shapinglight: (Default)
[personal profile] shapinglight
I see the mysterious disappearing LJ comments phenomenon is still going on. Wonder what that's all about?

Anyway, after watching the second episode of True Blood last week and still finding the Bill/Sookie relationship about the least interesting thing in the show....

Very slight spoilers within for True Blood and Flash Forward ep 4



....I read some vague spoilers to do with season 3, in which the guy who developed the series (can't remember his name) said that, though other characters would be brought to the fore in the new season, the Bill/Sookie romance would still be the focal centre.

I suppose the show and the books it's based on were built around this romance (very Twilight, though I suppose the Sookie Stackhouse books came first?) so he didn't have much choice. I must say, though, I do think it's a mistake, because it hamstrings the story and prevents it going in the direction of what works. I mean, to this day, I am grateful that BtVS was about Buffy and how she grew up and found her place in the world, not about the great, eternal romance of Buffy and Angel. I liked B/A fine in season 2, but if the show had become all about B/A, I doubt I would have kept on watching - or rather, I might have done, but would have found myself watching for the secondary characters, not the leads, which is how I'm pretty sure I'm going to end up watching True Blood.

In fact, the more I think about it, the more I realise I'm not really a 'shipper. Which is not to say that I don't like romance at all, or that I don't like the characters I like to have romantic relationships. No, it's more that I tend to glom on to particular characters to a greater or lesser extent and go through their journey with them, seeing how they deal with what's thrown at them. In general, this is why I don't feel the need to identify with characters, or even necessarily like them, to find them interesting and want to watch them.

So yes, I wanted Spike/Buffy to work when I was watching the show in real time, but more because Spike wanted Buffy and because I loved him so much, I wanted him to have what he wanted. That didn't happen, or only sort of, but because Spike was still around, I was still happy enough to carry on watching. His personal arc was more important to me than his romantic relationships, which is probably one reason why I found his story so exasperating at times in AtS season 5, because he seemed to be going backwards.

I've previously identified myself as a Spike/Angel 'shipper too, but I'm not really one. I can happily 'ship Spike with lots of characters. I do like him to have romantic/sexual relationships. I just don't need them to be with one particular character.

As for other shows I've loved, like BSG, I've never really 'shipped anyone. I love Starbuck almost as much as I love Spike, but it's her character journey that interests me, not her romances as such. Which is not to say that I don't appreciate romantic (and otherwise) relationships are an important part of character development. Clearly they are. Without Buffy, Spike would still be a two-dimensional villain etc etc. But I'm not a 'shipper.

At least, I don't think so, but maybe I just don't understand the term properly. To me, it means being invested in a particular relationship and that relationship becoming the touchstone of the show, so that if that relationship bombs, it ruins the show for the 'shipper in question. Do other people interpret it differently?

In other telly-related news, I am watching season 4 of The Wire, and it's just as good and just as upsetting as I thought it would be. Bravura scene from Michael K Williams as Omar in the episode I watched today (not to mention some full-frontal nudity), and a horrific shock ending.

Finally, was disgusted to find at the end of last night's ep of Flash Forward that I was right. The characters with British accents are evil. How bloody predictable. Have to say, it's beginning to seriously annoy me. After all, we haven't done anything particularly horrid to Americans since the 1780s. How come we always get picked on?

Date: 2009-10-20 04:20 pm (UTC)
liliaeth: (Default)
From: [personal profile] liliaeth
I think you should see it as a compliment, see, Americans see British accents as sexy, sexy leads to evil, hence Brits are evil...

Or something like that ;-)

Date: 2009-10-20 04:31 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] willowgreen.livejournal.com
Exactly. British villains are suave, sophisticated villains, rather than disgusting, brutish ones. Also, because anti-British prejudice in the U.S. is really pretty minimal, the people making the shows don't get accused of perpetuating negative stereotypes when they make their villains Brits.

Plus, suave, sexy British villains are just so darn much fun! Give me a sexy British villain over a degenerate German or a foppish Frenchman any day. :-)

Date: 2009-10-20 04:31 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] swsa.livejournal.com
The Stackhouse books aren't really about Sookie and Bill. There are books where he's almost entirely absent. And she does hook up with other characters. They really aren't at all Twilight-esque in that sense. The series, so far, is way more Bill/Sookie 4-eva than the books. Not sure if that will continue, or if it's just typical showrunner talk, so as not to annoy the existing shippers or give away S3 plot details.

Date: 2009-10-20 05:11 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shadowkat67.livejournal.com
Have only seen the pilot of FlashForward, so can't comment on it.

But I'm not a 'shipper.

At least, I don't think so, but maybe I just don't understand the term properly. To me, it means being invested in a particular relationship and that relationship becoming the touchstone of the show, so that if that relationship bombs, it ruins the show for the 'shipper in question. Do other people interpret it differently?


Yes, that is how I define it as well and the reason why I don't consider myself really a shipper. I was more interested in the individual character's emotional/personal arcs. Romance only works for me to the extent that it evolves the character. If we are just going around in the same circle over and over and over (eg. B/A, Sookie/Bill or 85% of the buddy cop procedurals on tv) then I get bored and flip channels.

Regarding True Blood? Yes, it pre-dates Twilight. The books are actually better written than Twilight (although not by much)
and more into the politics of the vampire world. In the books, the author rapidly gets bored of B/S and moves onto S/Eric and S/Werewolf, and S/Tigershifter, then back to S/Eric again.
Actually the books are - who can we put Sookie with this time?

Alan Ball is only on the third book. S/B don't break up until about the third or fourth book. S's romantic life is the focal point of the books. And outside of S/E - it is pretty dull.

I've heard season 2, True Blood is better than Season 1. Found Season 1 to be fairly dull - except for the Tara, Sam, and Rafelle arcs.



Date: 2009-10-20 05:48 pm (UTC)
next_to_normal: (Default)
From: [personal profile] next_to_normal
I'm pretty much right where you are in regards to shipping. It kind of baffles me, actually, how some people will start watching a TV show and immediately start mentally pairing people up. I watch shows for the characters and their journeys, and while the romantic relationships can be interesting, they're rarely the sole focus of my attention.

Spike/Buffy is kind of an anomaly for me. I hardly ever get invested in a particular pairing, and even in this case, I only really shipped them after the show was over (i.e. reading and writing fanfic), so the fact that it didn't work out didn't ruin the show for me at all. Even if they'd never gotten together at all, I'd still love the show and love them as individual characters.

Date: 2009-10-20 05:56 pm (UTC)
elisi: Living in interesting times is not worth it (Spangel together (hands) by amavel_bel)
From: [personal profile] elisi
The shipping thing is an odd thing for me, because although I most definitely ship people, it's not romance I like, and I don't want the relationship to be the focus of the show. I like 'ships that are awkward, where the people in question have a *connection* that needn't have anything to do with love as such.

(That's all I can manage for now, it's been a LONG day.)

Date: 2009-10-20 06:35 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wackinessensues.livejournal.com
Yeah, after reading the first 5 Sookie books I must say...I am no longer a Bill/Sookie shipper. Not to spoil you, but there are other relationships that overshadow that one SO MUCH in the books. My hope is that the next two seasons will follow the archs in the books, because OMG, face-meltingly hot!

Date: 2009-10-20 06:47 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] whichclothes.livejournal.com
Hey, don't forget the War of 1812! ;-)

I'm with you on shipping, in that I like to see a relationship between characters (usually between Spike and someone) but I don't really care very much who. I just wrote a draft of my noel_of_spike fic that involves Spike/Riley--definitely a first for me (unless you count the fic where crazy/evil!Riley tortured and raped Spike *g*). In any case, the characters themselves and their journeys are more important to me than the specific identity of their love interest (if they have a love interest, even).

Sookie dumps Bills by the 3rd or 4th book, I think. He remains a character, but much more peripherally. I didn't miss the romance between them at all. I've said it before--Eric's way more fun.

Date: 2009-10-20 07:27 pm (UTC)
gillo: (connection)
From: [personal profile] gillo
Meanwhile Joe Fiennes, of impeccable aristocratic descent, has to have an American accent to show he's a normal guy.

I ship Spuffy insofar as it's the relationship within the show I most enjoy and because it brings out so much in Spike that is interesting. Other ships I prefer to have at least some basis in canon - so Spike/Tara makes no sense to me, or Angel/Willow for that matter. The world of the show and in particular the complexity of the characters, especially Spike is the main draw, though.

Date: 2009-10-20 08:00 pm (UTC)
ext_15392: (Eric by tell_a_tale_4_u)
From: [identity profile] flake-sake.livejournal.com
I agree, I'm not really much of a shipper either though I do like the dynamic between Buffy and Spike or Angel and Spike a bit more than Spike with others.

I think others already wrote it, but be not worried about True Blood. Bill is decidedly not forever, something I really liked about the books(though they often focus on romance too much for my liking).
The show changes stuff from the books, but the way they're setting things up in S2, they seem to want to speed up. I really hope they make it to season 4, it's easily my favorite book.
Edited Date: 2009-10-20 08:01 pm (UTC)

Date: 2009-10-21 12:43 am (UTC)
lokifan: black Converse against a black background (Default)
From: [personal profile] lokifan
Mmm, I'm not a big shipper either. Which is probably part of why my original fic has so little romance in it.

Date: 2009-10-21 02:34 am (UTC)
rahirah: (Default)
From: [personal profile] rahirah
:headscratch: But some people ship couples that never even meet in canon, so I don't think that the success of the relationship can be it.

I've never shipped any characters other than Buffy and Spike. I'm disappointed that the two of them never really got together. But it didn't ruin the whole show for me.

Date: 2009-10-21 01:02 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hello-spikey.livejournal.com
heh. I was going to comment on how the books aren't all shippy, but then 99 other people already did. :D

The thing I like about the Sookie books: a lot of gritty realism. People break up and Sookie is allowed to be petulant about it. She has to stop in the middle of a murder investigation to mow her lawn, or do the laundry, or make it in to her shift at work.

The thing that's unbelievable is that she keeps coming across these drop-dead hot guys who are well-to-do AND single. What are the odds, seriously? And not one of them a dead-beat.

Forget about the vampires, that's the supernatural element in the books!

Also, as a northern, city-dwelling gal, I'm not too found of her frequent asides about snobby city-dwellers and rude northerners. But I assume that's the prejudices of the character... even if she reads minds and the author has her prejudices backed up 100% of the time... grr.

These books are mind-candy. I've read the first seven and am tempted to go out and find the eighth. I do think Anna Paquin captures the character very well.

Date: 2009-10-21 01:02 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] candleanfeather.livejournal.com
Like you I'm not a shipper in the sense you define. I found great interest in all the romantic relationships not because of the romance itself but because of their very different dynamics, of their layers, of what they revealed about the characters, of how they were motors in the characters'journey.

Date: 2009-10-21 02:28 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] swsa.livejournal.com
I don't think there really are. If anything, it's the Sookie/Eric shippers who are rabid. I'm sure S3 will have a lot of Sookie/Eric, and if they follow book 3 at all, even more of Sookie and another male character who hasn't been introduced yet. The only reasons I can see Bill/Sookie being a bigger issue in the series than in the books is that 1) Anna Paquin and Stephen Moyer are together in real life, so I can imagine that has an impact on the storylines that isn't even intended or possibly even noticed and 2) it feels like the show often turns to Bill/Sookie as being a place of stability in all the craziness of the rest of the show. But really, who knows what will happen? I do feel confident though that you're not going to have to worry about them being Bella and Edward. There's just way too much story in the books about Sookie's other relationships for it ALL to be ignored.

Date: 2009-10-21 02:44 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hello-spikey.livejournal.com
And no one commented on the point of your post, did they? Shippiness. Shipping does kinda bug me. I'm with you there. Although I suppose I'm guilty of anti-shipping because Bangel just makes me shudder. For me it's like remembering my own first teen romance and how painfully blind I was to its essential shallowness.

I don't write Spuffy or Spangel because I think Spike and Buffy (or Spike and Angel) should OMG be together forevah! - I write it because the relationships are interesting. (Read; Provide fodder for abusing Spike.)

I think 'shipping itself is in a way a form of blindness, like that teen romance, because ultimately the truth is, it's not the one true pairing that creates a happy relationship, it's being a balanced person, receptive to your partner and all that mumbo-jumbo. So, like you said, it's about the individual character arc, not the couple. A lot of shipping seems co-dependant to me, like this one person will fix the other person's life? EEK. Look at how some fanfics start with all sorts of contortions to make the pairing the end-all be all "Xander never met Anya and Spike isn't in love with Buffy and Riley never left" etc. If ya gotta force it, you're hiding.

Date: 2009-10-21 02:47 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shadowkat67.livejournal.com
It's pretty dull. Not sure why I'm bothering really.

That was my impression from the pilot. No one appealed to me characterwise. Wasn't sure why. I have it DVR'd, but just haven't gotten around to seeing the episodes saved on the DVr. May delete them. Too many tv shows, no time, and 80% of them just don't hold my interest for some reason.

how Bill/Sookie isn't nearly such a big thing in the books. Maybe the show will change course to reflect that at some point? I hope so

If memory serves...and it has been a while, the author more or less breaks them up permanently in the third or fourth novel. It has to do with the vampire queen, who (in the books) was also Bill's sire. But isn't in the tv series, as far as I can tell. Not sure they'll do the same here or not. It was a permanent break up in the books and once it happened, we rarely saw Bill after that.

Oh dear, really? That sounds more like a fanfiction job to me.

Exactly. Half these novels, not just Harris, L.K. Hamilton falls into the same trap, really are like fanfiction...except not as well written and cost money.


And my boss just snuck up behind me to ask what the significance of a dollar nailed to a sign behind my cubicule was. (I've no idea). Jumped half an inch. UGH! I want an office with a door.

Date: 2009-10-21 03:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] whichclothes.livejournal.com
Hey, don't forget the War of 1812! ;-)

:scratches head: Never heard of it. Weren't we a bit busy fighting Napoleon then?


You were. But you were also blocking US trade with France and supporting Native Americans who were trying to avoid US conquest. We invaded Canada. It was an even more stupid war than most. At the end, we both said, "Oh, nevermind," and that was sort of the end of it.

Yep. Definitely. And Spike's about the only character I'm interested in pairing with multiple partners (either singly, or all at once :)). I just like imagining how he would relate to them.
Me, too. Well, okay, I admit it. I just plain old like Spike, pretty much no matter what. :-)

Date: 2009-10-21 04:23 pm (UTC)
elisi: Living in interesting times is not worth it (Lost without you by indiexicons)
From: [personal profile] elisi
So where'd you put Doctor/Master?

Date: 2009-10-21 04:54 pm (UTC)
ext_15392: (Default)
From: [identity profile] flake-sake.livejournal.com
:) I've never met a Sookie/Bill shipper so far, but maybe that's because Spike fans lean naturally to the blond less broody vampire?

Also the think that happens in the books between Sookie and Bill sets the past realtionship into a whole new light. I even feel a little sorry for Sookie/Bill shippers because it's just messed up.

And oh yes! Spike/Giles is one of my favorite ships too. I guess can't say that I have much of a need to settle for one.

Date: 2009-10-21 05:18 pm (UTC)
elisi: by frimfram (Spuffy - destroyer of worlds! by frimfra)
From: [personal profile] elisi
Ah, but see that's how Spike & Buffy start out (and one reason I like them so much). Also there's a lot of that in Spike/Angel...

Date: 2009-10-21 05:21 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] whichclothes.livejournal.com
Hee! Great icon!

Date: 2009-10-21 05:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shadowkat67.livejournal.com
Sorry about your boss. Was he trying to imply that time is money or something?

No. There was literally a dollar bill stuck to a poster about covering your cough, just outside my cubicule. I seriously doubt he knew what I was doing.

Everyone else too is saying that as time goes on Bill pretty much disappears. I wonder how the show will work it? I can't believe they'll just ditch the character.

The show isn't following the books that closely. Tara is white in the books and has a tiny, tiny role, barely appears. Sam also disappears at different points, we rarely see him. Jason becomes a werepanther in the first or second book (which he doesn't do in the series).
Rafelle is also a tiny tiny part in the books. And there's a character played by Michelle Forbes in the series that doesn't exist in the books. The series is actually a lot more interesting than the books are and less focused on Sookie and her romances. The books are romance novels with a touch of mystery, and the series appears to be the opposite. It's also gorier than the books.

I don't think they'll ditch Bill - Stephen Meyer has a following and his character is actually more interesting than in the books.


Date: 2009-10-22 06:28 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jamalov29.livejournal.com
I meant to comment sooner but RL got in the way.
I pretty much stand where Barb stands in the sense that I never shipped any characters other than Buffy and Spike and when I enjoy shows I don't feel the need to ship anyone . I can be interested in romances but I don't really mind if there isn't ( like in Being Human and I do hope it will remain like this).
I would say I'm a Spike/Buffy lover more than a shipper.
I agree that that their relationship had become the touchstone of the show for me ..Their story enhanced tenfold the pleasure of the series and I wouldn't have felt the need to go into the spuffy fandom otherwise but it didn't ruin the show- even if I often wished to get much,much more between them.

Date: 2009-10-23 04:59 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shadowkat67.livejournal.com
Who is Rafaelle? I don't think I've met him yet, unless he's the Latino character who slapped around the frat boy type in the bar for inappropriate touching of Sookie. Was that him?

Oh you have. I just may have gotten his name wrong. He's the hot gay black chef/drug dealer who is related to Tara. In the books, he was just a black and gay chef who gets killed off and we get very little of. In the tv series, he's a major character. The tv series really expanded on the supporting roles of Tara, Rafe, and Sam. The only thing that stays true to the books is the S/B and Eric and Pam storyline. Everything else doesn't. And ironically, the only parts I liked about the tv series are the parts that are completely different from the books.

PS: You apparently shipped *hard* the same characters I did. Starbuck and Spike. Without caring too much about their romantic entanglements except to the extent that it furthered their arc. I was thinking it over last night, and I think the reason I adored Starbuck (kara thrace) and Spike so much is they are in some respects flips of the traditional gender trope. Spike is a flip on the femme fatale with a heart of gold, and Kara is a flip on the devilish rogue fighter pilot/womanizer.

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