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Number of posts : 52 Activity Points : 156 Reputation : 0 Registration date : 2010-12-27
| Subject: Internet usage Wed Jan 12, 2011 12:53 am | |
| Babylon 5 was one of the first shows to employ Internet marketing to create publicity among online readers far in advance of the airing of the pilot episode. Straczynski participated in online communities on Usenet (in the rec.arts.sf.tv.babylon5.moderated newsgroup), and the GEnie and Compuserve systems before the web came together as it exists today. Straczynski had long participated in many online forums since the 1980s, and is widely credited as being the first notable artist and celebrity to interact with fans online, even before the advent of the world wide web.[4] This free interaction with his fans was not without its problems. A third season episode ("Passing Through Gethsemane") was originally developed a year earlier in 1994 but had to be "scuttled"[5] because a fan posted a story idea on GEnie that matched the plot of the episode. The story was not put back into the production pipeline until Straczynski could obtain a signed legal release from the fan.[6] The moderated Usenet group was created as a consequence, specifically to filter out story ideas. Straczynski also asked fans not to engage in fan-fiction while the show was in production, and most fans complied with this request.[7] On rec.arts.sf.tv.babylon5.moderated, Straczynski regularly discussed with fans the process of creating and producing the show, the meaning of the work, and the development of the plot.[6] He confirmed or denied fan theories and interpretations of the show, and answered questions — though often cryptically. In November 1995, Straczynski temporarily left the newsgroup due to an increasing number of flames, but returned in December when a process was put in place to filter the threads that reached him.[8] best sleeping pills for insomniaOutsourced Sales | |
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