ext_2082 ([identity profile] stewardess.livejournal.com) wrote in [community profile] life_wo_fanlib2007-07-27 08:10 pm

Lez Girls Needs You

A trade website, broadcastnewsroom.com, picked up the press release FanLib issued July 10th (I've been tracking the press release; it bombed).

It's mostly about the new The L Word contest, but Broadcastnewsroom.com put a slightly different spin on it, leading off with Ilene Chaiken of The L Word.

Chaiken says of the contest, "I can't wait to see where the fans take their favorite characters."

Since the fan-written scene is only a tiny snippet of a fictional book written by a fictional character, and the tiny snippet has to be based on a scene from season one or two, I think it is safe to say the fans aren't going to be taking their favorite characters all that far.

Oh, fuck! I just took a peek at OurChart.com, the L Word FanLib site operated by Hilary Rosen. You remember her, right?

There is a section labeled Guestbians. Guestbians. You can't make shit like this up.

We know where bryson went now.

Ah, FanLib. Marketing to lesbians. But not to women.

[identity profile] icarusancalion.livejournal.com 2007-07-28 10:17 am (UTC)(link)
LOL. Desperately!

I wonder if they've gotten the message that fanfiction draws a primarily female audience.

I did see that ff.net lists their male/female ratio as around 40/60, which is pretty high. I'm wondering how ff.net got those figures. If it's based on what people tell them when they sign up (it's been so long I don't recall what I was asked), well, when I'm asked a survey question for Yahoo! or some online form, I usually give them a fake name, say I'm male (I'm female), a birthdate that has nothing to do with my own, and a random career selected from their list. I usually pick something high tech. ;) They like that.

I would have done the same for ff.net.

A fan survey, now, those I answer honestly bcause I know how they're going to use the information.

I wonder if other people do the same.

Icarus