Seanan McGuire (seanan_mcguire) wrote,
Seanan McGuire
seanan_mcguire

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On spoilers.

So Chuck Wendig posted his thoughts on spoilers recently. I agree with many of them. There are entire media empires I have chosen to have no truck with because they were spoiled for me so thoroughly before I could start embracing them, as often through the intent of the people doing the spoiling as by accident. There is a whole subculture on Tumblr dedicated to bootlegging new movies the day they hit theaters, so that the very first spoiler-laden animated .gifs can be created. It can get really, really frustrating. While I understand the joy of having an open and enthusiastic discussion of a thing you love, part of me goes "not everyone can go to every opening night, watch every show the second it airs, read every book in ARC form three months before publication." It's just not possible, and in those cases, spoilers can steal a lot of the joy in enjoying a piece of media.

(Not for everyone, naturally. I know people who adore spoilers, and find them an exciting roadmap to what's ahead. I am just as likely to go "welp, that was the greatest hits version of the story, let's go enjoy something new.")

But saying "spoilers are bad" and "spoilers are wrong" seems very...I don't know, privileged? At least to me. I have friends who cannot watch rape. Cannot watch any threat of sexual violence. Cannot handle the use of date rape drugs or other such devices in fiction. I know people who are so severely afraid of spiders that even spiders in movies are not safe for them, or who can't deal with certain forms of bodily harm (eyeballs, sure, but no fingers, no teeth...). Most, if not all, of these people have really good reasons for their fears, and if they don't go around wearing shirts that list them off for your comprehension and enlightenment, that's because it's nobody else's business.

So they seek out spoilers. They look for them everywhere, because a little loss of surprise is worth it for the comfort of knowing a piece of media is safe. I was lucky enough to see Thor 2 early (I love you, Disneyland Annual Pass), and while I refused, for the most part, to be a source of spoilers, one person asked me a very basic "this thing will be triggery for me, does this thing happen" question, and got an answer. Because my desire not to put spoilers out into the world is not stronger than someone else's need for mental peace. I knew why she was asking. Refusing to answer at that point would have been policing someone else's choices, and saying I knew what she needed better than she did.

I will absolutely roll with "involuntary spoilers are bad": I don't want to get spoiled for everything in the universe the second I turn on my computer in the morning. I will roll with "there is a statute of limitations," and while we haven't all agreed on what it is, I stop getting grumpy after a week or so for minor things (it takes longer for big, shocking, "this changes everything" revelations). But we have to remember that for some people, spoilers are safety and self-defense. Spoilers are what makes it possible for them to enjoy media, just like everybody else.

Sometimes, providing spoilers is the only kind thing to do.
Tags: be excellent to one another, contemplation
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Yeah, I'm one of the weirdos who likes spoilers, for two reasons. One is, as you mentioned, trigger warnings. My partner and I marathoned Angel, and I got very into it. This is before I was treated for my bipolar, and my manic depression could be affected by things I had strong feelings about -- including media of various types. My partner made some comments about what was coming up, without spoilers, and said -- "No, you don't want to be spoiled, it'll ruin it." I kept pushing, and finally, they told me. And... it's a very, very, VERY good thing they did, because if I had not known about those two particular incidents (things happening to my two favorite characters) I probably would have ended up suicidal. (Thankfully, I am now on medication! And this doesn't really happen as, well, severely. I still have mood swings along with what I'm reading or watching but I don't get nearly to the extent I did before. And it occurs to me, I've never really heard of anyone else having this issue. Hm.) In a sense, that would have been triggery for me; and there is stuff I want to know in advance, like that, so I can make the decision for myself whether I want to watch it or not (or more usually when to watch it.)

Sometimes I don't want spoilers. I've managed, somewhat remarkably, to be unspoiled for BSG, and I have found I like (at least with this series) not knowing what's coming... but I also know that there is enough triggery stuff in there that I have to take anti-anxiety meds before watching and have more on hand. But I love it and still don't want to know what's coming, which is weird for me.

Normally, I like knowing ahead of time. I usually dislike the feeling of "what's gonna happen next" -- which is for most people, a big thing behind consuming media. That feeling? Actually makes me anxious. So I usually search out spoilers ahead of time -- and usually, they just make me want to watch or read it more! I had been planning on seeing Frozen, for example, at some point, but I wasn't feeling especially "okay, must see it now" and was thinking I might wait for video. Then I read a review and the comments had spoilers (warned for!). The spoilers made me want to see it more, because the twists sounded so damn cool, and I wanted to see HOW they did it, and I ended up actually dragging my GF out to see it the very same day. (...which happened to be Sunday at 4pm. I haven't been to a theatre so packed with kids in years. Oops.)

But I realize I'm odd in that, and so I try not to spoil things for other people. Even liking spoilers, though, I want warnings, so I can make the active choice for myself. Almost always, I'll read the spoilers, but sometimes (as in the above BSG example) I don't want them.
I think it's entirely reasonable to not be wondering what's going to happen next—we certainly get enough of that in real life, and not everybody enjoys anticipation. Since so much of what makes a story good is execution, not raw plot elements, you can still enjoy your stories.
Good policy choices.

<3