Subject: I once saw...
Author:
Posted on: 2013-04-29 07:02:00 UTC

... writing for the PPC described as 'Monty Python's Improv Workshop', which I still think is pretty apt.

What it means is that a PPC story means taking whatever comes your way, such as:

-Being absolutely furious at a Mary-Sue ruining the Council of Elrond.

-Your co-writer making a typo in a common phrase.

-Your partner ruined your deck of cards

And, rather than glossing over it, using it (the Improv Workshop part), and putting a distinctly Pythonesque twist on it:

-Making sock puppets to tell the Sue off

-"It's a bit of a maze, unless you haven't noticed"

-Steal some from Saruman!

To use your example, while it might be funny once for someone to paint the walls with ketchup, random nonsense does not a good character make - "I enjoy pasta, because my house is made of bricks" is not a good personality type. Instead, how about a character who paints the walls with ketchup because they've heard there's a vampire in HQ and want to confuse it? Or because the Response Centre is made of chocolate and they want to stop their partner eating it? Both of those actions make sense - they're logical, if weird, responses to the situation.

And yes, sometimes people just do random things - and, because Jay was in fact a flake, "Monkeys have feet!" - but that's to do with the specific character, not the overall method.

As to why it's important... um, because it's one of the two reasons the PPC is funny, the other being snarky commentary on badfic. To turn the question around, if you don't understand that - what do you find funny about The Original Series?

hS

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