Entry tags:
Media references to fanfic, the week ending 4/1/17
The New York Times’s Carla Correa and Neil Genzlinger explored 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer,' Reimagined by Its Fans.
In ‘How Erotica Can Be Great for Your Mental Health’ for Glamour, Kate Sloan shared A 2013 census survey of fan fiction hotbed Archive of Our Ownfound that 80 percent of the site’s users are women. And it goes far beyond arousal: In an industry where most successful writers, showrunners, and filmmakers are still male, fanfic can be a way for women to take back narrative power.
In 'Why U.S. hospitals relief rally may be short-lived,' Bloomberg’s Max Nisen wrote Add in the broader market retrenchment -- as investors realize the bullish Trump Trade was basically overwrought fan fiction -- and it’s hard to see health care’s relief rally lasting much longer.
According to Zakiya Kassam in 'What a 14-hour plane ride taught me about life' for The Globe and Mail, there is no judgment if you want to drink at 10 a.m., and there’s certainly no judgment if you spend four solid hours playing Pokemon or writing Star Wars fan fiction or crafting the perfect Bitmoji – which looks just like you, only hotter and with better hair.
From Shroud News: A youth perspective with Maya Williams: Introducing my dad to the amazing world of fanfiction.
( WWE, Smurfs, Fifth Harmony, Grey’s Anatomy, Inspector Morse, Tesla, Archie Comics )
In ''Blog' Is Not a Dirty Word,' NYU Local’s Zoe Haylock wrote Your idea of a 'blogger' might be a dirty, rage fueled fan fiction writer or a mother of two DIY-ing Xanax in her spare time.
For the University of Arkansas School of Law news office, Darinda Sharp wrote that the second episode of a monthly school-produced podcast features [Susan] Lantagne, […] an assistant professor at the University of Mississippi School of Law who studies copyright and trademark law. She discussed her current research on legal issues with fan fiction while she was on campus as part of the law school's speaker exchange program.
Finally, from the Mumbai Mirror: From six-word-long stories to 140-character tales, extreme brevity forms the crux of the emerging genre of micro-fiction. Enter The Micro Fan Fiction Fest, which aims to celebrate this exciting and innovative form of storytelling.
In ‘How Erotica Can Be Great for Your Mental Health’ for Glamour, Kate Sloan shared A 2013 census survey of fan fiction hotbed Archive of Our Ownfound that 80 percent of the site’s users are women. And it goes far beyond arousal: In an industry where most successful writers, showrunners, and filmmakers are still male, fanfic can be a way for women to take back narrative power.
In 'Why U.S. hospitals relief rally may be short-lived,' Bloomberg’s Max Nisen wrote Add in the broader market retrenchment -- as investors realize the bullish Trump Trade was basically overwrought fan fiction -- and it’s hard to see health care’s relief rally lasting much longer.
According to Zakiya Kassam in 'What a 14-hour plane ride taught me about life' for The Globe and Mail, there is no judgment if you want to drink at 10 a.m., and there’s certainly no judgment if you spend four solid hours playing Pokemon or writing Star Wars fan fiction or crafting the perfect Bitmoji – which looks just like you, only hotter and with better hair.
From Shroud News: A youth perspective with Maya Williams: Introducing my dad to the amazing world of fanfiction.
( WWE, Smurfs, Fifth Harmony, Grey’s Anatomy, Inspector Morse, Tesla, Archie Comics )
In ''Blog' Is Not a Dirty Word,' NYU Local’s Zoe Haylock wrote Your idea of a 'blogger' might be a dirty, rage fueled fan fiction writer or a mother of two DIY-ing Xanax in her spare time.
For the University of Arkansas School of Law news office, Darinda Sharp wrote that the second episode of a monthly school-produced podcast features [Susan] Lantagne, […] an assistant professor at the University of Mississippi School of Law who studies copyright and trademark law. She discussed her current research on legal issues with fan fiction while she was on campus as part of the law school's speaker exchange program.
Finally, from the Mumbai Mirror: From six-word-long stories to 140-character tales, extreme brevity forms the crux of the emerging genre of micro-fiction. Enter The Micro Fan Fiction Fest, which aims to celebrate this exciting and innovative form of storytelling.