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I'm offline for the next two-three days for the Thanksgiving Holiday. When I get back will hopefully do a meta on poll results and respond to comments. Sorry about delay.

Thank you for answering my poll. If you friended me and are a fan of Buffy? And haven't seen or answered the poll? Please take the time to answer at least the first three questions of the poll. I really would like to see how many Buffy fans actually have read the comics, and how many gave up on them. I know it can't possibly be an accurate or scientific sampling (as I myself stated recently to someone else doing polls - such a thing may well be impossible)...but I'd like to get a snapshot, see the degree to which the mileage differs. Thanks!!

Regarding the canon question?

"I think how you answer that question has a great deal to do with whether you consider Joss Whedon the sole creator of Buffy the Vampire Slayer series, or a co-creator/part of a larger collaborative effort. Think of it this way - you've written part of book, say one chapter, and there's a guy, JW, who hired you to write that chapter, he may have even edited portions, and given you notes , and he does the same with other people, including writing a few chapters himself, and he puts his name on the book - edited/created by J.W. Your name is listed in the table of contents, you are credited as a writer for hire. J.W does a sequel, he hires different writers, you either decline to contribute or aren't invited. He chooses to take the characters or information in the chapter that you wrote and write a sequel based on it, and states that his sequel is canon. It is a continuation of what you wrote - even though you haven't been consulted in any way. Since he or the publisher own the copyright, and you are a mere "work-for-hire" writer, you can't claim copyright infringement. He can do whatever he wants. Would you consider what he does with your characters, story, and/or ideas/information that you have concieved and written a true continuation of the work (ie. canon), if you are no longer part of the collaboration purely because he combined the original combination of stories, edited and put them together and is the one credited with coming up with the title and main concept?

Happy Thanksgiving for those in US who celebrate, elsewhere, have a great weekend!

Re: Part I - Canon doesn't matter to all of us

Date: 2009-11-29 08:46 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shadowkat67.livejournal.com
I guess my difficulty with that pov is that you are discounting everyone else's contribution. I highly recommend that you read two television writer's blogs - tightropegirl - Doris Egan - who is a long-time staff writer for series such as Tru Calling, Dark Angel, Smallville, Homicide Life on the Street, and House as well as Kevin Levin - who wrote for series such as Frazier and Cheers.

I will accept that the comics is how Whedon would continue the series if he could do whatever he damn well pleased with it - no budget limitations, no actors, no network notes (although I'm guessing Scott Allie is now in that function.).

But accepting Whedon as the sole creator of the series the only one who counts? That is akin to stating that the blood sweat and tears the others put in is worthless. And that is not true. They did more and worked harder at times than Whedon ever did. Sorry,
no, the comics are not canon. They merely show us how Joss Whedon and the writers, editors and artists that he has hired would have continued this storyline. If that is how you define canon? Than yes, I agree that is true. I do not agree that they show us anything other than that. Nor do I require them to.

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