Organized spamming? I think that has been alleged, not proven.
Is an accusation still only "alleged" if the accused actually admit that they did indeed do that?
Now, I don't speak German, but Google does.
Organized spamming? I think that has been alleged, not proven.
Do posters have to read the books to have an opinion about whether they would like to see Janeway return to the Voyager novels?
in all that sound and fury the total number is still less than 100?
Maybe DS9 attracts a more literate crowd...
I'm just sayin.
RonG - you're not helping
It'd be nice if we could avoid the hysteria on both sides. Your favorite character being violently murdered is a PERFECTLY valid reason to stop liking something, and you're WELL within your rights to do anything you feel would reverse that decision, including pointlessly argue about it with a bunch of "punk"s like us.
You're right about one thing, though - it's an argument between people that have read and love a story, and can discuss the details, and people for whom this particular plot development is a dealbreaker. So we're never going to be able to argue the actual merits of the story, because they won't read it.
The idea that Janeway, who was the main character of the TV show, can be replaced by just any ol' woman is sexist. And just because a woman decided to do KJ in didn't mean she wasn't sexist. Sometimes women are their own worst enemies, unfortunately. And just because people don't see evidence of sexism doesn't mean there isn't any. People say the same thing about racism. It's easy to gloss things over. And it's easier to be anti-something (ie Voyager/KJ) than for something. Oh, well. PS, I read the last "Voy" book, not too interesting.
My wife's very much a feminist and a longtime Trek fan, and she's never expressed much admiration of Janeway. She and I would probably put Susan Ivanova, Aeryn Sun, and Kira Nerys ahead of Janeway as strong, interesting women in SFTV.
So wait - they're making multiple accounts, encouraging several people from other websites entirely to come vote, even people that didn't read the books in the first place, and in all that sound and fury the total number is still less than 100?
Wow. What a threat to Pocket's sales.![]()
I did a little research a few weeks ago for this post in the Voyager section of the BBS, I just counted the number of hits for the following subjects in AOL’s Google search engine. I did the same again tonight.
J/C Fan Fiction – 1,060,000 hits
Kathryn Janeway – 20,200 hits
Captain Janeway – 29,900 hits
Star Trek Voyager – 548,000 hits
But one thing you may not know is most of the sites for Janeway fans are also Chakotay fans, so if you search on Janeway/Chakotay you will get Janeway fans too.
Janeway / Chakotay – 3,010,000 hits
One of my favorite things the Destiny trilogy did was populate the new ships with more than 50% women, to the point where the female characters no longer seemed like token females, but were commensurate and thus completely able to stand on their own distinctiveness without gender mattering. Half the captains are female, half the first officers are female, the Enterprise-E has more female senior officers than male, the pivotal Columbia plot stars only women...
I've said it before and I'll say it again, the Voyager fandom is largely female, they see the death of Janeway as a "let’s put the women in their place" kind of story line.
I have asked some of my German contacts and was told that the post was made in jest as a joke, and from experience I've found google is notorious at not getting jokes.
That tells me that there is so much free amateur Janeway fanfic out there, online, that people hooked on reading it never yearn to seek out licensed pro novels they need to pay for. The same argument used to come from K/S "slash" fiction fans in the 70s and 80s. They had absolutely no interest in licensed pro novels because they were spoiled for choice with their Kirk/Spock light porn, and when one of their own (eg. Della Van Hise) got a novel published, it was too tame for their tastes, despite creating a controversy all of its own.I did a little research a few weeks ago for this post in the Voyager section of the BBS, I just counted the number of hits for the following subjects in AOL’s Google search engine. I did the same again tonight.
^ You're obviously entitled to your opinion, but just to clarify a couple misunderstandings.
1) The people that DO hold the creative rights to the Star Trek must approve, in full, every outline and manuscript published. They DID approve of Janeway's fate.
2) In fact, they were the ones that decided to make Janeway become a Q instead of die completely, but they did not make any mandate that she return. They only required that the story be written so that, if desired, she could return at some future point.
3) Janeway has been dead for 2 Voyager novels. Sisko was dead for 10 DS9 novels before he returned. For any logical definition of "long past due", Voyager isn't even close yet.
4) I would guess perhaps 10% of the novels published in the past 5 years have obeyed the Submission Guidelines, if even that much; that is not a mission statement of the kind of stories they want to publish, it is a description of the audition process for potential new writers. The two are VERY different things.
Again, you are of course entitled to your opinion; I just want to make sure you have your facts straight.
I don't speak German either, however I've had a lot of experience last fall with good old Google The major problem is that it translates almost too literally and usually picks the most used words instead of the right ones. My experience was helping a German woman who spoke little English to translate her fic into English. To complicate this I speak no German at all.
I have asked some of my German contacts and was told that the post was made in jest as a joke, and from experience I've found google is notorious at not getting jokes. However as a mod from message board myself and a junior administrator from another, your mod should be able to sort it out, only they have to look at all votes no matter which side they are on.
6) It was a Next Generation novel, not a Voyager one.
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