Posts Tagged vidding

Guestpost: Katie Freund, “Supernatural” and Vidding

Please join me in welcoming Katie Freund to FandomResearch! When I was first putting the site together, I knew I would have to ask Katie for her input. She’s one of the first people I met in Toronto. I’ve watched her present on misconceptions about slash in Japan, and she’s helped me write pieces for Frames Per Second. This is another peek at Katie’s expertise, this time on fanvids, intertextuality, and how to read both as a researcher.

“It starts with a story, doesn’t it? And then you get the music to fit the pictures.”

“It’s more like visual fanfic, I think—“

“Yeah, exactly – it’s the story I see in my head when I hear the music… It’s taking it out of your head and putting it out there so other people can see it too.”

“It’s closer to making something like art, isn’t it? It’s drawing a picture for people, a visual text for them to follow.”

There are six of us crowded around a table stuffed with junk food and my single voice recorder in a hotel room in England. I am listening to a group of editors I am interviewing debate the origins of vidding, or fan-made remix videos at VidUKon, a fan convention. It’s a story, I am told, a visual version of fan fiction. It’s an individual’s imagination, their art: vids can be complex treatments of race or gender in popular television, in-depth examinations of certain characterscertain characters, or tributes to beloved shows now cancelled. But above all else, it’s fun.

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Questionnaire: vidding demographics and copyright

Upcoming guestblogger, Katie Freund sent me her latest survey, and asked me if I would be interested in posting it. Naturally, I was! Here’s how she explains it:

Here is the questionnaire I distributed among 8 different online vidding communities on Livejournal.com for the purposes of my postgraduate research (at the time, an MA thesis although I have since upgraded to the PhD programme). I sought to gather a variety of qualitative and quantitative data, as I desired both statistics on demographic composition of the community, internet and computer use, and fandoms participated in, as well as more thoughtful and open-ended long answer questions on copyright/fair use issues, the vidding community, and the art and practice of vidding itself. A full consent form was not deemed necessary for this online questionnaire, but those who took it were directed to a participant information sheet detailing the ethical concerns of completing this survey.

The survey was at first not well-received by the community as it the vidders several hours to complete, rather than the half hour or so I had indicated in the introduction. Also, many vidders commented that my questions were extremely difficult to answer and that things were not nearly so cut-and-dried as I may have thought (or hoped!). I then altered the introduction in response to their concerns and it was much better received as far as I can tell. To date, I have received 150 responses, but only 63 have completed all the sections (42%).

For more information about my research, please check out my research blog at http://fanthropology.blogspot.com or email me at fanthropology (at) gmail (dot) com.

If you’re interested, you can refer to (or take!) the survey here.

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