Thursday, January 3, 2008

A Cynical Light in the Wilderness Returns...

For you fans of the MTV animated program Daria, which ran from 1997 to 2002 and provided absolute proof of the Snipes Conjecture (named after the actor Wesley Snipes and his line from the film White Men Can't Jump, where he stated, after the good fortune of another character in the film, 'that the sun shines on even a dog's ass sometimes')... in this case, that even a spewing dimensional rift in realiy such as MTV can occasionally have something wonderful or even beneficial issue forth amongst all of the hellish crap.

(P.S. - how many seasons of The Real World have there been now, in place of Headbanger's Ball, or MTV Unplugged? I'm still pissed that they killed off Dead at 21 before it hit its stride - and it was getting there - and bitch-slapped a decent parody like 2Gether into oblivion by making the saddest half-hour comedy imaginable out of an interesting telefilm.)

Anyway - there's always been a small, scrappy and resiliant group of fans dedicated to the adventures of OH (Our Heroine, as Daria is known by her fans), and her journey through high school, adolescence and the general crap that comes with being a young woman who recognizes the BS for what it is, and yet, still has to paddle through it all the way to graduation. (Lucky she's had an amiga like Jane Lane to watch her back.) These Daria fans have been responsible for ten years of amazing fan fiction, artwork, essays and just general discussion on the world of Lawndale and its denizens - as well as forming several Internet sites and message boards dedicated to OH and her friends.

However, there's always a point where things seem to get a bit off-track in any fandom. Why? Does it matter - they just do. In this case, however, it led to what's known as 'the Great Daria Fandom Implosion of 2007'. A number of prominent Daria fan sites either shut down operations or (just as bad) stopped accepting fandom contributions, and several prominent members of the fandom either left altogether or distanced themselves. In the wake of this, there was wondering if this meant the end of Daria fandom (as one person famously referenced in an essay on the subject, with the ending of the show in 2002 and no new episodes forthcoming, the fandom has taken on the attributes of a 'cargo cult').

Maybe, however, this was just what the fandom needed.

In the roughly six months since the Implosion, there's been a resurgence of activity in the Daria fandom; a number of new authors have begun to pour new works of fan fiction into the fandom for members to enjoy. (Two new names of note to this effort are Doggieboy, with his 'OH and BFF meets Damnnation Alley - without the mutant bugs' serial fic Apocalyptic Daria, and Legendeld, a writer who's already noted for his prolific writings and his unique manner of writing the majority of his fics in three-parts.) Also, there's the launch of Lawndale Online, a new mega-site dedicated to the fandom. (I really need to set up a small site with my fics and send them a link for fans who want to read my fics. I'm not exactly loving the formatting they're using for fics there. Oh, well. You can't have everything.) Finally, Dariacon Orlando 2008 is fast approaching, and for the Daria fans who attend, either in person or virtually, it should be interesting.

However, in the ashes and out on the cold frontier, deep within dormant, idle machinery... something stirred.

It seems that Outpost Daria - long considered THE site for all things Daria-related, and the body blow that could have signaled the beginning of the end when its owner decided to shut down in May 2007 - may be returning to full operation soon.

Why? How? Doesn't matter. If OD goes back on line, it's a good thing. As the 'first stop for new Daria fans' and the second listed site for the show on the Daria Wikipedia entry, OD was always THE place to find almost anything you wanted on the Internet, including loads and loads of fanfiction you simply couldn't find anywhere else. (The only exception for this was fan works of an adult nature - works listed as 'R' rated or above. No problem. The Sheep's Fluff has a section for such works - Mistress Daria's Dungeon - so those works can be represented as well.)

Let's see if it happens. Outpost Daria was a good thing for the fandom. It can be a good thing again.

Maybe it could add a couple of new things when it returns... I'm liking that 'review of stories' idea of Lawndale Online... maybe adding a co-administrator to take the load off the site owner when RL starts acting like a bitch and starts shoveling on grief or just a need to step back and take a good, long nap - that could be good, too. Another good section to add could be an 'in memoriam' section, with screenshots or mentions of inactive sites (such as Planet Daria, which went down before I came into the fandom), and with the mass amounts of fandom works out thre, maybe a Fandom Database showing charecters created in fanfiction and have sort-of come to life in Lawndale through that fashion.

Whatever the owner feels he can handle.


Now... if we can just get Viacom and MTV off the stick and making Daria webisodes... Daria minis... if someone with the power to say so in the front office would say that even though they can't see the company making any new Daria materials in the forseeable future, but wouldn't be adverse to the idea of fans who wish to show their affection for the program by making new episodes... I'd love to see Apocalyptic Daria in webisode form online somewhere, or The Last Summer, or even a one-shot episode that covers something that SHOULD have been covered in the series itself. Promise in Green would be the perfect one-shot episode for an online Daria fan-made episode.

For right now, though, the news of a possible return of OD is good enough. Let's hope it happens.

6 comments:

James said...

Maybe the content creators just needed a little rest. In any event, maybe there will be a reshuffling of Daria fandom, which can never be bad. It's good to see Martin J. Pollard come back -- and for me to say that, you know that it's the truth.

As for new "visual media" content outside of art, I'm very tempted...we shall see what comes of it.

/evil cackles, lightning striking

E. A. Smith said...

That's certainly great news. I don't know if I'll ever have anything else to submit there, but it'll be great for keeping with any new fanfic I choose to read (I'm none too fond of the way LO has things set up either).

Scissors MacGillicutty said...

I think a lot of the new fans are from Australia, where Daria has recently come back on the air after some time away. It's also interesting than many of the new crop of writers have immediately gone off-canon or AU.

Lawndale Online is rather over-engineered for what it needs to be. As a former developer, I'm truly impressed by what Slobbergoat has created and how quickly he implemented it. He built the sort of content management system that usually runs in the thousands (or maybe tens-of-thousands) of dollars for free. For a business or organization that wants to preserve uniform appearance across all pages in their website without picking through HTML, removing all but certain tags from documents is desirable. For some authors who are...um, casual about the presentation of their stuff, Lawndale Online's automatic formatting works in their favor. For others (The Angst Guy, me), its undesirable. So I have purely selfish reasons for hoping OD comes back online.

I don't think we'll see Daria on DVD for some time. Viacom is displaying the typical myopia of the rent-seeking big media conglomerate: on the one hand, threaten legal action for unauthorized distribution of "content", but on the other hand, ignore the evidence of demand for said "content" that the unauthorized distribution gives!

As for other problems with getting Daria on DVD, I've written about them in this post at the PPMB. That's not to say it'll never come out; it may show up when a 90s nostalgia wave hits the nation, and all sorts of things come out of the vaults. For right now, however, I think an important fan project would be sharing/preserving/rating such sources of the show that exist. Let's not pretend that people don't have bootleg DVDs: they do. But which ones have good image quality, and which ones don't? Which ones have Nogginized episodes, and which ones have the episodes as originally aired? Are there any errors editing, i.e., are the commercials cut, or do fragments of some appear? Or did the DVD creator err in the opposite direction and cut the commercial bumpers or even scenes before or after commercial breaks?

Yeah, I know that seems like an enormous task, and it's something Viacom could sue for to boot. Maybe something...less obsessive-compulsive could come to pass.

I still allow myself to daydream occasionally that Daria will be the first TeeVee show the Criterion Collection releases...a handsome box set with a thick booklet containing essays on the show...commentary tracks by Glenn Eichler, Anne Bernstein, Wendy Hoopes...all the commercials and auxilliary material as bonuses...and Criterion's OCD approach to making a DVD from the best elements available...would a restoration make the color of Daria's jacket and tee be consistent throughout the series? Or would research show the colors only became codified after the first season?

I know, I know—extravagant, silly, and horrendously geeky. But what can I say? I write fan fic. I must have OCD. ;)

E. A. Smith said...

"For some authors who are...um, casual about the presentation of their stuff, Lawndale Online's automatic formatting works in their favor. For others (The Angst Guy, me), its undesirable. So I have purely selfish reasons for hoping OD comes back online."

It was a pain for me to just go back and put in all my italics (and my fics are pretty much incomprehensible without them). I'm glad LO is there - especially for features like fic ratings and reviews, even though no one seems to be using them - but OD is still the best designed and maintained of all the Daria sites.

Scissors MacGillicutty said...

It was a pain for me to just go back and put in all my italics (and my fics are pretty much incomprehensible without them).

Oy—italics get stripped? That's going a little too far.

One of my projects for the coming year is to help set jtranser's "Stacy Rowe, Seeker" in HTML; after some discussion and guesswork, I found he preferred the tracking (average inter-letter spacing) to be tighter than normal to reinforce the appearance of dense blocks of text. If LO eats italics, it's sure to eat an inline stylesheet. Let's hope MJP decides to bring back OD...

E. A. Smith said...

You can get italics in LO; you just have to go through and put in the italic tags by hand. I originally just submitted my fics to them in .doc or HTML form (back when they first called for material and didn't specify any format), and they got slapped into the site with no formatting at all, so I had to go back and edit them all by hand.

LO's formatting is pretty basic, though, and I highly doubt it can take any kind of style sheet; it's pretty much limited to italics, bold, and the like.