aimeeandbeatles
watermelon
- Joined
- Apr 5, 2007
- Messages
- 20,112
I just skimmed over most of it tbh.
One person's definition of "implied" can be another's "explicit." Some people don't like any sex in their fanfic, just adventure. And then there's the flip side where the reader is left wondering if there's a plot in there someplace... I skip over those. I prefer a story to have a plot of some kind, regardless of what else may be there.You were warned. I hope it was well written and worth reading.![]()
One person's definition of "implied" can be another's "explicit." Some people don't like any sex in their fanfic, just adventure. And then there's the flip side where the reader is left wondering if there's a plot in there someplace... I skip over those. I prefer a story to have a plot of some kind, regardless of what else may be there.
One person's definition of "implied" can be another's "explicit." Some people don't like any sex in their fanfic, just adventure. And then there's the flip side where the reader is left wondering if there's a plot in there someplace... I skip over those. I prefer a story to have a plot of some kind, regardless of what else may be there.
Sex scenes are no substitute for good story telling. Authors put them in or leave them out based on their preferences. For readers the choice is different; some will enjoy them (well written or not) and others skip over them or not read the story at all. The happy place is when what the author writes is enjoyed by a reader.I read an fanfic where the author spent like three or four chapters making some characters have sex on a table. It went on so long I wondered if the author even had an idea for the rest of the plot. Apparently not because it was abandoned.
That was one of the few fanfics I deleted from my Calibre library. Out of disappointment mostly, because what plot they had was actually interesting. It was a waste.
Well, they're kinda essential to at least mention if you want to include the couple (assuming a heterosexual couple) having children. Modern audiences might wonder where and how Fred and Wilma Flintstone conceived Pebbles if they always slept in twin beds (yeah, I know the married couples in twin beds was a thing in older TV shows).Sex scenes are no substitute for good story telling. Authors put them in or leave them out based on their preferences. For readers the choice is different; some will enjoy them (well written or not) and others skip over them or not read the story at all. The happy place is when when what the author writes is enjoyed by a reader.
It turns out I do not like vanilla pudding.
You, sir, are also a barbarian!You, sir, are a philistine!
Technically, none of you three speak Greek, so the ambiguity in your post is resolved nicely.You, sir, are also a barbarian!
α) I've never said ‘you aren't Greek!’"You, sir, aren't Greek!" sounds to me as a compliment. Get with the program, Takh.
One person's definition of "implied" can be another's "explicit." Some people don't like any sex in their fanfic, just adventure. And then there's the flip side where the reader is left wondering if there's a plot in there someplace... I skip over those. I prefer a story to have a plot of some kind, regardless of what else may be there.
For instance, I've become hooked on Harry Potter fanfic, specifically Marauders stories (I tend to find Harry and the other kids boring). Some of them are Wolfstar-centric (Remus Lupin/Sirius Black), while others follow J.K. Rowling's canon and have both characters preferring women. As long as the stories are well-written and nobody is out of character, either way works for me.
I saw some of Marco Polo when I still had Netflix. It was... different. It was certainly not like the miniseries back in May 1982, when there was a glorious 4-night epic on TV, and my cat was mesmerized by all the horses galloping over the steppes in the battle scenes. Picture a small Siamese cat either watching intently from the back of the couch, or standing on her hind legs in front of the TV, paws on the cabinet, staring at the TV screen, ears twitching madly (a sign of extreme interest) as the horses thundered all over the place.Actually I'm pretty tired watching recent series either HBO or Netflix where most of the series start with a very good and decent or even powerful beginning but in the middle it just turns out as erotic "sex and the city" with lots of affair, raw betrayal and lots of crankiness. Last Kingdom is a very good example of that, I just stop watching the series where the protagonist post as an ideal man where every female would drop their jaw to the concrete whenever interacting with him then everyone want to have some part of him, this kind of theme after-a-while becoming super repetitive and nauseating. So when I see Marcopolo on netflix, I really want to watch it because I like the Mongolian theme, but I just gave up because I know Marcopolo would be end up as a fudge boy just like the protagonist on Last Kingdom. Ugh.
But just yesterday I watch on Netflix "the ballad of buster scruggs", it's really a classy movie, and I like how sex-scenes implied in a very classy manner and also some of the violence implied artistically (don't get me wrong there is still a violent scene, but some that are implied have its own powerful effect).
I can't think of any fiction I've read or seen where sex scenes added anything of value. They seem added just to keep the attention of the inattentive, or because they're kind of expected by now.Actually I'm pretty tired watching recent series either HBO or Netflix where most of the series start with a very good and decent or even powerful beginning but in the middle it just turns out as erotic "sex and the city" with lots of affair, raw betrayal and lots of crankiness. Last Kingdom is a very good example of that, I just stop watching the series where the protagonist post as an ideal man where every female would drop their jaw to the concrete whenever interacting with him then everyone want to have some part of him, this kind of theme after-a-while becoming super repetitive and nauseating. So when I see Marcopolo on netflix, I really want to watch it because I like the Mongolian theme, but I just gave up because I know Marcopolo would be end up as a fudge boy just like the protagonist on Last Kingdom. Ugh.
But just yesterday I watch on Netflix "the ballad of buster scruggs", it's really a classy movie, and I like how sex-scenes implied in a very classy manner and also some of the violence implied artistically (don't get me wrong there is still a violent scene, but some that are implied have its own powerful effect).
I can't think of any fiction I've read or seen where sex scenes added anything of value. They seem added just to keep the attention of the inattentive, or because they're kind of expected by now.
In the tv shows I've watched lately, there were scenes in Lovecraft Country, New Amsterdam, The Expanse and The Boys that I thought worked pretty well. I'm trying to think of one that was a clunker.I can't think of any fiction I've read or seen where sex scenes added anything of value. They seem added just to keep the attention of the inattentive, or because they're kind of expected by now.