What You Want, Not What You Need
Aug. 23rd, 2013 03:00 pmWhich, yeah, does happen to be the title of the last arc in the Angel & Faith comic, but :shrug: it fits this post.
More musings within on how nothing is new in fandom, or among comics/TV show writers. Contains spoilers for True Blood and for the Buffy comics.
Joss Whedon (in)famously said that you have to give the fans not what they want, but what they need.
I understand what he was getting at (while at the same time thinking it rather presumptuous of him to think he knows what the fans need. I mean, it's not like they all need the same thing, is it? Unless he means they all need a bloody good lesson in being careful what they wish for?) but I'm not sure I entirely agree with it.
Or, I agree with it in the sense that you can't let fan opinion influence the story you have to tell (except that I suspect even Joss did many times, whether he'll admit it or not), or at least you have to pay lip-service to not letting it.
On the other hand, you don't want to lose your audience, do you? So, before you decide to ignore those fan opinions, you might at least want to know what they are. Not just to assume that you know.
This post is brought on by reading several interviews with the current showrunner of True Blood, in which he tries to allay fears about the return of Alexander Skarsgard's character, Eric Northman, in season 7, given that he appeared to die a stupid, comedy death in the final episode of season 6. Needless to say, a lot of people were quite upset (yes, I was too, though I'm not in the TB fandom, just a lurker) and the fact that Eric was stark, full-frontal naked when he 'died' didn't mollify them much at all. In fact, it's rather insulting for anyone to think that it would have (shades of the 'women only like Spike for his abs' argument).
Must say, I came out of reading these interviews with the impression that this showrunner was just irritated by this section of the audience ("Why can't they just wait till next summer to find out?"), and resented having to placate them. But, see, I think that's him not so much wanting to tell his story how he wants to tell it, but conflating the audience's needs and their wants. He thinks their need should be to be surprised by the story next year. Is Eric dead, or isn't he? However, the fans might actually need to have a reason for tuning in again.
All these, can't you wait till next summer? kinds of remarks are aimed at general viewers who maybe aren't as emotionally invested. But you want to keep the more fannish viewers watching too, don't you?
Then again, you don't want to go promising something you have no intention of delivering on, the way the Dark Horse PTBs (and Joss) did about Spike/Buffy prior to season 9 of the Buffy comic. Joss said Spike and Buffy were 'gold' (he meant the snappy dialogue exchanges, I suspect), and Scott Allie promised the Spuffy fans their interaction would be worth waiting for. Well, apart from a few nice moments in early issues, their interaction turned out to be (yet another) kick in the teeth for the Spuffy 'shippers, to add to the ones they got (repeatedly) in season 8. So obviously, Dark Horse, Joss et al would have been better off (or more honest) if they'd just told people re Spuffy and Spike's role to 'wait and see.' But of course they knew that section of fans was extremely pissed off after season 8 and wanted to persuade them to keep reading.
Hmm. Think I'm going around in circles here. I think what I'm trying to say is, don't presume you necessarily know what your audience needs, do some research. Then, if you appear to kill off a much-loved character, at least you'll be prepared for the following shitstorm.
And if you do promise fans things in your upcoming stories, make damn well sure you deliver.
Fool me once, etc, etc.
ETA: It is of course possible to f**k up all the above so much that you end up giving the audience/readership neither what they want nor what they need. I think the Buffy comics are a case in point.
ETA 2: And of course that applies to all fan groupings, not just Spuffies, Bangels and other assorted weird 'shippers.
I suspect the use of the phrase 'tune in' really dates me.
More musings within on how nothing is new in fandom, or among comics/TV show writers. Contains spoilers for True Blood and for the Buffy comics.
Joss Whedon (in)famously said that you have to give the fans not what they want, but what they need.
I understand what he was getting at (while at the same time thinking it rather presumptuous of him to think he knows what the fans need. I mean, it's not like they all need the same thing, is it? Unless he means they all need a bloody good lesson in being careful what they wish for?) but I'm not sure I entirely agree with it.
Or, I agree with it in the sense that you can't let fan opinion influence the story you have to tell (except that I suspect even Joss did many times, whether he'll admit it or not), or at least you have to pay lip-service to not letting it.
On the other hand, you don't want to lose your audience, do you? So, before you decide to ignore those fan opinions, you might at least want to know what they are. Not just to assume that you know.
This post is brought on by reading several interviews with the current showrunner of True Blood, in which he tries to allay fears about the return of Alexander Skarsgard's character, Eric Northman, in season 7, given that he appeared to die a stupid, comedy death in the final episode of season 6. Needless to say, a lot of people were quite upset (yes, I was too, though I'm not in the TB fandom, just a lurker) and the fact that Eric was stark, full-frontal naked when he 'died' didn't mollify them much at all. In fact, it's rather insulting for anyone to think that it would have (shades of the 'women only like Spike for his abs' argument).
Must say, I came out of reading these interviews with the impression that this showrunner was just irritated by this section of the audience ("Why can't they just wait till next summer to find out?"), and resented having to placate them. But, see, I think that's him not so much wanting to tell his story how he wants to tell it, but conflating the audience's needs and their wants. He thinks their need should be to be surprised by the story next year. Is Eric dead, or isn't he? However, the fans might actually need to have a reason for tuning in again.
All these, can't you wait till next summer? kinds of remarks are aimed at general viewers who maybe aren't as emotionally invested. But you want to keep the more fannish viewers watching too, don't you?
Then again, you don't want to go promising something you have no intention of delivering on, the way the Dark Horse PTBs (and Joss) did about Spike/Buffy prior to season 9 of the Buffy comic. Joss said Spike and Buffy were 'gold' (he meant the snappy dialogue exchanges, I suspect), and Scott Allie promised the Spuffy fans their interaction would be worth waiting for. Well, apart from a few nice moments in early issues, their interaction turned out to be (yet another) kick in the teeth for the Spuffy 'shippers, to add to the ones they got (repeatedly) in season 8. So obviously, Dark Horse, Joss et al would have been better off (or more honest) if they'd just told people re Spuffy and Spike's role to 'wait and see.' But of course they knew that section of fans was extremely pissed off after season 8 and wanted to persuade them to keep reading.
Hmm. Think I'm going around in circles here. I think what I'm trying to say is, don't presume you necessarily know what your audience needs, do some research. Then, if you appear to kill off a much-loved character, at least you'll be prepared for the following shitstorm.
And if you do promise fans things in your upcoming stories, make damn well sure you deliver.
Fool me once, etc, etc.
ETA: It is of course possible to f**k up all the above so much that you end up giving the audience/readership neither what they want nor what they need. I think the Buffy comics are a case in point.
ETA 2: And of course that applies to all fan groupings, not just Spuffies, Bangels and other assorted weird 'shippers.
I suspect the use of the phrase 'tune in' really dates me.
no subject
Date: 2013-08-23 02:43 pm (UTC)Just them wanting to have their cake and eat it too. There seems to be this resentment by writers if people value characters and interactions over their soapboxing.
Joss, DH and company of full of it on a lot of things. Like children who refuse to accept that there's a cost for everything. Not too long ago he was complaining about all the flak he gets for killing characters (and made a comment about WB killing Angel). He killed characters for emotional effect or because he was bored with them. Then he acts all irritated that people were emotionally affected by it.
Overgrown toddler, I swear. Can't say much about the True Blood guy since I don't watch it, but it sounds the same way.
no subject
Date: 2013-08-23 03:00 pm (UTC)I do understand their POV. It's a tricky balancing act trying to tell your story without alienating your audience/readership, but I also resent being patronised. So, yeah.
Can't say much about the True Blood guy since I don't watch it, but it sounds the same way.
There are definitely similarities. Having said which, Joss doesn't often express irritation with the fans in public (though I'm sure he feels it plenty).
no subject
Date: 2013-08-23 03:22 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-08-23 04:26 pm (UTC)Of course it should first and foremost be about what the story needs as opposed to what the viewers want, but a lot of really great stories manage to make the readers/viewers/whatever confront something about themselves too.
That said, obviously that demands that you actually have a clue what the audience both want and need. As far as I could tell, Season 8 assumed that all readers were Twilight fans who knew every single dumb superhero comic cliché. Based on that, Joss and Allie were never going to give the readers what they wanted or what they needed.
no subject
Date: 2013-08-23 04:55 pm (UTC)I do understand their POV. It's a tricky balancing act trying to tell your story without alienating your audience/readership, but I also resent being patronised.
I tend to think if you get right down to it, if you tell an honest story the fans get both what they want AND what they need. Sure there will be some who won't like it, but that's true no matter what you do. Fans'll come along or they won't, but your core audience will stick with it.
Like you, my nose kind of turns when I read the 'what you need' thing. If by what I need you mean a steady progression of why characters make a choice or why a plot point happens, I agree. If you mean I need some kind of morality lesson about liking X character or Y ship, then whatever, you know?
no subject
Date: 2013-08-23 05:53 pm (UTC)Joss Whedon seems to be under the mistaken apprehension that giving people what they need rather than what they want will somehow miraculously be popular because it is the right thing to do. It isn't, for exactly the same reasons - people want what they want, and are unlikely to notice or care that something that went against what they want is 'right' in some way.
The difference is that in politics it may be necessary to do the right thing because otherwise the economy may collapse, the country be invaded by giant wasps or Brian Blessed get elected as king. What happens with a TV show is viewers go off and watch something else. Joss really should have learnt the difference by now. I wonder if he has?
no subject
Date: 2013-08-23 05:59 pm (UTC)You say that as if it would be a bad thing. :)
no subject
Date: 2013-08-23 06:22 pm (UTC)That's what I was thinking. ;)
no subject
Date: 2013-08-23 06:28 pm (UTC)Sure, you can never please all the people all the time. That's a given. I actually think Joss made a fair stab of trying to do that in Chosen. Okay, it wasn't perfect, but whatever.
And yes, morality lessons.
As I said, it's a very tricky balancing act, and no wonder these showrunners fail quite often. I am absolutely certain, though, that putting yourself on the moral highground above your fans and preaching at them never works in your favour.
no subject
Date: 2013-08-23 06:30 pm (UTC)They turned Giles into a twelve year old boy, because 'old Giles' wasn't 'relevant' any more.
no subject
Date: 2013-08-23 06:35 pm (UTC)Oh, I understand what he means too. I think he could have expressed himself in a less condescending way, but whatever. And of course, while he still had a good story to tell, you could forgive him a touch of arrogance anyway.
That said, obviously that demands that you actually have a clue what the audience both want and need.
Joss did once upon a time. I think, with the Buffy characters, though, he's lost it.
At least, though, he doesn't tend to get a soapbox and lecture the fans much. This guy from True Blood kind of did that, and it was gobsmacking to see him acting all shocked that people were so upset about what he did to this character. He'd have to have been hiding under a rock for the last six years not to realise that's what would happen.
no subject
Date: 2013-08-23 06:40 pm (UTC)Because they know most politicians are lying scumbags anyway.
But yes, that quote of Joss's just makes you feel irritable, and that you want to tell him to stop taking himself so seriously.
no subject
Date: 2013-08-23 06:55 pm (UTC)It occurred to me recently as I was reading yet another ridiculous superhero comics plot that it seems like part of the problem with the Buffy and Angel comics is that they are being plotted by people who write superhero comics, where death is fluid and deaging is viable tactic to relaunch a character and a character unknowingly being a robot for a year or two just isn't that weird. I mean, you'd think Joss would know better, except of course he's a comics writer, too. It's like the comics sensibility overruled the TV/canon sensibility as soon as we changed media.
IDK. Does that sound way off-base? It just seems to me like the plotting in the Buffy comics is of a piece with what I'm reading in the Marvel books.
no subject
Date: 2013-08-23 07:15 pm (UTC)it was gobsmacking to see him acting all shocked that people were so upset about what he did to this character. He'd have to have been hiding under a rock for the last six years not to realise that's what would happen.
See, this is one of the reasons I'll always respect Tim Minear despite some very questionable ideas. When he kills a character he knows exactly what he's doing and doesn't apologize for it. I'm all in favour of killing characters, but make it mean something. If you don't know your audience, you don't know your story either.
no subject
Date: 2013-08-23 07:44 pm (UTC)It's okay. You didn't imply that at all.
I agree that there's truth to it. I do it myself in my own stories. I know how they should end and I don't let readers' expressed wishes change what I write. On the other hand, I do know what my audience wants, which of course is a lot easier for me than it is for Joss because I have such a limited number of readers. And I think Joss obviously did get that a lot of people found it hard to connect with season 8 and that he'd misunderstood what they might want/need from a Buffy comic book (too comic book, not enough Buffy, in short)but if season 9 is anything to go by he doesn't really seem to know how to rectify that (by which I don't mean he should have served up Spuffy on a plate, just that he should have given us a better story).
I don't know about Tim Minear as a showrunner, but oddly, what the True Blood writers did with this Eric Northman character's apparent death in the season 6 finale reminded me of what Minear said about how he'd wanted to kill off Darla in the first episode of AtS season 3 - that she's been spying on Angel through a window but slip and accidentally stake herself. However, Joss nixed the idea.
This was one of those Jossian writers stories in praise of Joss, and whether they would actually have done that even if Joss hadn't expressed an opinion I don't know, but I think it was a horrible idea (and certainly not what I, as a viewer, needed, any more than Eric's 'comedy' death would be what I needed had that in fact been the last of him.
no subject
Date: 2013-08-23 07:47 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-08-23 07:53 pm (UTC)And even on a comic level they're just really, really badly written. Allie's unwillingness or inability to reign all of it in plays a part, but even for a comic they're bad. One story or arc seems to have nothing to do with the last.
The DHP Billy mini is just...off the wall incoherent with the S9 story, for instance.
no subject
Date: 2013-08-23 11:43 pm (UTC)And if you do promise fans things in your upcoming stories, make damn well sure you deliver.
Fool me once, etc, etc.
Nods in agreement. It's all very good and well to declare that you are giving your fans anticipation and not what they think they want..but what they need.
But here's the thing? We have over a million tv shows, movies, books, and comics to choose from. If you aren't providing us with the story that we are craving? We can find it elsewhere, and bye-bye ...
An example of a tv series that gives viewers what they want, and follows their cravings - is Vampire Dairies. It's fast paced. It gives them the moments they crave, and it has an obsessed and adoring fanbase in its demographic. Another example is Scandal - which became the must see hit last year. And say what you will about Stephanie Meyer and EL James - but they gave their readers what they wanted and became multi-millionaires.
You can do what Whedon and True Blood are doing...but you have to give the audience something to grab hold of. Whedon obviously did to an extent or he wouldn't have a such a huge fandom. But Dark Horse isn't.
Also, Whedon had to release the teaser that Spike survived and lived on in Angel, after his death in Chosen, to attract more fans to the dying Angel. Also, if you piss off your fans - they won't continue to follow you. I've admittedly lost interest in True Blood (haven't seen the last three episodes) and lost interest in Whedon completely - he hasn't provided me with an entertaining story since well Angel S5. And in my opinion hasn't written anything worth being fannish over since well Conversations with Dead People. Although Dollhouse's Man on the Street was interesting and the Avengers was mildly entertaining but hardly worth squeeing over.
He's the "IT GUY" now, because of Avengers. Making the covers of mags.
And giving his relative's high-paying and lucrative jobs. But I'm so over him.
Trueblood's writer...has big problems too. Because quite a bit of the audience was only watching for Eric. Alex Skarsgaard is the movie star in the cast and the only cast member that has grabbed a cross-over audience. The other's really haven't taken off. It's like killing off Spike. You don't kill the fans favorite character - not if you don't want them to jump ship. Fans are fickle and have lots of other choices.
no subject
Date: 2013-08-24 12:29 am (UTC)Yeah. It makes me sad that some Buffy fans who were new to the medium thought these comics were representative of comics at large. Obviously there are some terrible comics, but the good ones usually have interesting, sense-making stories, and characters that are relatable. Plus they look good. I'd say the Buffy comics are barely a journeyman effort, if that.
no subject
Date: 2013-08-24 01:02 am (UTC)I like his body of work as a whole — aside from the comics and parts of Angel — though there are definitely some egregious bits of fail sprinkled throughout. His concerns about the over-powerful, exposing expectations for being paper thin, his willingness to look at the motivations of the "bad guys", liking comedy, liking ensemble — these all contribute to making work that will resonate with me. I'm not expecting perfection, just a contribution to pulling back the curtain on what I see as the failings of U.S./American society, preferably in a way that won't make me give up all hope. Sigh.
All that is not to say that I enjoy authorial arrogance and defensiveness. And I really don't like it when the "creators" treat the audience in a paternalistic way, which is exactly what I DON'T need from art, thank you very much. Look, if you want to tell a particular story, you should also be willing to own up to what you told. If you can't, then maybe you just need to admit that you didn't think that hard. Learn from the experience. Do better next time.
no subject
Date: 2013-08-24 03:13 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-08-24 08:17 am (UTC)But that would be a good thing. He would be the first King in 528 years who I would be willing to accept.
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Date: 2013-08-24 10:40 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-08-24 10:42 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-08-24 10:55 am (UTC)