
How do you get your ideas?
Some of my friends say that the idea arrives fully
formed in their head, and it's just a matter of tweaking
it and
adding the punctuation.
I get the majority of my ideas when someone tells me I
can't do something. If you want to see me dive into a
story
idea, tell me it's impossible. (Ask my friend Thorne, who
mentioned the difficulty of writing Alias slash and six
weeks later was presented with a Vaughn/Weiss fic for her
birthday.)
For many people, the idea of a formula--you have
to do this, but you can't do that--is too
confining. But for
others, it gives them something to work with. For
example, romances are boy meets girl, boy loses girl, boy
gets
girl, right? But that same formula gives us both
Pretty Woman and Good Will Hunting.
Closely related to this are challenge
fics. Some fandoms have more of these than others: fics
where someone else
lays out the rules for you. It may be as specific as what
genre your story has to be in, lines of dialogue or items
that
must be included, or again, things you cannot do.
For a good example of a general challenge, try the Credit Dauphine (Alias) challenge page. For a smut challenge page, check out the monthly challenges at the State of the Union list (West Wing).
A sample Alias challenge from the CD challenge archive (http://www.creditdauphine.net/challengearchive.html):
Challenge requirements:
1. It has to be someone's birthday: However, it CANNOT be
either SYDNEY or VAUGHN'S birthday.
2. The principle characters ( SYDNEY or VAUGHN) may not
participate in said birthday celebrations. ( This can
either be the an aspect or the angle of your fic, either
way, S/V may not attend any b-day celebrations.
3. Someone, anyone, must suffer from a broken bone.
4. These three cities must at least be mentioned, by name
: London, Paris, Memphis. HOWEVER, they may be in
any locality: ie: Paris, France or Paris, Tenn. - it is
your call on how you place the cities.
5. In honor of the season finale, you have to use the
Alias catch phrase somewhere " Sometimes, the truth
hurts"
6. Lastly, your title must contain the word "
Transgression" or some form thereof.
And two different entries from Professor Celli that fit the requirements while being nothing alike:
Without Transgression
(an angsty Vaughn POV story)
Transgression All Night
Long (a fluffy, funny Syd/Vaughn story)
Challenge fics can be fun. Here's one basic idea; how
many different variations on that can the writers create?
They're also great if you need an idea to get you
jump-started, and many have a deadline, so writers who
work better
under pressure like them. But don't be afraid to go back
to an earlier challenge if it sparks you. Good fic is
good fic.
Another fic commonality is fanon. How
do I explain fanon to you...? Well, canon is something
that is set in a
particular universe. Vaughn's father was a CIA agent,
Mulder drops his gun a lot, Dawn is both a mystical
energy
thingy and an irritating teenager--all those are canon in
their respective universes. If you're going to write a
fanfic
for Alias, X-Files, or Buffy, you'd better take canon
into consideration. If you're going to ignore one or more
canon
element, you're writing an AU (see Lizbet's lecture on that for more
detail).
(By the way, something said on the website for a show,
or in a tie-in novel, is secondary canon at best. The
show's
writers will often ignore that info when writing scripts,
so fans will also ignore it when writing fic.)
Fanon is something that is never directly mentioned on
the show, but used in fanfic and fan discussion so much
it
takes on a life of its own and is often confused with
canon by newcomers to the fandom. Some examples:
When it comes to fanon, you have two choices. You can
use it, which has the benefit of making your work blend
in
with the many other fics out there that use fanon. (Some
authors even create their own fanon, even though the
stories they carry tidbits to may not be directly
related. In labyrinthine's
Alias stories, for example, Vaughn has an Ethan Allen
sofa. In canon, we've never seen his home.)
Or, you can choose to go strictly with canon and
strike out on your own. This may cause some confusion--
especially in established fandoms where fanon is
common--but gives you the benefit of fewer facts weighing
you
down. Neither way is better than the other. It's a matter
of what you prefer.
***
My last topic today: injokes. Now,
this crosses over a bit with the fanon discussion above.
Many fanfic authors
choose to make reference in their stories to other movies
the actors have been in, other stories they've read
(which is
how fanon comes into existence), jokes among friends...
Now, the end result of all this can be--should be--an
entertaining story that everyone likes to read, and those
"in" on
the facts find especially amusing. The problem occurs
when people who don't know the injoke can't
appreciate
the story on its own. If you find yourself having to
explain it to non-insiders just so they can read the
story--or, on
the other hand, if the injokes are so obvious that your
readers stop to notice them instead of getting a quiet
chuckle
as they continue with the story--then you're telling a
joke at the expense of your story, and that's the last
thing you
want to do.
How do you avoid either of the above pitfalls? Ask
someone. Find a beta who gets the joke and another that
doesn't, and say, "Hey, on page three--does that fit
with the rest of the story?" If the answer is no,
then you can
change it before it goes to the general public.
An example: Actor Randy Vasquez played the role of
Gunnery Sergeant Galindez on "JAG" and then
moved over to
"First Monday," where he played an entirely
different character. Someone on one of my JAG lists
suggested a fic
that capitalized on the resemblance between the two.
Someone else wanted a Gunny fic involving baby oil (see
what
I mean about challenges?) and voila, a story was born:
"Coincidence," my JAG/First Monday crossover.
On top of
the problems that come with writing a crossover (which is
another lecture entirely), I had to make sure I explained
the same actor injoke without stepping all over the
story.
One last note about all these things: challenges and
fanon and injokes and whatnot are all tools that you can
choose
to utilize--or not--for your stories. I like them because
they make me feel like part of the fanfic writing
community.
But don't feel that you're required to use them. Like so
many other things we've talked about (music, POV, etc),
do it
because it's right for your story, not because it's what
"everybody else" is doing. Even if
"everybody else" includes
your Fanfic Professors. :)
Stories mentioned: the Alias slash mentioned in the
beginning of the lecture and the JAG/First Monday
crossover mentioned at the end are both NC-17 and can be
found on Celli's adult fic
page.