Buffy

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yup. no rocket science required

stimmy stimmy yah (Simon H.), Thursday, 11 February 2021 13:07 (five years ago)

Whedon was good at writing creepy, controlling nerd characters, like the Buffybot guy. Write what you know, I guess.

a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Thursday, 11 February 2021 14:03 (five years ago)

fun fact, the actor who played Buffybot guy (Adam Busch) had/has an almost-decent band called Common Rotation. I went to a house concert of theirs some time in the 2000s. I was dating a Buffy fan and he (Busch) was dating Amber Benson. We shared an elevator and, for some reason, bought her novel.

4 QAnon Blondes (Ye Mad Puffin), Thursday, 11 February 2021 14:21 (five years ago)

(Just to clarify, I don't mean that we bought her novel in the elevator. My memory of that night is fuzzy, but I think we got to talking and ended up buying a copy of her novel but I don't think we bought any of his records. They seemed nice.)

4 QAnon Blondes (Ye Mad Puffin), Thursday, 11 February 2021 14:24 (five years ago)

everyone has bills

sure. just saying “the boss is an abusive asshole” is not the only quality of a job, which is another reason continuing to work with him isn’t proof you think he isn’t.

difficult listening hour, Thursday, 11 February 2021 14:39 (five years ago)

It can also be hard to realize how abusive an environment is when you are immersed in it, especially if the other people immersed in it have come to think of it as normal. And if you are young and it's one of your first work experiences, you may not have the frame of reference to know what's expected and what's not.

Lily Dale, Thursday, 11 February 2021 18:29 (five years ago)

Yeah and if you swim in the soup of a misogynist culture everyday. Who among us doesn't look back on the stuff we put up with in our teens and twenties with horror?

horseshoe, Thursday, 11 February 2021 18:37 (five years ago)

“Buffy the Vampire Slayer” actress Michelle Trachtenberg claims showrunner and creator Joss Whedon was not allowed to be alone with her on set.

shivers me timber (sic), Saturday, 13 February 2021 09:25 (five years ago)

jesus christ

you are like a scampicane, there's calm in your fries (bizarro gazzara), Saturday, 13 February 2021 11:19 (five years ago)

a Firefly writer:

"Casually cruel" is a perfect way of describing Joss. He thought being mean was funny. Making female writers cry during a notes session was especially hysterical. He actually liked to boast about the time he made one writer cry twice in one meeting. #IStandWithCharismaCarpenter https://t.co/SgPF1rgRby

— Jose Molina (@JoseMolinaTV) February 13, 2021

shivers me timber (sic), Sunday, 14 February 2021 06:55 (five years ago)

My dream is all the actresses & their stunt doubles show up at his door and roundhouse kick him in his face one after another

Fucking w all these great women who made these shows successful is just so heinous

It hurts my heart & makes me so angry

terminators of endearment (VegemiteGrrl), Sunday, 14 February 2021 07:30 (five years ago)

Such a huge, Louis CK-like dissonance between how he presented himself in his art, and how he treated people in real life, although I guess both showcased Whedon’s narcissistic, erotic need to see people in distress.

Chuck_Tatum, Sunday, 14 February 2021 10:39 (five years ago)

Most cruelty is casual.

Chuck_Tatum, Sunday, 14 February 2021 10:41 (five years ago)

yes, but it's good to add to the fuller picture of his shitbaggery, vs the extremely targeted cruelty around Carpenter that has been known for years.

shivers me timber (sic), Sunday, 14 February 2021 11:55 (five years ago)

My dream is all the actresses & their stunt doubles show up at his door and roundhouse kick him in his face one after another

Fucking w all these great women who made these shows successful is just so heinous

It hurts my heart & makes me so angry

― terminators of endearment (VegemiteGrrl), Sunday, February 14, 2021 2:30 AM (seven hours ago) bookmarkflaglink

Same. Would watch Carpenter grind him under her heel.

horseshoe, Sunday, 14 February 2021 15:11 (five years ago)

boreanaz tweeted his support for carpenter over the weekend

I am here for you to listen and support you. Proud of your strength♥️🙏

— David Boreanaz (@David_Boreanaz) February 14, 2021

tiwa-nty one savage (voodoo chili), Tuesday, 16 February 2021 17:53 (five years ago)

<3

terminators of endearment (VegemiteGrrl), Tuesday, 16 February 2021 21:22 (five years ago)

(the murdernerd actors have all tweeted similar things, A.S.H. professed himself surprised and distressed when asked on radio, Carpenter replied to Boreanaz thanking him for also having been supportive privately earlier, and Nicholas Brendon posted a video to facebook complaining about rando followers pestering him for a statement before he has had time to process, and that he is more immediately concerned with upcoming surgery for his paralysed penis and anus.)

shivers me timber (sic), Tuesday, 16 February 2021 21:32 (five years ago)

yikes/lol at that nicholas brendon story

tiwa-nty one savage (voodoo chili), Tuesday, 16 February 2021 21:34 (five years ago)

surgery for his what

Hello Nice FBI Lady (DJP), Tuesday, 16 February 2021 21:37 (five years ago)

I can't even laugh that's just rough as hell

stimmy stimmy yah (Simon H.), Tuesday, 16 February 2021 21:38 (five years ago)

Carpenter to Eliza Dushku in the comments of Charisma's 'stagram:

I owe you an apology. I never lent my voice to you privately nor publicly when you shared your truth after suffering sexual misconduct in the workplace. As I wrote to you privately, this makes your statement of support sweeter. And as I said to J, your loving embrace empowers others to feel safe to share their stories. Thank you for being who you are. Thank you for your inspiring words of support. I will never forget how you have made me feel. 💖

shivers me timber (sic), Wednesday, 17 February 2021 10:08 (five years ago)

Big reported (with BTL workers) story:
https://variety.com/2021/tv/features/joss-whedon-buffy-angel-charisma-carpenter-toxic-workplace-1234915549/

According to sources, after Whedon created “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” in 1997, he was largely left alone, operating on a tight budget with little oversight, thanks to a steady stream of strong media buzz and rich key-demo ratings. The show shot at a relatively remote location on soundstages in Santa Monica where executives were not regularly roaming around, and the production operated much like an indie film. Insiders say the combination of Whedon’s lack of experience running a television show, the financial pressures of delivering an action-and-effects-heavy hourlong dramedy, a cast largely populated with young and eager actors, and the absence of regular supervision contributed to an environment ripe for a chaotic, highly competitive, toxic workplace. Many people who spoke with Variety described the set as operating like high school, with Whedon making everyone aware of who was in and who was out.

Another major factor contributing to the messy nature of the “Buffy” set: Stories of Whedon engaging in affairs with women working on the show quickly spread, according to three independent sources. As the executive producer and showrunner, Whedon was the boss, including of the women with whom he engaged in relationships. The alleged behavior contributed to a toxic workplace and heightened competition on set, blurring the lines between personal and professional demeanor for the cast — dynamics that continued long after Whedon’s purported affairs ended.

This describes so so many toxic workplaces pic.twitter.com/NQoNYThItV

— Kendra "Gloom is My Beat" Pierre-Louis (@KendraWrites) February 26, 2021

grab bag cum trash bag (sic), Saturday, 27 February 2021 12:50 (five years ago)

ten months pass...

The last 1/3 of this is a nice write-up of the screwball mode of American art.

https://www.vice.com/en/article/v7d34y/when-joss-whedon-was-our-master

xyzzzz__, Friday, 14 January 2022 09:28 (four years ago)

wherein: Joss Whedon, a narcissist hangs himself with his own rope, preserving the rich tradition of selfowning narcissists since time immemorial

the final paragraph is like *throws phone through window*

https://www.vulture.com/article/joss-whedon-allegations.html

terminators of endearment (VegemiteGrrl), Monday, 17 January 2022 21:36 (four years ago)

and the Ray Fisher stuff is wtf

I guess Joss Whedon's comeback strategy is to gaslight Ray Fisher on Martin Luther King Jr. Day? pic.twitter.com/jRa1Lt3iVA

— ☕Stephen M. Colbert (@smcolbert) January 17, 2022

terminators of endearment (VegemiteGrrl), Monday, 17 January 2022 21:45 (four years ago)

I doubt Whedon specified that Vulture should publish on MLK Day, but it is extremely damning anyway

That piece xyz linked is weak though. The writer seems to think screwball is defined as a) is based on a play and b) privileges dialogue over action; they also only cite His Girl Friday (ok) and Arsenic & Old Lace (uh wut) as exemplars of screwball.

I understand why JW has emerged as a popular lightning rod for overly stylized, recognizably voiced, "all the characters sound the same" screenwriting, but if you actually lived through his rise to fame you might recall all the same things being said about Kevin Williamson, Amy Sherman Palladino, Aaron Sorkin, Diablo Cody, etc. Not to mention Woody Allen, Armando Ianucci, Succession, etc. There are countless other examples

rob, Monday, 17 January 2022 22:00 (four years ago)

Fisher in response

Looks like Joss Whedon got to direct an endgame after all…

Rather than address all of the lies and buffoonery today—I will be celebrating the legacy of Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

Tomorrow the work continues.#MLKDay

A>E

— Ray Fisher (@ray8fisher) January 17, 2022

Ned Raggett, Monday, 17 January 2022 22:00 (four years ago)

JW cant even use the "have to go pee" move again now

mark s, Monday, 17 January 2022 22:01 (four years ago)

Thanks Rob, don't know much about screwball so was wondering what others thought about it.

xyzzzz__, Monday, 17 January 2022 22:17 (four years ago)

digging into the real issue tho: his adjustable dome size is mesmerising and perhaps even in its way beautiful

Thoughts and prayers for silence. pic.twitter.com/D9PynqmnHz

— Aaron Pruner (@AaronFlux) January 17, 2022

mark s, Monday, 17 January 2022 22:34 (four years ago)

This was a nice thread on that piece (which I am not going to read, the 'highlights' are bad enough)

so where's this Joss Whedon article that's making you all mad. Someone pass it over, it's my turn

— extortin, snortin, supportin corbyn (@fireh9lly) January 17, 2022

xyzzzz__, Monday, 17 January 2022 22:37 (four years ago)

Ah ok to be clearer on my objections then:

The "based on plays" thing is just a head-scratcher. While some screwball comedies are based on plays, many are not. And the idea that being based on a play means you end up with people in a room talking to each other isn't particularly true either. Most pertinently that ignores the genre of farce—a key influence on screwball—where characters are often moving on and off stage. While the dialogue will strike contemporary viewers as the most obvious characteristic, there's also plenty of physical comedy elements in screwball, and I just don't agree that dialogue is the only way character is communicated in screwball (costumes are often super important!). Plus, rapid, rat-a-tat dialogue can be found in lots of classic, non-screwball hollywood movies like gangster films or noir. Personally, I don't think Whedon's stuff sounds partic screwball; in contrast, mentioned above, Amy Sherman Palladino was v deliberately going for a screwball style with Gilmore Girls and you can tell.

Examples of screwball: core classics would be films like It Happened One Night, Bringing Up Baby, The Awful Truth, My Man Godfrey, and The Palm Beach Story. Importantly, these are all *romantic comedies*—which is why Arsenic & Old Lace is such an odd one to claim as screwball (it's a black comedy)—and usually the leads are at odds for most of the film in a "battle of the sexes." Like any genre, the limits can be contentious, so you can get screwball-ish films that aren't rom-com, but you wouldn't start there when defining it. Amusingly, despite that Vice writer going into depth on Whedon's doubtlessly bad X-Men run, they don't mention Much Ado About Nothing: a battle of the sexes romantic comedy based on a play. Obviously calling a Shakespeare screwball would be anachronistic, but it helped set the template!

rob, Monday, 17 January 2022 22:41 (four years ago)

I doubt Whedon specified that Vulture should publish on MLK Day, but it is extremely damning anyway

That piece xyz linked is weak though. The writer seems to think screwball is defined as a) is based on a play and b) privileges dialogue over action; they also only cite His Girl Friday (ok) and Arsenic & Old Lace (uh wut) as exemplars of screwball.

I understand why JW has emerged as a popular lightning rod for overly stylized, recognizably voiced, "all the characters sound the same" screenwriting, but if you actually lived through his rise to fame you might recall all the same things being said about Kevin Williamson, Amy Sherman Palladino, Aaron Sorkin, Diablo Cody, etc. Not to mention Woody Allen, Armando Ianucci, Succession, etc. There are countless other examples

― rob, Monday, 17 January 2022 22:00 (three minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink

Very weirdly written in places ("Lavinia Bidlow[...] is played by an actress from Whedon’s Dollhouse, where she also played a morally ambiguous matriarch." - could the writer not be bothered to google her name??) and over-reaching in it's attempt to dismantle Whedon's legacy. It's a tainted legacy to be sure and lots of it has aged poorly, but "His comics writing is occasionally sub-par" seems a bit of a feeble criticism given the more serious allegations raised against him.

"Spaghetti" Thompson (Pheeel), Monday, 17 January 2022 22:44 (four years ago)

Totally. I get why the knives are out and have no interest in defending his work in 2022, but "Joss Whedon is the reason the live-action Cowboy Bebop sucked shit" is not a claim worth making right now for several reasons

rob, Monday, 17 January 2022 22:51 (four years ago)

this all seems foreseeable from the moment he changed his name to 'joss'

mookieproof, Monday, 17 January 2022 23:40 (four years ago)

lol

terminators of endearment (VegemiteGrrl), Tuesday, 18 January 2022 00:07 (four years ago)

Read that full interview now. Holy shit.

There are points where he almost, almost convinces you to pity him, and then you read the accounts from women he's dated and it reads like the behaviour of a pure sociopath. Thanks for the fun times Joss, hope you never work again.

"Spaghetti" Thompson (Pheeel), Tuesday, 18 January 2022 00:10 (four years ago)

Read that full interview now. Holy shit.

There are points where he almost, almost convinces you to pity him, and then you read the accounts from women he's dated and it reads like the behaviour of a pure sociopath. Thanks for the fun times Joss, hope you never work again.

Indeed.

Joss always seemed to get ultra defensive about keeping things within the strong vision he himself had for what the story/end product should become, he was never open to anyone altering things or doing anything other than helping him create his story. I remember James Marsters once saying that he thought of a direction for Spike (I believe it was Spike falling in love with Buffy) but that he had to pitch it as a tongue-in-cheek joke to Joss so there was a chance for Joss to take it as his own idea. Joss' own accounts on working with Donald Sutherland, working on the Alien script and again here on working on Justice League also all show that he expected actors to say the lines he had written for them.
In that sense, I can sort of understand where he was coming from regarding his treatment of cast and crew, but it sure doesn't excuse it and it indeed all reveals his character as a narcissistic asshole. And that is even beside his infidelity and treatment of women.
I still love pretty much all of Joss' creations, even with the rotten core of his ego-driven forceful creation towards HIS products, but as much as I think he wanted it, there is still far more to all of those shows and movies than only Joss writing that made them what they are: the cast, the other crew - sadly mistreated as many of them were, they still made for some terrific art.

And Joss Whedon may be a terrible nasty sociopath, but he certainly does have his talents in writing dialogue and general storylines.

I also thought that the vice article was terribly weak. The author doesn't like Joss' writing and somehow seems to wants to prove that it has always been bad writing with bad influence. But a lot of it is missing the point or making subjective arguments which I really cannot agree to. The article also makes a big point out of the fact that Joss' work is dialogue-driven and we're not shown why characters feel or act the way they do. It's dialogue driven, sure, but it is not only dialogue and many examples could be given of strong scenes without dialogue ('Hush', anyone?). Also, a lot of the dialogue is really good and does reveal a lot about the characters. I don't agree with many of the given examples. I thought the X-Men run was fine & the quoted dialogue was actually pretty good - I personally had more of an issue with the plotting of Joss' comics than with the text.
Also, I don't agree at all with the thing about characters being derivative of each other. Kaylee is nothing like Willow. Topher is nothing like Xander.

Valentijn, Tuesday, 18 January 2022 08:53 (four years ago)

That last paragraph is so infuriating. What a fucking dick.

Chuck_Tatum, Tuesday, 18 January 2022 12:59 (four years ago)

He is exactly the toxic narcissist that all those Insta reels warned us about

Chuck_Tatum, Tuesday, 18 January 2022 13:00 (four years ago)

That article reminds me of various profiles I've read of tech bros in the Silicon Valley, these nerds suddenly given money and power and explicitly coming to the twisted conclusion, well, might as well take advantage of it now and do and be all the terrible things we could never do and be in high school.

I still don't quite follow the Ray Fisher stuff, but even setting aside what may or may not have happened on Justice League (a misbegotten project all around), or Buffy, he sounds like he at the very least grew into a bad person that, for all his purported therapy and pursuit of personal betterness, does not appear to have learned a single lesson.

Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 18 January 2022 13:39 (four years ago)

Did he "grow into" a bad person? Or maybe he was always a gnarled mass of eels, but he hid it well because he liked the attention he got for appearing to be a S.N.A.G.?

I don't see his story as "wide-eyed wunderkind becomes beloved through innovative work, then becomes bad because power and fame corrupted him."

I see it as "He was a deeply troubled and flawed young man, who noticed early on that the best way to get the approval he desperately wanted from attractive and smart young women was to create an elaborate persona of woke feminism. He went to precisely the sort of college where that worked as a dating strategy. As his fame and cachet increased, he realized how much he could get away with, he had no incentive to change."

Maybe he couldn't tell where the persona ended and the "real" Joss began. But in any case, since everyone kept telling him he was brilliant and beloved, there was no reason for him not to indulge his long-held fantasies. In scripts, on various sizes of screen, and - heck - in various dressing rooms. Because why not?

I don't think he came into the industry pure as snow and got corrupted in the process. That lets him off too easily. I think he entered the industry and cannily saw a path to making his 13-year-old's jerkoff scenarios come true. He was fantastically rewarded for doing so (as long as they were couched in an overall storyline of "female empowerment") so there was never a reason for him to evolve.

If in his later career he did stuff like therapy or whatever, mmmkay, but the seed (NPI) was probably there from the beginning.

umami dearest (Ye Mad Puffin), Tuesday, 18 January 2022 14:54 (four years ago)

i think whedon's writing got worse over time tbh (which is not exactly advocated by that v flattening vice piece, but regardless). he totally burrowed into his own tropes. i recall with unfortunate clarity the "we have a black president now" line from the season one finale of dollhouse

STOCK FIST-PUMPER BRAD (BradNelson), Tuesday, 18 January 2022 14:57 (four years ago)

also it's impossible not to feel like he made one of the characters in firefly a sex worker just so she could get called a whore constantly

STOCK FIST-PUMPER BRAD (BradNelson), Tuesday, 18 January 2022 15:02 (four years ago)

i think whedon's writing got worse over time tbh

yep. I watched The Nevers and while it wasn't awful (I'd compare it to something like the revived Doctor Who), the degree to which it was clearly "joss plays the hits" was pretty embarrassing. If we're narrativizing his career, I think "dude ran out of ideas" is more apt than some of this remote psychopathology

rob, Tuesday, 18 January 2022 15:57 (four years ago)

Kevin Williamson, Amy Sherman Palladino, Aaron Sorkin, Diablo Cody, etc

def always lumped whedon in with this crew in my head so no certainly not solely responsible for this particular strain of horrible writing, god what a baleful and wearisome bunch

Nerd Ragequit (wins), Tuesday, 18 January 2022 16:29 (four years ago)

I (haven't seen the Nevers but) don't really share the impression that his writing got worse. I think his writing was always overall (IMO) very good, but with occasional flaws from early on.
The impression I get is that after seeing more of his work, some of his tropes became more apparent through frequent use and got very, very tiresome. And none more than the notion that people are simply not allowed to have a happy relationship, because of some kind of philosophy that characters ending up together may be what the viewers want but not what they need. That's why as soon as people finally get together, one gets killed off or worse. I often wondered if that was some kind of pathetic release of Joss' own personal frustrations/inabilities.

Valentijn, Tuesday, 18 January 2022 16:30 (four years ago)

It definitely sheds new light on Tara's death.

peace, man, Tuesday, 18 January 2022 16:37 (four years ago)

Like, a really gross new light.

peace, man, Tuesday, 18 January 2022 16:38 (four years ago)


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