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- Giving Back, Fandom-Style
Giving Back, Fandom-Style
- By Merlin Missy
- Published 10/4/2007
- Dr. Merlin's Soapbox
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Merlin Missy
Merlin Missy has been active in online fandom since 1994. She likes fanfics with plots and happy endings.
View all articles by Merlin MissyWe've all heard the stereotypes and the tired cliches. If you're a fan and other people know about it, someone had told you to "Get a life," per William Shatner. The person probably even thought it was funny, because as my dad would say, there's always someone who'd laugh at a rubber crutch, too. The truth is, we do have lives. We have jobs and classes and families and pets as well as our fandom-related hobbies. What's more, because fandom acts as a large, loosely-knit community, we can spread information and gather help with just a quick post or email, and when that particular power is turned towards helping others, we bring out something else the get-a-lifers don't see: fandom's unlimited capacity for giving.
It's a natural fit, logically-speaking. Fandom is an entirely volunteer-driven concept. Fanfiction, fanart, fanvids, websites, metatextual discussions and costuming (just to name a few pastimes) are labors of love, performed for the joy of the thing and the people who celebrate them with us. True, people make the jump from fan to professional; there's not a fanfic writer out there who wouldn't love to be Peter David or Naomi Novik, if just for a day. For every book published of professional critiques on Joss Whedon's work, there are at least two hundred fans sitting back from their keyboards shouting, "You missed the crustacean imagery, you moron!" and posting their own essays simply because they want to say something.
Fans give their time to each other. Giving to everyone else just goes along with the rest.
The fannish whip-round is a well-known phenomenon in any fan community. Life happens to people, and unfortunately for some, it happens pretty hard and all at once. Lose your job, get sick, and you too will be staring at a pile of bills you will be very lucky to pay before the power company shuts off your lights. When that happens to fans or their friends, the fannish whip-round happens.
Seanan McGuire, a well-known filk singer, recently conducted a fannish whip-round for a friend going through a tough time. McGuire offered all proceeds from sales of her album to her friend:
"[S]he starts her new job in two weeks, but until then, there's no money to do fun things like 'feed the resident small child' and 'keep the electricity running'. If we can manage to sell forty copies of the album, at $15 a pop, we'll raise six hundred dollars, and get them through this stupid speed bump." For those who didn't want to buy albums, there was also a place for direct donations. The sale was planned to run for a week; within twenty-four hours, McGuire and friends had raised that and more. By the end of the week, they'd brought in almost $1,500.
Fannish whip-rounds can have fallout, of course. In late 2004, Harry Potter BNF Cassandra Claire had her apartment broken into and her laptop stolen, some of her friends arranged a whip-round to replace it, as well as the stolen laptops of her roommates. Some fans protested the whip-round as capitalizing on Claire's popularity, but plenty of fans disagreed and together they raised over $2,000. Unfortunately, when the same friends were approached to publicize another fundraising drive for a cancer patient named Christina Hall, a misunderstanding led them to decline, and flamewars began regarding how it was "okay" to ask for money for a BNF's laptop but not for someone with cancer. The dust eventually settled, and the repercussions included an outpouring of generosity for Hall and her family from fans, but resentment over the incident still pops up in fannish circles such as Fandom Wank.
Among the items stolen in the original break-in at Claire's apartment included toys intended for donation to the children's ward at a local hospital where her roommate worked. After the laptops were replaced, the rest of the donated money was used to buy toys for the hospital.
A.J. Nordall, co-founder of the Stuffy Guard Project, said, "Back in 2000, I was part of a group of fans online trying to get a fan club created for [SG1 cast member] Teryl Rothery. We'd heard about the Wolf Events convention that November that would celebrate Teryl's birthday by collecting teddy bears to be donated to a local children's hospital. The five of us wanting to start up the fan club decided we would collect teddy bears to send to the event. Since I was one of the club members attending the first Gatecon convention that September in Vancouver, BC, I was designated one of the spokespeople for the group. We managed to collect approximately 90 bears that were sent along to the Wolf Events convention. While at the convention, we were brought to the attention of Teryl herself. The fan club never got off the ground, but the experience in collecting those teddy bears, knowing they were going to ill children, left a definite impression on me."
Since its inception, the Stuffy Guard Project has been collecting stuffed animals and monetary donations for disbursements to a number of children's charities, including Make-A-Wish (the favorite charity of popular SG1 fannish get-together Gatecon), Canuck Place, and the Canadian Cystic Fibrosis Foundation (which also benefits from Sekh's Party another SG1 fan-run group), as well as the hospital. According to Nordall, "By our sixth year, 2006, we had collected over ten thousand stuffies and nearly $4000 worldwide, all donated to children in hospitals and shelters."
Shelters are popular recipients for fannish charity funds. Over Labor Day weekend, a Supernatural fan-run group called Fandom Rocks raised over $1,000 for the Lawrence Community Shelter, a homeless shelter in Lawrence, Kansas. Lawrence is the hometown of the Winchester brothers, so naming a charity in that city seemed fitting. Fandom Rocks raised another $1,000 for SOS Children's Villages, a non-governmental organization that operates in over one hundred countries providing assistance and resources to children and families in poverty and in the wake of humanitarian and natural disasters.
Just last weekend, JemCon was held in Chicago. Among the convention's activities was a charity auction held Saturday evening. JemCon 2007 head of programming Tara O'Shea said, "We chose The Harbour, Inc. as our designated charity for JemCon 2007 because as an organisation that provides crisis care and shelter for runaway and troubled adolescent girls in the Chicago-land area. It seemed the closest equivalent to the Starlight Foundation and Haven House in the fiction Jem television series, and embodied the ideals set forth by the series, and as such, would really resonate with the attendees and the fandom at large. Also, it had the added bonus of the Harbour representative we spoke with having been a huge Jem fan in her youth! We were so incredibly thrilled to be able to donate over $1105 to the organisation, and really make a difference for young women in need."
Wonder Woman Day is an annual event held by the Wonder Woman Museum where fans and pros meet to celebrate their favorite superhero role model and, in her honor, benefit three domestic violence shelters and a women's crisis hotline in Portland, Oregon. This year's Wonder Woman Day will be held in Portland and in Flemington, New Jersey on October 28, 2008.
(Continued in Part 2)
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