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1. Day 09 – A book you thought you wouldn’t like but ended up loving

Eh. What often happens is I'll hate a book the first time I try it and then will pick it up months later and enjoy it. It's so dependent on my mood. And this has happened with so many books over the years...that I'm sort of drawing a blank.

It surprised me that I liked James Joyce's Ulysess as much as I did. It also surprised me that I enjoyed..Harry Potter, which I'd avoided when it was first released, because of the hype. A co-worker talked me into trying it. Loved it to pieces. Same thing happened with 50 Shades of Gray actually - thought I'd despise it. Tried a sample and it hit my mood - it was like reading an absurd parody of all the bad contemporary romance novels and fanfic that I'd read in the last three years. I was laughing my head off, and oddly moved by the crazy hero of the piece. Granted I was the only I've met who saw it that way, but such is life.

I think...it surprised me a bit that I fell in love with Dorothy Dunnett's Chronicles of Lymond - not my genre. Also surprised me that I loved Song of Ice and Fire, although love is too strong a word.



Day 10 – Favorite classic book
Day 11 – A book you hated
Day 12 – A book you used to love but don’t anymore
Day 13 – Your favorite writer
Day 14 – Favorite book of your favorite writer
Day 15 – Favorite male character
Day 16 – Favorite female character
Day 17 – Favorite quote from your favorite book
Day 18 – A book that disappointed you
Day 19 – Favorite book turned into a movie
Day 20 – Favorite romance book
Day 21 – Favorite book from your childhood
Day 22 – Favorite book you own
Day 23 – A book you wanted to read for a long time but still haven’t
Day 24 – A book that you wish more people have read
Day 25 – A character who you can relate to the most
Day 26 – A book that changed your opinion about something
Day 27 – The most surprising plot twist or ending
Day 28 – Favorite title
Day 29 – A book everyone hated but you liked
Day 30 – Your favorite book of all time


2. TV SHOW MEME: Day 12 - An episode you've watched more than 5 times

This category is much easier than the last one under the TV Meme. Less controversial.

Which one to choose? Because here's the thing, I've watched a lot of episodes more than 5 times. Actually I think I've watched both Buffy and Angel more than 5 times. Although granted not the entire series, there are quite a few episodes I've skipped over after the first two viewings (such as pretty much most of Angel S1 and S3). When I say I was an insane Buffy fan, I'm not kidding. Granted...I had good company.

So which one to pick? I think I have Fool for Love and Beneath You memorized. There's a reason for that - both episodes worked for me. Another episode that I have memorized is Restless - which I thought was a crazy puzzle with lots of forshadowing for future episodes. Loved the fact that the writers did reference Restless in various ways, but disappointed that it wasn't as neatly planned as I thought. (Discovered this through interviews...which pretty much goes to show you, you should not read writer interviews. I don't anymore. I really do not want to know what the writers are thinking or what they intended. I agree with the writer of The Kite Runner who stated that once the story is out there it becomes an interactive work of art, readers minds are interacting and perceiving bits and pieces of it differently. Something he may have meant literally or thought nothing of at the time, a reader may come up with a brilliant metaphor for. Often, he stated the readers come up with better stuff than he ever intended. The problem with our current culture - is there is too much interaction with the writers/creators of the art we enjoy. We spend too much time interviewing and talking with them or reading their interviews - to the point that we only see the Doylist version and not the Watsonian. I prefer the Watsonian, it's more often than not, more interesting and compelling, not to mention satisfying - than the Doylist. I lost my Buffy fandom by reading Whedon and various other writer's and actor's interviews and listening to commentary. One of the pitfalls of becoming an obsessed fan is that you feel this need or compulsion to read every interview or bit you can find on your favorite series...until eventually the writers/actors/collaborators views either piss you off or disappoint you. It will eventually happen. It's inevitable. It was a mistake that I'm attempting to avoid repeating. That said - I love Neil Gaiman's blog more than I like his books...so there are exceptions to this rule. LOL!)

Sorry for the aside.

I think I watched the final scenes of Beneath You a hundred times, almost killing the DVD with the rewinding. It's a weird episode. The tonal quality doesn't quite match. We have bright techn-color, then faded blue light...with everything washed out. It is almost as if you are watching two different shows at the same time. This happened quite a bit with Buffy and I always found it compelling and jarring at the same time. Almost as if we had two different production writing staffs. Production quality sometimes varied from episode to episode - some had better quality than others. Which is understandable. But when it happened in the same episode...I was thrown by it. Examples? Seeing Red (which is an episode that is admittedly very hard to watch multiple times but it does have that weird tonal shift in quality), Beneath You, Fool for Love, actually a lot of the Spike centric episodes for some reason, which may explain part of my obsession with the character?

At any rate the ending of Beneath You is pure poetry, a prose poem delivered as monologue. Marsters delivers it well..in a restrained performance. And the words ...can mean many things. You can literally interpret it various ways. Hence the rewatching. I tended to rewatch episodes that could be interpreted more than one way. (Seeing Red and Lies My Parents Told Me - are difficult episodes to re-watch - but also fit in that category. You can interpret both multiple ways.) This may explain why I was obsessed with the series - I like things that you can watch a million times and see something new, interpret differently each and every time you watch it. Particularly things that deal with moral quandry's or emotional arcs of characters. I'm not really a plot person - more character oriented, so the episodes that I got obsessed with were about characters.

I remember re-watching the Angel episode "Destiny" multiple times for much the same reasons. Also re-watched "Home". Once More With Feeling was rewatched multiple times, along with Tabuleh Rasa, HUSH, and Intervention. As great as The Body was...it couldn't be interpreted in multiple ways and it was too bloody painful to watch it more than once, unless of course you like bawling your eyes out.

Buffy had a lot of episodes that you could look at it in more than one way...which is also why I joined the fandom and got involved in writing and discussing it online. The episodes I watched more than five times - had one thing in common - they could be interpreted multiple ways and be discussed to death.


Day 13 - Favorite childhood show
Day 14 - Favorite male character
Day 15 - Favorite female character
Day 16 - Your guilty pleasure show
Day 17 - Favorite mini series
Day 18 - Favorite title sequence
Day 19 - Best TV show cast
Day 20 - Favorite kiss
Day 21 - Favorite ship
Day 22 - Favorite series finale
Day 23 - Most annoying character
Day 24 - Best quote
Day 25 - A show you plan on watching (old or new)
Day 26 - OMG WTF? Season finale
Day 27 - Best pilot episode
Day 28 - First TV show obsession
Day 29 - Current TV show obsession
Day 30 - Saddest character death.

Date: 2013-02-22 12:58 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cactuswatcher.livejournal.com
Like you I was leery of the early hype about Harry Potter. I can't even remember now whether I read the first book first or saw the first movie first. But whichever, it was an adult I knew that got me to try it.

Date: 2013-02-22 07:47 pm (UTC)
rahirah: (Default)
From: [personal profile] rahirah
Well, the entire last scene of Beneath You was completely re-written and re-shot weeks after the rest of the episode, so that may explain some of the discrepancy in production values. The original script with the original cross scene is out there on the net somewhere. It's not a bad scene, but the revised version is definitely better.

Date: 2013-02-22 10:53 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shadowkat67.livejournal.com
Yeah, I know. There's no interview or commentary on that series I didn't find and read. Unfortunately. (that was what the aside was about above). Probably should have mentioned it in the post and made it clearer - but was looking at the episode from Watsonian perspective not Doylist.

Although that's a good example of how Doylist perspective ruins viewing pleasure. I'm amongst the minority of the Spike fans who detested Petrie's original script (read it a number of times, even wrote a post on the ATPO board about it at one point - I think) and agreed with Whedon - it sucked beans. LOL! YMMV of course. Most fanfic writers liked it, I never understood why. But I was also a poet in my 20s and Petrie's lame attempts at poetry and his bashing of it - was not funny to me, just offensive.

I'd read that it was literally re-written and re-directed within 24 hours, not several weeks later. At least that's the impression I got from Marsters Q&A's on it, and various other backstage reports at the time. They film and edit the episodes with eight-nine days. So I can't imagine they could do it several weeks later...but it's possible, I suppose.



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