Subject: Non-boarder speaking here
Author:
Posted on: 2013-08-02 13:59:00 UTC

You don’t need to go behind the scenes to ask. You just shouldn’t judge the whole organization by some stories written about it. (I admit that it may be impossible to read anything ever written about the PPC, but I’m still trying.)

In Chapter Seven of The Original Series, Agent Jay told Agent Acacia that she had reviewed the badfic.

In some other mission reports, like this one, the agents are at least aware of the constructive critic given in reviews, so a natural conclusion would be: either these agents’ authors reviewed the badfic, or they didn’t because there wasn’t anything to add to what already had been said.

It would be stupid to repeat this in every story, but maybe it should be done more often.

Also, I may be wrong, but IMO a really good mission report doesn’t just mock the story (never the author), it is or should be concrit presented in a form more entertaining than a plain review, and it can occasionally be done to good fan fiction, although agents normally wouldn’t be send into a goodfic.

Stupid canon:
Do I sense a misunderstanding here? Again a may be wrong, but I thought the PPC-Wiki is not about “How to write good fan fiction”, it is about “How to write good PPC fan fiction based on the canon defined by The Original Series and additions agreed upon by the Board”.

If I ever join the PPC, and get permission, and decide to send my agents into a specific badfic for good reasons, then I may write my agents feeling terrible and complaining bitterly, because at this point they agree with the badfic’s author, but either they have to charge for breaking stupid canon, or they have to get into trouble with the Flowers That Be for letting it slip.
Now I wonder whether the punishment could be less harsh if even the Flowers agreed that this canon is stupid.
Anyway, this doesn’t say that
- My agents cannot agree with the fan fiction’s author.
- I cannot agree with the fan fiction’s author to a certain extent.
- A story preferring good fanon over stupid canon is always bad.
- Breaking stupid canon is a sufficiently good reason to send my agents into a story when nothing else is wrong with it.
- I should send my agents into a story although I don’t want to do it. (I have a choice, they haven’t.)

Applying this to your example, my agents would probably charge for the badly written dialogue, because they don’t like to be punished. They probably wouldn’t charge for the well written dialogue, not because it is well written, but because they wouldn’t even be there in the first place. Or, if such a well written dialogue could exist in a badfic, and I were a Star Wars fan and knew what these Midi-somethings are, my agents might not charge and suffer the punishment, because they wanted to make a statement.

I don’t know the ponyverse, and I refuse to read more legendary badfic (I already had my deal), so I can not answer to your last paragraph.

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