thoughts on the Beast-era

"What? Transformers made from animals instead of vehicles and stuff? Doesn't sound so great, throw it to Kenner division, maybe they can make a quick buck or something."
Beast Wars, Machine Wars, Beast Machines... seeing a pattern? Coming soon: "Wars Wars"
SynjoDeonecros
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Re: thoughts on the Beast-era

Post by SynjoDeonecros »

Onslaught Six wrote:Van Halen sucks, your argument is invalid.
No, it isn't; even if you don't personally like his music, telling him that you don't like it - or music in general - if it doesn't conform to a very specific and unfeasibly stringent set of parameters that no one else has heard, before, and that if it doesn't conform to those parameters, it's a waste of time and shouldn't be bothered with, is not merely disagreeing with how good his music is, it's insulting his livelihood and the genre, in general, and claiming to be a fan of it is just a mockery and a bold-faced lie to him. There are plenty of writers that I personally hate; Ian Flynn, Laurel K. Hamilton post-Obsidian Butterfly, whoever wrote Lord of the Flies, and I'd insult their talent for writing, but I wouldn't go so far as to say they're crap because their writing doesn't conform to some bullshit backwards artistic philosophy that would render 99.9 percent of all fiction out there dead, if it was ever followed through. My complaints are with specific problems that they keep repeating; Ian drops plot points and character development far too often in favor for boring fight scenes, flanderizes his characters, abuses the characters he hates, and resolves everything too fast and with unsatisfactory deus ex machinas; Hamilton turned an intriguing character into a mary sue author insert and devolved the storyline into a porn fanfic, and the Lord of the Flies guy can't write good character perspective transitions to save his life (seriously, i couldn't get past the first couple of chapters, because I had no idea who was talking or seeing the world through, at any given time). Dom isn't focusing on specific problems of writing, but instead basing everything he reads or watches solely on the set of parameters he's been taught (by who, I have no idea, as like I said, no one in their right mind would agree to his position on how fiction should be written). It honestly reminds me of the elitist tournament duelists I see on Yugioh boards, condemning a card from a new pack as worthless without even bothering to take a second glance at it, just because they don't see an immediate use for it in their specific cookie-cutter decks, and doing the same to with anyone who tries to defend the cards, simply because they don't fit into their personal views of what a duelist should be, either.

Like I said, I wouldn't have had nearly this much problem with him, if he simply didn't find Beast Wars as enjoyable as Beast Machines; we still would've argued, but it would've been respectful debates, and i wouldn't knock him for the difference in opinion. But he went further than that, and insulted and called stupid and a waste of time both the entire Tranformers franchise as a whole AND any other form of literature that doesn't fit into his Ted Turner School of Writing textbook. That insulted my sensibilities as an artist and writer, but when he followed that up with his insistence that he's really a fan of Transformers, that insulted my intelligence. As far as i'm concerned, he's not a fan, he's not a good moderator for this site, and he's not the kind of person I'd want to hang out with or even give a second look.
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Re: thoughts on the Beast-era

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I think you're taking his views on fiction a little too seriously. (And my responses, for that matter.)
BWprowl wrote:The internet having this many different words to describe nerdy folks is akin to the whole eskimos/ice situation, I would presume.
People spend so much time worrying about whether a figure is "mint" or not that they never stop to consider other flavours.
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Re: thoughts on the Beast-era

Post by SynjoDeonecros »

Onslaught Six wrote:I think you're taking his views on fiction a little too seriously. (And my responses, for that matter.)
...No, i don't think so, not with the way he keeps touting about it, and the length that I and other people on here (like Sparky Prime) have argued with him about it. Seriously, even with my admittedly poor sense of satire and sarcasm, I don't think Dom is putting this shit out with any irony or humor to it, intended or otherwise.There's really nothing in his argument that even hints that this isn't what he honestly and seriously thinks. So, sorry, but taking his views too seriously? I don't think so.
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Re: thoughts on the Beast-era

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What I mean is that you're taking it as if Dom's view of how he prefers fiction to work colours his entire personality, which it, uh, really doesn't. You're making some pretty heavy accusations and writing paragraph upon paragraph about 'nothingness' to somehow condemn him when you're basically arguing...to nobody. Nobody wants to have this argument with you, because you're being kind of a dick about the whole thing. Basically you're calling out one of our moderators--who we all stand by 'as a person,' if not in their views of fiction--and saying you wouldn't even associate with him if you could. And by doing that, you're effectively calling into question the practices of the entire website. If you don't like the way this place is being run, why don't you go away?
BWprowl wrote:The internet having this many different words to describe nerdy folks is akin to the whole eskimos/ice situation, I would presume.
People spend so much time worrying about whether a figure is "mint" or not that they never stop to consider other flavours.
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Re: thoughts on the Beast-era

Post by SynjoDeonecros »

Onslaught Six wrote:What I mean is that you're taking it as if Dom's view of how he prefers fiction to work colours his entire personality, which it, uh, really doesn't. You're making some pretty heavy accusations and writing paragraph upon paragraph about 'nothingness' to somehow condemn him when you're basically arguing...to nobody. Nobody wants to have this argument with you, because you're being kind of a dick about the whole thing. Basically you're calling out one of our moderators--who we all stand by 'as a person,' if not in their views of fiction--and saying you wouldn't even associate with him if you could. And by doing that, you're effectively calling into question the practices of the entire website. If you don't like the way this place is being run, why don't you go away?
At this point, I'm contemplating it.

What you don't seem to understand is that we come here to socialize mainly about Transformers, and as such, our personality on here is colored by our love of the franchise and to what extent we like it and which subgenre. I don't come on here to shoot the breeze with people about political news or world crises, I come on here to talk about Transformers. And if Dominic's personality as a Transformers "fan" is colored by his backwards-ass view of fiction in general, then why should I socialize with him on here? Why should I waste my text talking to a guy about Transformers, if that guy has shown quite clearly and in no unsubtle terms that he hates nearly everything that makes Transformers what it is, because his own personal view of how fiction in general makes him believe it's all a fucking waste of time?

That's also part of the reason why I don't think he's a good moderator; when I go on a fan forum, I expect the moderators to at least be actual fans of the media the forum is based around, and it's been made clear that Dominic is NOT, in fact, a fan; he thinks it's a waste of time, he thinks the shows are bullshit because they don't fit into his twisted view on how fiction in general should work, and you yourself have said that he doesn't even consider himself enough of a fan to deal with it, for any length of time significant enough to justify him being a moderator. The only way a guy like that could even get a moderating job on a place like this, from what I can see, is if it was a friend favor...which, from what you just told me, is actually what it is. I don't care if he's "fair" or "laid-back", how can I trust that he'll make the proper call on a flame war or something if he doesn't give enough of a shit about what's being discussed, on here, to waste his time with it?

And if that's his view on ALL fiction, then no, I wouldn't want to socialize with him AT ALL, because as an artist and writer myself, fiction is a big part of my life, and pop culture and media is usually one of the biggest topics of conversation for the general public; how in the hell do you expect me to be courteous or friendly with a douche that I can't talk about the latest movie releases about without having to hear a boring and insulting diatribe tearing them apart and showing exactly why they're a bullshit waste of time? What, is he going to tell me the Red Queen makes the latest Alice in Wonderland movie preachy because she does evil just to do evil, and not because she's batfuck insane with that giant melon of hers, if I ask him if he's going to see it? Why would I want to socialize with someone with such a narrow, backwards, and sanitized view of fiction? Why would I want to socialize with someone whose only known topics of discussion is environmentalism and political analysis? Do I really want to hear his "Synjo's rant = political partisanship" debate, again? I don't think so.

Think of me as a dick all you want, but it doesn't change my opinion of the guy OR his position as a moderator, and the latter continues to infuriate me, because I'm not able to put him on ignore, as a result! If I could, we wouldn't even be arguing like this over him; I'd had silenced him from my account, long ago, and that would've been the end of it. Would it have cut off roughly half the posts on this forum for me? Maybe, but that's one half of the site that I wouldn't have wanted to read, anyway. So fine, I'm a dick who hates Dominic and is questioning the process that allowed him to become a mod. I'm not calling you guys out, for it, and I'm not trying to be a dick, to anyone else; as I said, if Dom had just limited his bullshit diatribe to his belief that Beast Machines was better than Beast Wars, we wouldn't be in this position. But he went farther than that, and made himself out to be an idiotic asshole in my eyes, as a result, and I am not going to apologize for that. Hell, I even said a while back that I was willing to DROP THIS, if Dominic was, and move on, but he didn't drop it; he had to continue the argument with someone else, and dug himself further and further into the hole he started digging, with me. No, I'm sorry, but my opinion about him stands, and I'm not changing it. I think he's an idiot, I think he's an asshole, I don't think he knows what he's talking about with his backwards view of fiction in general, i don't think he's a fan OR that he has an actual degree in literature (because no literature teacher in their right mind would teach the kind of crap he's preaching), I don't think he's a proper mod for this place, given his opinions of Transformers and fiction as a whole, and I would do my danrdest to avoid him at all costs, given the chance, online or off. Whether that means I'll be leaving on my own or will need to be banned by administration, I dunno, yet, and I guess it depends on what happens next, but at the very least I would like the board to be changed so that you could put moderators on ignore (since it only affects their posts on the main boards, and not their ability to PM you, so they'd still be able to send you warnings and administrative decisions).
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Re: thoughts on the Beast-era

Post by Onslaught Six »

Dominic wrote:
But I'm still a huge TF fan.
No you ain't.
I'm heartbroken to hear you say that. :(
Who is the biggest fan? Clearly, not O6. He does not have a collection, (based on comments he has made), as extensive as myself.
My collection is only as limited as my funding, mind you. If I had more money, surely I would have more toys. And I wish I had the space to display it all at once.
What about Fred from Fred's Workshop? He has a couple of hundred Jumpstarters. He is a much bigger fan than any of us. He loves certain figures so much he buys them over and over and over and over and over...
Mind, Fred got out of the variants game several years back, and I think he sold off most of those.
I hate trying to find the damned things though.
Don't we all. Still can't find Bludgeon!
BWprowl wrote:The internet having this many different words to describe nerdy folks is akin to the whole eskimos/ice situation, I would presume.
People spend so much time worrying about whether a figure is "mint" or not that they never stop to consider other flavours.
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Re: thoughts on the Beast-era

Post by SynjoDeonecros »

Dominic wrote:
I'd prefer a moderator that shows more interest in the subject the forum is built on than "Yeah, it sucks, all of it, now let me go back to listening to my audio books on how to give a good political seminar".
Thankfully, you do not have that. As posted above, the fact I am not not slavishly praising every piece of vapid fiction, (or even the middling to good stuff), does not logically make me a bad fan.
That wasn't my argument, and you know it. My argument was that you've clearly shown you hate most fiction because of your stupid moral-driven bullcrap philosophy, and that extends to most if not all Transformers media in general. Seriously, with the standards you've placed, it's a wonder you even got peripherally into Transformers, in the first place, as - like I said before - IT HAS EVERYTHING YOU CLAIM TO HATE IN FICTION.
Did you bother to read the AHM thread? I praise the hell out of that. (Sparky, I expect a smart-@$$ remark about me claiming to not praise middling to bad fiction. :) ) If anything, one could argue that focusing obsessively on one part of the hobby limits a fan more than anything else. You dislike certain elements of the franchise. So do other people.
From what I'm reading of the series on the TF Wiki, it's no wonder you praised it; it's just as much of a preachy, continuity-screwing fanfic asspull as Beast Machines is.

And again, I need to remind you that I've said several times if you had JUST limited your debate to what you liked about Beast Machines, and not gone on that stupid diatribe about how all non-moral-driven fiction is a bullshit waste of time, we wouldn't be here at each other's throats. I can respect you as a fan for liking a show I dislike; I cannot respect you as a fan for essentially saying it's almost all bullshit and a waste of time, because it doesn't fit into what you'd consider good storytelling to be.
I see little point in reading about fiction characters doing fiction things that have no bearing on anything. If a writer can show insight about something else while writing about big robots, then I am more interested. Hell, read my comic reviews. I pick up a fair amount of filler, and admit as much when I review it. But, I do not lavish praise on those comics. My initial reason for reading Bendis was his amazing dialogue. it was not until later that I started to see where he was going with "Dark Avengers". (My praise for that book has gone up in proportion.)
Then you might as well stop reading or watching any sort of fiction, whatsoever, because THAT IS NOT HOW THINGS USUALLY WORK; fiction is just that, FICTION, not meant to be a reflection of real life or societal norms or problems or philosophical diatribes. It's meant as an escape, a journey into the unknown, a look at new worlds and new civilizations, of magic and wonder, of things we cannot possibly have in the real world or have any sort of comparative parallel with real world objects, locations, or issues. That is why it's called FICTION. Does that mean that real-world issues can't be explored in these worlds? Of course not, but the difference between you and the rest of the world is that the rest of the world acknowledges that fiction is STILL meant to be a journey into something non-realistic and non-reality based, and as such the message and reality-based parallels should take a back seat to the plot and the more fanciful elements, whereas you are determined to keep reality in the fiction, and force the more fanciful stuff and the plot to take a backseat to the real-world parallels and message.

For instance, one of my favorite novels, "Forests of the Night" by S. Andrew Swann, involves a genetically engineered anthro tiger investigating the death of a conservative anti-anthro politician on the eve of an election that could change the face of anthro rights forever. Okay, political message of minority rights and whatnot...but the novel doesn't focus on that; the murder turns out to be a conspiracy by aliens to invade the US. It never loses its perspective that this is a fictional world, keeps its atmosphere, and most importantly uses the political and human rights undertones to drive the plot, instead of using the plot to drive the undertones. It doesn't feel like a rehash of real life issues, because it keeps the feel of its fictional world and allows us to get lost in it. It's an escape for the reader instead of a lecture for an author tract, and that's what makes it so good.

On the other hand, I stopped reading Laurel K. Hamilton's Anita Blake series when Obsidian Butterfly came out, because she DID turn it into an author tract, one about her own personal fantasies and - arguably - a reflection of her breakup and remarriage; before, her version of a St. Louis infected with vampires, werecreatures, and other things that go bump in the night was layered and multi-faceted, with each crisis being explored through the interactions and personal experiences and personalities of the characters, and the titular protagonist grew from a stern, black-and-white exorcist and monster hunter into a more complex and lovable character through those interactions. There wasn't really a moral, there, just really well-written fictional stories about fictional worlds and fictional characters. Now, though, she's turned the main character into an author avatar, sexed everything up, said "to hell" with character development or progressive storytelling, and made it an outlet for her own personal fantasies, and it ended up sucking, as a result. She put her own personal biases and desires above the story she was wanting to tell, and forced said story to be worked around it instead of letting the former flow naturally through the latter. This is what you're arguing good fiction should be about. And this is what most of us are saying is NOT what it should be about, or how we were taught it should be about.

not going to feel safe with a moderator on here who "does a good job moderating" but only comes on here because he has nothing else to do with his time, rather than out of a genuine love for the franchise, whichever parts it may be.
Really, you feel unsafe? Have I censored you, even once? I would be lying if I said I was not tempted. But, have I edited your posts? Have I deleted your posts? Have I done anything to your account? Or, do you simply find new/different ideas *that* frightening that you feel unsafe around somebody voicing them?
What if you DID start censoring me, or pull some moderatorial action on me? How do I know that it was because I was honestly being disruptive, and not because you hated talking about the shows and disliked arguing with me about it? Like I said, you can like Beast Machines or hate Beast Wars all you want, but if you're going to rag on nearly everything Transformers-related because you don't like it from a story mechanics standpoint, and think it's too much of a waste of time for you to bother with it, how can i trust that ANY action you take against me or anyone else, for that matter, isn't simply because you hate the franchise and just don't want to be bothered with it? As i said, it's like giving Fred Phelps a job moderating a gay pride board, it just doesn't make any logical sense.
When talking about a story, does it not make sense to bring up the mechanics of story-telling? It makes more sense than impugning the politics and integrity of somebody. (I am a right-wing hack in the Commonwealth of MA apparently.....)
Considering that we WEREN'T talking about the mechanics of story-telling, no it doesn't make sense. Debating about whether the show was being preachy or how much Rattrap was derailed isn't the same as talking about how bad the sentence structure of a book is. You could've argued your point about the show NOT being preachy without bringing up stupid shit like "villains being evil just to be evil making a show preachy" (it doesn't, it's how the message is presented that makes a show preachy), or how characters should be tools to push the message; the main argument was, at least from where I was coming from, was whether Optimus' and Megatron's zealotry and constant diatribes about how their side of the conflict was right was too heavy-handed and preachy for the show, and whether it disrupted the story. You could've simply argued that that was what the writers were going for, and the story might've made less sense or had less impact than it did if it was made more subtle, or something along those lines. You didn't have to go as far as you did with your assessment of how story structure works, especially not to the extent of saying anything that doesn't revolve around a moral and is firmly grounded in reality in its message and isn't pushing that message in our face every five seconds is utter shit and a waste of our time.

As a writer myself, I feel insulted by his drivel, and I don't buy that he's got a degree in literature; no literature or creative writing teacher in the world would teach that kind of shit, at all. The only way I can think of to explain how he could possibly have that kind of opinion on fiction in general, is if he lived an intolerably sheltered life where fiction and games were off-limits for being "destructive to his intellect".
Serious question Synjo, if you are writer, where do you get ideas to write about? I am honestly curious about this. (And, for the record, my BA is in English. There was an emphasis on LIT classes though. I was killing time until grad school, which is another story.....)

And, again, do you see the difference between a story having an idea and having a moral?
A lot of what I do is fanfiction, so you wouldn't be interested in it, but I'll give you a short list of stories that I've done or am trying to do, and what inspired them:

1. My one and only Transformers story to date, "Seeds of the Future", was actually inspired by Primeval Dawn, as well as the debate over Transformer reproduction and how it would change post-Beast Wars and Beast Machines, after they've become more or less cyborgs instead of true robots. Yes, it stars Ravage, but it also brings in the Maximals (mainly Cheetor, Rattrap, and Rhinox), Tarantulas, the Tripredacus council, and even the original Insecticons. It deals mainly with Ravage's loyalties to Megatron, the Tripredacus council and Cheetor/Nightstalker (it's complicated), and involves him getting in a war with Tarantulas and the Insecticons on Earth while the others work on stopping a plot by the council to unleash a lab-created version of the Swarm to destroy the populace. The way I have it written, right now (it's only the first chapter, and I'm debating rewriting it or merging it into another version of it that I had), I realized it had a hint of unintentional gay rights subtext (a big part of the plot is an "Interfacer" underground that the council is using to spread/blame for the Swarm plague), but honestly, it's not going to be based on that subtext or really on the loyalty issues.

2. I have a Mortal Kombat story in the works based on the events of Armageddon, dealing with two characters of mine inspired by rejected character designs (mainly Zebron and the original, non-Shokan version of Kintaro) as they search for the real culprit of the Centaur's curse. The only thing that inspired this was the fact that they never made any bios for half of the characters in the game, and never gave an adequate explanation for most of the events in their endings, so I decided to come up with my own explanation. I seem to be able to do that really well, I'm told; take an existing franchise and work in my own theories explaining things that weren't adequately expanded on, and making them sound plausible.

3. The big one I'm hoping to get out the door is an original story based on the SatCho alliance, and the fall of the Tokugawa shogunate. It actually started as a sort of "furry sentai" comic taking place in neofeudal Japan, but living with an asshole of a war vet with a thing for the Tokugawa period inspired me to try a priod piece as a sort of backstory for the future series. And the original concept was inspired by, of all things, a White Wolf "Werewolf: The Apocalypse" supplement gamebook. Again, you'd likely not be interested in it, since it's heavily character-oriented, dealing with the interactions between the heroes and the villains, and the conversion of the latter to the former's side.

4. I also had another, more modern novel in the works (though I seem to have lost my copy of it) about a mercenary sniper that lost his teammate on a botched mission being hunted down by the same people who killed the teammate, and getting help from a British sniper who ends up becoming his new partner. The inspiration for this was easy: Silent Scope 2: Dark Silhouette. Again, it has a bit of a pro-gay message to it, this one being a little more intentional than the Transformers one, but again, it's more focused on the characters than anything.

5. Finally, I'm working on what is admittedly a Sonic slash fic, but i'd like to think it has more heart in it than just that. It was inspired by a thread on former Sonic writer Ken Pender's board about his plans to turn one of the Freedom Fighters gay in an alternate future sries he was writing, as well as a subplot of a current story his replacement Ian Flynn is doing, currently. i didn't like how Ian just stopped the subplot without any real resolution, and I thought Ken's plans for the character in question would actually work well in it, so the fanfic's basically my little fan contribution to the series (ironic, since Ian himself started out as a fan comic writer/artist).

There's a ton of others, but I trust I made my self clear; fiction inspires me, not real life - TV, movies, novels, comics, even mythology. I know that that's not true for everyone, but even those who take inspiration from real life know that there's a difference between taking inspiration from and basing stories on reality, and having reality overrun the story, and I've had enough of my fill of real life to have it in my stories.

I think you're taking his views on fiction a little too seriously. (And my responses, for that matter.)
About 2 weeks back, I lost my temper. I admit it. But, I lost my temper when the attacks became personal and completely disconnected from fiction.

I have friends in red-ish states and friends in blue states. I have friends with "R", and "D", and "U", and even (maybe) a "G" or 2 in front of their names. And, we can talk maturely about more important things than toys or comics.
[/quote]

Then, since we've established that neither one of us wants to argue these points, anymore, nor will we be able to convince the other of our point of view when it comes to the subject of how story mechanics need to work, can we please shut up about it and move on? I'd like to get back to talking about the Beast Era, now, and as passionate as I am with my arguments, I can guarantee you I'm a LOT less argumentative and more cordial when it comes to talking about Transformers itself.
Last edited by SynjoDeonecros on Mon Mar 08, 2010 2:41 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: thoughts on the Beast-era

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SynjoDeonecros wrote:
Dominic wrote:Did you bother to read the AHM thread? I praise the hell out of that. (Sparky, I expect a smart-@$$ remark about me claiming to not praise middling to bad fiction. :) ) If anything, one could argue that focusing obsessively on one part of the hobby limits a fan more than anything else. You dislike certain elements of the franchise. So do other people.
From what I'm reading of the series on the TF Wiki, it's no wonder you praised it; it's just as much of a preachy, continuity-screwing fanfic asspull as Beast Machines is.
Now you're pushing one of my buttons. How about you actually read All Hail Megatron and judge it for yourself? Having talked with at least one person who runs TFWiki about the story, I can promise you that there's a profound anti-McCarthy bias over there, and you're not going to get an objective opinion from them.
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Re: thoughts on the Beast-era

Post by SynjoDeonecros »

andersonh1 wrote:
SynjoDeonecros wrote:
Dominic wrote:Did you bother to read the AHM thread? I praise the hell out of that. (Sparky, I expect a smart-@$$ remark about me claiming to not praise middling to bad fiction. :) ) If anything, one could argue that focusing obsessively on one part of the hobby limits a fan more than anything else. You dislike certain elements of the franchise. So do other people.
From what I'm reading of the series on the TF Wiki, it's no wonder you praised it; it's just as much of a preachy, continuity-screwing fanfic asspull as Beast Machines is.
Now you're pushing one of my buttons. How about you actually read All Hail Megatron and judge it for yourself? Having talked with at least one person who runs TFWiki about the story, I can promise you that there's a profound anti-McCarthy bias over there, and you're not going to get an objective opinion from them.
I might if I can find a copy. Right now, though, the only comic shop I can get to has insanely wonky store hours, and I'm busy working on getting a job, so wiki articles are the only source of info I have on it, for right now.
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Re: thoughts on the Beast-era

Post by SynjoDeonecros »

Dominic wrote:Synjo, again, do you see the difference between having an idea and having a moral?

Either way, you are downplaying good points in TF when you say it is not good enough for my standards. (Though I suppose I should appreciate the concern for my sensibilities.)
Yes, i do know the difference between an idea and a moral. The question is, do YOU? What you want in every story is a moral, an author tract that the writer is trying to push on the reader to make a statement about something related to real life, whether it be a political diatribe, a philosophical dilemma, an environmental or social problem, etc. It's a real world issue that the writer is using the story to explore and draw attention to. The instrumentality/free will debate of Beast Machines is a moral; the environmental message of Captain Planet is a moral. What I and most everyone else wants in their stories is an idea, in the context of fiction being a plot or conflict that forms the bedrock of a fictional world and sets the stage for the events to come. It doesn't require a moral to be based around to be a good idea, just an intriguing plot point or conflict that can be written about. Having Eggman go insane in the Archie Sonic comics? Good idea for a storyline, doesn't have a moral behind it. Zombie pirates trying to break their curse in Pirates of the Caribbean? Good story idea, not based on a moral. Teenage cheerleader fighting vampires in a southern Californian hellmouth in Buffy? Good story idea, NO MORAL ATTACHED. Does that mean you can't EXPLORE morals with a story idea? No, of course not, but that's what we've been arguing with you about; what we're saying is good stories with morals in them have the morals tempered by and filtered through the ideas being written about, while you're insisting that the story ideas should be moderated by and filtered through the moral; as i said, "Forests of the Night" could've focused solely on the minority rights political moral that the characters and story lend themselves to, but it doesn't, it uses the moral as a supplement to the main murder mystery idea, not as its basis.

Seriously, everything I'm arguing with you comes straight from what you yourself have said about the franchises, and what your friends have informed me about your opinions of the franchises, so don't try to pin this back on me.
What if you DID start censoring me, or pull some moderatorial action on me? How do I know that it was because I was honestly being disruptive, and not because you hated talking about the shows and disliked arguing with me about it?
Ah, yes, the tyranny of living under Domonarch, the Dominator. Dominus Prime. It is terrible.

Putting aside smart ass comments, I do not have a monopoly of power on this board Synjo. You know this. Even if I did, what real harm could I cause you, so as to make you feel "unsafe".


Dom
-thinks the world is a pretty amazing and fantastic place.

I know from bitter experience that one moderator can screw up the entire administration. And i've been burned plenty of times in other forums by mods who let their own bias for the subject at hand dictate how they handle the moderating of something like a flame war; seriously, how do I know that your apathy and dislike for Transformers and fiction as a whole won't taint your moderating calls? If you can't be bothered to find the time to waste on a franchise you clearly have little interest in, how the hell do you think I'd be assured you'd be bothered to properly moderate a flame war over said franchise? You clearly don't have the time or the patience to deal with the actual franchise, so how do you know you wouldn't just suspend everyone involved in a debate over whether Wheelie really is annoying, without bothering to check who started it or who made good points and tried to stay on topic? You may not LIKE the show, but without an interest in the franchise to help you understand and determine these things, how do you expect me to believe you wouldn't have the same apathy and disdain in your moderating decisions that you show for the subject matter?

This is why I say I'd rather have an actual, honest to god fan of the franchise as a moderator instead of you; you have no interest in the series, you have no time for it, you have no tolerance for it, so it makes no goddamn sense for you to be a moderator for this site. What appealed you to the job? You said before that you wouldn't want to go into politics, and moderation on a forum is nothing but politics, so that can't be it, and you clearly have little to no real interest in the franchise, itself, so that can't be it, either. And if it was done as a fan favor, then that makes me more disturbed having you as a moderator, because having people put into positions of power as favors from friends or loved ones don't usually turn out very well.

Look, I'm getting really, REALLY tired of talking about this, so can we just agree to drop it and move on to talking about, y'know, TRANSFORMERS?! I'd really like to go back to debating Megatron's plans for technological purity, now. I really, really do. I swear.
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