So, I'm now going to be posting my NCIS reviews and other trivia here, because it seems people are leaving LiveJournal in droves. I read the new agreement and didn't really have a problem with it (I'm unlikely to sue, so having to do so in Russia isn't a problem), but if no one's there, no one's going to read my musings. Not that anyone does now...

Seaboe
After a gap (filled by my obsession first with NCIS and then with Numb3rs), I have returned to reading SG1 fan fiction. The gen stuff, mostly as recommended by Fig Newton (because very few reccers focus on gen, and besides, she's good).

I've been thinking again about why I still don't read fanfic from other shows (including NCIS and Numb3rs) except on the rare occasions when I find stories I like that cross over with SG1. I actually think I might have an answer. A lot of people write fanfic to follow up on relationships that either did not officially exist in the shows, or that were not given enough screen time (in the opinion of the fanfic writer).

That's not, however, why I read fanfic. I find a lot of fanfic that focuses on sexual and/or romantic relationships to be a frustrating waste of my time. Because (for the most obvious example), I watch SG1 for the adventures. The relationships, while important, are secondary. When a story focuses on the relationship instead of the adventure, I lose interest. This is why I prefer Gen SG1 stories even though I'm a S&J shipper (one who believes they can't have a happy ending until Jack retires, and that children will never be in the cards).

My ideal SG1 story would be an off-world adventure that took for granted that S&J were a couple. It wouldn't be about their relationship. It would be about the adventure. The fact that they were a couple would be completely unremarkable. Unfortunately, no one will ever write this story. The shippers would want to focus on the relationship, and the non-shippers would find the relationship anathema. And I don't write fanfic.

Sigh.

1969

Jul. 31st, 2012 07:36 pm
So they're riding along with hippies, yet no one questions the fact that Sam continues to call Jack 'sir'.

And why does the balcony in the warehouse not disintegrate? It's hit by at least three zat blasts.
Generally, if you interrupt a computer program in the middle, it crashes. Jack's didn't. So, I figure he typed in the complete program first, and then started typing in locations. The actual program part was set to execute if the typing stopped. So when Teal'c grabbed Jack's arms and stopped him, the program went into action.

Makes you wonder how many more addresses he'd've added if they hadn't stopped him.
Poor guy, he gets hurt all the time and never gets to speak a line.
It's always been my opinion that Frank let go because he knew Jack never would.

Abyss

Jul. 12th, 2012 08:43 pm
This is my favorite episode, and I'm sure it will come up more than once on this blog. Today, I want to talk about what Ba'al knew.

I think it's clear that, as of this episode, Ba'al had no clue who Jack was. None of the questioning that we saw on screen was about Jack and what Jack was doing. Jack, to Ba'al, was merely "the host."

Ba'al's only concern was Kanan. All the questions he asked concerned what Kanan wanted, what Kanan was doing. Given Ba'al's reactions to Jack later in the series, if he'd known who Jack was, there would've been as much focus on the host as on the Tok'ra.

Don't you think?
I was in a discussion on Gateworld this week about where the line gets drawn between original fiction and fan fiction (well, that's what I was discussing, anyway). I never quite seemed to be able to make my point, which is this: at some point, the author will have changed so many things that hir story no longer fits into the Stargate universe. So why call it fan fiction? Why not admit that it is original fiction?

A good example of this is one I recently read, and even recommended over on SG1genrecs: For More than Country, by Regency. This isn't, really, a Stargate fic. There is no gate in it. If you changed the names of the characters, you'd never even know it was inspired by Stargate. This doesn't make it less good, or less worthy of recommendation.

At some point, you're no longer "exploring the Gateverse" if you're taking nothing from the original series or movie. So are people slapping the label of fanfiction on this because it's easy? Because they think they can't use a character with the traits of Jack O'Neill or Daniel Jackson without calling him Jack or Daniel?

I'll admit it can be difficult to draw the line between original and fanfic. Is it enough to include the 'gate? How many of the alien species are necessary? What about personnel? It's the ubiquitous slippery slope.

What I found interesting about the original discussion was that no one picked up on, or commented on, the why aspect. They just harped on what constituted the Gateverse and the legalities (if you have a stargate, you have to call it fanfiction or you're going to get in trouble for trademark and/or copyright infringement).

I still what to know, though: WHY is it so important to these authors to call what they write fanfiction, when they've taken out almost everything connected to the fandom? Are they afraid? What?
I've been reading a lot of fan fiction lately, and while I've mostly been avoiding the Sam/Jack stuff, a lot of them talk about Jack's marital status, sometimes in a rather sideways manner.

That set me thinking. In CotG, Jack tells Daniel that he and Sara are separated. In Lost City, Sam asks him "do you ever talk to her?" Between those two events, very little is said. In fact, so far as I can recall, the words "divorce" or "ex-wife" are never used in relation to Jack. The closest we come to those terms is when, during Solitudes, as he's telling Sam about the parachute accident. She says "your wife" and he says "at the time."

Now, it's fairly clear they are divorced. What's not clear at all is when they were divorced. In Cold Lazarus, Sara speaks of getting back together. To me, that indicates that while separated, they are not divorced.

My theory is this: I think Sara divorced Jack, sometime between CL and Solitudes. I think throughout the first season, Jack was still very much in love with her. His outrage at the idea that he would turn to another woman (in TBFTGOG ETA: oops, that was in Politics, wasn't it?) was real. To him, at that point, being attracted to another woman was the same as being unfaithful. Jack has way too much honor to be unfaithful.

I think Sara divorced him, in part, because she knew he would never divorce her. She was the mother of his child, and he still loved her. He failed the child and failed the wife. He would never cause her more hurt and harm by divorcing her. Just as I go with the CotG scenario, that she left him. I grant you, there's some confusion here. In CotG, Jack tells Daniel that Sara left him, but in CL, she says he left her. With canon in conflict, we accept the version we like the best.

I also think that, no matter what hopes she'd had, by the end of CL, Sara knows her marriage is over. The way she says "take care of yourself" indicates that she doesn't expect to see him again.

I do wish they'd brought Sara back, at least once. I liked the actress. I also think they did a piss-poor job of giving Jack a life. Sam, despite Jack's cracks, did have one. She had a father and a brother. She patronized a coffee shop. She gave special lectures at the Academy. Teal'c had a life--granted, not much of one on Earth, but he had one. He had Bra'tac and Dreyauc and Ry'ac (not to mention Ishta and the whole of the Jaffa Rebellion). Even Daniel had a life, eventually. We saw a lot of Jack's house, and his cabin, but nothing of his friends or family. Daniel was in the same boat, but the difference was that we knew what had happened to his family. As far as Jack was concerned, he might have been hatched from an egg. No parents, no cousins, no brothers or sisters were ever mentioned. Then they took away the wife we knew he had, leaving him with nothing outside the Mountain.

It's not a very nice way to treat a hero.
I probably won't post here often, but when I do, the post will be about Stargate SG1 fanfiction (my primary blog is on livejournal, where my posts are pretty random and cover a range of topics).

Here's the thing: I write, but I don't write fan fiction. I'm not willing to spend the time learning the voices of characters I haven't created. Prior to finding SG1 fanfic, I had no interest in reading it, either.

To me, even the best fan fiction has nothing to do with the characters portrayed in the series. That's because TV series, by their very nature (being episodic, written by numerous people, and confined to 42 minute segments) don't lend themselves to in-depth, consistent characterization. Some people blame the people in charge of the show. Others understand that the structure of TV makes consistent characterization practically impossible.

At any rate, the best fan fiction writers can create unique characters that reflect enough of the characters I see on TV that I'll read them. But the characters they see on tv will never be the ones I see, because that's what personal interpretation is all about.

More later, sometime, maybe.

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