Girls who “ship” two guys being together

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Fandom nerd here! (Cracks knuckles)

The term “slash” began with Kirk/Spock fanfiction in the 70s, mostly written by women, and generally refers to male/male romantic relationships (notice the /). So it’s not at all new. The communities just moved from snail mail fan magazines to Usenet newsgroups to AOL to online fan forums to LiveJournal to Tumblr.

“Shipping” originated from “relationship” in the X-files fan community in the mid-90s and can refer to either hetero or same sex relationships. “Canon” relationships are actually featured on the show or in the books, but fans often “ship” characters that are not canonically together. Until recently, male/male relationships were very rarely canon. Now that gay relationships are more common on TV and in books, there are more canon gay ships. Popular non-canon M/M ships include Harry/Draco from Harry Potter and Stiles/Derek from Teen Wolf.

RPF (real person fiction) is written about real people— often the actors that play characters, boy band members, or athletes. For example, when Glee was at its height, there was a ton of fic about Chris Colfer, who played Kurt, and Darren Criss, who played Blaine. (Both were involved with long term partners, and Darren Criss is straight, but that doesn’t matter.) Pete/Patrick from Fall Out Boy is another popular pairing (also both straight in real life). Hockey RPF is also a big thing, pairing famous players romantically. People are often split in whether RPF is icky. It is a BIG no-no to send RPF to the person being written about, but people sometimes do it.

There’s also plenty of original male/male fiction bring published, often by women. There are all different genres, just like in straight romance fiction, and that includes YA.

There’s a lot of discourse on why slash appeals to so many straight women and teen girls. One theory is that it allows romance and fantasy without having to compare oneself to an idealized female that one can’t measure up to. (There’s also discussion of whether it’s appropriation/fetishization of LGBT identities/relationships.)

I’ve been reading fan fiction since I was 13ish, and slash fan fiction for ten years or so. I am a late-30s straight woman in a perfectly normal marriage.


Early 50's straight woman in a happy marriage (with a man) and I've been reading slash fan fiction for about 15 years.

Don't knock it till you've tried it.


Hello my people! Reader of fanfiction here, sometimes slash, though only if it seems to fit. I generally like things not too OOC.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Fandom nerd here! (Cracks knuckles)

The term “slash” began with Kirk/Spock fanfiction in the 70s, mostly written by women, and generally refers to male/male romantic relationships (notice the /). So it’s not at all new. The communities just moved from snail mail fan magazines to Usenet newsgroups to AOL to online fan forums to LiveJournal to Tumblr.

“Shipping” originated from “relationship” in the X-files fan community in the mid-90s and can refer to either hetero or same sex relationships. “Canon” relationships are actually featured on the show or in the books, but fans often “ship” characters that are not canonically together. Until recently, male/male relationships were very rarely canon. Now that gay relationships are more common on TV and in books, there are more canon gay ships. Popular non-canon M/M ships include Harry/Draco from Harry Potter and Stiles/Derek from Teen Wolf.

RPF (real person fiction) is written about real people— often the actors that play characters, boy band members, or athletes. For example, when Glee was at its height, there was a ton of fic about Chris Colfer, who played Kurt, and Darren Criss, who played Blaine. (Both were involved with long term partners, and Darren Criss is straight, but that doesn’t matter.) Pete/Patrick from Fall Out Boy is another popular pairing (also both straight in real life). Hockey RPF is also a big thing, pairing famous players romantically. People are often split in whether RPF is icky. It is a BIG no-no to send RPF to the person being written about, but people sometimes do it.

There’s also plenty of original male/male fiction bring published, often by women. There are all different genres, just like in straight romance fiction, and that includes YA.

There’s a lot of discourse on why slash appeals to so many straight women and teen girls. One theory is that it allows romance and fantasy without having to compare oneself to an idealized female that one can’t measure up to. (There’s also discussion of whether it’s appropriation/fetishization of LGBT identities/relationships.)

I’ve been reading fan fiction since I was 13ish, and slash fan fiction for ten years or so. I am a late-30s straight woman in a perfectly normal marriage.


Early 50's straight woman in a happy marriage (with a man) and I've been reading slash fan fiction for about 15 years.

Don't knock it till you've tried it.


Hello my people! Reader of fanfiction here, sometimes slash, though only if it seems to fit. I generally like things not too OOC.


I almost exclusively read slash, though I prefer M/M/F OT3s to all-male ones. I keep meaning to look for good Captain Marvel Femslash.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:How old are you?

What does this title mean using grown-up language?



Ship is in quotation marks, Granny, because that’s what these teens call it. Isn’t it time for your Geritol?


I’m 48 and know what it means. I ship Stucky, no matter what Endgame says. And I’m a fairly straight woman married to a straight man.


I'm younger. And have a teen. Never heard of this. Then again, I use actual full words to speak and write.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Fandom nerd here! (Cracks knuckles)

The term “slash” began with Kirk/Spock fanfiction in the 70s, mostly written by women, and generally refers to male/male romantic relationships (notice the /). So it’s not at all new. The communities just moved from snail mail fan magazines to Usenet newsgroups to AOL to online fan forums to LiveJournal to Tumblr.

“Shipping” originated from “relationship” in the X-files fan community in the mid-90s and can refer to either hetero or same sex relationships. “Canon” relationships are actually featured on the show or in the books, but fans often “ship” characters that are not canonically together. Until recently, male/male relationships were very rarely canon. Now that gay relationships are more common on TV and in books, there are more canon gay ships. Popular non-canon M/M ships include Harry/Draco from Harry Potter and Stiles/Derek from Teen Wolf.

RPF (real person fiction) is written about real people— often the actors that play characters, boy band members, or athletes. For example, when Glee was at its height, there was a ton of fic about Chris Colfer, who played Kurt, and Darren Criss, who played Blaine. (Both were involved with long term partners, and Darren Criss is straight, but that doesn’t matter.) Pete/Patrick from Fall Out Boy is another popular pairing (also both straight in real life). Hockey RPF is also a big thing, pairing famous players romantically. People are often split in whether RPF is icky. It is a BIG no-no to send RPF to the person being written about, but people sometimes do it.

There’s also plenty of original male/male fiction bring published, often by women. There are all different genres, just like in straight romance fiction, and that includes YA.

There’s a lot of discourse on why slash appeals to so many straight women and teen girls. One theory is that it allows romance and fantasy without having to compare oneself to an idealized female that one can’t measure up to. (There’s also discussion of whether it’s appropriation/fetishization of LGBT identities/relationships.)

I’ve been reading fan fiction since I was 13ish, and slash fan fiction for ten years or so. I am a late-30s straight woman in a perfectly normal marriage.


FASCINATING! Thank you for the explanation.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:How old are you?

What does this title mean using grown-up language?



Ship is in quotation marks, Granny, because that’s what these teens call it. Isn’t it time for your Geritol?


I’m 48 and know what it means. I ship Stucky, no matter what Endgame says. And I’m a fairly straight woman married to a straight man.


I also ship male-male couples the same way I do male-female ones. When you’re invested in characters, you like to see them happy or like to imagine your version of their happiness. I don’t think it is at all weird for a teen girl to ship a male-male couple. I’m a 42 yo married woman and it doesn’t have anything to do with my own personal sexuality.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Fandom nerd here! (Cracks knuckles)

The term “slash” began with Kirk/Spock fanfiction in the 70s, mostly written by women, and generally refers to male/male romantic relationships (notice the /). So it’s not at all new. The communities just moved from snail mail fan magazines to Usenet newsgroups to AOL to online fan forums to LiveJournal to Tumblr.

“Shipping” originated from “relationship” in the X-files fan community in the mid-90s and can refer to either hetero or same sex relationships. “Canon” relationships are actually featured on the show or in the books, but fans often “ship” characters that are not canonically together. Until recently, male/male relationships were very rarely canon. Now that gay relationships are more common on TV and in books, there are more canon gay ships. Popular non-canon M/M ships include Harry/Draco from Harry Potter and Stiles/Derek from Teen Wolf.

RPF (real person fiction) is written about real people— often the actors that play characters, boy band members, or athletes. For example, when Glee was at its height, there was a ton of fic about Chris Colfer, who played Kurt, and Darren Criss, who played Blaine. (Both were involved with long term partners, and Darren Criss is straight, but that doesn’t matter.) Pete/Patrick from Fall Out Boy is another popular pairing (also both straight in real life). Hockey RPF is also a big thing, pairing famous players romantically. People are often split in whether RPF is icky. It is a BIG no-no to send RPF to the person being written about, but people sometimes do it.

There’s also plenty of original male/male fiction bring published, often by women. There are all different genres, just like in straight romance fiction, and that includes YA.

There’s a lot of discourse on why slash appeals to so many straight women and teen girls. One theory is that it allows romance and fantasy without having to compare oneself to an idealized female that one can’t measure up to. (There’s also discussion of whether it’s appropriation/fetishization of LGBT identities/relationships.)

I’ve been reading fan fiction since I was 13ish, and slash fan fiction for ten years or so. I am a late-30s straight woman in a perfectly normal marriage.


FASCINATING! Thank you for the explanation.


Not pp, but there’s a decent YA book, Fangirl, that is set around a the teen girl author of a fanfic like this. You might enjoy it!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Fandom nerd here! (Cracks knuckles)

The term “slash” began with Kirk/Spock fanfiction in the 70s, mostly written by women, and generally refers to male/male romantic relationships (notice the /). So it’s not at all new. The communities just moved from snail mail fan magazines to Usenet newsgroups to AOL to online fan forums to LiveJournal to Tumblr.

“Shipping” originated from “relationship” in the X-files fan community in the mid-90s and can refer to either hetero or same sex relationships. “Canon” relationships are actually featured on the show or in the books, but fans often “ship” characters that are not canonically together. Until recently, male/male relationships were very rarely canon. Now that gay relationships are more common on TV and in books, there are more canon gay ships. Popular non-canon M/M ships include Harry/Draco from Harry Potter and Stiles/Derek from Teen Wolf.

RPF (real person fiction) is written about real people— often the actors that play characters, boy band members, or athletes. For example, when Glee was at its height, there was a ton of fic about Chris Colfer, who played Kurt, and Darren Criss, who played Blaine. (Both were involved with long term partners, and Darren Criss is straight, but that doesn’t matter.) Pete/Patrick from Fall Out Boy is another popular pairing (also both straight in real life). Hockey RPF is also a big thing, pairing famous players romantically. People are often split in whether RPF is icky. It is a BIG no-no to send RPF to the person being written about, but people sometimes do it.

There’s also plenty of original male/male fiction bring published, often by women. There are all different genres, just like in straight romance fiction, and that includes YA.

There’s a lot of discourse on why slash appeals to so many straight women and teen girls. One theory is that it allows romance and fantasy without having to compare oneself to an idealized female that one can’t measure up to. (There’s also discussion of whether it’s appropriation/fetishization of LGBT identities/relationships.)

I’ve been reading fan fiction since I was 13ish, and slash fan fiction for ten years or so. I am a late-30s straight woman in a perfectly normal marriage.


FASCINATING! Thank you for the explanation.


Not pp, but there’s a decent YA book, Fangirl, that is set around a the teen girl author of a fanfic like this. You might enjoy it!


DD and I have enjoyed RR’s series about that M/M couple.
Anonymous
Interesting factoid: 50 Shades of Gray started off as Twilight fanfiction. It's basically a x-rated version of Edward and Bella. It's also probably the reason for the inaccurate and poor portrayal of BDSM in 50 Shades.

And in my personal opinion (this is not confirmed), Twilight started off as Buffy/Angel fanfiction.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:How old are you?

What does this title mean using grown-up language?



Girls who fantasize about two guys being in a relationship together
Anonymous
There are so many pasty pale, likely obese posters on this thread. I guess this degree of obsession with pretend people is a victimless activity, but, aren’t you ever remorseful that you spent those hours not actively creating your own life narrative?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:There are so many pasty pale, likely obese posters on this thread. I guess this degree of obsession with pretend people is a victimless activity, but, aren’t you ever remorseful that you spent those hours not actively creating your own life narrative?



Oh man, that hurt! "pasty pale, likely obese" that was so insightful and viciously on target! I really hope you say stuff like that to people in real life so someone can kick your ass! Jerk!

~Someone reading this thread out of curiosity but who is not the target of your moronic insults
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:How old are you?

What does this title mean using grown-up language?



Girls who fantasize about two guys being in a relationship together


Thank you, seriously.
Anonymous
This is quite possibly one of the dumbest threads.
post reply Forum Index » Tweens and Teens
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