bop_radar: Boppy default (Default)
bop_radar ([personal profile] bop_radar) wrote2008-06-12 08:37 pm
Entry tags:

Introspection

I've been in a very introspective mood recently, and among other things have been contemplating my fannish status.

It's not been an easy couple of months for me with my fandoms. Smallville Season 7 wasn't the strongest season ever, but it did have some brilliant Lex material, except now, of course, he's gone. And the news re. Season 8 has not exactly filled me with hope. I will watch Season 8, but I do feel like things are coming to an end there. The remaining aspect I'm most invested in (Clois) doesn't seem to be a big part of the writers' agenda for the season so realistically I think there will be a dimming in my enthusiasm for the show. I'm kind of ok with because it's a very gradual thing but it is hard because it was my gateway fandom and it's not the only show that's coming to a close...

BSG. Sigh. BSG has been haaaaard. I didn't even realise how high my expectations going into season 4 were until they totally failed to be fulfilled. I think I found it a lot easier to roll with the punches (or plot holes) in season 3, when there was still plenty of time for things to come good again. Now I feel like there's a ticking clock while I'm watching and a voice screaming 'they're running out of tiiiiime!'

Where my ship (Kara/Lee) is concerned, I feel completely crushed. It makes no sense whatsoever to me to play that big grand scene at the start of this season and then have them not even speak to each other on their return. I know there's a lot of other plot threads going on, but I'm talking 30 seconds. That's all it would have taken.I have a horrible feeling the writers don't feel they need to do any further storytelling about them, and that they've pressed 'pause' on the whole relationship until, say, the last 15 minutes of the final episode, when they'll suddenly throw in some tearjerky declaration of love before nuking at least one of them. (Um, yes, my cynicism is a problem.) If that happens, it will actually piss me off MORE than if they had actually ended the relationship formally for some greater plot purpose. I want character consistency, dammit, not 'shock!' moments.

I know my crankiness about this is spreading to the show as a whole, but I've also been disappointed in Lee's plot. I was so excited about his political career, but I thought it would be played with slightly more realism. One week he was the new guy, the next he was CAG of the Quorum (everyone looking to him), and then WHAM! he's President. I can't be UNhappy about that, but it could have been better (particularly Sine Qua Non).

I miss being in my emotions when I'm watching BSG. Nowadays I get thrown out of it so often, I find I'm picking holes in the eps before they're finished. I try to get back into it but... that emotional connection is missing most of the time, and it's leaving me feeling empty. My heart's not in my meta these days and I miss it.

I've been having a long hard think about what to do about this. Obviously season 4.0 is nearly over and there's nothing I can do about that. But I'm a completionist and I *do* want to see things through to the end of season 4. How could I ever give up on Lee?! :D However, I clearly need to a) lower my expectations and b) acquire some zen. [livejournal.com profile] queenofthorns has been rewatching earlier seasons and I'm thinking that this could work for me too. I am due a rewatch anyway and it might help me to either find other aspects of the show to enjoy or just revel in nostalgia for the bits I always liked.

The other zen-inspiring solution I've come up with is: VID. When in doubt, vid. Vidding creates an emotional distance even when there's not one and usually allows me to reconnect with the source in a different way. So I'm still engaged but my expectations and desires are different. I've got several BSG vid bunnies floating around my head at the moment (Paranoid Android left a big hole) but am yet to fully settle at any of them. I think I'll push myself to do so though because it will cheer me up AND keep me distracted.

This leads me to the third part of my fannish crisis/transition though. I think I'm starting to be a vidder as my primary fannish THING. I don't know whether that sounds presumptuous or obvious, but it was quite the revelation to me when it occurred to me earlier this week. It's not a reflection on the quality of my vids (just to be clear!), though I do think they're getting better--it's more about the amount of time I spend vidding versus other fannish activity these days. I started out writing meta mostly, and I don't see myself ever giving that up, but with the two main shows I write about on the wane, it's not surprising I'm feeling a little lost. But more and more I approach fandom from a vidder's perspective--I even vet potential shows on how good they might be for vidding! When I've got spare 'fandom' time, I inevitably watch vids. Or rec vids. Or beta vids. Or vid. ;)

Overall this is a positive realisation because vidding is something I can take with me beyond my current fandoms. However, thinking it through, I do have some anxiety about the fact that it's a less interactive fannish activity--or it feels that way. Vidding is a lot of solitary work. Meta, on the other hand, is a short burst of solitary work and then (when it's going well) a lot of fascinating to-ing and fro-ing with other people. So I experienced some probably-misplaced anxiety about possibly losing some of the social aspect of fandom if I retreat into my vidder's shell. I think there's a fairly easy solution there though, and that's to keep posting and commenting regularly.

I guess I'm both interested in and a little freaked out by these changes. I've been in fandom several years now and this is a new phase for me.

If I wasn't so introspective right now, here's where I'd be playing...
- [livejournal.com profile] svgurl is running a Lois Lane Love week and posting daily round-ups of activities. I'm looking forward to catching up on the weekend!
- [livejournal.com profile] latxcvi has a mega-poll on the best and worst of Smallville, which I am very curious about.
- [livejournal.com profile] talitha78 posted some great truths about vidding.
- [livejournal.com profile] daybreak777 made an AWESOME post about favourite vid moments which I totally totally want to emulate, but every time I try and narrow down my choices I go into meltdown or find that an hour has passed and I've been playing the same vid over and over again. One day! Soon...
ext_2583: "Lady Agnew" by John Singer Sargent (30 Rock: Tracy dances)

[identity profile] mskatej.livejournal.com 2008-06-13 12:54 pm (UTC)(link)
Coldness is a problem for me too which is probably why it took me a while to warm to Mad Men, but then there were events later in the season that knocked my socks off: I found Peggy's continuing successes incredibly moving and exciting, and her tragic "situation" at the end absolutely gutting. The lesbian and gay characters both broke my heart. The story of first "vibrator" thrilled me to pieces. And best of all, one of my least favourite characters, Betty, surprised me into loving her, with that final startling scene in the psychiatrist's office where she reveals just how much she knows about her husband and situation.

I'm just so impressed with the quality of the writing and so amazed that I am able to sympathise with such seemingly unsympathetic characters, that actually, I think the coldness might be a deception. Because coldness, to me, implies a lack of compassion for characters, and that's not something I would say about Mad Men. They might not be particularly likeable but they are all so recognisably human that I get a sense not that the creative team hates human beings but that they see us for what we are: flawed, maddening and marvellous. Like, for every scene with Don behaving like a hateful piece of shit we get one where he reveals his tortured soul or his undeniable talent or his capacity for love. You know?

[identity profile] bop-radar.livejournal.com 2008-06-13 01:02 pm (UTC)(link)
I like Peggy, and Betty grew to be my favourite character against all expectations--I appreciated that a lot. I would tune back in for both of them. And I do agree that the quality of the writing is very high.

However, I have a block where Don is concerned. I agree that the show balances every scene of him being horrible with one that's meant to show his inner pain (heh!) but it doesn't work for me. I find him hateful in the extreme no matter how tortured he is. I know it's an emotional block that's personal and biased, because I can identify exactly where it comes from. But that insight doesn't help me actually get rid of it! And I think being blocked completely from Don hampers my viewing of the show.

I get a sense not that the creative team hates human beings but that they see us for what we are: flawed, maddening and marvellous.
Perhaps... I don't see a lot of the 'marvellous' in the show though: I mainly see the flawed and maddening. ;) And I understand their fascination with that and agree that there IS compassion there behind the writing, but ... maybe I'm too much of a romantic at heart or something. I want a bit of warmth between the characters as well. They're all so insanely LONELY! And while I do think that's true of life, I don't find it pleasurable viewing. ;)

You're making me think about the show more though, so maybe I could end up writing about it...