paraka: A baby wearing headphones and holding a mic (SGA-Fishing with Carson)
paraka ([personal profile] paraka) wrote2007-04-21 09:23 pm

SGA Love?

So, I keep thinking to myself, "Self, you need more SGA people on your flist, because people are what makes LJ cool, and in a stupid defriending mood you got rid of all the QaF people on your flist, and now are all alone". Also, "SGA is awesome, and totally fun, so SGA fans should be as well."

Thing is, as it is now, I'm really on the outskirts of the SGA fandom. I come across some awesome fics, I'm on some Yahoo groups that give me a lot of the lowdown on other matters, and don't ever have to interact. I interacted quite a bit in the QaF fandom, and I miss that sometimes. But you know, now I'm kind of afraid of trying in the SGA fandom.

I was barely touched by the whole racist thing that happened (and appears to still be happening). I mostly read the Fandom Wank stuff, and wrote my own little post (that got way more attention than I ever wanted). But sometime after that I put [livejournal.com profile] sga_newsletter on my flist, and have followed some of the meta.

Now obviously I'm not that into the fandom, because I keep hearing people talking about how bitchy the fandom is, how it explodes everytime someone says somethin, how people are just... not nice. SGA people on my flist, have you noticed this? Because if the fandom is really like that, I think I'll keep my current level of involvement. Or maybe the problem is reading meta. I don't actually like meta. Mostly because when I stumble across it, I feel I need to read every comment and every link, and then it's *days* later by the time *I'm* finished, and fandom is still going strong.

Also, now I'm kind of afraid of ever publicly posting what annoys me in fandom. Or what I think on the current "hot topic". Seriously. [livejournal.com profile] maekala, thank god for our e-mails, you let me rant :) *loves*

...Maybe I should go back to a locked journal...?

[identity profile] ana-grrl.livejournal.com 2007-04-22 01:49 am (UTC)(link)
I'm really on the outskirts of SGA fandom too. But I have found that there are a lot of really fun SGA fans! I have a killer time with [livejournal.com profile] mklutz, for example.

I tend to try and stay away from a lot of the wank - although sometimes it's hard to avoid. I've heard that there's a history of some het/slash tension (but then again, I have to ask - what fandom doesn't have at least a little bit of it?), but I don't read SGA het, so I'm not totally sure. I also came to SGA quite late (less than a year ago, I think).

I think that SGA, like pretty much any fandom, probably goes through phases of being really volatile, and phases of being quiet. I feel like these things tend to go in cycles or something. Anyway, don't let it scare you away from the fandom, because there are some really great writers and fantastic fics out there.

...I don't generally like meta either.

As for the locked thing - I don't know. I think it's a matter of personal preference.

[identity profile] ana-grrl.livejournal.com 2007-04-22 03:01 am (UTC)(link)
To be honest, I wasn't even that crazy about the show when I first started watching it

Me either! It just kind of grew on me.

Why is everyone so angry?

The question of the ages *g*

Maybe I'll do one of those "Sort of locked things..."

I lock a lot of things, although that's mostly because they touch on my personal life or something! I think a lot of people selectively lock posts.

[identity profile] ana-grrl.livejournal.com 2007-04-22 03:23 am (UTC)(link)
You know, I can't actually remember when I started to love SGA. But I can remember when I first thought I'd want to write SGA fic - it was when I started to love Lorne. He's efficient! He's got a wry sense of humour! He's totally hot!

I think being selectively locked is a good idea. I like it!

[identity profile] geeklite.livejournal.com 2007-04-22 07:12 am (UTC)(link)
I've been in the SGA fandom for a couple of years now. Happily ensconced right in the middle of McKay/Sheppard heaven. Honestly, it's a big enough fandom that even when there's extreme bitchiness going on elsewhere, there's still a bunch of my friends list writing fic and writing interesting meta and posting endless pictures of Joe Flanigan being hot.

[identity profile] keewick.livejournal.com 2007-04-22 09:13 am (UTC)(link)
SGA is just like any fandom. People always like to say how one fandom is especially bitchy or another is all sunshine and roses and it's just not true, or at least in my experience it hasn't been. Fans are fans are fans, but if you're lucky you fall in with other likeminded (not to mention super talented) individuals and get to reap the benefits.

Although I must admit I'm in SGA fandom mostly for fic of the McKay/Sheppard variety, so a lot of the crap that goes down passes me by. It's the meta and episode discussions that stir everyone up, and personally SGA isn't about Deep Thought for me, so avoiding both isn't that great of a loss. The show is fun and funny and oh so pretty, and what substance it lacks is better left to the brilliant online writers to devise after the fact imo.

Anyway, I guess I'll just add one more thing: if QAF was a good fandom experience for you then SGA probably would be, too. They're not so different and if anything I think SGA is overall less wanky than QAF was, plus better writers seemed to have gravitated toward it.

[identity profile] maekala.livejournal.com 2007-04-23 09:58 pm (UTC)(link)
The thing with living on the outskirts of fandom, is that you can sometimes avoid the drama all together. You know that I'm mainly on the femslash side of things (although the *big* femslash pairings in SGA, I just don't like, so I tend to gear toward male slash) and we hardly see any drama. But we're small.

You've heard how epic the SG-1 wars were and not all of that was actually ship wars. We also had the gen people vs. everybody else.

And I love our e-mails, too...you're not the only one whose been ranting. ;) Which reminds me...I need to get a-cracking on a response to the last two. *sigh* I hate the end of the semester.