selenak: (FangedFour - Wisteria)
selenak ([personal profile] selenak) wrote2005-08-12 10:14 am

Creator Fannishness

There is something incredibly endearing, to me, when people whose creations I admire show their enthusiasm for someone else’s creations. On a basic level, this is very similar to how fandom works – we get to know a fellow fan of a certain fandom, they’re also enthusiastic about something else we don’t know yet, and we decide to have a look. (That’s how I got to watch Blake’s 7, BTVS, and Farscape, among other shows. And how I got to read Harry Potter - it was recced to me by honor just a nanosecond before the hype started.)

If I already know the recommended show/book/film, it’s the fun of sharing. For example, watching Steven Spielberg go all fanboy on the Lawrence of Arabia DVD. If I don’t know, I’m at the very least curious, and stimulated by the enthusiasm. Which means I’ll probably try and watch Veronica Mars now, because who can resist Joss Whedon in fanboy mode, when he’s sounding like this after having watched Veronica Mars:

Big emotion, I mean BIG, and charsimatic actors and I was just DYING from the mystery and the relationships and PAIN, this show knows from pain and no, I don't care, laugh all you want, I had to share this. These guys know what they're doing on a level that intimidates me. It's the Harry Potter of shows. There. I said it. People should do whatever they can to check out this first season so the second won't be a spoiler fest. I'm nutty.

So, [livejournal.com profile] monanotlisa, [livejournal.com profile] kskitten, anyone, who has the Veronica Mars PAIN available? Trust Joss to get wild about this particular trait. I mean, this is the man who in another example of fannish enthusiasm, in this case about Stephen Sondheim, confessed in an interview:

"Sondheim wasn't someone you would go to if you wanted to be told that everything was perfect. Neither were my parents, for that matter — all concerned were greatly relieved when they got divorced. I told my therapist that I knew all of Follies by the age of nine; she said, 'We have our work cut out for us.'" One of Follies numbers, "The Road You Didn't Take," posed a particular challenge to young Whedon: "the notion that every choice you make means that other possibilities are eliminated forever — as a kid, I found that terrifying. As an adult, I still find it scary."

Joss Whedon getting raised on Sondheim tunes in the 70s explains a lot.*g* As [livejournal.com profile] andrastewhite said to me, will future therapists hear from other people “I have the sixth season of Buffy memorized”?

Meanwhile, friends’ list, share. What is your favourite example of a writer/creator/composer/whatever whose creations you like going fanboy/fangirl over something?

[identity profile] smashsc.livejournal.com 2005-08-12 01:40 pm (UTC)(link)
David Sedaris is a fanboy and I adore him for it. He geeks out over a wide range of things and I adore it. Examples: his Marah article (http://yeproc.com/news.php?articleId=975) and his Springsteen interview (http://observer.guardian.co.uk/omm/story/0,13887,1527571,00.html).

The other thing I really love is the quote (in TV/movies) or the cover (in music). In the series premiere of Weeds one a female 16 year old said to a male 16 year old: "You're 16. I could be talking about linoleum and you'd want to have sex." By that point in the episode I was already falling hard for the show but the Buffy reference further cemented my opinion. Cover songs in concert (and usually on albums) work similiarly.

Me? I fangirl TS Eliot, Bruce Springsteen, Nick Hornby, the Drive-By Truckers (all of them), Brian Andreas, and others (and not necessarily in that order)

[identity profile] likeadeuce.livejournal.com 2005-08-15 04:39 am (UTC)(link)
Smash, you do mean Nick Hornby, not Sedaris, right? *g* Seriously, Hornby is the king of the fanboys and his "Stuff I'm reading" column in The Believer (essays collected in The Polysyllabic Spree (http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/1932416242/qid=1124080345/sr=8-1/ref=pd_bbs_1/103-2237495-5039042?v=glance&s=books&n=507846)) is one of my favorite examples of fanboying-of-books. Hornby got me to read David Copperfield of all things, with a smashing essay on the subject.

Selena, if you do check out Veronica Mars, I'll be very interested to hear your thoughts. I could only watch the show intermittently (the local station kept preempting it for sports), so I eventually gave up and decided to wait for the DVDs to come out. I'm fairly spoiled on the mystery, but I'm still interested to see it from the beginning. It took me a while to warm to it, and, as an old-school junkie of PI-novels, I find the week-to- week plots a little flimsy. But Veronica is a tremendously appealing young female character, and I'm not surprised at all to hear that Joss is a fan. (Now my fantasy where Joss guest-writes an episode? Sigh, they probably can't afford him.)

[identity profile] selenak.livejournal.com 2005-08-15 08:25 am (UTC)(link)
Well, if Joss is that much in love, maybe he'll do an episode for free.*g*

I'll check out the Hornby essays. One of these days. When I have hypothetical time... *sighs*