And also, it takes some real huevos (or stupidity) to go to a writer's group where -- presumably -- you recognize the person you're plagiarizing from in the audience, and go forward with your fraud anyway. I mean, did she think the plagiarize-ee wouldn't notice?? Did she think the other woman would be grateful?
I think it was just a coincidence that they happened to be in the same writer's group at the same time. They'd never met before (and as far as I know, didn't swing in the same online social circles), but the plagiarizer wrote and posted her fic using her real name. So when she passed out the plagiarized fic (with character names and details changed, etc) with her real name on it, the plagiarze-ee figured out the connection, and then went on to confront her.
fic writer who went to a real-life writer's workshop, and found another participant in the group (whose name she recognized as another fic writer) handing out copies of the first writer's fic, with the names changed.
Now, there's a coincidence! I'd have been less surprised if the non-plagiarist had merely recognized the fic as being that of someone else in the online community, but to have it be her own work? Oy!
And I agree with Nutty up to a point on the specificity of fic being hard to swap to original stuff, but... I dunno. I think about stories like some of the really good casefiles from XF ("Antidote", "Rags", any of Syntax's or Nascent's work), and I really wouldn't be surprised if someone took one of those and made it into a free-standing mystery novel. Sure, there would be some work to do, but less work than writing it all yourself. Of course, arguing against it is the fact that the better a given story is, the more well known it is and the less likely the plagiarist would be to get away with it.
I love the Nanny-fic story.
I think it was mainly knowing the word
So it's a real word, then, and not just a pleasing (and it
is
pleasing) sound cluster? I asked two dictionaries but it wasn't there. Is it a place name...?
So it's a real word, then, and not just a pleasing (and it is pleasing) sound cluster? I asked two dictionaries but it wasn't there. Is it a place name...?
It's Greek. Thought I'd put the definition in there (I tame or I subdue). But, mostly, I like it because it's a pleasing sound cluster.
(I tame or I subdue).
Oh my
lord.
You're SUCH a top.
(...when I looked at Adamao, though, the header just reads Adamo.org, rather than Adamao.org. Is that intentional?)
Fixed. Was time to update the header image, anyhow.
Probably will avoid mentioning it to Paul, however. (But it's such a PRETTY eyeball...)
Plei, the disclaimer at the bottom:
This site is not officially involved any production
involved with any...yes?
involved with any...yes?
Yep!
The disclaimer underwent some edits, and I seem to have missed a spot shaving. I'll fix it tomorrow (unlike the typo in the header, the disclaimer one doesn't bother me.).
I thought this was an interesting discussion on names used on the show vs. how characters think of themselves (e.g., if you're writing from Giled POV in a 3rd-person story, is he Giles or Rupert? At what point does Anyanka start thinking of herself as Anya?).