• Hey Guest. Check out your NeoGAF Wrapped 2025 results here!

Vox: When fandom bemes a crusade, things get ugly

Status
Not open for further replies.
Wow, perfect illustration of the OP. Someone posted that he suffered from death threats and your response was basically "well, it DID suck..."

Just out of curiosity, do you know what Oreimo's about? And how it ended?

Because...yeah, you should go look it up.
 
If they feel like they aren't getting something sufficiently back by just being a consumer then they shouldn't be a fan.

I'm sure they'd be fine just being consumers but they get added pleasure from all the other stuff. Everybody wants more and will take more if given.

There are degrees here, which is what the article is all about.
 
Sorry if this is a dumb question, but do you mean "know as people" or "know as characters"? I don't agree if the latter. That would imply that criticisms about characters doing things that seem out of character for them - based on what's seen of them in whatever work they're housed in - are invalid. People definitely can and do know well-established characters.

Shipping isn't even about that though. It's interesting you said "theorizing"; Shipping is fantasy. There's little to no interest in theory of any kind.
I think that's the thing that bugs me about a lot of fan work. Hardcore fandom is supposed to know who these people are but so often they'll ignore that to shoehorn them into whatever story they want to see.
 
Only virgins reject shipping

Are you a virgin?

Do don't know what you got

Til it's gone

84COONJ.gif
 
There's a difference between rooting for two characters to get together and feeling personally betrayed by the creator when they don't. I'm guessing everyone does the first to some degree, even if they aren't consciously identifying with "mai waifu." But I'm trying to figure out how self-absorbed/maladjusted you need to be to demand that someone else's creation cater to your fantasy life.
 
Shippers want Zoro and Perona to be a thing. I can't look at that community under a positive light.
I think saying "Be cool if A and B hook up" is fine, its when folks start taking it personal it doesn't happen.

I would love for Spiderman and She Hulk to date, but I am not going to show up at Dan Slott and be like "What we going to do to make this happen?". Hell I wouldn't even tweet that, mainly because Dan Slott is a savage on twitter
Slott would just block you. lol
 
...there are times where I am happy to be so oblivious. I was just going "yaaaaaaaay, more Monty Oum stuff!"

It was actually pretty funny when the series actually started up and some in the fandom actually raged that Weiss's personality wasn't what they thought/assumed it would be after her trailer.
 
Pick two characters

Pray they fuck

Y'know I think all successful series with this kind of shipping for them...they're probably more successful when they don't let the characters get together. I mean all the biggest ones are like that.

If they get together mid-series it's like, yay the fantasy became reality, they're so perfect for each other...but then the series has to keep going and the idea of them together becomes mundane and they continue to face challenges and zany hijinks.

I'm specifically thinking about the Office (US) when Jim and Pam finally got together and destroyed all the tension and the show slowly petered out over a long period of time afterward.
 
Fandom has changed with social media.

Shipping has been been around for ages. When I was young and in fandom, the thought of even hinting to creators that fandom existed was tantamount to a crime. I remember a huge kerfuffle that happened because someone at a con handed a creator a print out of their favorite fan fic. Fandom was PISSED.

Now, for some fucking reason, fans have decided that shipping isn't just for fun, it's for results: getting the couple to actually become canon. It's insane. I'm a shipper, I enjoy writing and reading fanfic of couples I think have great chemistry that aren't canon couples (though the story matters more to me than the ship), but this new, bizarre entitled behavior from some shippers is very upsetting to me.

I mean, there are people that constantly harass actors over this crap, as if they have any control over it. In the Supernatural fandom, there's a contingent of fans who actually believe the two male leads are secretly in love, that their wives are beards, and that the studio is preventing them from being open about their relationship. These J2 fans, as they call themselves, have gone so far as to send death threats to Misha Collins, another star on the show, because a lot of people ship his character with one of the male leads' character.

Yep, they sent death threats to an actor because other people thought Destiel was cool. What the entire fuck is wrong with people like that?

But, this type of behavior is still, thankfully, a small but vocal minority of fandom. Hopefully reality will set in and these people will stop giving fandom and fan creators a bad name.

/resident fanthroplogist
 
The 100 got burned hard by going full fanservice in S3 and directly leading those fans on even though an actress was leaving the show. (in addition to other issues with copy/pasting one of the dumbest death scenes in history)
 
This happened?
They even invited some of these fans to the shooting of the finale. buuuuutt....
One of the two in the pairing had been killed off and was showing up in what was effectively a dream sequence

And of course, they didn't bother to mention this because it'd be a spoiler, leading to hordes of angry fans.
 
They even invited some of these fans to the shooting of the finale. buuuuutt....
One of the two in the pairing had been killed off and was showing up in what was effectively a dream sequence

And of course, they didn't bother to mention this because it'd be a spoiler, leading to hordes of angry fans.

Damn.
 
Avatar: The Legend of Korra kind of ruined the ending with its complete fan service.

Did it though? The writing in Korra wasn't particularly good to begin with, and the earlier seasons were much more overt in their pandering to shippers. I love the show, but there really wasn't much that could be "ruined" lol.
 
I remember when Stargate SG1 poked fun at it in 200 with the 'dream' wedding between O'Neill and Carter and just before Carter appearing Daniel (who was standing alongside Jack) muttering if that if this didn't get started soon people would think that they were the ones tying the knot.
 
Did this really happen?
They even invited some of these fans to the shooting of the finale. buuuuutt....
One of the two in the pairing had been killed off and was showing up in what was effectively a dream sequence

And of course, they didn't bother to mention this because it'd be a spoiler, leading to hordes of angry fans.

Also,
the fans they lead on were lgbt ones which is even worse due to the lack of gay couples on screen.
Especially when you factor in that the gay character got killed in an incredibly cliche way that has happened in multiple tv shows to gay characters.

Trying to be somewhat vague due to spoilers, but I'd imagine anyone online that's a fan of the show already knows due to the huge backlash.

Edit: Actually, spoiler tagged just in case.
 
Shippers are the worst part of fandom.
 
Also,
the fans they lead on were lgbt ones which is even worse due to the lack of gay couples on screen.
Especially when you factor in that the gay character got killed in an incredibly cliche way that has happened in multiple tv shows to gay characters.

Trying to be somewhat vague due to spoilers, but I'd imagine anyone online that's a fan of the show already knows due to the huge backlash.

Edit: Actually, spoiler tagged just in case.

That sounds like they didn't stick the landing.
 
That sounds like they didn't stick the landing.
After the ending of S2, they shoehorned in a romance plot which made zero sense in context of the plot, instead of allowing it to be a "ships passing in the night" situation where the tragedy is that they were never able to try in the first place due to duty/politics/etc.
 
Shippers are the worst part of fandom.

It seems to me that there is a huge disconnect in fandom, mostly divided on the line of male fans and female fans.

Male fans tend to be curative: They make databases, lists, collect things, memorize triva and stats..etc
Female fans tend to be creative: They write fanfiction, make music videos, fantart, etc.

A lot men just don't get shipping, and I believe it's because of that divide. Romance is more important to a story for a lot of women, and with women being more creative fans, of course shipping is going to happen. I for instance would much rather write fanfiction than create a wiki for a fandom. Gathering details and stats seems more pointless to me, while shipping seems pointless to a lot of men.
 
Ship for fun, don't seriously get invested in a pairing that has 0 chance of taking off. Use some common sense (if it's anime, chances are your gay ship won't sail)

That's how I stay sane.

Avatar: The Legend of Korra kind of ruined the ending with its complete fan service.

lmao

2 seconds of hand holding didn't "ruin" anything.
 
It seems to me that there is a huge disconnect in fandom, mostly divided on the line of male fans and female fans.

Male fans tend to be curative: They make databases, lists, collect things, memorize triva and stats..etc
Female fans tend to be creative: They write fanfiction, make music videos, fantart, etc.

A lot men just don't get shipping, and I believe it's because of that divide. Romance is more important to a story for a lot of women, and with women being more creative fans, of course shipping is going to happen. I for instance would much rather write fanfiction than create a wiki for a fandom. Gathering details and stats seems more pointless to me, while shipping seems pointless to a lot of men.

I don't quite agree with this nowadays. Ten years ago I would have said yes but nowadays I would say both sides are damn near deep within it. At least in the fanfiction side.
 
I enjoy shipping, and although I'm usually a fan of less popular/common pairings it's all cool. I remember when it all felt so simple, and it was just a bunch of nerds sharing fanfiction or art and trading theories on dumb high school AU settings and headcanon and such.

Actually haven't really gotten into the fandom side of things in a few years. Homestuck was the last, and boy was that fucking crazy. Most people are great, but there are always those who take shit too far.
 
Avatar: The Legend of Korra kind of ruined the ending with its complete fan service.

Hahaha, nope, it's probably one of the few reasons the finale was good.

I like shipping, but as you guys said, it's not like I'm going to do a hashtag campaign out of it. If it happens, it's fine. If not, I'm glad that the artist stands up to what he thinks the characters would do.
 
After the ending of S2, they shoehorned in a romance plot which made zero sense in context of the plot, instead of allowing it to be a "ships passing in the night" situation where the tragedy is that they were never able to try in the first place due to duty/politics/etc.
The fact that there was a change in the plot sounds like they were focusing on a certain demographic then.
 
It seems to me that there is a huge disconnect in fandom, mostly divided on the line of male fans and female fans.

Male fans tend to be curative: They make databases, lists, collect things, memorize triva and stats..etc
Female fans tend to be creative: They write fanfiction, make music videos, fantart, etc.

A lot men just don't get shipping, and I believe it's because of that divide. Romance is more important to a story for a lot of women, and with women being more creative fans, of course shipping is going to happen. I for instance would much rather write fanfiction than create a wiki for a fandom. Gathering details and stats seems more pointless to me, while shipping seems pointless to a lot of men.

I had a lot of discussions with my ex about this stuff. She was big into fandom and shipping, and I wasn't.

I don't know if separating by "creativity" makes sense. Male fans tend to do a lot of creative things but also tend to care deeply about what is "true" and canonical. A lot of these fans will do things like make reconstructions of Minas Tirith in Minecraft or in Legos. These are still creative endeavors! Similarly a lot of guys seem disinterested in doing "alternate" takes on characters. There are way more femLinks or femCaps than Wonder Man or manHarley or whatever. But they'll still do things like argue who would win in a fight between characters from different universes, which I guess is kind of like violence shipping, lol.
 
I don't quite agree with this nowadays. Ten years ago I would have said yes but nowadays I would say both sides are damn near deep within it. At least in the fanfiction side.

I might run in different circles when it comes to fanfiction, so I might not see as much male participation. Do video game fandoms and anime fandoms have more male fanfiction writers? I only get really into live action fandom, and in my 20 years in fandom, I've only met two male fanfiction writers.

Slash fandom I know is 99% middle aged straight women, though that might be changing as the average age for fanfiction writers is getting lower.

I had a lot of discussions with my ex about this stuff. She was big into fandom and shipping, and I wasn't.

I don't know if separating by "creativity" makes sense. Male fans tend to do a lot of creative things but also tend to care deeply about what is "true" and canonical. A lot of these fans will do things like make reconstructions of Minas Tirith in Minecraft or in Legos. These are still creative endeavors! Similarly a lot of guys seem disinterested in doing "alternate" takes on characters. There are way more femLinks or femCaps than Wonder Man or manHarley or whatever. But they'll still do things like argue who would win in a fight between characters from different universes, which I guess is kind of like violence shipping, lol.

Oh yeah, I'm not saying male fandom doesn't have creativity, sorry >.< It's just easier to use those terms. A scale model of Minas Tirith is creative, but it's still very curative as well. I find it facinating really, how different men and women engage in fandom.
 
I had a lot of discussions with my ex about this stuff. She was big into fandom and shipping, and I wasn't.

I don't know if separating by "creativity" makes sense. Male fans tend to do a lot of creative things but also tend to care deeply about what is "true" and canonical. A lot of these fans will do things like make reconstructions of Minas Tirith in Minecraft or in Legos. These are still creative endeavors! Similarly a lot of guys seem disinterested in doing "alternate" takes on characters. There are way more femLinks or femCaps than Wonder Man or manHarley or whatever. But they'll still do things like argue who would win in a fight between characters from different universes, which I guess is kind of like violence shipping, lol.

This description is so perfect I want to steal it.
 
I might run in different circles when it comes to fanfiction, so I might not see as much male participation. Do video game fandoms and anime fandoms have more male fanfiction writers? I only get really into live action fandom, and in my 20 years in fandom, I've only met two male fanfiction writers.

Slash fandom I know is 99% middle aged straight women, though that might be changing as the average age for fanfiction writers is getting lower.

In anime and sci fi circles males have generally dominated the writing game. The slash side of the fandom was at one time heavily female influenced with some small lesbian/yuri shipping rounding it out but the latter really grew over the last 10 years or so and the bulk of it is male writers unsurprisingly. Slash of either isn't my personal cup of tea but its been easy to see it grow in that timeframe (in that there has been frustration when certain pairings dominate a section - such as the aforementioned RWBY within the last few years).
 
There is 2 things that I don't understand when this topic appears :

1- The fact that this is something NEW
2- This is some Tumblr thing

Nerd fandom as we KNOW begun with Spocknalia, a 1972 fanzine SHIPPING KIRK AND SPOCK !


The Original series of star trek only got further seasons because of letters from fans !
Characters are changed and killed because of public reaction ALL THE FUCKING TIME.
You probably heard even stand up comedians saying that Peach is not kidnapped but actually goes to date Bowser these days !
The idea of the Pirates of the Caribean franchise is basically fan wishing for Jack Sparrow to become the main focus !
People COMPLAIN when the dude and the girl don't kiss at the end !
The term "jump the shark" was created BECAUSE the audience hated the moment the CREATORS choose to make a character do something stupid. This means that the audience had EXPECTATIONS of what that characters was.
It is not considered bad when fanservice comes from japan =P
Supernatural episode to the fans is considered one of the best ones in the series

And it is funny to start with Sherlock because of that season 3 first episode had ... well .. an
actual scene with Sherlock kissing Moriarty
showing that the creators KNOW what happens in the fandom =P
 
In anime and sci fi circles males have generally dominated the writing game. The slash side of the fandom was at one time heavily female influenced with some small lesbian/yuri shipping rounding it out but the latter really grew over the last 10 years or so and the bulk of it is male writers unsurprisingly. Slash of either isn't my personal cup of tea but its been easy to see it grow in that timeframe (in that there has been frustration when certain pairings dominate a section - such as the aforementioned RWBY within the last few years).

It's very interesting how anime brings out the writers in male fandom, but like The Walking Dead, also with a huge male fanbase, doesn't have a ton of male written fanfic. I wonder what makes these deviations happen.

I also find it interesting that male written slash is on the rise in anime fandom. Is it just femslash or is it m/m as well?
 
So many parallels between this and the, "Link MUST be a girl in the next Zelda game or else," crowd.
 
So many parallels between this and the, "Link MUST be a girl in the next Zelda game or else," crowd.

The difference from the "link Must be a girl in the next Zelda" and the "Zelda formula is stale and needs to change" is that one person likes one and other person likes the other. Is that the devs heard one and not the other. Is that some sites you like said one and not the other

edit : like how this article is weirdly focusing on LGBT pairings ....
 
It seems to me that there is a huge disconnect in fandom, mostly divided on the line of male fans and female fans.

Male fans tend to be curative: They make databases, lists, collect things, memorize triva and stats..etc
Female fans tend to be creative: They write fanfiction, make music videos, fantart, etc.

A lot men just don't get shipping, and I believe it's because of that divide. Romance is more important to a story for a lot of women, and with women being more creative fans, of course shipping is going to happen. I for instance would much rather write fanfiction than create a wiki for a fandom. Gathering details and stats seems more pointless to me, while shipping seems pointless to a lot of men.

I'm a writer myself (by trade), and I enjoy writing using someone else's world. The relationship part is the least interesting part, and often takes away from plot, which is far more interesting. I have no interest in making databases either.

Shipping just completely ignores the best parts of a story in favor of "who wants to bang who", quite literally the most banal question one could want to answer.

Now, fan plot theories are great stuff. Trying to guess where the story is going is far more interesting.
 
It's very interesting how anime brings out the writers in male fandom, but like The Walking Dead, also with a huge male fanbase, doesn't have a ton of male written fanfic. I wonder what makes these deviations happen.

I also find it interesting that male written slash is on the rise in anime fandom. Is it just femslash or is it m/m as well?

Majorly femmeslash, or shoujo ai/yuri as the fandom calls it. The majority of it though naturally is because "it's hot" though a lot is for the same reasons for shipping to begin with. It wasn't until 2006-2007 that I really noticed it rising as like I mentioned it had existed prior but not in any great numbers.

There's also that some series lean heavily towards one gender, such as sports anime or idol anime (idol is more or less singing individuals or a group, heavily leaning female with series such as The iDOLDM@STER or Love Live) which is another reason for slashshipping. Original Character stories, particularly for romance, are generally frowned upon due to a number of cases being seen as a self insertion (though good ones do exist) and thus wish fulfillment. And if a writer wants to do romance story but not involve someone they made up they can and simply turn to one of the other characters (unless its a crossover as they likely will have more to work with).
 
The difference from the "link Must be a girl in the next Zelda" and the "Zelda formula is stale and needs to change" is that one person likes one and other person likes the other. Is that the devs heard one and not the other. Is that some sites you like said one and not the other

edit : like how this article is weirdly focusing on LGBT pairings ....

Slash fanfiction is probably the most popular shipping community in these fandoms. You can read the Zine's that first introduced "shipping" in the 70's above me which started out with homoerotic ships.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top Bottom