It's still essentially fan fiction. I mean my whole point started by saying that the current TV series is essentially fan fiction, and that's 100% official too. It's fiction written by fans. It may be of a higher quality than the worst of it, but it has all the same hallmarks.
Wow. I'll be sure to pop over to the TrekLit forum at TrekBBS and tell some of these authors that even though they've been successful professionals for over 20 years, they're only writing "fanfic" and should really just be posting in the fanfiction forum there and we should stop paying for their books. I'm sure they'd totally agree with you and throw away their computers and go become plumbers or waiters or whatever it is they did for a living before they became full-time paid writers.
You do realize that not all TV/movie tie-in writers are actually fans of the franchise they write for, right? Some of them are just writers who work from a script and know very little about the series they're contracted for. Diane Carey was certainly no fan of any Star Trek series other than the Original Series, and she inserted her own political opinions and hobbies into the stories at every opportunity - whatever she liked to do (sailing), Kirk liked to do. Kirk also mysteriously acquired Diane Carey's political opinions. And she hated Voyager, and made it extremely obvious with the snarky, obnoxious way she wrote the Voyager novels assigned to her. She wove her own opinions into the characters' dialogue and inner thoughts, and it was
so obviously disrespectful that she ended up fired. I actually think much less of her books than I think of the mess that some of the earliest Bantam novels were (some of which really did start out as fanfiction that was accepted for professional publication).
And before you ask why she would write for a series she didn't like, the answer is obvious: Most writers aren't in the position to turn down an assignment that will pay the rent, buy the groceries, pay the kid's tuition, etc., and they may be under contract for "X" number of books per year, or however long the contract is for. So she wrote the books she was contracted to write, but in her warped thinking, just because she had to write them, it didn't mean they had to be
good ones. And since the publishing industry is so time-sensitive, they didn't have time to scrap her book and get someone else to write a Voyager novel for that slot.
Mind you, there are a couple of them whose books I absolutely will not buy, but that's because the authors themselves are jerks, not because they write bad books. I don't reward jerks by helping to put food on their table, which is why Christopher L. Bennett and David Mack have been banned from my bookshelves. And since Greg Cox has always been pleasant and friendly with the fans (even when disagreeing about something), he's earned a permanent spot on my bookshelves (of course I came to enjoy his writing many years before discovering that he posts on the same Star Trek forum I do).
Yes, I understand why it exists and what function it serves and why it appeals to some people. I'm happy for them to enjoy it. I however, am not interested in it and what I know of it doesn't appeal to me.
Groovy. You don't like it personally, and that's fine. Not everyone does. But at this point you're just denigrating a subgenre of writing for the sake of saying "I don't like it, therefore it's a bad form of writing, and anyone who writes tie-in novels is also just writing fanfiction" - even though I've already explained the difference between professional writers and amateur writers numerous times in this thread.
If you need a more immediate example: Kyriakos and Plotinus are professional writers. They get paid for their work. Plotinus happens to be a Doctor Who fan. If he were ever to write a Doctor Who tie-in novel and it was accepted for professional publication (ie. he got paid for it), it would be a professional work of fiction, not a fanfiction novel.
I, on the other hand, do write fanfiction. I've never been paid for any Star Trek story I wrote, any Doctor Who story I wrote, or any other series/franchise for which I've written stories, songs, poems, etc. I don't expect to be paid, either - for me it's a hobby. For the professional tie-in writers, it's their job, their livelihood, their
career. I can walk away from my stories any time (and have, for the ones that turned into an unsalvageable mess). They can't, because they're under contract and $$$$$$ is involved, not to mention their professional reputations.
Newsflash: I know that (insert rolly eye emote). Does every discussion have to get so antagonistic so quickly? You even just said you don't care for them in the same story, so why such a strong reaction? It's an accepted trope of fanfiction that writers will often have two or more sets of recurring characters/groups teaming up is it not? That fanfiction writers like to play around with established lore in that way? Well that's why I said the TV show is like fanfiction.
You appear to think that just because the Daleks appeared in one story, they should never appear again. The first Dalek story back in 1963 simultaneously scared and amused the audience, and they became very popular - too popular at times, since one of the stories that was commissioned turned out to be 12 episodes long ("The Dalek Masterplan"). It must have been grating on the audience to go through 3 months of listening to Dalek voices, but OTOH, it was an interesting exercise in other ways. This is the story that had the first companion deaths, which is something nobody was expecting.
The only story in which both Daleks and Cybermen both appear that I liked was The Five Doctors. They pretty much both had to be there, since it was the 20th anniversary special. But it wasn't overdone; there were other monsters, villains, and several old companions were brought back, as well as three of the previous four Doctors.
The overdone stuff is in the nuWho stories, so put the blame on the self-indulgent twits running (ruining, in my opinion) the show during the last several years. I consider most of the Matt Smith and Peter Capaldi eras to be unwatchable, due to the unnecessarily convoluted plots that were so dumbed down that even a child should be able to spot the plot holes. And then there was Clara, the Companion Who Will Not Die. Holy crap, they killed her off multiple times, yet always wrote her back in. Now she's between sort-of death and permanent death, off in her own TARDIS, with her own immortal companion. That's what killed my enjoyment of the show - keeping an awful character around just because the producer/showrunner had a thing for the actress and insisted that Clara was really the main character and the Doctor was just her sidekick.
Well, thank goodness they're all gone now (please let them all be gone). I'm willing to give the new Doctor a chance, but they're going to have to work very hard to win me back as a viewer.
So yeah, I'll concede that there was a
lot of shameless pandering to Clara fans in the Capaldi era (I've no objection to Capaldi himself as an actor; he just got stuck with abominable writing and an abominable companion).
But it's a mistake to assume that all franchises, shows, movies, comics, games, etc. are like this, or to assume that anything that references a previous work is "just fanfiction." The musical "West Side Story" is a modern adaptation of "Romeo and Juliet"; it's a powerfully-written musical, very raw in places, and has some mature themes. I've never seen anyone dismiss it as "Oh, that's just Shakespeare fanfiction."
This is precisely the sort of thing I don't really care about, which probably explains why fanfiction doesn't appeal to me. Fanfiction is all about this sort of self-referential stuff and is the kind of thing certain types of fan care about a lot (the ones who write fanfiction). I mean... obviously fanfiction has a place and appeals to people and that's fine, but it's not for me.
I guess I'm not picking up on precisely what you mean by "self-referential". Do you mean that everything on TV and fiction should be anthology style and absolutely no reference to anything that happened previously? If so, you must never watch any TV series, since they have to refer to what happened before, even if they're only addressing another character by name or referring to the boss they work for, the city (or other setting) they live in, etc. There are some exceptions, of course.
The Twilight Zone's only bit of continuity from episode to episode was Rod Serling's voiceovers at the beginning and end.
That's kind of exactly the Buffy thing. Constant wisecracking and pop-culture references from absolutely all the characters all the time.
I'll take your word about Buffy. I never watched it. For one thing, how seriously am I supposed to take a show when the main character's name is "Buffy"? That's a name for a child, not a grown woman (and yeah, I get that Buffy was supposedly in high school, but the actress sure wasn't any teenager; she was previously on the soap opera "All My Children").
I don't remember the 21st century nuWho companions constantly wise-cracking and using pop culture references, at least not up until I stopped watching. My objection is merely that they were 21st-century women who displayed some really selfish attitudes at times. Rose didn't give a damn if she caused a temporal rift - she wanted to change history to save her father. Clara pretty much demanded that the Doctor bend to
her wishes, demands, and schedule. They weren't like the Classic Companions, who got into the TARDIS and most of them never saw their homes again, or if they did, it wasn't always in the same century they left. Many ended up on alien planets, a few of them got married, and several of them died. They didn't tell the Doctor, "pick me up after work for that trip to the planet _____ you promised me, and don't you dare be late".