Conventional Thinking
Nov. 18th, 2004 01:06 amConventional Thinking
I, Mishalak, swear that I'll never...
1. Run a science fiction, anime, or other fannish convention.
2. Do even half of the following if I can't manage to follow through on number one.
3. Schedule a guest of honor, or indeed much of anything, opposite opening ceremonies.
4. Engage in a coup d'etat against the organizing committee. Particularly not in the final month before the convention.
5. Spend money the convention doesn't have or have any conservative expectation of getting.
6. Refuse to delegate tasks I cannot do to maintain my own little tightly controlled empire of nothing getting done unless it gets done the way I want it to.
7. Announce a project/event and keep it in the schedule/progress reports without anyone assigned to organize it.
8. Put up and leave up misdirecting signs.
9. Make constant programming changes during the convention.
10. Allow every masquerade entry to take 10 minutes to recite a monologue to go with their costume. Heck they shouldn't get more than one minute on stage.
11. Allow conrunners to use the con to promote their religion or political party.
12. Attempt to strangle other committee members.
13. Make useful volunteers feel like they aren't needed or appreciated.
14. Fail to advertize the convention and then wonder why no one shows up.
15. Endlessly claim that other fans are out to get me and that's why my con is failing.
I'll add to this as I think of things/get suggestions.
I, Mishalak, swear that I'll never...
1. Run a science fiction, anime, or other fannish convention.
2. Do even half of the following if I can't manage to follow through on number one.
3. Schedule a guest of honor, or indeed much of anything, opposite opening ceremonies.
4. Engage in a coup d'etat against the organizing committee. Particularly not in the final month before the convention.
5. Spend money the convention doesn't have or have any conservative expectation of getting.
6. Refuse to delegate tasks I cannot do to maintain my own little tightly controlled empire of nothing getting done unless it gets done the way I want it to.
7. Announce a project/event and keep it in the schedule/progress reports without anyone assigned to organize it.
8. Put up and leave up misdirecting signs.
9. Make constant programming changes during the convention.
10. Allow every masquerade entry to take 10 minutes to recite a monologue to go with their costume. Heck they shouldn't get more than one minute on stage.
11. Allow conrunners to use the con to promote their religion or political party.
12. Attempt to strangle other committee members.
13. Make useful volunteers feel like they aren't needed or appreciated.
14. Fail to advertize the convention and then wonder why no one shows up.
15. Endlessly claim that other fans are out to get me and that's why my con is failing.
I'll add to this as I think of things/get suggestions.
(no subject)
Date: 2004-11-18 01:19 am (UTC)Hee! The "Inner Brat" reads this and says, "Yeah, I'll actually DO it, none of this "try" crap!"
On a more serious note, general sympathies - I've never run a convention, but my life has overfilled on more than one occasion, and it's something I guard against pretty constantly now, for my own sanity's sake.
Crazy(but trying not to give it to others)Soph
(no subject)
Date: 2004-11-18 01:38 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2004-11-18 03:06 am (UTC)You're
Date: 2004-11-18 06:09 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2004-11-18 06:45 am (UTC):)
(no subject)
Date: 2004-11-18 08:42 am (UTC)You could probably ...
Date: 2004-11-18 08:49 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2004-11-18 12:59 pm (UTC)* Use "why hasn't this been done yet" as a means of delegating tasks.
* Omit paying the bills.
* Humiliate a well-meaning volunteer in front of the entire committee.
* Attempt a coup d'etat against the chairman with hypothetical financial calculations that manage to omit little bits of reality.
* Send confidential meeting minutes from a fake email address to as many SMOFs as I can in an attempt to aid in the aforementioned coup.
(no subject)
Date: 2004-11-18 01:00 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2004-11-18 01:00 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2004-11-18 02:48 pm (UTC)How very, very painful. *shivers*
(no subject)
Date: 2004-11-18 05:33 pm (UTC)So do I. Mostly. I wish I had the type of personality to be able to remain sane and work on one.
Mostly because of my con experience I think of opening/closing ceremonies as the main GoH event. I'll have to add about sending gophers to the bars to round up an audience. Stepping into a power vacuum is in no way like a coup, more like charging an enemy position. Still crazy, but not evil.
Happy enough to delegate stuff, the problem was often not having anyone to delegate to.
Yeah. But at times like that I figure it is time to call off that part of the event or if it is mission critical to think about how much the con is really needed/wanted.
I figure something went wrong in the planning stage if on the day of the convention is finding it needs to move or cancel programing because people are not showing up. It's a sign that control of the situation was lost some weeks before and no one noticed.
Only if equal time given to all, and I mean all religions/parties. And if one isn't available, then they all get the same time as that one - i.e. none.
Nice rule.
Unless necessary for your health, or the continued well-being of the con.
I'd think that it would be more helpful to just remove the person or threaten to quit.
I'd go further - make unnecessary, but enthusiastic, volunteers feel useful - that way they'll come back and do it again when we do need them.
Good idea.
Re: You're
Date: 2004-11-18 07:22 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2004-11-18 08:01 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2004-11-18 08:39 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2004-11-18 08:40 pm (UTC)