War of the Worlds

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Fandom
Name: War of the Worlds
Abbreviation(s): WoW, WOTW, WOW
Creator: Greg Strangis
Date(s): October 1988 to May 1990
Medium: TV series
Country of Origin: USA
External Links:
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Overview

cover of the zine, Ashes to Ashes

The series begins with the idea that the aliens defeated in the 1953 film of the same name have been hibernating, rather than dead. Harrison Blackwood (played by Jared Martin) leads a very small group in the fight to stop them and keep the larger population of the planet from knowing about the invasion. He is joined by the military leader of the group, Paul Ironhorse (Richard Chavez); the scientist, Dr. Suzanne McCullough (Lynda Mason Green), and her daughter Debi; and the computer tech, Norton Drake (Philip Akin).

From a fan in 1996:

If you recall this show, you may remember

that the first season starred a quartet of characters carefully chosen for total contrast (i.e., incompatibility) coping with an impossible and deadly situation. Seeing as this contains nearly all the elements that engender hothouse slash if any two of the characters are male — this being TV, three of them are, of assorted flavors and colors, but all pretty.

I'd frankly have expected more miscellaneous slash on the show than ever appeared. Well, fandom was busy with the B7 feud at the time, or something, and besides the show itself wasn't great. But it had a great outline. I mean, H. G. Wells and Orson Wells, updated with cute actors? How could you go wrong? (By overdoing the gore-n-slime factor, for one, and by yanking the best characters after the first season, for two, and I could go on... but it did have a great outline.)

In retrospect, I think it could have been trying to play on the paranoia-with-government-shadow-

forces, not to mention aliens-among-us, that X-Files is currently exploiting to such good effect, but the times or the scriptwriters weren't ready for it then. [1]

Controversy

cover of the zine Bring 'Em Back Alive, artist is Connie Faddis

At the end of first season, control of the show was handed off to the son of Paramount's CEO, Frank Mancuso Jr., who decided to take the show in an entirely different direction. In the first episode of second season, we are shown that the invasion has gone from covert to overt; Ironhorse and Drake are killed; Blackwood and the rest go, literally, underground (they begin to live in the sewers); and a new character named John Kincaid (played by Adrian Paul) is introduced as the group's security/para-military defender. Many of the characters seemed changed radically from the first season, and the basic physiology and structure of the alien invaders was also changed.

Part of the controversy was Mancuso Jr.'s purported reasons for killing off Ironhorse (he saw him as having been painted into a corner, in terms of development, but was unaware that Ironhorse was the character most popular with fans) [2], and especially Norton: Mancuso said in an interview in Starlog that he felt no one wanted to see a disabled person on television [3] [4]

Some fans found the changes to be an improvement, but many more did not. Some unhappy fans refused to watch the second season, others watched but considered it an alternate universe, and still others ignored it all together in the same way Beauty and the Beast fans did when the popular character, Catherine, was killed off.

The changes did, however, lead to an upswing in War of the Worlds zines; fans unhappy with canon tend to take things into their own hands. Many of the zines published were "first-season" only, or required contributors to figure out a satisfying and logical way for Ironhorse and Norton to return to the team. [5]

Some Specific Fan Comments Regarding the Second Season: The Mancuso Changes

For other examples of fan reaction to the creative changes by Mancusu in the show, see the letterzine, The Blackwood Project.

A lot of people aren't [fans of the show] due to the violence with its Cronenberg touches (in the first season).

[...]

The second season was toned down, financially and in violence, too, though that first ep was a lulu. It was a good try for a non-network program and probably had a predictable run of one year, like Alien Nation. Now Alien Nation had the family touches, great continuity, and likeable people in an "almost tomorrow" future (like WOTW), was a step or two above WOTW in production values, and of the two, would be my choice for new episodes, as long as there aren't any chances for VTBS' return. [6]

Are you still grieving because Paramount killed off the two most popular characters in the series? Let BeBA make it all better! We offer logical alternatives to the screen premise, using various script-breaking techniques to prove that Ironhorse and/or Norton survived the bloodbath of the Second Wave. [7]

Bring 'em back alive? Why? 'Cause we're mad as hell, that's why! Okay, so Mancuso decided both Ironhorse and Norton had to die, but that doesn't mean they have to stay dead. We're looking for stories that will believably save our boys, ressurrect them, or explain why they couldn't really be dead in the first place. Remember: logic and believability are what we're looking for here. And if, by chance, a character named Mancuso [8] gets to suffer heavily along the way, your editors will be really pleased with you! Send all submissions to [address redacted]. And forget not thine SASES. [9]

Well, the new season of War of the Worlds is upon us - except it's not really War of Worlds, is it? And the atrocities being committed are not just the atrocities attributed to the aliens, are they? And you know what that means, don t you? Let us hit you with our proposed zine and make it all better.... Yeah, they didn't have to trash the Colonel; they didn't have to trash Norton; they didn't have to trash the whole first-season universe; and we don't have to let them got away with it! Can you plausibly bring back Lt. Colonel Ironhorse? Can you make sense of what "went on" between last season and this? Can you negotiate the plot inconsistencies and do the revamp of the show that should have been done? Can you even possibly find a way to give Norton back his place among the living? CAN YOU KEEP THE COLONEL FROM STAYING A CASUAL CASUALTY??? We're looking for plausible, good, complete stories - it's gonna take more than simple wish fulfillment to help us get through this one! Even if you have an idea but can't develop it yourself, get in touch; we'll jiggle it in front of some writers, and you'll still get credit for your idea, because you've helped the Cause! Take your pick of editors to contact, you aggrieved, grieving, talented, spunky fen... [10]

Anti-Second Season, Anti-Mancuso Cartoons

Fan Art

Fanfic

Most WOW fiction appears in print zines, and most is gen, thought there is some slash in multimedia zines.

For a full list of WoW zines, see Category:War of the Worlds.

Single Fandom: Advocate Angst | The Advocate's Deli | Alien Sushi | And Hell Followed With Him | Another Battlefield | Ashes to Ashes | Ask and Ye Shall Receive | Celebrity Mudwrestling | Cell-Phase Matching | Code 47, Level 3, Authorization 10 | Cosmic Travelers Guide to War of the Worlds | Dee-Pice | Downloading Aliens | E.T. Phone Help | Forgive Us Our Trespasses | The Forrester Papers | Green Floating Weirdness | The Happy Hunting Ground | Heretic Flotsam | Ironhorse Project | It Is What It Is | Late Night Musings | Leap of the Worlds | Let the Children Come.... | Mind Games | Need to Know | Pearl of Great Price | The Phoenix Mountain Project | The RC Dispatch | A Sacrifice of Jealousy, A Garden Locked, A Fountain Sealed | Sarge | Scent of an Alien | The Second Wave | To Life Immortal | The Triangular Whatsis | Troubled Times | WOW! | War of the Worlds Fan Fiction Bibliography | The War of the Worlds Special Gen Collection | The War of the Worlds Special Slash Collection | War of the Worlds Surplus | Wasting Aliens | Whispers of Armageddon | The Whitewood Chronicles | Yea Though I Walk | You Call This Living?

Multimedia: Adult Situations (slash) | The Celestial Toybox #5, #6, #7 (gen) | Chalk and Cheese #7, a Professionals/WOW crossover | Compadres #7 (gen) | CrosSignals #2 (gen, two crossovers) | Dyad (slash) | Missing in Action (gen) | Moonbeam (gen) | Of Dreams and Schemes #8 (gen) | Our Favorite Things #8 (gen) | Osmosis (gen) | Rerun #8 (gen) | Thoroughbreds (gen) | Wild Cards (slash) | ΞΕΝΟΦΟΝ (gen, focus on horses)

Newsletters: The Eagle Flyer (Richard Chaves fan newsletter)

Also see: Proposed Zines

Zine Fic as of 1990

From a list in Phoenix Mountain Project #1:

  • A Christmas Story, fiction by Ruby (Wild Cards #1)
  • A Night to Remember, fiction by Delaine (Playfellows #1)
  • A Turn of the Wheel, fiction by Duval (Business Associates #1)
  • After-Image, fiction by Copeland (Dyad #10)
  • At the Edge, fiction by Hicks (Dyad #9)
  • Behold a White Horse, fiction by Hicks (Dyad #5 and Business Associates #1)
  • Between Two Soldiers by Hicks (Dyad #12, Business Associates #2)
  • Blood and Roses by Hood (Dyad #2)
  • Child of Dawn, fiction by Hood (Business Associates #1)
  • Duty Calls, fiction by Duval (Playfellows #3 and Business Associates #1)
  • Embracing the Snake by Duval (Dyad #10 and Business Associates #1)
  • Flowers by Duval (Dyad #9 and Business Associates #1)
  • Flying on the Ground is Wrong, fiction by Gilgomesh (Plain Brown Wrapper #1)
  • Green Pastures by TACS (Compound Interest)
  • Hard Freeze, fiction by Duval (Dyad #13 and Business Associates #1)
  • I Know What You Want, fiction by Audrey (Wrath of Frisky Business)
  • I'll Remember You, fiction by Delaine (Playfellows #2)
  • Interlude Before Dark, fiction by Hicks (Frisky Business Strikes Back and Business Associates #1)
  • Into the Valley of the Shadow of Death, fiction by TACS (Compound Interest)
  • Moonlight by Wendy (Adult Situations #5)
  • The Moon's Secret, fiction by Ruby (Business Associates #1)
  • Native Secrets, fiction by Duval (Business Associates #1)
  • Night Song, fiction by Dundas (Playfellows #2)
  • On the Other Side of the Border, fiction by TACS (Compound Interest)
  • Sea Cruise, fiction by Duval (Playfellows #4)
  • Storm at Sea, fiction by Duval (Business Associates #1)
  • Surprise!, fiction by Ruby (Business Associates #1)
  • Surrender of Logic, fiction by Radei (Playfellows #2)
  • Thanks Given, fiction by Duval (Dyad #11 and Business Associates #1)
  • Battle Grounds, poem by Hood (Playfellows #1)
  • Body of the Rock, poem by Hood (Business Associates #1)
  • Distant Passion, poem by Hood (Business Associates #1)
  • Flight of Fancy, poem by Duval (Business Associates #1)
  • From One to Another, poem by Duval (Dyad #8 and Business Associates #1)
  • I Remember by Duval (Business Associates #1)
  • Ironman, poem by Hood (Playfellows #1)
  • Knights in Jasmine, poem by Hood (Playfellows #1)
  • Medicine Bundle, poem by Duval (Business Associates #1)
  • Moonlight & Swords, poem by Cameron (Playfellows #4)
  • Night-Aliens, poem by Jonson (Playfellows #3) see also War Time/Night Time Surrender to Logic, poem by Radei, Playfellows #2)
  • War Time/Night Time by Mercedes (Playfellows #4) see also Night-Aliens

Mailing Lists

  • Late Night Musings archive link "This list is an adult slash fiction list dedicated to the show War Of The Worlds The Series. This list is for posting fiction and making story challenges about our favorite characters from the series. This list also will welcome general relationship stories as well as long as it is about War of the Worlds The Series. This is an ADULT list so PLEASE DON'T SUBSCRIBE IF YOU AREN'T OVER EIGHTEEN YEAR OF AGE!!! This list Avatar assumes that by your subscription to this list that you are confirming that you meet the age requirement."

References

  1. ^ from. Strange Bedfellows (APA) #13 (May 1996)
  2. ^ This would be news to fans as just about every fan who wrote LoCs to The Blackwood Project proclaiming him their favorite character.
  3. ^ Norton is in a wheelchair, though the actor was not
  4. ^ there is much discussion of this topic in The Blackwood Project
  5. ^ a similar theme is SND stories in Beauty and the Beast fandom
  6. ^ from a Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea fan in Up Bubble #9 (October 199)
  7. ^ from Datazine #61
  8. ^ Frank Mancuso, Jr. was the second season creative replacement who drastically changed the show and killed off two popular characters.
  9. ^ from Communications Console
  10. ^ from a flyer in Below the Surface #4