Subject: I thought you were going to call me 'mainstream'. ;)
Author:
Posted on: 2014-05-31 17:39:00 UTC

I take your point that trying to explain something fundamentally inexplicable can make people forget it's supposed to be funny - but quite frankly, I'm having heaps of fun doing this!

And... well, leaving the PPC as a mass of unrelated puns is (was) certainly one possible way to develop it - but I subscribe to the idea that figuring out the 'rules' actually makes for more jokes down the way. If I hadn't decreed that HQ ran on dead authors spinning in their graves, we could never have had CAL-9000 - or the 'power'-obsessed Slaver Sunflower - or the idea that both of those are fed up to the respective idiom with people coming in to pay their respects to the generators. (Or, indeed, a certain agent named Tequila Sunrise)

The Department of Redundancy Department was a hilarious one-line joke - but turning it into an actual department, with rules and desks and 'logic', gave us Rosalind and Haar. I'm quite fond of them.

And so it goes on. The TCDA could join in the Blackout because someone (...me) had fleshed them out enough that they were an actual organisation, not just 'hey the PPC could be steampunk'. FicPsych is immensely funnier now that it goes far beyond 'we bring Legolas in because Sues make him crazy'. The question of 'how does HQ handle security?' led to the humorous UST (er... Unresolved Pollination Tension?) between the Tiger Lily and Captain Dandy.

Ultimately, my view is that the more things you stake out a basic ground-rules background for, the more you can play with that background. Without the idea that there's a 'Void between Verses', Lou could never have wandered past a Star Wars comic set.

hS

Reply Return to messages