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Ah, my work glared at me and I glared back. But I did get a few things accomplished. Trying not to worry too much and the story I've been plotting is working again. Don't know if I'll ever write it all down or not. Did write a snippet over the weekend.

The internet has had a weird effect on my writing. It has to a degree helped me find my voice, which is of the good. It's also allowed me to experiment with different types of writing, including web/media essays - which are bloody headache inducing - no wonder the damn things are more media heavy than content heavy, people are spending all their time doing the tech stuff. But you do learn a great deal from doing them. On the other end of the spectrum - it has almost killed my ability to write fiction. I go through stages. The only way I can write fiction is if I leave the net for a bit and never post it on the net - because I get self-conscious. Fiction for me is more precious than non-fiction, more personal, and more close to my heart. I hurt more when no one responds to it - and they rarely do. Or people are critical of it. Which is ironic, considering how critical I am - this fact is not lost on me. Part of the problem is I'm a critical thinker - it's what I do for a living, as a co-worker pointed out - our job is to literally analyze and criticize everything to the minute detail. So, yes, I apply that level of criticism to what I do, and when someone echoes it - it's like getting it twice. So, I've learned not to post it. Like I said, weird.

Lots of Buffy reviews on my flist - and they are split right down the middle, which makes them incredibly entertaining. You scroll down...you get reviewer #1: "I hate this, it's misogynistic crap" right below reviewer 2: "I love and adore this, it's the best thing ever!". And back and forth. It's almost every other one, (although, admittedly, the vast majority of my flist doesn't post on or to my knowledge reads the comics.) And they aren't ambivalent about it either - we're talking passion here, folks! Remind me not to put these people in a room together regarding the comics. There will be blood. I was about to ask if other things are quite this divisive, but that's a stupid question. Who am I kidding, we live in divisive times. At least this is just comic books, put a Glen Beck fan and John Stewart fan in a room together...and see what happens. (The Glenn Beck fan will probably win because he'll bring the gun. ) OR how about a Jets fan vs. a Steeler's fan (guess who I'm rooting for? The Jets! Go Jets! Although half-heartedly, I admittedly care as much about football as I care about Angel getting his own series in the Dark Horse comics, which isn't that much in case you can't figure out my analogy. Not a spectator sport fan, much to my own chagrin). Comic book fans are relatively civil in comparison.

I haven't bought the thing yet. Or read it for that matter. Lots of people are reading it for free via download. Hee. Loss of money for Dark Horse. Cool. Although, wildly unfair for anyone who has forked over 116 bucks and counting for the things. As an aside? I think the net may kill comic books or reinvision them in much the same way it has reinvisioned journals, magazines and periodicals.
And there's some really good web-comics out there. The reviews aren't exactly inspiring purchase, but I've admittedly only read the negative ones to date, and the negative ones are REALLY negative. People seem to either love this thing, or really despise it, with just a few ambivalent folks.

Off to fix dinner and putter about. Maybe see the Good Wife...which I was looking forward to.
It got a lacklustre review by selenak, who thought it was bland this week, which she admitted was rare for the Good Wife - but hey, it's tv - they are allowed to have bland episodes. Impossible not to, the damn medium is fast and hard.

Date: 2011-01-20 03:55 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ponygirl2000.livejournal.com
Oh Buffy comics! Is our long fandom nightmare finally over?

Date: 2011-01-20 05:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shadowkat67.livejournal.com
We should be so lucky...no, apparently Whedon has decided to produce a s9, which is written and drawn entirely by people who have either never seen the tv series or only watched the first two seasons. (Making Brian Lynch look an expert on the characters by comparison.) But he's selling it as the best thing ever, that he'll be involved (assuming you've ignored the past six interviews where he said the exact opposite, Whedon wishy washy? Nah.), and that it will focus on the characters and be character oriented. I seriously think the man missed his calling as a con artist or used sales man. ;-)

Date: 2011-01-20 07:59 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] local-max.livejournal.com
apparently Whedon has decided to produce a s9, which is written and drawn entirely by people who have either never seen the tv series or only watched the first two seasons

To be fair--Jane Espenson is definitely writing for season nine, as is Drew Greenberg (who is so-so as a writer, but, you know, from the Buffyverse). So we'll see on that front!

Date: 2011-01-20 11:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shadowkat67.livejournal.com
Didn't know that. Last I read - Gail Simone, who has only watched a few episodes and never seen the series had been asked to write for it. (Which reminds me a lot of asking Brad Meltzer, who also hadn't watched the series.)

Doesn't change anything for me though. I'm pretty much done with the comics for a lot of reasons, I won't bore you with.;-)

I disagree about Greenberg - he's done some amazing writing for Dexter.

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