Wednesday, June 8, 2016

Happy Endings

I am pleased by the suggestions for comment-response that are coming in; so far the "mailbag" approach seems to be the most reasonable given my predilections, so I'm leaning that way, unless I can figure out some blogspot gadget that would allow me to do something a bit more precise.

Now to the point of this post. Someone over on 4chan (a wretched hive of scum and villainy, which is probably why I am over there so much) observed that my stories tend to be sort of boring because the villains always win. In fact, let me quote:
The biggest and really only problem with Tabico is that all his/her stories read the same.

People act deliberately stupid, X character never had a chance, and every ending is a bad end.

Why not a story where the characters are smart? Why not a story where the villains don't just pull out a surprise trick? Where they aren't just going to win all along?

Why not a happy ending?


Now, some other anon posted a very intelligent and reasonable response to the question, but I figured I would also dive into it myself. Obviously, the first thing to say is that, like most stereotypes, the claim isn't entirely true - Winter Flesh, for instance, has a classic 'good guys win' happy ending. I daresay some of my other stories do as well. And I try my best to write intelligent characters; they're usually just outgunned, or unprepared, but not stupid.

But, like most stereotypes, there is truth at the core of the statement; I do write stories where the Evil Mind Controllers win. It's true; it happens again and again. And it's going to keep happening, and I do wrestle with the fact that if the reader comes to expect the bad guys to win, the story might get boring.

And there's a simple reason for it - when I come from (yes, 'when'), stories where the mind controller won didn't exist. So I very purposefully set out to create them.

I came up on Saturday morning cartoons. (This dates me, by the way. Saturday morning cartoons no longer exist.) Over and over we'd watch characters get mind controlled - which, for budding fetishist like me, was so confusingly erotic - and then by the end of the episode it was all reversed and everyone was back to normal. It happened in movies, it happened in books, you name it. The heroes always won; the mind control was always defeated, although in adult-focused media such as films the specific individuals who were controlled would generally meet bad ends while the protagonists went on to defeat the evil forces.

(Aside: William Lee once had a 'Saturday Morning Mind Control' site that put together a fantastic list of these cartoon mind control moments. Is that still around? *googles* No, no... hmm, some other person wrote a book with that title. Unrelated. Darn, it appears to be gone. Maybe the Wayback machine... ha! God damn I'm good. Saturday Morning Mind Control, from 2005. Sadly none of the links work, but you can see the list. Good God, it even has a quote from me!)

So when I went to write Mind Control Porn, I wanted to redress that balance. The forces of Evil Mind Control win in my stories, by jingo, partly because IMO that's hotter, and partly because they never, ever did, when I was growing up. It was a balance that needed redressing.

What's interesting to me is that we're now getting a generation of readers who are being exposed to stories like mine (and a lot of other writers) and who don't share that assumption. Who are, in fact, experiencing our stories and wondering why the good guys never seem to win. Who may, ironically, go forth to write stories where the good guys do win because they want to redress the imbalance that I and my ilk have created.

Which is fine. And I will see if I can have the good guys win a little more, just to keep things interesting. Of course, I can also split the difference, e.g. 'Lens'. Did the good guys win? Did the bad guys? Sort of both.

In the end, what's important is that someone resurrects that Saturday Morning Mind Control site.



6 comments:

  1. I always want the evil/corrupt ending. I totally agree on the Saturday Morning Cartoons problem. Started off for me with the evil clown in Scooby Doo and WW in the SuperFriend's Mind Maidens episode.
    Keep doing what you like. There's plenty of writers out there that have happy, sappy endings.
    Always advance the story though. And some type of character development/modification is a must. If there's a retcon there must be some residual alteration/consequence at least.
    Love your work with Uzobono. And I'd love to see sequels to so many of your stories.

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  2. I think it is not necessarily the younger generation but readers who may have come upon the niche with expectations similar to what they have been offered in mainstream media.

    Smallville for instance had several episodes with heavy mind control in it, and an entire group of young people were exposed to this idea through shows such as that. The problem was as you said, that at the end of the day, the control was broken and everybody went back to normal.

    It is rare enough to see things from the antagonists point of view but to see them win is a guilty pleasure. The same drive that makes fans write fan fiction, to have them ask "What if my favorite characters took the other path?" is what makes your stories so engaging, because while we may know that the bad guys may win, it is all about the ride, and who may get off and join the ranks before the ride ends.

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  3. Agreed, for us the goodguys DO win, we're pulling for MC because that is what pushes our buttons. We also want to care about the characters, their innocence and flaws and how that becomes their undoing. The fall is the story. Their demise the happy ending.

    Also, I would encourage you when you feel compelled to close a story with 'just plot' left like compromise for example to try to finish it extra sexy, with a saphic ending.

    "She continued to lap at the juicy pussy in her face with abandon, gazing up into the face of her mistress her with hopelessly glazed eyes in submission, forming a slight smile with her lips around her darting tongue. A new purpose had claimed her.'



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  4. One comment not on happy endings but on pierced- I struggled at times to follow the story because you would alternate between first and last names. I a long story with breaks where sometimes I'm not reading as carefully as I might otherwise, I got confused as to who was who. I forgot which last name belonged with each character (and vice-versa). I almost went back through to make a diagram with descriptions of the characters and their maladies... but didn't but did feel it necessary to better enjoy the story.

    What made it harder to follow was the jumps and breaks in the story, which made knowing the characters being described all the more important yet, for me, it was a trifle confusing. Loved the transitions and breaks but had to keep pulling myself out to figure out who was who.

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  5. Imma challenge some of your premise on this - far be it from me to suggest your intentions are 'wrong'. I too grew up on Saturday morning cartoons. They shared the same problem that much of the Trek canon shared (and indeed, most comics) - regardless of what happens in the episode, the magic reset button must be hit at the end. (I think the most outrageous example of this might have been on "Star Trek: Voyager", with the two-part episode "The Year From Hell", where an entire YEAR was wiped out, and everything reset by story's end. But I digress).

    So all that does resonate...but...I mean, why are we all here? I hate stories where the person controlled is made to forget at the end, as if nothing happened. Why bother?

    I also go back to the interviews you've done in the past (no, they are NOT clipped and on my refrigerator door, why do you ask?), where you talk about how the people in your stories are never treated with contempt. That is, the people in the stories participate and are enthusiastically grateful for what is happening to them (I think my favourite Tabico line - one I've seen again and again - is "Thank you for doing this to me").

    So without disputing your intentions, I would suggest that the 'bad guy winning' isn't the hallmark of your stories; rather, its the protagonist enjoying what is happening (eventually, anyway). This is a new and thrilling component of mind control stories, that probably didn't exist before the 90's. You have respect for BOTH the protagonist and the 'villain' and treat them as such. So someone can express that the villain always wins, but I think they are missing the point - the hero doesn't mind. And that is pretty damn cool.

    Saint Germain

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  6. There's something incredibly generic about always letting the hero of the tale win. We see that all the time in pop culture and regular media. I must confess that I enjoy having a happy ending in that arena - because the conventional viewpoint of a non-happy ending always seems to be the 'I am so Emo let's make it a super depressing nobody wins' ending. You don't really get anything else. Your take on the ending where 'everybody is mind controlled to be happy' is really a fresh take on an ending that we still haven't seen in a movie theater.

    When I am reading for erotica, I'm not really ever looking for a happy ending, because that means the hero/heroine escapes the mind controller and fun sexy times are terminated. If the story is a serial, and the main character continually encounters new mind controllers, you can't ever take it seriously, because you know that in the end, the hero will always escape - like a comic book villain that always has his/her plans foiled.

    I like seeing how the author handles the eventual downfall and corruption of the main characters, and what happens after the mind controller wins. I think that's one of the main reasons I enjoy your stories so much. I *expect* the main characters to be taken out and subverted. It's the how and why it happens that's so delicious! There's nothing quite as thrilling as a former friend knowingly leading another character along the path towards submission and subversion.

    Anyway, I say those people who find your tales 'boring' because they usually end up with a 'bad end' should go back to watching Saturday morning cartoon villains, because clearly they can't handle anything more interesting. And who says that your 'bad ends' are really all that bad? Everybody loves being mind controlled, after all!

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