• LNH: LNH 20th Anniversary Special, Part #2

    From Arthur Spitzer@21:1/5 to All on Thu Apr 28 22:24:52 2022
    Part II

    **** L N H 2 0 Y E A R S ****




    ANDREW PERRON

    Wheeeeeee. @-@ Here ya go:

    ----

    To tell the story of myself and the LNH, it's necessary to start the
    story of myself and the superhero genre. Let us pull back the curtain
    of time...

    My infatuation with the most awesome of all storytelling models began at
    a young age. I grew up on Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, on Captain
    Planet, on BraveStarr and on Power Rangers. It took me a bit, though,
    to get into comics - moving into a neighborhood where the local
    mini-mart had a spinner rack was a godsend - and a bit longer to put the
    two together.

    The thing that moved me from Archie and Harvey to Spider-Man and the New Warriors was the Marvel Universe Series III collector cards. Seeing
    them at school lead me to beg my parents into visiting whatever outlets carried them, which lead me to seek out the characters in other media.
    (The X-Men animated series helped; I was a bit young to really get into
    the tone of Batman: TAS.)

    So I got into comics right at the crest of the Dark Age. There's a
    lesson there about the importance of having widely-available entry-level products, but let's keep going. I was mostly a Marvel zombie, though I
    did get the Death of Superman TPB for Christmas. The crossovers, the
    shock storylines, the holofoil gimmicks, none of them dampened my
    enthusiasm; the thing that finally did was moving cross-country, away
    from that handy spinner rack and from any real source of comics.

    It was only about a year after that that my parents split up. But when
    I went to visit my dad a couple of summers later, I discovered that he
    had something amazing and new - an honest-to-goodness Internet
    connection. I don't remember which of those old search engines I made
    my first query on - Lycos? Yahoo? AltaVista? - but I quickly got around
    to typing in "Mystery Science Theater 3000". This lead me to the Blue
    Light Productions page (still around at http://www.eyrie.org/~thad/blip/blip.html), where I found a .gif with
    three unfamiliar letters on it: LNH.

    This, then, was my introduction not just to our fair shared universe,
    but to Usenet and comics fandom beyond the letters page. I eagerly ate
    up everything on the BLiP site, and sought out alt.comics.lnh and RACC.
    I was temporarily stymied by the end of that summer, but when I came
    back, I was so inspired that I wrote a preview with not one but two WCs,
    and when I got my own computer (sure, it was theoretically shared
    between my siblings, but I knew what was what), it seemed like I had
    stepped right into position as a new LNHer!

    Yeah, not quite. A problem cropped up that would beguile and bedevil me
    from there on out: a notable difficulty in carrying projects beyond the initial surge of enthusiasm. Nevertheless, I tore through the Eyrie
    archive, grabbing enormous chunks of story and stuffing them into my
    brain. I stretched out, visiting Dave's site and getting into ASH,
    finding the Roster and the author's pages, untangling crossovers, and
    plotting the day that my characters would burst onto the scene.

    But, eventually, my interest waned. Never completely, but every so
    often, there'd be an interruption - a broken keyboard, a break in
    service, a malfunctioning hard drive - that would keep me from RACC for
    a while, and catching up waited until I was in the proper mood. Nor did
    it help that I had fallen into an "anime and manga uber alles" stage.
    For a time, my fervor for American superheroes took a rest.

    But other things were going on in my life, and in late 2002, through
    various tribulations largely of my own making, I found myself with an
    Internet connection, a mess of frustrated productive impulses, and an
    excess of free time. Surfing the Internet, I found myself on a rather peculiar corner of the World Wide Web: Unca Cheeks' Silver Age Comics
    Site. ( http://www.reocities.com/cheeksilver/ )

    This man's burning passion for all things ridiculous in sequential art reignited my love of superheroes - incidentally transferring my primary preference to the DCU - and I decided to stop by RACC, see if the old
    place was still kicking. Turns out it was, undergoing a period of
    flourishing after the Age of the Apathy Beast, and in a fit of
    creativity, I took all the Japanese influences I'd accumulated and spun
    them together with the classic LNH intro story and an updated version of
    what a character based on my personality traits would be, and out came
    Digital JUMP! #1!

    The response was encouraging, and I immediately dashed out #2, and soon
    after #3 - and ran right into the same problem all over again.
    Procrastination and distraction began to take over. I managed to stay
    active in RACC, at least, and a year later (a significant chunk of which
    was spent on a framing device that I never got to work and eventually
    tossed out entirely), pushed out #4.

    Not that I was otherwise inactive in the LNH. I started up on my habit
    of providing feedback to all sorts of stories, I contributed to the ill-starred Bride of C'thulhu cascade, and in 2005, successfully kicked
    off a cascade of my own: Just Imagine Saxon Brenton's RACCies!

    But I wouldn't be around to see it end. I had gotten a sudden idea for
    a Digital JUMP! story, bringing back my WCs of yore, and decided to skip forward, writing #11 - and sealing my fate. The Curse of the Skipped
    Issue took hold, and I faded out once more.

    There were RL circumstances associated with it - the rigors of college
    and suchlike - but I think the real problem was guilt. Or, rather, a combination deal where I couldn't face my unfinished stories, so I left
    them behind and started new ones, but accumulated more guilt with each
    writing project I tried and abandoned. And I tried - O! how I tried;
    both my hard drive and the Internet became clearinghouses for attempts
    at storytelling. I never got anything consistent going, and there's one
    thing I haven't mentioned that played into the reason why: feedback.

    The most important resource to any writer - heck, to any creative
    person, and especially when they're developing - is feedback. And in
    leaving RACC, in letting my inability to confront the unfinished drive
    me away, I cut myself off from it.

    Somewhere in there, I hit ultimate unproductivity. I reached rock
    bottom and, to rip off a far better writer, I bounced. Fed up with
    myself, I tossed all the guilt I had for not finishing things out the
    back door, buckled down, and focused on my studies and my goals - and
    while I was doing so, just happened to find an awesome, loving, stable relationship.

    Coming out the other end, I found myself in a new city, as a bona fide
    adult, with a real (though temporary) job... that just happened to be
    hella boring. So, five years after I'd departed RACC's pastures, I was finally ready to face it again. And with my newfound ability to just
    keep working on something, even if my attention got pulled away for a
    while, and damn the guilt, I plunged in - and the rest, good readers, is history.


    **** L N H 2 0 Y E A R S ****


    ROB ROGERS



    For a long time -- much longer than I am prepared to
    admit -- I believed I could become a super-hero.

    This was not as ludicrous as it might seem.

    After all, I was lucky enough to live in a small town that had its
    very own nuclear power plant. I also knew that before I was born, my
    father had been exposed to all sorts of dangerous -- and, hopefully,
    mutagenic -- chemicals during the Vietnam War.

    I believed it was only a matter of time before my nascent
    super-powers manifested themselves, and I could get down to the serious business of fighting crime.

    As late as my college years -- by which time I really ought to have
    known better -- I'd hang around my roommate's biology lab on stormy
    nights, hoping that an errant bolt of lightning might strike the racks
    of chemicals and change my life forever. At the time, it didn't seem
    any crazier than buying a lottery ticket.

    It wasn't the powers themselves that I craved. Don't get me wrong
    -- I'd love the chance to fly, or throw lightning bolts, or move at
    superhuman speed. What I really wanted, however, was not the powers themselves but what I thought they could give me: confirmation that,
    despite all available evidence to the contrary, I was somebody special.

    Because that's what I loved about comic books. They gave me a
    world in which that nerdy-looking guy on the subway -- the one with the messed-up hair and rumpled suit, whose glasses are crooked and whose aftershave is a little too strong -- might be Superman. Or Spider-Man.
    Or the Hulk. Anybody you met might have a hero, a monster, or both
    lurking inside of them.

    The heroes I read about in comic books seemed to have the same
    problems I did: trouble relating to other people, trouble getting a
    date, trouble finding time to do all of the things they wanted to do
    with their lives. What made them different was that, from time to time,
    those heroes had the opportunity -- and the courage -- to let their
    secret selves shine, to go out in their underwear and show the world
    what amazing people they really were.

    At some point I realized that I would never be a part of this
    world. Whatever hidden powers a lifetime of radiation and environmental toxins bestowed upon me had decided to stay hidden. I was never going
    to be a super-hero, so I decided to do the next best thing.

    I became a writer.

    Writing gave me the opportunity to exercise the kind of control
    over a fictional world that I'd always wanted to have in the real one.
    I could, like Woody Allen, make myself the hero of every story. I could
    give my characters the ability to work through situations I'd
    experienced and enjoy the kinds of happy endings I'd felt I'd deserved.

    (This could sometimes backfire. I once wrote a story in which the
    main character is so upset that his roommate has begun dating the girl
    he likes that he decides to kill his roommate. My own roommate -- who
    was, in fact, dating the girl on whom we both had a crush -- found the
    story, and was disturbed by how many of its details seemed familiar...)

    I took writing very, very seriously. I attended a college, Kenyon,
    that also takes writing seriously (one of my coffee mugs says "We did
    poetry at Kenyon, the way that at Ohio State, they do football.")

    My writers' workshops were full of very, very serious would-be
    writers like myself, who wrote about bad childhoods, broken
    relationships and terse, highly symbolic episodes that I did not
    understand at the time, but later learned were meant to be homages to Hemingway, Nabokov or Raymond Carver.

    I was well on my way to becoming a serious writer.

    And then something funny happened.

    I discovered the Internet.

    Not in the same way that Al Gore did, of course. The information superhighway arrived at Kenyon College, as most things did, about two semesters after it showed up at every other university. There was no
    World Wide Web in those days, of course, just e-mail, FTP, Gopher and something called "newsgroups," which seemed to be bulletin boards where
    people with very strong opinions spent a great deal of time telling
    everyone else why they were wrong.

    It didn't take me long to realize that in the Internet I'd finally
    found the place I'd read about in comic books: a place where seemingly ordinary people could lead double lives as the heroes, or the monsters,
    or (in the case of one of my male friends), the attractive and
    flirtatious women they had always wanted to be.

    It made sense then, that there would be a place -- alt.comics.lnh,
    the home of the Legion of Net.Heroes -- for people like me, who had
    dreamed of becoming super-heroes, or at least writing about them.

    What surprised me was how good the writing was.

    Comics were supposed to be a second-rate genre (this was the time
    at which the world's best-selling comic book began with the lines "His
    name -- Spider-Man! His powers -- Extraordinary! His webline -- ADVANTAGEOUS!"). And yet here were writers like Dave Van Domelen, Ken
    Schmidt and Jeff McCoskey, telling stories that were funny, well-crafted
    and engaging about real people who just happened to be super-heroes.

    I was also surprised by how much broader and deeper the world of
    the Legion of Net.Heroes was than the world of mainstream comics that
    had given birth to it.

    The super-heroes of DC and Marvel Comics were, in the 1990s, mostly
    young white men who lived in the United States. By contrast, the men and
    women who posted on alt.comics.lnh came from Canada and Australia and
    New Zealand, from a variety of cultural and religious backgrounds, and
    with a range of influences that rarely appeared in comics of the day --
    pulp novels and manga, old cartoons and classic TV shows, comedy
    routines and music (there were at least two series featuring characters inspired by the band They Might Be Giants), all of which found their way
    into their stories.

    The thing that amazed me the most, however, was how friendly a
    place the LNH was. I'd come to expect writers' groups to be catty --
    and a writers' group on the Internet, where one rarely has to encounter
    the object of one's scorn face-to-face, to be ten times cattier.

    Yet the harshest criticism I'd seen leveled on alt.comics.lnh was something along the lines of "that character's actions seem inconsistent
    with how he/she has been portrayed in the past." Everyone on the
    newsgroup seemed supportive of one another, and no one seemed to take themselves too seriously.

    It was, as a certain credit card company says in its commercials, everywhere I wanted to be.

    So I wrote my first story for the LNH. I created a character who
    was, like me, someone who had desperately wanted to become a super-hero, someone who had, in fact, gone so far as to subject himself to prolonged exposure to radiation in order to gain super-powers, and who had, as a
    result, gained the ability to glow in the dark and be detected at great distances with a Geiger counter. I called him Easily-Discovered Man.

    And because I had recently read _Don Quixote_, I felt that my hero
    needed a sidekick, someone who would act as the voice of reason and a point-of-view character for my audience. If Easily-Discovered Man was
    earnest and heroic to the point of obsession, his sidekick would be
    practical and a bit sneaky, someone who viewed the whole idea of being a super-hero as more than a little ridiculous. I called him
    Easily-Discovered Man Lite.

    To say that I had no idea what I was getting into when I posted
    that first story was something of an understatement. The Legion of
    Net.Heroes was more than just a writers' group, more than just a place
    online to read and discuss stories. It was a shared universe, where characters and actions in one story influenced events in another, and
    where an eclectic group of authors collaborated and competed and created
    a world together.

    When it worked -- when it really worked -- writing for the LNH was
    like what I imagine it would be to play in the world's greatest jazz combo.

    I'd toss out a riff -- a story, a chapter of an ongoing cascade, a response to someone else's post -- and the next author would respond
    with something even more brilliant and hilarious (or, in the case of
    Arthur Spitzer, completely surreal) and the whole thing would roll on,
    each of us constantly forced to reach down into that creative part of
    him or herself, each of us constantly raising our game to match the
    talent of the people surrounding us.

    That experience changed the way I write -- and by extension,
    changed me, too.

    I'd begun writing as a means of wish fulfillment, as a way to make
    myself feel special. But when you write in a shared universe, the story
    can't always be about you. The more I participated in the world of the
    Legion of Net.Heroes, the less I cared about being the star of the show
    -- and the more I simply wanted to tell the very best stories that I could.

    I started out wanting to be a super-hero when I grew up. I ended
    up growing up by becoming a super-hero. And for that, I have the
    authors, the readers, the monsters and the heroes of the Legion of
    Net.Heroes to thank.

    Long live the Legion.



    **** L N H 2 0 Y E A R S ****


    ARTHUR SPITZER


    Ah, the Legion of Net.Heroes -- how do I love thee? Let me count the
    ....um *Ahem*...

    You know I was thinking just the other day about how I no longer seem to
    care about what's happening in DC and Marvel comics. I still have some interest in those characters although it is mostly for the various
    Superhero movies that come out. But as for the comics unless it's some
    writer that I like, a Grant Morrison for instance, I just don't seem to
    care. Even if I could read them for free -- I probably wouldn't. And
    yet it has been 18 or so years since I've been a part of the LNH and I
    still care. Why do I like the LNH more that Marvel or DC?

    That's an interesting question. It could be that my view of the Big Two
    has become very tarnished. The characters in these work-for-hire
    companies seem more like devices to sell various superhero crap. And
    the people who created these cash cows don't seem to be getting any of
    the pie (or if they do it's a very, very tiny slice). I guess what I'm
    saying is that the LNH never screwed over Jack Kirby, or Siegel &
    Shuster -- or anyone else and so it doesn't have that bitter taste that reading a Marvel or DC comic has. And it's kind of funny when you think
    about how the LNH would probably have a better chance of getting Alan
    Moore to write for it than DC or Marvel now days (still -- he probably
    doesn't work for free).

    Still, there are plenty of other shared universes (like Superguy) that
    haven't screwed over Kirby and I'm not writing an essay about them. So
    what else? I wouldn't have fell in love with the LNH if all of the
    stories were mediocre. No, there has been a lot of great writing over
    the years by tons of great writers (you know who you are -- I won't
    embarrass you by pointing you out :)). And also tons of great
    characters, tons of great concepts -- that make the LNH more that just a parody of superhero comics. And we still have some great writers still putting out great stuff as I write this down. So, that's probably a big reason -- but not the reason.

    I mean other RACC shared universes have had some (and still have some)
    good writing. The Omega Universe probably had a greater percentage of
    quality writing than the LNH (although my top ten list of greatest RACC stories would probably have a lot more LNH stories than Omega -- also
    LNH characters are way cooler than Omega characters). But I don't have
    the same feelings for Omega that I have for the LNH -- and that's
    probably because I was never a part of Omega beyond reading it. But I
    was a part and still am a part of the LNH and I have written tons of
    stories for it over the past 18 years. So is that why I love the LNH -- because I've been a part of it? Is it basically narcissism? Yeah,
    probably -- but really how can you not love something more if you put
    your blood and sweat into it than if you don't?

    So, that's why I dig the LNH. And it's 20 years old, and it's kind of
    amazing that it has lasted that long -- and it's amazing that there are
    still plenty of people willing to write LNH stories for free. And 20
    years is really a long time when you think about it. There are people
    who were born after the LNH came into existence that are now old enough
    to vote. Think of all of the animals and plants that will never live to
    20. All of the TV series and comic book series that never made it to
    20. Hell, a lot of comic book companies never made it to 20 years (Interesting fact -- Image Comics and The LNH started about the same
    time -- Image is a little older, but they both started in 1992).

    Can it last another 20 years? Who knows. I suppose if Superguy is 3
    years ahead of the LNH in Writer's Apathy -- then maybe we'll be seeing tumbleweeds blowing around on RACC in 2015. But I wouldn't bet against
    the LNH -- it's lasted this long -- it's possible it will bury us all
    and just keep on going. And going. And going.

    And I'll be there -- if not writing then lurking -- and waiting for that
    three month lull when I can post the last LNH story and then watch as a
    bunch of other writers jump in and the LNH comes back to life again --
    just refusing to die. And laughing at my last LNH story attempt.


    **** L N H 2 0 Y E A R S ****



    TODD "SCAVENGER" KOGUTT



    So, twenty years ago today,
    I taught you guys how to play.
    And because I've never gone away,
    I wrote an anniversary essay.


    Twenty years.

    That doesn't sound right.

    Are you sure? Shouldn't I have a jetpack or be typing with my thoughts
    or something by now?

    Really? Twenty years? Well, if you say so, I'll go with it.

    So, you may ask yourself, "Self, who is this person talking to me on my computer screen and why I am reading his words?"

    Well, to the second question, I can only guess. Boredom, perhaps. Or
    maybe you're so caught up in the twenty year (seriously?) celebration, you’ll read anything.

    As for who I am, well, suffice to say, without me, you wouldn't be
    reading this.

    (Well, obviously, as I have to be here to type it, but stick with me for
    a bit of a trip to where Memory Lane intersects with Ego Drive.)

    I am a founder of the Legion of Net.Heroes. Not THE founder, mind you,
    but I was one of the originals to join in the fun in the spring of 1992.
    When it was really just the folks on what was then rec.arts.comics (no
    bloody ".misc", ."xbooks", or ".creative", just RAC, the way G-d and Tom Galloway intended it!) started making up silly LSH inspired names and
    gave themselves "powers" based on their posting idiosyncrasies. But
    that's not the real reason you're reading this.

    No, the real reason you're reading this… my real "claim to fame" is that
    I'm the Revivalist of the LNH.

    Back then, in the pre-graphic and sound and LOLCat ridden days of the Internet, before the World Wide Web was a catch phrase for any business student, once spring turned to summer, and college students left their computer labs for the offline world of Mom and summer jobs, traffic on
    Usenet would die down and things would be relatively silent for a few
    months until the fall semester kicked things back up. And that's really
    what this 20 year anniversary is about: Me returning to school in the
    fall of 1992 and posting "Hey, what happened to the LNH?"

    Now, if I hadn’t posted, undoubtedly someone else would have. If Neil Armstrong hadn’t been the first to step on the moon, there’d be more schools named after Michael Collins. But twenty (hmmm) years ago, I made
    the post.

    And from there came the flood of stories, the flame wars, the RAC*
    split, the MUSHes, the wikis, the fights, the friends, the fans....

    Ah, the fans. I like to say I was a net.celebrity back when it meant something. Unfortunately, it didn't mean money and endorsements and pseudofame that can lead somewhere like it does today, but at least at
    the time, through just the power of writing, you could garner that most precious of commodity, "fans".

    I remember a pal from high school telling me how his friends at college thought it was so cool that he knew me in real life. I remember joining
    a World of Darkness MUSH and while asking some questions to an admin, introduced myself, and he knew me from the LNH and instantly made me a
    full power player, which a friend of mine at school had been trying to
    get for weeks (and boy did that piss him off :-)). I remember sending a birthday card to another LNHer and she telling me that her friends
    thought it was awesome she'd gotten a card from me. I said to her that
    she was as important as I was in the LNH, but she replied that to her
    real life friends, she wasn't me.

    Even now, thinking of those things brings a smile to my face. I don't
    think people, especially professional writer types, really appreciate at
    the base level what it means to have fans.... I've had folks who've been excited to get an email from me, as I have from people I'm a fan of.
    It's flattering and humbling all at once.

    I'd like to think that, at least for a time, I deserved the adulation. I
    tried to make the LNH a place anyone was welcome; where anyone could
    come and be creative to the best, if not better, of their abilities.

    Another LNHer once told me that before finding the LNH he hadn't ever
    really been creative. It had opened a whole new area of his life to explore.

    In my darker moments, it's memories like those that make me think what
    me and a bunch of folks did twenty (sigh) years ago in a small corner of
    the Internet might have been worth doing.

    Some might say I was the leader back then. It may come as a surprise; I
    wasn't actually one of them. I was recognized as such by our opponents
    in the Great RAC Flame War, for being someone reasonable to talk with,
    rather than our more.... enthusiastic members. To bring some order to
    the chaos, I formed the dramatic sounding Council of Elders, made up of
    other founders and the more active of new members, again, not so much to
    lead, but to organize, to be a guidepost in the new creative wilderness
    of net.fiction.

    I walked the Long Road. I created many of the terms used in the LNH. I
    helped the Electrocutioner find his Song (and have the trading cards to
    prove it!). My declarations were officially official. I designed the
    logo. And I wrote the only Legion of Net.Heroes story possessed by Neil Gaiman.

    So who am I and why are you reading? You're reading because twenty years
    ago, I helped create "the most fun you can have with your .net on." As
    for "who am I?" I am Todd Kogutt: SCAVENGER, and you are most definitely welcome!


    **** L N H 2 0 Y E A R S ****



    Well, that's it (except for those stragglers who are posting their
    essays right as you read these words)! Thanks to those who sent me some essays (or stories)! And thanks to you people out there reading these
    words (we do this all for you)! See you five years from now for the
    25th Anniversary (Well, hopefully we'll see you sooner than that)!

    Arthur "One more year till drinking age..." Spitzer

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)