Tumblr Post+ Protest
Oct. 1st, 2021 07:39 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Anyway, yeah, I'll be logging off of Tumblr in a few hours as part of Phase Two of the Post+ Protest. I'm afraid I don't actually expect Tumblr to take Post+ away; a lot of websites are married pretty hard to the Sunk Cost Fallacy, and Tumblr has sunk waaaay too much into Post+ to abandon it without at least a few years of trying to make it work. But I'm sure y'all have already gathered how big a proponent I am of Dreamwidth, and, well, any excuse to get people to check it out!
Official logoff time starts in about 3.25 hours after this post goes up, and lasts for 48 hours. We'll see what happens!
Official logoff time starts in about 3.25 hours after this post goes up, and lasts for 48 hours. We'll see what happens!
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Date: 2021-10-02 12:51 pm (UTC)I've now logged out, and moved my queue to drafts.
48 hours, you say? Maybe that's the one distraction I need removed so I can finish the story I'm working on (a retelling of "The Frog King" -- with an aro-ace princess) 😉
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Date: 2021-10-02 05:24 pm (UTC)My queue is too long to move to my drafts, and apparently you can't pause it anymore, so I just slowed it to one post per day and queue'd a couple of logoff protest posts instead.
Ooo! I've been reading some of your worldbuilding posts on Tumblr, and I must say, I am very looking forward to the results!
Yeah, I was thinking last night that, without the near-constant dopamine drip distraction of Tumblr, I might be able to take a few prompts over here; but I've got work tomorrow, so I'd want to finish them all today, and I don't know if I have the spoons for that. Maybe if I ever manage to move permanently away from Tumblr, I'll end up writing more consistently again... (Or maybe that'll only happen when Dreamwidth gets busy enough that it won't make a difference 😅)
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Date: 2021-10-02 08:59 pm (UTC)Yeah. I used to think of Grimm Brothers versions of the stories as "The authentic originals" (because that's the propaganda they themselves pushed, and even many serious scholars took them at their word, until recently). I don't think that anymore, but it's still true that their versions are the ones that modern adapters choose to remix into other media.
But when I read the Grimm Bros. 1852 version of The Frog King, my first thought was: "Well, that's a happy ending -- for the two other people whom these losers didn't marry, instead of each other.
So I've given myself the challenge of keeping all the key motif beats in the story, and reworking the context so (a moderately) happy ending makes (a bit more) sense.
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Date: 2021-10-03 04:29 am (UTC)Yeah, they had some seriously hardcore propaganda going; I was lucky enough to be exposed to some foreign versions of at least a few of the tales when growing up (Cinderella in particular), so I knew they weren't the only versions of all of the tales, but I caught enough of the "Everyone was angry about all the gory bits in the original Grimm Bros version so they cut them out" business to buy that they had a more authentic version of the European tellings, at least. I am glad to have since learned otherwise!
😂 What an excellent way to put it!
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Date: 2021-10-03 11:53 am (UTC)Yeah, I think the "gory versions of fairy tales are more authentic" is the same argument as "Grimdark superhero movies are more realistic," but in Renfaire costume. 😜
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Date: 2021-10-04 03:07 am (UTC)Sounds about right, lol sob 😂