Looking back many years,I can remember two wonderful nights spent sleeping under my mother-in-law's dining room table with my husband while we copied video tapes of a long defunct British TV show, whose name most people wouldn't recognize if they heard it. A very kind friend had loaned us her tapes while we were in town - thus the marathon session so that we could be near enough to the VCRs to quickly switch tapes when necessary. In many ways, the experience was like those wonderful nights of exhaustion and exhileration when you stay up working on a deadline.
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Conventions are the places where we get together. Conventions can range from mammoth megaevents, like the Science Fiction Worldcon, to events that draw attendees from the low thousands to barely a hundred dedicated friends. The joy of these events is that you're guaranteed to meet people who share your passion for TV shows.
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Most of us were sucked in by the frustration of unanswered questions.
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Art is a big part of the fan world. Conventions frequently host art auctions, and even in the smaller conventions, some pieces go into the hundreds of dollars. Especially portraits of characters in the newest shows to capture fans' imaginations. For a general science fiction con like Worldcon, you can be talking in the thousands. Fanzines are almost always illustrated, and the originals of the illos will also sometimes show up in the convention auctions.
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Did I mention that sociologist fans analyzing other fans have discovered that we're as highly educated and skilled as we are obsessed? |
A favorite attraction at many conventions is filking, folk singing off by only a single letter, though rarely off the key. Filkers get to be as famous in fandom as writers and artists. You'd be hard pressed to find a professional singer as good as Julia Ecklar. She's an all-around artist who has also published a professional Star Trek novel, The Kobayashi Maru.
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I just discovered a site where a friend I found in video editing has written about my music videos. I'm stunned, but I had to share it. Paul Campanis is a multimedia artist in the style of the early beat poets. One of the most fascinating people I've ever met!
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