interactions with people who loved that character?

The answer a qualified, yes. I qualify that answer because there's another component that should be addressed - how much was do to the individual poster's personality and how much of my reaction was due to how they argued their points or the "nature" or "reasons" stated? You could argue about 50/50 or 60/40, but actually
it's more complicated. For instance, at a recent gathering of BTVS/ATS fans, the majority of the people at the gathering were Angel fans and preferred the B/A relationship to the B/S one, one of the people showed me a series of vids she had created of the show. I liked the person showing the vids. I also liked the other person who joined us to watch them. One of the people - S, the other spectator, stated a strong preference for the B/A relationship, while L declared herself to be neutral. Her opinion was B/S was all about fighting and B/A was all about kissing. S agreed stating how she much preferred to watch B/A and even oohed and awed over my shoulder as the vid was being shown. After watching the two vids, I had an interesting emotional reaction - I had no desire to see an episode of the early seasons of BTVS, felt an intense dislike for the B/A relationship, and was bored watching the vids on the screen, although I politely nodded and suppressed these feelings. The vid did the opposite from what the maker intended, instead of reminding me of what was good and romantic about the characters and instilling a love of them or interest in the series, it made me wonder why I'd bothered with it and what a load of romantic sappy crap. The first vid, B/S, where the vid maker kept telling me that this relationship was all about fighting and clearly a train wreck, shown prior, made me feel quilty for being turned on. And annoyed. Same experience online - my reaction often had more to do with how and what the person was saying than who they were, since obviously you have no clue on most of these boards - people tend to be pretty anynomous - it's how the phrase their opinions that influence or persuade.

Persuasion notes Aronson, while discussing political issues such as health care reform not tv characters, is predicated on how you approach the audience and when. In several studies they determined that people tended to ignore or deny something if it was forced upon them. If someone says - this is "good" for you and this is "bad" for you - a la Mom and Dad telling you to eat green beans instead of ice cream, you are more likely to ignore them and do the reverse. (This is not meant to state that B/A and B/S are analogous to green beans and ice cream, don't be silly. Personally see both as ice cream.) For instance, if you present an hour long documentary about the poor and how bad their health care is to someone who does not want national health care reform, they are likely to flip to Wheel of Fortune, if you on the other hand, have place small ten minute add spots in between favorite tv programs, have the news media investigate it and do a spot, and maybe introduce it in the plot of a tv show - then you are more likely to persuade.

The other thing about persuasion - is the tone of it, also how you back up your facts. You are not going to change my mind regarding B/A or the character of Angel by degrading B/S or Spike. All you will accomplish is make me hate B/A, despise Angel, and lose all interest. Negative political advertising has seen the same backlash. But it also works occassionally, some people state that Bush Sr. owed his election to Willie Norton, a convict that was furloughed by Dukakis and ended up raping and murdering a woman in Maryland. Dukakis tried to fight this by citing statistics and factual data that Bush had furloughed just as many convicts as head, all governors do. It's standard. But Bush appealed to the emotions with his ad, pushed people's buttons, while Dukakis appealed to intellect. The arguements I've heard professing B/A to be the cat's pajamas inadverently do the opposite of the intent, they piss me off. The arguments professing Angel to be interesting equally piss me off. I oddly enough liked the character and the actor playing him far more when I didn't know anyone else who did. What bit of information is the proponent using that is pissing me off or pushing my buttons? Causing me to turn a death ear? I think a combo of things - the biggest ones being: Angel was adored by his peers, he was an accomplished artist, he deserved Buffy, he was the "chosen" one, he was successful and the most evil.

What persuades one person to like something could very well turn another off. But social influences also play a role. If the people you like and admire like one coupling over another, you might be persuaded towards their viewpoint. Attractiveness. If people you can't abide prefer something, you may disregard their opinion out of hand. In another study, pairs of women were given a topic to discuss. Before each presented their case to their friend. They were told that their friend either strongly agreed or disagreed with them, this influenced how they presented their case. OF the people told that their friend strongly disagreed, about 75% changed their case to fit their friends point of view. (We don't like to be in conflict with our friends, so will often tailor our views to fit theirs?) Another factor at play, if the opinion being professed disagrees with an attitude that is deeply imbedded in you - say for instance you hate frat parties, had a bad experience with certain type of guy in school, read poetry (which was soundly criticized) and struggled in high school and college academically. While say, someone who is a mere acquaintance, who had what you'd call an easy ride in school, barely had to study, everything came easily for, was a member of a frat -etc, comes online and professes through their examination of a character how people who wrote "bad" poetry and weren't popular and couldn't get straight A's are losers. They may not intend to be saying this - but their examination may be interpreted that way sublimally in their defense of say Angel over Spike. How would you reacte? Probably with an intense dislike for Angel, a character you may have previously enjoyed, and an increased interest in Spike. That's what some social psychologist would no doubt site as a personality or developmental factor - the factor that is not addressed by social psychology.

The problem with human thinking, and something I keep thinking we need to keep in mind while interacting with one another, is it is not always logical. It does not always follow a clear syllogism.

What may seem like a persuasive argument from one perspective could be the opposite depending on the audience you are attempting to persuade. Persuasion has a lot to do with how receptive the audience is to the argument.
Juries are a perfect example. In NYC they create hostile juries merely through how juries are selected. You wait anywhere from half a day to three days in an overcrowded room, unable to do work, waiting for your name to be called. Once it is, you are put in another small room and asked a bunch of personal questions in front of strangers. Then if chosen, forced to sit in an uncomfortable court room listening to lawyers present a case for hours on end. Needless to say juries are not made up of people who are receptive. They aren't comfortable.
They aren't happy. They are pissed. Whoever speaks the least, makes them the happiest, will most likely win the day. The OJ Simpson case is a perfect example. Cochran did wonders with a memorable and rhyming phrase that stuck in the jury's head like glue :"Glove doesn't fit acquit". Logically it's possible to wear tight fitting gloves to comit murder also blood and other chemicals can shrink them. But all they remember is the phrase. (I'm not saying OJ was guilty, just using an example cited by Aronson.) We remember what is most recent, we are receptive to what is presented to us in a comforting manner, and does not conflict with prior attitudes.

If I remove myself from the online fandom, I like Angel fine and Boreanze is a serviceable actor who I don't mind watching, even enjoyable, but if I read the fandom, I can't abide the character or actor. I reject both vehemently. Some of the reasons may be due to social influences, others...ah, not so much. But social interaction definitely plays a part in my views and those of the people around me. More I think than we know or are willing to acknowledge.



ETA 2022: I just re-read the comments to this - and they are insane. We did take ourselves a touch too seriously back then, didn't we?

Re: to clarify

Date: 2005-09-19 03:07 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shadowkat67.livejournal.com
Oh no, didn't think that at all and you are correct we are talking at cross purposes. I'm trying to apply a social psychological analysis here, which may or may not be doable.

What I'm trying to point out is there is a social influence at work here, or at least I perceive one to be. Somewhat new at this and as any good social psychologist would tell me, you can't make generalizations or assumptions in an uncontrolled test. But there are a few interesting things to note here, removing our personal reactions out of the quotation for the moment, let's look at how people related to it online. Because to be honest I never really saw Spike or Angel as heroes per se, but as tragic heroes or anti-heroes. Right with you on that score.

What just occurred to me, when I thought about it, is the accepted status quo on all the public posting boards was B/A or Angel. The people who ran these boards or the board moderators and owners were professed B/A and or Angel fans and did not like Spike. They tolerated the character and the characters fans, but when push came to shove , being human, came out in favor of their favorite. Their websites were B/A or Angel specific. ATpO, BC&S, Angel's Soul Board, Television Without Pity. AngelX was a B/A and Angel fan. Masq same way. They liked Evil Spike but did not like him when he was paired with Buffy. Strada and Ace despised Spike on TWOP and of the three boards mentioned were the least tolerant of Spike fans and deleted and often banned fans from their boards, they did the same with Connor fans by the way. These were the known public boards. On ATPO two trolls or people with trollish behavior popped up in 2003, one was a B/A fan and pro Angel and hated Spike, one was a Spike fan, B/S and hated Angel. Both were obnoxious, both used more than one name. The B/S fan was the younger of the two. Of the two, the B/S fan was booted off the board. The B/A fan was accepted into chat, and even went to more than one meet. Personally I found both personalities equally annoying and impossible to deal with or talk to online - I saw no difference between them except one was pro Angel and one was pro Spike.

Further evidence, when BC&S, Angel's Soul, and ATPO decided to do collaborative fiction for fics after the series ended, all three without exception focused primarily on the character of Angel, the character Spike was relegated to supporting or rarely addressed. The reason stated? That's canon.

The online interaction I've seen on the public boards and in the established sites is without exception pro Angel, and anti-Spike. It's fascinating from a social psychology perspective why this is so. Yes you have interlopers and fans on those sites posting on Spike, but they are not running the boards and not in control.

David Boreanze is not a trained actor and is pretty. He was not by any means the best actor in either series, yet the marketing and posters have sold him to the audience. He was hired as a pretty boy. And he does have enough talent to get by. Marster by comparison was theater trained, not a pretty boy but can be made to look pretty, and was hired purely for talent not just looks according to writer and director commentary.
But the status quoe picked Boreanze. Why?

People who did not go along with the trend or booted it, created peripheral sites in response such as Marsters Mobsters, Blood Awful Poet Society, Big Bad Board, Tea At the Ford. Each meeting the needs of the crowd that did not go with the established trend, which was established back in S1. Most of the people who created these boards came to the series in later years, around the same time you did or S4, most were much older. Although there were board masters of the earlier boards who are also older, but most of the well-known established boards were created in the 1997/1998.


Not sure this made much sense, just late night thoughts wanted to jot down so could go to sleep...and go back to work analyzing contracts, sigh, much more fun analyzing televion fan behavior. Even though I'm probably more knowledgable and far better at analyzing the contracts, plus much safer - less likely to piss people off. ;-)

Re: to clarify

Date: 2005-09-19 07:47 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rahael.livejournal.com
I think you raise some interesting points - thanks for clarifying. Have to rush to work now, so will have to reply properly tonight. The only thing I'd say is, I'm not an Angel fan as such. I'm an Angel on AtS fan - I think he's quite a different character.

Secondly, does one actually want mod/mainstream approval? I can't think of the heterosexual pairings I ever squee about on my lj. I don't like how tv does romance. I liked Spuffy before they actually started showing it. I didn't particularly like B/A. I just liked BtVS, and canonical BtVS for the first five years. Which meant, being interested in B/A as a metaphorical element of the show. No Hotness involved.

Re: to clarify

Date: 2005-09-19 05:22 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] arethusa2.livejournal.com
I think there were a few more factors involved in why the B/S fan was kicked off, perhaps the main one being that the person was deliberately spoiling others and secretly (although badly!) using alternate posting names, while the B/A fan openly changed names, at least after a brief fling with secrecy. This at least was my impression. I'm right there with you on the general annoyingness of the situation, which I probably contributed to because the dynamics of the situations were so *fascinating.* (And I have a bit of a mean streak.) What fools we mortals be, indeed.

I wonder if shippyness is a bit of a smokescreen, because the most vehement reactions to ships that I've seen end up having less to do with romance or romantic parings and more to do with reinforcing the world-view and life choices and needs of the fan. Hence the personal nature of the shipping defenses--because it *is* personal to them. You can realize and acknowledge that Wood irks you for personal reasons, so you aren't emotionally invested in seeing him succeed or fail, and when the writers' choices don't echo yours you shrug and move on. (I wanted to see him eaten for reasons of continuity, though. Where's the follow-through, ME?? ;)) You, Rahael, know why Spike offends you, but the situation has more weight with you for moral reasons. Maybe none of us have any overriding shipping preferences because none of us unconciously identifies with the characters.

When Angel ended I thought, but the story isn't over yet! Angel hasn't learned his lesson, he hasn't completed his journey. He still has to reach an existential point where he stops trying to control others and expunge his feelings of guilt, thereby ruining his life! Because it's my existentialism that I want to see verified, since I'm probably never going to be able to watch another show written by someone I think is in synch with my own ideas. And it's just so fascinating to see how people (fictional, but well-written) deal with their problems and past, how their problems affect the way they relate to others and themselves. How do we find the strength to endure? How do we compensate for our shortcomings, hide our neediness, mess up because we don't accept who we are? I love the characters for their flaws, and I love the way the writers showed that for every action, there is an opposite and equal reaction. Nothing is chance, while at the same time everything is chance, because even when we understand why we do what we do, life throws us another curveball and we have to figure out everything all over again.



Re: to clarify

Date: 2005-09-19 08:22 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shadowkat67.livejournal.com
It's by no means a perfect sampling - to do that I'd need to set up a better test and make sure all the variables are controlled. They aren't here.

That said, there are additional bits of information that lend weight to my theory that the ATPO board specifically in the years 2003-2005 had a social biasis towards one specific character - Angel and against Spike.
1. Some Posters felt the need to set up a corollary board in 2003 called Angel after Spike. Not many people were on that board.
2. Posts regarding fanfic on Spike or Spikecentric fic are ignored. And disappear unaddressed.
So there is a social biasis, if slight. The question is to what degree was this biasis influenced by the show itself and to what degree by the consensus?

Re: to clarify

Date: 2005-09-19 08:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rahael.livejournal.com
Angel after Spike was a spoiler board, as far as I recall, so I'm not sure how many people would join - a lot of people didn't want to be spoiled. And more, a lot of people who liked Spuffy and Spike didn't want to watch AtS, Before Spike, or after Spike.

Re: to clarify

Date: 2005-09-19 11:40 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shadowkat67.livejournal.com
Actually it wasn't. It was set up as a board for non-spoiled fans of Angel who wanted to talk about Spike without getting blasted in 2002-2003.
It sort of crumpled around 2004, when the viewers who were raging about Spike joining Angel realized they were being incredibly silly and Spike was not going to take over the series after all. Yes, there was a point in time there in which I wondered if we all weren't posting from our locked attics. LOL!

But you are right for pointing out a factor that didn't occur to me until today, about 50% of the Spike fans, possibly more, who'd been into BTVS did not come over to Angel. They tried the first four episodes and gave up. So - of course ATPO showed a definite Angel bias, it also decreased in the number of posts considerably. Buffy Cross & Stake rarely discussed Angel and also dropped in attendance. Angel's Soul increased with the Spike add ons for about five months, then decreased.

So, yep that's a major hole in my argument.

Thanks. Had been tempted to use my experiences in fandom in one of the papers for class, but playing around with it here makes it clear I was right not to try it. Not workable. Too complex.

Re: to clarify

Date: 2005-09-21 12:09 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rahael.livejournal.com
Oh, you must be right about it not being a spoiler board. I probably conflated it with the Spoiler board which had an overlap in terms of mods.

Also rememmber that as far as AtPO and Angel After Spike was concerned, there were storms bigger than Spuffy & B/A at work (though there was a correlation between the two).

Re: to clarify

Date: 2005-09-21 02:40 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Oh yeah, part of the fight was over the trolls or a better term is "social deviant" or "social nonconformist" - we meet them everywhere in life. That person whose mannerisms, oral or writing ability just does not fit with the social construct or drives the group nuts. Or in the case of the two individual posters I'm referring to here drove sections of the group nuts. Personally I found the B/S deviant far more tolerable. She didn't bug me that much, but she drove the moderators crazy enough to get banned. The B/A deviant befriended at least one of the moderators and as a result was tolerated. Hence the reason a new board was partially created - it was a way for those of us who found the B/A deviant's behavior intolerable but felt we had no voice and no way of stopping it due to the fact that the majority of the group tolerated it - to handle it. I'm not saying one group was wrong or right here or that the thinking was logical, just interesting to contemplate in respect to how we handle group dynamics.

Re: to clarify

Date: 2005-09-21 04:16 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shadowkat67.livejournal.com
Oops, me...stupid lj

Re: to clarify

Date: 2005-09-20 02:51 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ladystarlightsj.livejournal.com
2. Posts regarding fanfic on Spike or Spikecentric fic are ignored. And disappear unaddressed.

Well, I might be biased, since quite a bit of my fic attempts have been Spikeish in nature, but here goes.

It's been my experience that any fanfic post pretty much passes without a comment. ATPo is not a fanfic kind of place, really. I remember that you, actually, commented something about my OC in "Menage a Deux" not being a Mary Sue. Which I can't remember if I ever told you how much I appreciated getting a feedback comment on the board, so, thank you!

Now that I'm posting my own stuff more on LJ and/or Lyric Wheel, I'm getting a titch more feedback. However, I guess that legions of adoring fans clamouring for more more MORE is probably not something that I could deal with anyways.

Re: to clarify

Date: 2005-09-20 12:41 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
You're welcome. Yours was one of the few fic rec's outside of Dead Soul that I responded to on a board. So I'm as quilty of this as anyone. ;-)

With the exception of the ATPO Season 6 Serial, you're right. If it's a board sponsored fic - it will get comments, quite a few actually, if not, rarely any. This is not exclusive to ATPO by the way. Other boards have harsh rules regarding posting of fanfic recs - at Buffy Cross and Stake, you could only post recs on the non-spoiler board and only if you had reached "regular" status which was awarded by the board moderator. Later spoiler boards allowed fanfic but again only if board sponsored and permission was requested first. TWOP also has strict rules. You can only rec fic that is not your own or if it is, only if you have made regular status. Same thing goes for whedonesque - no linking to your own essays or fic, if you get an essay linked to on that board - it's because someone else found it and linked.
(Which was why in fandom making whedonesque or being rec'ed on whedonesque was a honor - since someone else had to do it and while in some cases you could say it was a friend of the writers, I never knew of an instance. Whedonesque also doesn't allow much on fanfic rec's and tends to only allow essays or reviews or news bits.)

So, you're right, my argument has a hole in it. On the other hand it is interesting that fic that is board sponsored gets responses and is considered "good" while fic outside the board doesn't get rec'ed or acknowledged. (To be honest, I don't like board sponsored fic find it dull and status quo, following strict rules of canon, the riskier stuff was unsponsored partly because it was done outside of a sizable "group" and not under strict guidelines. Have same problems with collaborative fics...so perhaps just don't like reading collaborations? (shrug) But since I don't read fanfic anymore, it's not really an issue.)

Re: to clarify

Date: 2005-09-19 09:37 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rahael.livejournal.com
Hmm, having read through the subsequent discussions, I'm not sure whether I'm quite understanding your arguments correctly. Are we talking about the fandom or the official machinery surrounding the show? I think the situation is a lot more complex than a simple cut and dried dichotomy.

Firstly, the fandom sprawls out way beyond one person's ability to get the measure of it. A lot of fandom happens secretly. A lot happens in chat rooms, journals (which may or many not be friendslocked). There is sitll a great measure of fandom that doesn't interact with other fans(as I used to be, and am now again - the silent, solitary consumers of a fandom).

I also think that people do not respond predictably to any "text". As is quite obvious, no matter how bald or absolute the statement, a million interpretations are launched. There *is* space in BtVS for multiple interpretations. Some are probably more correct than others. We all slot in our hierarchies of probablities differently.

I wrote a lot more, but I think it would be wisest to stop here. Everything you think about my view on Spike? There's an Angel fan who thinks the same about my views on Angel and who takes similar offence. Ditto a lot of Buffy fans. Let's not get started on the big Wesley-Gunn-Fred controversy! Or anywhere near Connor. I can't express how much relief I feel at having been released from my excitement/interest in the show and the characters. Fandom, Ugh. I always felt as if I was one step away from being locked in the attic.

Agree

Date: 2005-09-19 11:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shadowkat67.livejournal.com
What I was attempting to do and somewhat clumsily was to determine how much of the activity on the posting boards was due to external influence such as how the shows were advertised and marketing campaigns, how much was due to the bias of the people running the boards or the group that frequented the board the most - how they set the tone, and to what degree that prevented deviant interests from participating. Brighter people than me have attempted to do more or less the same thing, with quantitive analysis - taking surveys, tabulating results, etc.
And coming up with the same confusing muddle I just did. Heh..

So I tend to agree. [Particularly with your last paragraph. Ditto on the last sentence of your post! I wondered much the same about myself for a few years there. So happy to past all that.] Also, you're right - attempting to analyze fandom may be akin to capturing and analyzing lighting in a bottle, impossible. I think there's an obsessiven nature to being a fan that is worth studying, but difficult due to unknown variables.

Was thinking it over today and saw quite a few holes in my own arguments, while I could defend a position that there was a definite Angel bias on TWOP and ATPO in later years, I'd have to step back and admit that a) BTVS had ended and b) that the number of people frequenting both boards had scattered a bit. Also Buffy Cross and Stake, a spoiler board which had the highest number of posters of the three boards, averaging 600 or more a day at the height of it's popularity, showed a significant bias or leaning towards Spike (partly because Angel had his own show and there was the sister board, Angel's Soul for Angel fans, which had less posters interestingly enough. Perhaps a better argument would be that much of the Spike hatred was due to the fact that these fans felt displaced on their former boards?) Feel a little sorry for the Xander fans, who probably did feel a little like deviants on the boards, especially b/x and b/r shippers.

So you are right my arguments don't work if you expand upon them. I was attempting to confine them to three boards in analysis, but even there the argument falls apart.

Have another book to read for the same class entitled: "How We Know What Isn't So: The fallibility of human reason in everyday life by Thomas Gilvovich", which pokes holes in many social psychology studies and other research. It also cautions against attempting to do what I just did. The exercise taught me that you can't determine group behavorial patterns merely through observation, you need to be aware of other types of variables - such as the situation, the personalities of the people involved, and external influences.

Thanks for your comments, helped me clarify a few things in my head couldn't have done alone.

Re: Agree

Date: 2005-09-21 12:06 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rahael.livejournal.com
Oh, don't abandon your hypothesis just because of this discussion - what I would say is that because of the whole history of the Spike/Angel debate, what its supposed to be, the recriminations, the often barely suppressed grievances that still exist everywhere in fandom, you can't use it as an effective example, because as demonstrated by this, you end up re-creating the debate, rather than thinking why it arose.

I don't think its impossible at all, but I think there would have to be a measure of self-definition by other fans - perhaps my fannish experience and yours isn't the same, but your experience would be setting the parameters for the entire study? Things like that. similarly, as a non-shipper, with a canonical interest in the show's canonical couples with a deeper interest in the couples-who-aren't as a kind of mirror image (I rarely if ever want the show to depict the ships I actually read fic about) my fannish experience isn't probably very representative.

Re: Agree

Date: 2005-09-21 12:53 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shadowkat67.livejournal.com
Things like that. similarly, as a non-shipper, with a canonical interest in the show's canonical couples with a deeper interest in the couples-who-aren't as a kind of mirror image (I rarely if ever want the show to depict the ships I actually read fic about) my fannish experience isn't probably very representative.

Not sure this is true. There were lots of fans who did not directly "ship" onscreen relationships. (I know because half of them sent me emails asking for essays for websites featuring non-cannon ships : ie. Willow/Spike, Spike/Riley, Spike/Xander, Faith/Buffy, Buffy/Xander, Andrew/Spike, Willow/Buffy...Lilah/Spike. Giles/Anya - was huge on the BC&S board for a while. It goes on.) Also there's slash which is hardly canon or even condoned by the writers. Hence the name slash. Huge percentage of fandom actually prefers the non-canonical ships as a reaction to the shipping wars partly and possibly because they knew like I did that this being television the actual romances would never satisfy, so you might as well make up your own. There are quite a few people who shipped B/S in seasons 2-4, but did not ship them in 5-7.

So you aren't as atypical as you may think.

I tended to do both. I went with what was onscreen. I also played with reading fantasies of things that did not happen onscreen. But I doubt that was atypical either.

That's the difficulty with the analysis, determining what is the typical fan and what is the deviant, or the control/non-control.

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