Subject: Hey Sara! Good to hear from you again!
Author:
Posted on: 2014-12-11 05:24:00 UTC
Glad you're having fun in college! Here we go:
1. Twenty-eight, male, U.S. white.
2. A badfic is a fanfic that undoes, perverts or goes against some aspect of the source material, caused by lack of careful planning and thought during the writing process. (Not to be confused with an exploratory, alternate universe fanfic that intentionally changes something and examines the full consequences.)
3/3a. No. The only thing that's universal enough to missions to call the "formula" is the bare bones mechanical structure of the agents reacting to the writing of the original badfic. Even showing quotes from the original probably isn't strictly necessary, though it's probably easier to do it that way. I suppose the ending of missions (remove the problem) is also part of a "formula," but even then, we see unforeseen problems and consequences interfere with the resolution as often as not.
4. To me, the best missions are those that don't merely remove the uncanon and restore the canon, but celebrate the canon. This is sometimes as simple as writing in the same style as the original, or quoting it cleverly. More complex examples could be giving a canon character a moment to shine and reinforce their canon theme or attitude. In the best case, such a mission contrasts those canon themes with the mistakes made in the badfic, so that the reader of the mission sees the conceptual errors that contributed to making the original fanfic a badfic.
4a. The only tools needed for writing a good mission are a strong familiarity with the source canon, and a critical eye for narrowing down the badfic's themes: not just looking at superficial errors, but the major problems that cause the badfic to fail to properly coexist with the canon it takes place in.
5/5a. I do write missions, but I have never communicated with the authors of any of the fanfics I've written missions for. I have no desire to do so, mostly out of discomfort interacting with unfamiliar people.
6. I've always been interested in crossovers, and looking for both subtle and overt connections between different fictional universes. The in-universe PPC offered the opportunity to interact with essentially infinite canons from a single base point, which was exciting for me as a writer. (As a reader, all the free content produced by the other community members is also fantastic!)
7. I am heavily invested in the PPC setting, and have many plans for my characters, whom I hope to continue writing for many decades. Aside from my personal enjoyment in writing my PPC characters, I love seeing the reactions other people have to reading them, and getting other opinions and viewpoints about what I write.
On a more personal note, I have made many friends in this community; I have more close friends in the PPC than I do in real life. I don't often meet people who think like I do, so the PPC is fantastic for my continued sanity. I am also a better person now than I was when I first joined the PPC, due to the other members teaching me about people and the real world, a world I had little knowledge of at the start.
Hope that's useful! If you're quoting anything of mine, feel free to restructure any sentences to make them read more professionally.
Good luck, both on this assignment and with school in general. I hope we'll see you some more once you've graduated!
—doctorlit