Thought for the day…

The notion that science does not concern itself with first causes — that it leaves the field to theology or metaphysics, and confines itself to mere effects — this notion has no support in the plain facts. If it could, science would explain the origin of life on earth at once–and there is every reason to believe that it will do so on some not too remote tomorrow. To argue that gaps in knowledge which will confront the seeker must be filled, not by patient inquiry, but by intuition or revelation, is simply to give ignorance a gratuitous and preposterous dignity….

— H. L. Mencken, 1930

Media tie-ins and their place in the canon

On a mailing list I’m on, a former editor of media tie-in books wrote (and I’m paraphrasing to remove examples):

I used to PO fans all the time when I said that not only is the filmed material the only material that is canon, that’s the way is should be.

Why? Because the TV and Movie aspects reach millions of people while the books reach hundreds of thousands at best – same with any other media tie-in series you might name.

So of course the books follow behind.

This, to my mind, is complete and utter garbage.

Why? Because the books are touted as official tie-ins and that small percentage of the audience that buys the books spends far more money than the casual viewer. If you wonder why fans feel such a proprietary interest in the object of their worship, one reason is because he gives them much more money than the average consumer.

Take Star Wars. If you bought “The New Jedi Order” series new and complete, you spent approximately $250. If George decides, “Hey, remember when we killed Chewbacca? Didn’t happen. Psych!” –well, you’d be pissed. And rightly so.

George Lucas, at least, doesn’t exempt his own work from this– he’ll change his own stuff years later. (Han shot first!) But it irks when done from top down, without reciprocity, because there’s a strong aversion to “not invented here”. Sadly, this is something that’s seen more and more. If you follow some media tie-in franchises, you can easily spend a week’s paycheck a year on books. To say that this is not canon is insulting. When I write the stuff, I take care to make sure that it is canonical, that it fits with everything that has gone before.

If the stuff is good enough to take a fan’s money, it should be good enough to count as legitimate. When you sell products that say “the continuing adventures of X”, “a prologue to Y”, or “what happened between Episodes 9 and 10”, I don’t think it’s that unreasonable that they actually BE those things. As it is, this is a marketing strategy that takes your most loyal fan base and uses them like a drug dealer uses his clients– and then cuts the smack with baking soda or rat poison, figuring they’ll never notice the difference and if they do, it’s not like they can go somewhere else, is it?

Not only is this rude, not only is this deceptive, it’s horrible marketing. Ticking off your most loyal fan base, the evangelists who keep your brand alive when others were willing to write it off as a failure and turn it into a billion-dollar powerhouse, shows a contempt and stupidity that I can’t even fathom. Most brand managers KILL for that kind of user loyalty.

And it’s not like it can’t be done. All the MATRIX tie-in stuff is kept in continuity, from video games to comic books. J.K. Rowling controls the Harry Potter brand. After a bad start, Babylon 5 figured it out. And there are brands that not only work closely with the licensee, but actually adapt what the licensee does and incorporates it into the main brand– Star Wars and DC Comics lead the field in these areas. Did you know Kryptonite came from the Superman radio show?

But it requires devotion to the brand, not one section of it. And when done properly, it enhances the brand, and all the licensees involved.

Let me use a metaphor here.

Let’s say that Major League Baseball decides to start up an additional premium digital channel with ESPN for showing Major League Baseball games. At the end of the season, it’s announced that none of the games that aired on ESPN-MLB count for league standings– and furthermore, because those games don’t count, the Yankees are now league champions instead of the Blue Jays.

Is it okay to do so because customers were willing to spend money on it, but only 2% of the viewing populace of a whole? Or should baseball fans be upset because these games were sanctioned by MLB, but now aren’t because we didn’t like the way they were going and New York is a bigger market than Toronto?

No. And in fact, MLB this year started doing the exact opposite: they took the All-Star Game, a game outside league standings– outside continuity, if you will– and said that the league that won the game would get home field advantage in the World Series. Result? Ratings for the All-Star Game went up 30%. People cared again, because it had been brought into the larger fold.

The difference is that they cared about the brand as a whole, rather than one particular part of the family. And as we all know, when you favor one family member over another too much, a lot of bad blood builds up.

(Updated to extend remarks and remove unnecessary attacks, after the recommendation of a more cool-headed individual. The replies I’ve gotten, both pro and con, have been fascinating.)

Con coverage on MSNBC

So I was watching MSNBC last night for post con wrap up, Joe Scarborough was doing live talk with the crowd at Fanueil Hall– and a woman came up and started yelling into the mike about Lori Klausutis, until security came and hauled her away. Did my heart good.

And who, you may ask, is Lori Klausutis? And why should Joe Scarborough care? Read here for the background… basically, it’s a lot like the Chandra Levy case except it involves an actual corpse– and a Republican.

And it’s been real interesting to watch Reagan deliver commentary, both on MSNBC and at the convention at large.

Quotes of the day

Lance Henriksen on the San Diego Comic Con held this past weekend:

“There are 80,000 people who are going to pass through here, and there are only 35,000 at the Democratic convention. What does that tell you?”

Along with this, it tells us how easily we’re all amusing ourselves to death:

Last summer, [Andy Rappaport] got a call from Simon Rosenberg, president of the New Democrat Network, a fund-raising and advocacy group in Washington. Would Rappaport mind sitting down for a confidential meeting with a veteran Democratic operative named Rob Stein? Sure, Rappaport replied. What Stein showed him when they met was a PowerPoint presentation that laid out step by step, in a series of diagrams a ninth-grader could understand, how conservatives, over a period of 30 years, had managed to build a ”message machine” that today spends more than $300 million annually to promote its agenda.

Rappaport was blown away by the half-hour-long presentation. “Man,” he said, “that’s all it took to buy the country?”

Really behind…

You know, it’s bad enough to be so far behind on blogging that you’ve missed writing a catch up entry, but it’s probably even worse when you’re so far behind that someone has even beaten you to the catch up entry:

Catch-up post. So, how about that (1) Iraqi �handover� (2) John Edwards (3) New York Post (4) Seymour Hersh speech (5) Spider-Man movie (6) Martha Stewart sentence (7) new poll (8) Federal Marriage Amendment (9) Canadian election (10) intelligence report (11) Bill Clinton book (12) new poll (13) ongoing genocide (14) inane Hollywood scandal (15) new poll (16) upcoming political convention (17) Microsoft security flaw (18) thuggish Dick Cheney remark (19) blogosphere controversy (20) Fahrenheit 9/11 (21) new poll?

Okay, that�s done. Onward, then.

Where have you been, young man?

You may have noticed a certain paucity of posting. Most of this has been due to my laptop having problems. The screen fritzed out on the 4th of July in the wee small hours, which required me to go to pick up a few spare hard drives for backups before I could take the thing in to Tekserve for repair.

I was told it would be ten days, that this was a know problem with this model of iBook, and that they would pick up the cost. In the meantime, I’ve been muddling through on backups and my old iMac, which is showing definite signs of aging (dead Firewire ports, dying CD-Rom drive).

I got a call from TekServe on Thursday, the day I was supposed to get it back. Apple claims the problem is theoretically the hard drive, not the normally defective logic board. Hence $350 to repair, erasing my hard drive, and I don’t get it back until next week. If I decline the repair, Apple charges me $200 for a diagnosis fee anyway and I have a white paperweight.

I find this a tad hard to believe. The hard drive worked well enough after the monitor went for me to boot it as an external hard drive (which these laptops can do) and I was able to perform a complete backup. So I’m a bit incredulous.

If I’m lucky, they’ll zap it and discover that the logic board is the problem anyway. Then at least I won’t have the money hit, just the joy of restoring a hard drive and synching it with the last two weeks of work. And hoping that I can get to some of the passwords I’ve forgotten…