prillalar: (brains)
prillalar ([personal profile] prillalar) wrote2006-09-01 10:41 pm
Entry tags:

Does fanfic turn into a pumpkin at midnight?

[livejournal.com profile] bethbethbeth has a great post on feedback. Not one of those tedious ones where people seriously disucss whether or not feedback is a responsiblity, blah, blah, blah, but rather, one where everybody posts about their feedback neuroses and just how pitiful and needy we all are, refreshing the comments again and again, just in case one person out there loves us.

Anyhow. Something people keep mentioning is trying not to post "at night" or "in the middle of the night" (which I assume means "in the middle of the night in North America") because then people won't read the story. This puzzles me. When I read my flist, if something interests me and I don't have time to read it right away, I open it in a tab and read it later; I don't just skip it. And I go through my whole list every day. If someone posts in the middle of the night, I'll see it.

I can see not bothering to read somebody's post about their aspidistra or how they really hate that new barrista at Starbucks because you have too many posts to go through in the morning and not enough time. But do people really do that with fic? Do you do that with fic?

If I don't get many comments on a story, I just assume that people didn't like it, not that there were time-zone difficulties. Have I been wrong all these years?

Please tell me so I can have one more thing to stress over. Unless, of course, you don't ever see this post because it's the middle of the night where you live.

[identity profile] harriet-spy.livejournal.com 2006-09-02 05:43 am (UTC)(link)
I think these days traffic is *so* high in the big fandoms that a story can easily get lost in the shuffle. I usually post to my own LJ whenever I can't bear to wait any longer, and then post to the announce comm in early to mid-afternoon of the next weekday, just to try to avoid that.

[identity profile] mysticblueside.livejournal.com 2006-09-02 05:48 am (UTC)(link)
I've noticed that. The later at night it's posted, the fewer comments given. I guess it also depends on the story's appeal. But in general, early evening seems to get the most traffic. I personally look through my whole f-list at one point anyway, so if there's something up I want to read it gets read most of the time. Hmmm. It's interesting. :D
ext_1310: (starbuck)

[identity profile] musesfool.livejournal.com 2006-09-02 05:56 am (UTC)(link)
Nah, I post late at night all the time. It's Fridays and Saturdays I avoid, because nobody's actually *around*. Early weekday evenings/nights seem to be best for getting comments fairly quickly, but I've had good luck with late Sunday nights as well - lots of people looking for fic to go with their Monday morning coffee etc.

I do what [livejournal.com profile] harriet_spy does sometimes - post right away to my own LJ and then the next afternoon to a comm.

[identity profile] mysticblueside.livejournal.com 2006-09-02 05:59 am (UTC)(link)
True, true. I'm on Central time here.

I really wish someone could do an experiment. I'd be dorkily interested in the results. (And there's no such thing as writing too much fic! :D)
ext_3663: picture of sheldon cooper from the big bang theory sitting down and staring at leonard with a smug/gauging look (nietzsche/proust)

[identity profile] jennilee.livejournal.com 2006-09-02 05:59 am (UTC)(link)
I'm like you, I open it in a tab and read it later. I have a firefox window open 24/7 (although I only started this once I got installed a minimize to system tray extension: windows on the taskbar I'm not using really bug me), it's like having temporary bookmarks. I don't want to miss any of the good stuff just because of what time it is. That's ridiculous, I think.
ext_1310: (reading)

[identity profile] musesfool.livejournal.com 2006-09-02 06:06 am (UTC)(link)
No, if it looks interesting, I either open a tab or add it to my del.icio.us. I read my whole flist every day, though, going back to the point I stopped the night before. Some people don't.

[identity profile] wickedcherub.livejournal.com 2006-09-02 06:06 am (UTC)(link)
This isn't about fanfic, because I haven't read any in a long time, but I reply to more *posts* when they appear on my friends list while I'm actually online.

When I wake up, I might have to skip back=60 or so, and I'll just read through all of that in one 15 minute stint, and only comment when it's important. Because by then I've usually missed the discussion boat anyway, or I simply cannot be bothered.

And I've noticed that with my regular posts - if I post something about my breakfast/pet fish/whatever, if I post it during the night, i'll get a lot of my US friends commenting, but if I post it while my aussie friends are on , then i'll get their comments. But never both. Unless it was a scandalous pet fish story.

You know what else is horrible too, I'm more likely to open up a piece of fic in a new tab if it's already got some comments on it. So I have no idea how that fits into your timeline.

But yeah, I wouldn't post a piece of fic on a weekend.

[identity profile] elke-tanzer.livejournal.com 2006-09-02 06:40 am (UTC)(link)
When I'm pressed for time I can't keep up with my flist. Even when I have time to skim everything and save stuff I want to read in detail in tabs (yay for 'bookmark all in tabs'!), I now have a backlog of bookmark folders going irregularly back months.

It never crosses my mind what time of day anything is, because my flist is global and I am sometimes very nocturnal and sometimes very not.

Fandom is infinite and shiny and individual fans are finite and never have enough time to bask in the shiny. Such is life.

Dust. Wind. Dude.

*scampers*

Long comment and whoo I'm tired so I ramble.

[identity profile] disutansu.livejournal.com 2006-09-02 06:40 am (UTC)(link)
I used to be pathetically hungry for comments... on my first fic in the GW fandom. I got told off. XD Which I am very happy that someone did because I would still be pathetically hungry. I mean... it's not wrong to love comments. But personally, I don't like to beg for them. Not after so many years of writing first in the GW fandom and now the Tenipuri fandom. I have my little thing on commenting on my user info. That's what I've stuck by for a long time. I'm a comment giving person. I don't expect people to do the same. *shrug*

I always post at night before I go to bed. Because my "awake hours" are always hectic and I know I'll forget to do something or whatnot. And I love/worship Mozilla for its tabs. I religiously go through my flist, especially when I wake up or after class/work (after a length of time away from the computer) and open all the posts I find interesting in tabs. My tabs go so small since I have so many open. XD;; Then I actually read through them and comment on nearly 90% on them. I don't care that people post all hours of the night or whatever, I don't usually notice the times on the posts anyway?

I go through any and all posts the same. If it's a post on someone's day, if I can find a relevant thing to comment on, I will. On fics, I ususally save until after I comment on the daily posts, since those take a while to read through.

As for comments on fics, I don't particularly care about mine. I mean... not that I DON'T CARE about my fics, but just because they don't comment, doesn't mean they don't like it. At least that's what I've been telling myself all these years. *shrugs* Maybe they didn't like it and I've been deluding myself! Ah well. XD;; I sometimes hate to say that I write for myself and my own satisfaction because... it sounds so egotistical... and "omg so you don't care about anyone else's opinion" type thing. But really, if you like it then great. If you don't, it's not a bother to me.

If there is a correlation between time of posted fic and comments receive... will I change the time I post? Probably not.

Yeah, me = tired. Did that make sense? I am so sorry. XD;;

[identity profile] elke-tanzer.livejournal.com 2006-09-02 06:44 am (UTC)(link)
When I am "keeping up" with LJ, I do the same thing, though sometimes it's two nights before rather than one. But as RL has been more pressing lately I've missed gaping chunks of LJ for a couple weeks at a time and it's just not possible to go back to see all that I've missed. It's been a crazy year.

[identity profile] grasshopper.livejournal.com 2006-09-02 06:51 am (UTC)(link)
Well, there is something weird about nighttime on LJ (defining nighttime as American, east-coastish nighttime). Maybe it's just me, but I've noticed that my flist is utterly dead between the hours of 2 and 6 a.m. EST -- America being largely asleep, the Brits having not yet had their elevensies, and the Australians being in the waning hours of school/work, or just getting home. (My flist, in case you were wondering, is mostly HP people, and a mix of nationalities, although once I put a stat counter in a fic post and most, say 90%ish, of the people who clicked the cut had North American ISPs).

The thing about posting at night is that the post can then get buried in the onslaught of morning/midday posts, making it quite possible that people, especially those with large friendslists, might give up at skip=100something, and thus miss it. Though that doesn't really account for it, because people who really want to read your stuff will read it, one way or another.

I think in the end it's not that they're less likely to read so much as that they're less likely to comment -- if your post is buried like that, and people are coming to it after lots of reading and commenting, maybe they will bookmark yours and save it for later, or they will read it and think "I will comment later" (and I know from personal experience that I almost never remember to "comment later"), &c. And in general, I've heard a lot of people say that they feel weird commenting on older fics, and fandom is a pretty fast-moving place so "old" is relative.

Someone, [livejournal.com profile] xylodemon I think, posited once that the life expectancy of a fic on LJ is about 24 hours. Someone else, I forget who, mentioned the possibility of gathering statistics on that, e.g. comments vs time-from-posting, and if they ever did it, I want to see. In any case, I interpret that more as a comment-life than a reading-life, especially after my experience with the stat counter (lots of people still clicking, even a week or two later; comments falling off sharply around the 1 - 2 day mark).

I have noticed that a good fic posted at night will get a respectable number of comments no matter what, whereas a not-so-good fic will do better if timed well (when the people watching your journal are bored at work, say). These might just be impressions (starting from the subjectivity of good and bad, for one), but I do tend to let it all influence my posting habits, depending on how many comments I'm in the mood to receive -- in the beginning I was eager for fandom acclaim, and had a theory that fics should be posted between four and five p.m. EST, and then crossposted to no more than two relevant communities, with the space of a day between each crossposting. Now, however, I tend to be ambivalent on the subject of fandom acclaim and the weird publicness of LJ life, and so I don't crosspost anymore and I post a fic whenever it's finished, leaving feedback up to the fates. And sometimes I get in a funk where I don't want to hear people say nice things to me (but I just have to post a fic so I can stop tinkering with it)and that's when I post at 2 a.m. on the nose. It doesn't always work according to plan, but I like to overthink things, so at least pondering when to post will occupy my mind for a good long while.

Oh, and now I'm rambling :"> Anyway, I had a poll (http://garlandgraves.livejournal.com/50815.html) once about people's posting habits, including the times they tended to post. Very interesting answers :)

[identity profile] svilleficrecs.livejournal.com 2006-09-02 07:11 am (UTC)(link)
I suspect it's for when you have a large/post heavy friends list, and you don't always scroll all the way back over all the night posts, you might miss it. I don't always catch up. I'm sure I miss a lot of fic.

I suppose that happens when you're a friending whore like myself.

[identity profile] lilacsigil.livejournal.com 2006-09-02 07:15 am (UTC)(link)
Whenever I post a story, the people who really want to read it will (they're the same 5-6 people), but if I post in Australian daytime, no-one else does. If I post at midnight, random Europeans and US people read it, too.

[identity profile] shini-tenshi.livejournal.com 2006-09-02 07:16 am (UTC)(link)
I don't post stories, and I rarely post comments, unfortunately, but I go through my flist everyday... or every time I'm able. And I go back through the entries, until I find one that I know I saw the last time I was on... so I don't think what time a person posts has anything to do with the amount of people commenting. Some people comment whether they like the story or not, some people don't, unless it's something that's really grabbed them (ex. nekokatechan's 'One Glance'; Tarma's 'Changechildren'; sp_katherine's 'Into the Indefinite Sky', et. al.) So, in essence, you're not wrong. It's probably that some people don't go back on their flists, or through the post, which means they're just missing a lot.

[identity profile] ver2frog.livejournal.com 2006-09-02 09:15 am (UTC)(link)
er.... I dunnow.
*facepalms*
I assume that it's because the fic isn't 1)funny 2)painfully ornate (thus calling forth of "omg gorgeous")
:D
:D
:D
*mean today*

[identity profile] quinesale.livejournal.com 2006-09-02 09:31 am (UTC)(link)
I have actually never thought about posting time before. Maybe it's because in my main fandom most people live in my time zone anyway and the short time when I tried to wreak havoc on PoT (I prefer it as a reading fandom now), it just never occured to me. But then, I am so slow in my writing anyway, I probably finish a fic once in a decade if the stars are favourable. But if they are, I have to admit I'm pitiful with checking on comments either. I just want to have one person who has not been my beta reading it. And if they didn't like it, give me concrit so I can be aggrieved improve, but then personally I think people don't give concrit as it's too much work or they don't want to offend the writer. But ooops, that wasn't the topic ^^

As for my flist, I feel like every person on it deserves my attention, so I really try to give my best and read every entry on it, and I already feel bad for skipping two, but the cold has reduced my attention span to around zero. If I don't comment, it probably means I haven't had something intelligent to say.

Regarding fics on my flist, the two other fandoms I like are small, so I skip over pairings I'm not interested in and as I seem to have obscure pairing taste, there is sometimes just not enough fic. But okay, pairings are not everything if the writer is good, so I also like to depend on recs. One could say that is lazy but I just don't have the time to read all the fics that appear on my flist.
If I'm moody, but the fic interests me in general, I often put in my unread fics category in my memories where they have been piling up, but are always there if I want them. But I guess some authors are really surprised if they get a comment after half a year or so and some tend to be sulky that you didn't read the story at once. Though hey, getting a comment at some point of time is better than getting none at all.

I bet I had something more to say, but I can't remember anymore. Guess I've rambled *sheepish*

[identity profile] alex-s9.livejournal.com 2006-09-02 09:44 am (UTC)(link)
IMHO you're right. If I find a fanfiction on my flist, I'll most definitely read it. It may take me weeks to get to this, if I'm in a hectic phase in my life but I will. I usually say what I liked about it, sometimes, when I know the person can bear critique, I leave comments about the parts that didn't work for my and I try to say why.

And I live in Eastern Europe.

So no, time zones are excuses for weak.

[identity profile] bethbethbeth.livejournal.com 2006-09-02 10:26 am (UTC)(link)
Well, *I* do exactly what you do: open stories in new tabs to be read when I'm really awake. But even I miss things all the time - and I'm more likely to miss it if it's posted when I'm asleep (few hours though those might be) or teaching or in transit.

[identity profile] bethbethbeth.livejournal.com 2006-09-02 10:31 am (UTC)(link)
I think you're right about the comment-life of fic (to distinguish it from the reading-life).

The exception to this rule is if a particular story, for whatever reason, starts getting recced everywhere. A rec - or a number of them - seems to be a spur to leaving comments, as if people feel it's important to tell the author exactly why they're reading the story in the first place.

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