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Hey, Gleeks! (and Everyone Else): Fanfic.me Is Launching a Multimedia Fanfiction Platform

August 30, 2011

FanFic.me

Diehard fans often put up with clunky technology just to pursue their passion. But Fanfic.me, launching later this week, hopes to bring fanfiction addicts into the twenty-first century.

“We’re making fanfiction as easy – and feature rich – as blogging,” explains Jacquelyn Abromitis, who owns an online education company and can’t pass up a good Glee or Good Wife episode.

Fanfic.me’s WordPress plugin will bring fans together around TV shows, movies, and books. They can write and read fanfiction, embed pictures and videos, and share posts on their social networks.

Abromitis sees fanfiction writers as an underserved market, stuck in the era of text-only – mostly on Fanfiction.net, which has millions of authors and hundreds of millions of monthly page views. Ficly, a much sleeker site born out of an AOL project, also focuses on text but engages users with a 1,024-character limit so others can pick up where you left off. Fanfic.me is positioning itself as a more general alternative: fanfiction can be an individual or group project, text or multimedia.

Abromitis has grand visions for a site yet to go live, but she has an impressive team to back it up: COO Kathleen Ulisse, a former senior project executive at IBM; CTO Chad Horton, who has experience at a Fortune 500 company; and adviser Alice O’Brien, who has designed web and mobile sites for a large Canadian bank.

And the software underlying Fanfic.me has already been tested: eight years ago, an earlier version was born as L-word.com. Abromitis heard about Showtime releasing The L Word and knew it would be a blockbuster, so she created the site – where, originally, she posted content that fans emailed to her. As L-word.com grew to 8 million monthly page views, she began allowing users to upload their own posts.

“Writers and readers kept asking for more,” recalls Abromitis, who became inundated with user-generated content. And even after eight years in the making, Fanfic.me will be a “work in progress,” as a new crowd tries out the platform. Since they are writers, they’ll surely have a lot to say.

To hear more from Fanfic.me, or chat with Abromitis about Glee, join us at the Tech Cocktail Boston mixer this Thursday.



About the Author
Kira M. Newman

Kira M. Newman is a writer interested in startups, innovation, and new trends. You can follow her on Twitter at: @kiramnewman.

6 Responses to “Hey, Gleeks! (and Everyone Else): Fanfic.me Is Launching a Multimedia Fanfiction Platform”

  1. [...] Fanfic.me – UGC software + site designed for the most loyal and active fans of TV shows, movies, books, cartoons, and more. [...]

  2. Fandom says:

    "But Fanfic.me, launching later this week, hopes to bring fanfiction addicts into the twenty-first century"

    BWAHAHAHA….!

  3. Concerned Fan says:

    Been there, done that… before the site "goes live" (it takes logins now; how much more does it need before it's "live?"), it really needs a Terms of Use policy and a statement about copyright, unless it's happy facing lawsuits from anyone who claims content on the site violates their copyrights.

  4. Raven says:

    Wow, that´s an impressive staff you call your own, Mrs. Newman! Just that you kinda forgot to mention that these people want to get paid for their work. So, how do you intend to procure their salary? By implying a donation button, I presume..? *<= irony*

    Due to your biography I suppose you hadn´t much to do with fandom activities yet and don´t know how the whole thing works. Maybe I can sum it up by saying: Fansites don´t grow because an outsider decides there might be a "market" for them. They are launched by people who like to share their passion outside the world of new trends an innovation. Dear Mrs. Newman (or whoever is behind this), I´m afraid you´re trying to sell fridges in Greenland. The improvements you talk about – they alread exist. A big overlapping archive for each taste – it´s already there.

    There are just two questions I´d like to ask you.The first one is the question of moral:

    Given your little ship become a financial success how do you intend to share the money with the authors and artists who did the "creative" work for you? Because if all those professional guys work for you money is what you´ll have to make.

    Which leads me to the second one, the most important question of all: Once you run this site for profit – how will you undergo each and every copyright law? I guess you know that the only reason why authors and companies tolerate fanfiction is the fact that it is not made for gaining money (means: there is no such thing as a market). What will you do if you get buried under an avalanche of lawsuits? Do you have so much insight in questions of law you can deal with that? WIll you protect your authors from being sued into the ground?

    The summary is: I accuse you of the attempt to – and I like to support my predecessors here – make money by other people´s work. Funnily the same has happened a couple of months before. In case of doubt google Manderfail or Keith Mander (yes, news travel fast. So much for the "overarching" communication between difefrent fandoms). I recommend his blog, preferrable the approximately 80 comments to his latest entry…

  5. Raven says:

    It´s me again. I think I´m guilty of mixing up the names; it´s not Mrs. Newman but Jacky Abromitis who runs the archive. Or whatever it´s meant to be. I apologize for that. The rest, nevertheless, stays the same.

  6. CenturyFruitbat says:

    *rolls eyes* What a fucking self-seeking idiot. Newman, you really ought to have done your due diligence instead of writing this up like a press release.

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