Even if it's just for a little while. I hope you'll stick around, though. {= )
The survey:
1. 29, female, American.
2. A badfic is a fan-written story that's poorly written mechanically (e.g. spelling, punctuation, and grammar) and/or poorly told as a story (e.g. unrealistic characters, flawed logic, haphazard pacing). Usually both. Badfics tend to ignore or change aspects of the source canon, either because the writer forgot about them or didn't know better, or to "make the plot work" or benefit an original character inserted into the world.
3. Yes, but not more so than any other narrative.
3a. More than that, I plugged the standard PPC mission into Syd Field's paradigm for fun a few years ago: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1RMkTrDaAFMi8rnccdLe2glT51SzyQjz1IUzg8Ztpyxc/edit?usp=sharing
4. My favorite missions are the truly parodic ones that take the text of the badfic and transform it into something hilarious. Rather than just pointing out each thing that's wrong, groaning about it, and moving on to the next thing, they take what's wrong and express it in an exaggerated, absurd way. For instance, in Tungsten Monk's latest mission, a character is described as a "green shirt" instead of a "greenshirt" (a rookie). Therefore, in the mission, the character appeared as a floating green shirt the whole time. Much funnier than the agents simply pointing out the typo.
My favorite missions also star characters who are more than just interchangeable talking heads. Half of what makes a mission funny is what the writer does with the badfic; the other half is the interactions the agents have with each other and with the fic. If the agents are two-dimensional cardboard cutouts that can only groan and point out the literal errors, they're not interesting or funny. If they each have their own quirks and foibles, and get annoyed by different things, and disagree with each other sometimes, and their snark is insightful and revealing, that's gold.
4a. You gotta have a sense of humor, and you gotta push the envelope. I mean, okay, start with the basics: solid writing skills, knowing the canon, knowing the PPC universe. But then you have to have an eye for material you can work with, and you have to have a flair for the absurd. You have to take the time to look past the literal text of the badfic, both understand what the author intended and get past it, and extract comedy from what it could mean. Then build a story around it with characters who really engage with their situation and have it affect them.
5. Yep!
5a. Once, I was in the middle of sporking a fic when I went and looked at the summary for the first time, to find that the author had actually repented ages ago and was all for the PPC sporking the thing. I got in touch with him, let him know I was doing it, and actually invited him to have a cameo. He accepted, and ended up assassinating his own Gary Stu. ^_^ That's pretty atypical, though.
I have occasionally reviewed fics I've sporked, but I've never had anything come of that, to my knowledge.
6. The humor and the fact that they were a bunch of Tolkien nerds, like me. I don't think I had ever met a bigger Tolkien nerd than myself until I found the Board. It was a little intimidating, but awesome, especially because everyone was so nice and welcoming.
7. I've been a member for over a decade, and at this point I can hardly imagine my life without the PPC in it. It's a part of my identity now. Furthermore, I've made some great friends here, and I still have stories to tell and other contributions to make, such as my work on the wiki.
I hope that helps. {= )
~Neshomeh