On Fanboys and what is deserved:
As I grow older, I am more and more reluctant to identify with "geek culture" or being a "fanboy." And this is entirely why: there is an inherent danger in basing one's cultural identity around the consumption of a product, especially a product that in this case is owned by a company that has had aesthetic intentions that are questionable at best. I do not even really think that "geek" can be identified as a culture, because real cultures have philosophical, religious, historical, or ideological bases to them, whereas "geek" is mostly concerned with their own interpolation from marketed products, and rarely if ever attempts to turn these interpolations into anything more.
So, this is not what fanboys deserve so much as what fanboys and geek "culture" have unintentionally created. A product that truly does reflect them, and I feel that so much nerd rage and backlash have their roots at the horrifying image that they see when a film or game truly does reflect them.
As I grow older, I am more and more reluctant to identify with "geek culture" or being a "fanboy." And this is entirely why: there is an inherent danger in basing one's cultural identity around the consumption of a product, especially a product that in this case is owned by a company that has had aesthetic intentions that are questionable at best. I do not even really think that "geek" can be identified as a culture, because real cultures have philosophical, religious, historical, or ideological bases to them, whereas "geek" is mostly concerned with their own interpolation from marketed products, and rarely if ever attempts to turn these interpolations into anything more.
So, this is not what fanboys deserve so much as what fanboys and geek "culture" have unintentionally created. A product that truly does reflect them, and I feel that so much nerd rage and backlash have their roots at the horrifying image that they see when a film or game truly does reflect them.