Pixel Scroll 12/18/24 Light The Scroll, Not The Pixel!

(1) FANFICTION SURVIVES IN CHINA. The Annenberg School points to a new scholarly paper: “How Fanfiction Communities in China Cope With Censorship”.

In a new paper published in the journal Qualitative Sociology, Ran Wang, a doctoral student at the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania and the Penn Department of Sociology, explores how Chinese fanfiction writers responded to a wave of increased government censorship in February 2020.

Through interviews with 31 fanfiction writers in China, Wang documents how government censorship caused once-thriving fanfiction communities to break apart and forced fanfiction writers to find new ways to share their work.

Fanfiction — amateur-written stories based on existing media like television shows, video games, and books — first made its appearance in China in the late 1990s and has since gained a solid foothold in Chinese creative culture.

Inciting Incident 

In February 2020, fans of television actor and musician Xiao Zhan mass-reported the U.S-based fanfiction site Archive of Our Own (AO3) to the Chinese government after “sensitive” LGBTQ-themed fanfiction featuring the actor gained popularity in China.

Following the incident, fanfiction apps were removed from the country’s Apple and Android app stores, and Chinese fanfiction sites adopted heightened censorship policies. Stories considered “sensitive” were hidden or deleted by these sites.

“As a fanfiction writer myself, I witnessed the suffering, despair, and anger of my fellow writers facing the sweeping censorship intensification,” Wang, a member of the Center on Digital Culture and Society at Annenberg, says. “While there was little I could do, I felt the responsibility to tell the story of my community and to let the world know both the destructive state power and the resilience of the fandom community.

The community had to reckon with ever-evolving censorship policies and quickly find ways to keep their writing communities alive, she says. “[Fanfiction platform] Lofter turned articles visible only to the author without notification on an unseen scale, and authors could not appeal to make articles public for more than three months.”

… According to Wang, censorship isn’t stopping creativity; it’s changing how and where it happens. Of all the writers interviewed, only one decided to stop writing fanfiction after the incident.

Fanfiction writers are finding new ways to create and connect — in small group chats dedicated to sharing stories, through printed fanzines, by talking to writing friends directly. They are also discovering new creative outlets, including painting, digital art, interactive text games, and original writing, Wang says.

(2) ORYCON TO SUNSET IN 2025. [Item by John Lorentz.] Next year’s OryCon (OryCon 45) will the last, at least in its present form. The statement below has been posted on the con’s Facebook page.

As many of you have heard by now, the OSFCI board of directors voted on the competing bids for OryCon 45. Both bids were given time to present their ideas and goals, and both were opened for questions and commentary from everyone present. The OSFCI board voted in favor of the bid I submitted; part of this bid was an agreement that OryCon 45 will be the final OryCon-branded convention supported by OSFCI.

Our reasoning for this condition is to create space for OSFCI and the fan community to innovate: new panels, new structures, new creative outlets. We want to foster an expansion of ideas, for what kind of convention you would like to see, even possibly a one-day event. There is room at the table for you. The world has changed since the birth of OryCon. Technology, social media, and our community has grown in so many ways.

I want to celebrate OryCon’s history by inviting as many past Guests of Honor as possible to be panelists. I want to remember the good times, the laughter, the community at large. I have assembled a staff of individuals who have the desire to share their love of the fan community, the authors, the artists, and the vendors. We want to bring this dream to you.

As the cliche says, when one door closes another opens. Another desire is that we mentor and prepare a younger generation to explore these new avenues of the expressions of our fandom. My vice-chair Louisa Ark is an example. A second-generation convention runner, she’s taking advantage of this opportunity to learn first hand what it takes to run a convention: what works, what doesn’t, and how they can improve upon what’s been done in the past to make any future project they work on shine.

We want your ideas of what innovations you see in the future of an Oregon Convention, new panels, new fandoms. Until then, our vision is to make OryCon 45 be the best one that we possibly can. Stay tuned for upcoming announcements of guests of honor and what we have in store for this year.

There are several reason for this: it’s been difficult to attract new people to run the convention, the attendance has been dropping over recent year, the hotels in Portland have recently been hard to with, and OryCon in general has seemed worn-out and behind the times to the younger fans. (I’ve still enjoyed it–and have been to every one, and have co-chaired or chaired five of them–but at 72, I’m certainly not one of the younger fans.)

OryCon’s web page is http://www.orycon.org

(3) A HECK OF A LONG TIME AGO. Cracked shares “35 Trivia Tidbits About the First ‘Simpsons’ Episode Ever on Its 35th Anniversary”.

December 17th is a very important date in the history of The Simpsons. It was on this day in 1989 that the first episode of the show debuted on Fox, telling a Christmas story about how the first family of Springfield came to get their pet dog, Santa’s Little Helper. 

The episode was equal parts hilarious and heartwarming, and to celebrate its 35th anniversary, here are 35 trivia tidbits all about it…

No gaslighting here about when The Simpsons first hit TV – the first two items on their list make a full disclosure.

35 The Beginning, Sort of

While “Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire” was the first half-hour episode of The Simpsons, the family debuted two-and-a-half years prior to it on April 19, 1987 as part of The Tracey Ullman Show

34 The First Christmas

“Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire” also wasn’t the family’s first Christmas story. The short “Simpson Xmas” aired a year earlier. It was a rewrite of “The Night Before Christmas” by Clement Moore, narrated by Bart.

(4) SESAME STREET – HOMELESS? “HBO ends partnership with ‘Sesame Street’”NPR spreads the word.

It’s official. “Sesame Street” is looking for a new home. This comes after Warner Bros. Discovery decided to not renew a deal for new episodes of the children’s show on HBO and Max. You will still be able to watch old episodes for a while. “Sesame Street’s” library will stay on Max through 2027, but the show’s future is up in the air. So we wanted to take a moment to reflect on the show’s legacy with Marilyn Agrelo. She’s the director of the 2021 documentary “Street Gang: How We Got To Sesame Street.”

(5) MARTHA WELLS ON CAMPUS. Texas A&M University Libraries’ Annual Report 2024 includes a segment about Martha Wells’ visit to campus last March: “Successful Aggie Sci-Fi Author Comes Home to Talk about Writing & New Apple TV+ Series”.

…Wells used her time speaking at the March Cushing event to advise future writers. She told the crowd she grew as a writer as an anthropology major at Texas A&M by learning how cultures work together. She said her degree program also helped her see how small details fit into the larger picture. 

“I wanted to be an author from really early on when I was a kid, but I didn’t know how to do it,” Wells said. 

She entered the working world in the technology industry by designing databases, working with software and in computer support. She said that path helped immensely with developing background knowledge for the Murderbot Diaries. After holding other non-writing positions until 2006 to support her family, Wells concentrated on her writing career — what she called a long, arduous journey. She called writing “a calling.” Her perseverance led to honors as a New York Times bestselling author, including multiple Hugo, Nebula, and Locus awards

“A lot of people think if you publish one novel, you’ll sell more, and your career is made,” Wells said. “But no. You have to work just as hard to sell the next novel every single time.”…

(6) APPETEASER. “Superman’s First Teaser Takes Us Up, Up, and Away”Gizmodo tells us to get ready.

The first full Superman trailer will be here Thursday, but to tide us over for a bit, Warner Bros. released a short teaser which itself is now the first footage we’ve seen from the movie.

Written and directed by James Gunn, Superman stars David Corenswet as Clark Kent/Superman, Rachel Brosnahan as Lois Lane, Skyler Gisondo as Jimmy Olson, Nicholas Hoult as Lex Luthor, and many more. It’s coming this summer and now, here’s your first official look at footage from Superman

(7) OSCARS SUPER SNUB. Meanwhile, Deadline discovers – “2025 Oscar Documentary Shortlist: ‘Will & Harper’ In, Christopher Reeve Snub”.

Will & Harper, the Netflix documentary about comedic actor Will Ferrell and his friendship with SNL pal Harper Steele who came out as trans, earned a spot on the coveted Oscar documentary feature shortlist today.

It wasn’t the only shortlist honor for the film directed by Josh Greenbaum. The tune from the closing credits – “Will and Harper Go West,” written by SNL alum Kristen Wiig and Sean Douglas and performed by Wiig – got shortlisted for Best Original Song (Douglas is the son of actor Michael Keaton).

But another high-profile documentary in the running for the shortlist didn’t make the cut: Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story, about the late actor who was paralyzed in a horse-riding accident. That film, directed by Ian Bonhôte and Peter Ettedgui, recently won Best Documentary Feature at the Critics Choice Documentary Awards, and last week earned a nomination for the Producers Guild of America Award…. 

(8) JOHN MARSDEN (1950-2024). “John Marsden, author of Tomorrow, When the War Began, dies aged 74” reports the Guardian.

…From the beginning he set out to write for young people, having watched as the young adult genre blossomed in the US. He finished his first complete novel in just three weeks: So Much to Tell You, which was published in 1987, won many awards and would go on to be studied by countless Australian students.

Over the next 40 years he wrote and edited 40 books, including Letters from the Inside, The Rabbits and the hugely successful Tomorrow series, beginning with Tomorrow, When the War Began. The seven books in the series, published between 1993 and 1999, imagined a group of teenagers waging a guerrilla war on enemy forces surrounding their home town of Wirrawee.

Marsden said he first had the idea when he was a teenager, “fantasising about a world without adults, because pretty much all the adults I encountered were authoritarian, were not interested in fairness or justice … they were really a bloody nuisance”.

The series, along with the three books in a sequel series, were bestsellers in both Australia and the US and were translated into five languages. In Sweden, free copies of Tomorrow, When the War Began were distributed to hundreds of thousands of teenagers after it was voted the book most likely to inspire a love of reading….

(9) TODAY’S BIRTHDAY.

[Written by Paul Weimer.]

Born December 18, 1913Alfred Bester. (Died 1987.)

By Paul Weimer:

Eight, sir; seven, sir;
Six, sir; five, sir;
Four, sir; three, sir;
Two, sir; one!
Tenser, said the Tensor.
Tenser, said the Tensor.
Tension, apprehension,
And dissension have begun

That rhyming song is how I started a 2016 piece (an early “Mining the Genre Asteroid” column) I wrote on The Demolished Man, written by one Alfred Bester. 

Alfred Bester

The Demolished Man, the first book I read of his, came just because it was part of my brother’s collection. I was hooked in immediately by the psionics and the working out of their powers and how society views them, deals with them, and vice versa. 

Since I can never pass up a reference to it, I remember when Walter Koenig’s psi cop first appeared on Babylon 5 and his name was, inevitably, Bester.  I practically shouted at the screen, “You did not!” in delight. It soon became clear through subsequent episodes that Stracyzski, possibly through the mediation of Harlan Ellison, perhaps through his own reading of it, borrowed a lot of the ideas about psionics from The Demolished Man

It won the first Hugo award for Best Novel. 

While psionics are relatively out of fashion in SFF today, even today, anyone who wants to put psionics in their SFF work would do well to look at Bester’s work. (I hesitate to recommend old “classics” as essential, but The Demolished Man qualifies) . Maybe Julian May’s Metaconcert and Pliocene Exile novels come close to the magic of The Demolished Man. Maybe.

Bester is also the author of the original and still strong Count of Monte Cristo in SFF take, The Stars my Destination. Gully Foyle is left for dead, and not making sure he was in fact dead turns out to be a very high price by those he takes in a roaring rampage of revenge. It’s glorious and hits all the right notes. I knew the Dumas story by osmosis at the time, but having since read and watched adaptations of Dumas, I can see how much The Stars my Destination hits its beats.

Between the definitive psionic novel, and the definitive take on a Dumas novel, those alone would make Bester memorable and readable for science fiction fans. He wrote a number of stunning and timeless short stories, too, including “The Men Who Murdered Mohammed” which is a “take that” to the idea of changing history by time travel.

(10) TODAY’S NEXT BIRTHDAY.

[Written by Cat Eldridge.]

Born December 18, 1946Steven Spielberg, 78.

Steven Spielberg is one of my favorite directors ever. Not as risk-taking as say Terry Gilliam but definitely one who’s done a lot of work that I find pleasing and that in my book counts for a lot.

I’m going to do a rewatch of Columbo this winter, so I was delighted to discover that he directed the first non-pilot episode of the series, “Murder by the Book”. He is credited with giving us the mannerisms of the detective and the look of the series.

He got that gig for having worked with Rod Serling on The Night Gallery where in one episode he directed Joan Crawford, that being “Eyes”. What other episodes that he directed are unclear because as a new director credit may gone to more senior directors, so it is thought that “A Matter of Semantics” that featured Cesar Romero and was credited to Jack Laird might have been his work. 

His first major hit was Jaws which is not my fish and chips so I’ll pass by it here as we’re discussing what I like by him. 

He made up for Jaws with Close Encounters of the Third Kind which is simply brilliant, E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial which still makes me sniff, and two out of three of the Indiana Jones trilogy. 

No, I vehemently did not like the Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom. I saw it once and that was more than enough, thank you. 

Now Jurassic Park is one of the best monster films ever. Why it was so excellent that it even won a Hugo at ConAdian! Who came and accepted that Hugo? 

There is a lot of lot films next in his career that I didn’t care for until we come to the extraordinary undertaking that is The Adventures of Tintin from the French strip by Hergé. A true treat in animation this was. 

(Digression for a moment. He was an Executive Producer or Producer on way too many undertakings to list here that I liked. Who Framed Roger RabbitGremlinsAnimaniacs (both series), Pinky and the BrainFreakazoid! — that’s just a few I like.) 

Then there’s Hook with Robin Williams as an adult Peter Pan, Julia Roberts as Tinker Bell and the Dustin Hoffman as Captain Hook. Need I say more. Well there is the crocodile…

I think I’ll finish with The BFG, his adaptation of Roald Dahl’s children’s book. Fantastic film that’s true to the book, no mean feat.

Steven Spielberg

(11) COMICS SECTION.

  • Bizarro puts a guitar in the hands of the wrong Doctor Who. 
  • Crabgrass has a Krampus storyline. 
  • Dinosaur Comics says you can’t shoot the Sun. (But if you play the right card game you can shoot the Moon.) 
  • Free Range asks did he ever return? No, he never returned. 
  • Yaffle has a sad story to tell.
  • Posted at Mastodon – whatever gets you through the night.

(12) NOW OFFICIALLY HISTORIC. “Tintin and the terrific tomb: Essex heritage listing is thrill for Hergé fans” – the Guardian has the story.

Blistering barnacles! Thundering typhoons! Blue blistering barnacles in a thundering typhoon! Who knew there was a 300-year-old tomb in Essex that can be linked to Tintin’s boozy best friend Captain Haddock?

The little-known tomb of Mary Haddock, in a churchyard in Leigh-on-Sea, has been named as one of the quirkier places given listed status in 2024 by Historic England.

It has a fascinating Tintin link and is one of 17 “remarkable and unusual historic buildings and places” given protection and which, Historic England argues, collectively shine light on the diversity of England’s heritage.’

Mary Haddock’s son became an Admiral in the navy and was the inspiration for Tin-Tin’s irascible friend….

… Built in 1688, the tomb of Mary Anna Haddock is well crafted and, heritage experts say, “notable as a single monument to a named woman in a period of gender inequality”.

It is the name that will thrill Tintin fans. Mary married into the Haddock family, known for prominent seafarers such as her son Adm Richard Haddock. It was he and the wider family who inspired Hergé’s Captain Haddock character in The Adventures of Tintin comics.

Captain Haddock, as all Tintin fans know, was the young reporter’s short-tempered, generally seething best friend and protector with a brilliantly wild turn of phrase and a weakness for whisky….

(13) SHARING THE SECRET. Variety reports “’Secret Level’ Renewed for Season 2 at Amazon Prime Video”.

“Secret Level” has been renewed for a second season at Amazon Prime Video.

The series is an adult animated anthology made up of short stories set in the world of various video games, such as “Pac-Man” and “Dungeons & Dragons.” Season 1 of “Secret Level” debuted with eight episodes on Dec. 10 with another seven set for Tuesday. Details about Season 2, including which video game worlds will be featured, remain under wraps.

Amazon says that “Secret Level” achieved the most-watched animated series debut of all time for the streamer within its first week, though exact viewership numbers were not provided. According to measurement from Luminate, the series was watched for 155.3 million minutes in the U.S. during its first week of availability, which translates to roughly 1.4 million views when divided by its 109-minute runtime….

(14) FROM THE PAGE. IEEE Spectrum reports “Shape-Shifting Antenna Takes Cue From ‘The Expanse’”. “Inspired by the sci-fi show, the device morphs to suit its signals”.

…The project has an otherworldly origin story, according to Jennifer Hollenbeck, an electrical engineer at APL who first came up with the idea. She is an avid sci-fi fan and had been reading The Expanse series of novels by the collaborative duo who publish under the pen name James S. A. Corey. Notably, The Expanse features alien technology capable of morphing to achieve different functions.

“It can heal itself, it can change shapes, and that was really the inspiration for this,” Hollenbeck says. “I was in the midst of one of those books and my boss asked me if I had any ideas for some research topics—and it just hit me.”…

(15) BALCONY SCENE. In the Guardian: “‘If 1.5m Germans have them there must be something in it’: how balcony solar is taking off”.

They are easy to install, and knock chunks off electricity bills. It may not be Romeo and Juliet, but Spain’s balcony scene is heating up as the country embraces what has hitherto been a mainly German love affair with DIY plug-in solar panels.

Panels have already been installed on about 1.5m German balconies, where they are so popular the term Balkonkraftwerk (balcony power plant) has been coined.

Manufacturers say that installing a couple of 300-watt panels will give a saving of up to 30% on a typical household’s electricity bill. With an outlay of €400-800 and with no installation cost, the panels could pay for themselves within six years.

In Spain, where two thirds of the population live in apartments and installing panels on the roof requires the consent of a majority of the building’s residents, this DIY technology has obvious advantages.

With solar balconies, no such consent is required unless the facade is listed as of historic interest or there is a specific prohibition from the residents’ association or the local authority. Furthermore, as long as the installation does not exceed 800 watts it doesn’t require certification, which can cost from €100 to €400, depending on the area.

“The beauty of the solar balconies is they are flexible, cheap and plug straight into the domestic network via a converter, so you don’t have to pay for the installation,” says Santiago Vernetta, CEO of Tornasol Energy, one of Spain’s main suppliers….

[Thanks to Andrew Porter, John King Tarpinian, Andrew (not Werdna), John Lorentz, Lise Andreasen, Chris Barkley, Cat Eldridge, SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie, Steven French, Kathy Sullivan, Teddy Harvia, and Mike Kennedy for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to File 770 contributing editor of the day Jon Meltzer.]


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20 thoughts on “Pixel Scroll 12/18/24 Light The Scroll, Not The Pixel!

  1. Another one with no jetpack (at least yet).
    (0) No, light the pixels, file the scroll!
    (1) Great – back to samizdat. Or good ol’ fanzines…
    (4) NPR is spreading the word? WTF isn’t PBS getting it back?!?!?!
    (6) That was annoyingly short. I really dislike “auteurs” who think shorter shots are better, and jerky is edgy. But… his suit is back to the way Martha sewed it.
    Birthday: …and dissension have begun, sir!
    Birthday 2: I tend to not like him – he pushes buttons, not lets you feel. And I agree about Tomb. My take is that Raiders was all the parts of the old serials that made them great… and Tomb was all the things that made them bad.
    Comics, Free Range… and his name, of course, was Charlie.
    (15) Thanks for reminding me of that article – I want to think about it.

  2. (1) I think China will find you really can’t shut down fanfiction; justvmake it a little harder to circulate and thus more attractive.

    (4) Sesame Street has a whole street. How can it be homeless?

    Have begun taking my potassium supplement, and consequently have messaged my PCP to ask if it’s available as a tablet, rather than a powder to be dissolved.

  3. Lis says Have begun taking my potassium supplement, and consequently have messaged my PCP to ask if it’s available as a tablet, rather than a powder to be dissolved.

    Yes, it is. I took it for sometime. It’s available as gels, tablets or gummies.

  4. @Lis Carey
    Potassium gluconate comes in 99mg tablets, if that’s what you need. (I tend to run low in potassium, so I keep a bottle around for those low-banana muscle cramps.)

  5. Mark, PBS needed to raise or have on hand about one point five million dollars per episode for the thirty that comprise a season. That’s why was it shopped for a new financial backer which is how HBO got it.

    PBS doesn’t get funded by the federal government so it was a significant expense for them.

    I assume as HBO isn’t streaming the back catalog that reverts to PBS as they aren’t paying rights on it.

  6. Mark: Jetpack has missed eight in a row now. I put in a ticket to customer disservice earlier today.

  7. (9) Alfred Bester. I totally concur about The Demolished Man and the Stars My Destination. “The Computer Connection” was entertaining. Golem 100 was a mixed bag. On the short fiction side, other great work by Bester includes
    1. “Fondly Fahrenheit”, a 1954 novelette
    2. “They Don’t Make Life Like They Used to”, a 1963 novelette
    3. “Hobson’s Choice”, a 1952 short story
    4. “Star Light, Star Bright”, a 1953 short story
    5. “The Pi Man”, a 1959 short story.

    (10) For Steven Spielberg, “Duel” needs to be mentioned. Richard Matheson wrote the story and the screenplay it is based on, making it genre adjacent at least.

  8. (3) I remember seeing some Simpsons episodes around that time in a movie theater, back when animation festivals and dinosaurs both roamed the earth.

    (15) that caught my eye also, since I have a west-facing balcony. The sites I browsed showed plugging the inverter directly into what appears to be any old power outlet, but that feels wrong to me. Can it really be that simple?

  9. (9) The novella Hell is Forever (1942, Unknown) is very good, and I say that while disagreeing with it.

  10. @Cat Eldridge
    “PBS doesn’t get funded by the federal government ”
    From the 2023 PBS Budget:
    “[Public Broadcasting Service and Subsidiaries] receives funding from the U.S. government”

  11. (9) Bester is one of my favorites. “Disappearing Act” is another one ofhis great short pieces.

    Thanks for mentioning Julian May, by the way

    Mike: Good luck with the Jetpack ticket.

  12. 5). Looks like I’m in the center background of the freeze frame pic. I HAVE lost some weight since then, and that was a bad pic, and my dog ate my homework, etc. It was a great event and we managed to see good friends again that we hadn’t seen since college. One was on the infamous Cepheid officer trip to Confederation, the Atlanta Worldcon, our first. Martha made a record $11k profit at her Aggiecon, so all the officers went to Worldcon, crammed into a university van (one person having to lay on the floor under the bench seats) and sharing two hotel rooms. That was the con where Martha and I both had made Sith Lord outfits, and so ran around together in matching attire, leading to us dating.

  13. 4) I grew up on Sesame Street. That, Mr. Rogers, and The Electric Company.

    6) As much as I loved the Snyder DC movies, I’m 100% on board for this as well.

    15) The notion that if millions of Germans are doing something, it’s a good thing is, at least historically, somewhat suspect.

  14. OryCon: the fandom, and conventions, I grew up with are riding off into the sunset. Fandom will survive, but it’s not the same. I’ve reached the point where I no longer know the names of most current SF writers, nor the names of numerous convention GoHs.

    I published Bester’s “Writing and The Demolished Man,” in ALGOL, and as part of a 1975 chapbook, “Experiment Perilous,” with essays by Marion Zimmer Bradley and Norman Spinrad. Long out of print.

  15. JimJ: I gather it’s not safe, unless it’s wired for it. Certainly, in the US when they write about generators for emergencies, it ain’t.

  16. PBS: they do get federal funding, but not much, thanks to the Grinch, who threatened to cut it all off in ’95.

  17. (2) Regarding OryCon:

    I had no part in the decision to sunset the convention–I was just reporting what had been announced. (Only the last paragraph was mine.)

    I spoke to someone who was confused and thought I was chairing the committee to determine what to do next. Nope, I’m retired from con-running.)

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