Curating the best and worst of the internet Saturday January 20, 2024 |
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| alphaspiritit/Shutterstock (Licensed) | What can data tell us about fanfiction culture? | Data isn't always the most interesting way to analyze popular culture, but it can illustrate some compelling social trends. Take fanfiction, a popular but often misunderstood activity within fandom. Who reads and writes it, and what exactly are they writing about? We have answers to those questions. Every year, a user on the fanfiction site Archive of Our Own (AO3), centreoftheselights, compiles a data set about the most popular fanfiction that year. (They are also the author of a much-cited 2013 census about the user demographics on AO3.) In ranking the top 100 pairings on AO3 in 2023, centreoftheselights found that there were 59 male/male pairings, 12 female/male, 6 female/female, 16 Gen (platonic) and 7 Other. The top 12 pairings are male/male or Other, the 13th is female/male, and the first female/female pairing on the list (Robin/Nancy from Stranger Things) takes the 19th spot. Forty seven percent of the characters on the list are white while are 43% characters of color, and the rest are racially ambiguous. The stats for the all-time list are slightly different. The number one pairing is Castiel/Dean from Supernatural, and the most popular female/female ship (Kara/Lena from Supergirl) is number 6 on the list. Only 30% of the characters on the list are people of color (POC), and there are only 5 female/female pairings out of 100 total. What can we take away from this data? centreoftheselights writes that her intention with these surveys is to highlight the disparities in fanfiction when it comes to female/female pairings and characters of color. She argues that there is a "glass ceiling" when it comes to POC pairings gaining popularity, a claim that can be backed up by these yearly data sets. Fandom can be quite segmented, especially on AO3 where you can use the site's search function to literally filter out what you don't want to see. That's why data such as this can be useful in showing us the bigger picture.
In a journal article, Alexis Lothian and Mel Stanfill discuss the issue of race within fanfiction. They write that while fanfiction is assumed to be progressive, this is not necessarily the case. They suggest that fandom is "structurally white," regardless of racial demographics. This means that while fan sites like AO3 are understood as safe spaces, this may not be true for everyone. The second topic at hand is male/male fanfiction—why it's so popular, and who is reading and writing it. In February and March of 2022, scholars Lauren Rose and Mel Stanfill conducted a survey about user demographics on AO3. They found that "white cisgender women still dominate fandom spaces," though the assumption that most male/male readers and writers are straight women is not backed up by the data (centreoftheselights' 2013 survey also contradicts this assumption). Now that we have data about male/male vs female/female fanfiction, fans are proposing theories to explain the discrepancy. Considering how women dominate the genre, centreoftheselights suggests that internalized misogyny is at hand. One popular theory on Tumblr takes a different approach, with fans speculating that the source material is to blame. If TV and films are populated by more men than women, and the men tend to be better written than the women, it follows that fans would be more drawn to writing about the male characters. Considering how ingrained they are in our everyday lives, it's not surprising that prejudices about race and gender seep into fanfiction. Why it matters Fanfiction traffics in fantasy, and as Lothian and Stanfill write, "Fantasies, sexual or otherwise, are never apolitical, but neither are they transparent expressions of politics." Examining statistics like this can give us a birds eye view of what's going on underneath all the discourse, allowing us to see beyond our own biases. Fanfiction is not an unproblematic utopia, though it does provide the illusion of absolute freedom. But is this freedom equally distributed? The numbers suggest otherwise.
| Here is what else is happening across the 'net. | 🍻 Most people who go to bars understand what "last call" means. But one server who thought she was cruising to an easy end-of-the-night was derailed by a group of customers who ordered drinks at last call, 15 minutes before the bar closed, and then wouldn't leave. | 🛍️ Criticizing delivery drivers for not doing their jobs properly has become a common occurrence on social media. However, a TikToker had a different kind of post she wanted to upload about a delivery experience she had with a Walmart personal shopper. The glowing review she gave of an unsung hero named Graham reverberated throughout TikTok. | 💼 A human resources worker who is employed with her family's business posted a viral TikTok that's accrued over 547,000 views, in which she lists a few things job seekers should never do while they're on the hunt for a new position. | If you've ever been driving and wondered how another driver on the road still has their license, you're not alone.
Given that there are thousands of car accidents in the United States every day, and that renewing a driver's license in the U.S. rarely requires retesting, it's no surprise that some of the people on the road today may not be the best drivers. Seeing some of these poor drivers, one may feel as though there's nothing they can do to get them off the road. However, one TikTok user says that there's a way you can combat the problem head-on. In a video with over 3.1 million views, TikTok user Francisco (@franciscocorcia) simply says, " Did you know you can anonymously submit someone for retesting for their driver's license?" " So, do with that what you will," he concludes. | mapo_japan/Shutterstock (Licesned) @franciscocorcia/TikTok (Fair Use) | How did you like this newsletter? Click an icon below to give us a rating! | Copyright © 2024 The Daily Dot, All rights reserved. You are receiving this email because you signed up to get the inside scoop on internet culture from the Daily Dot.
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