smofbabe: (propellor)
smofbabe ([personal profile] smofbabe) wrote2012-04-15 10:49 pm

My Hugo Rant

The Hugos are awards voted on by the members of the Worldcon for that particular year. They are not a broad-based popular-vote people’s choice award and never have been. If people want to see the Hugos reflect a broader range of nominees, they should join the Worldcon and nominate and vote for them. Most of the time, seems to me that the people who are complaining about what other people nominate or vote for have not actually joined the Worldcon and nominated and voted. Frankly, it’s like the tag line of the old Pope joke: “You no playa da game, you no make-a da rules.”

On the flip side, I have a real problem with people who join the Worldcon just to vote for the Hugos (or to get the Hugo packet). The intention of a Supporting membership is to support the Worldcon and get the related publications such as the souvenir book and progress report because you can't attend that year. Nominating and voting for the Hugo awards is a perk of being a member of the Worldcon. I don't think it should be the sole reason for buying a membership, and I don't think the Worldcon should, as some have suggested, price and advertise cheaper memberships to make it easier for people to vote for the Hugos. I really really *really* wish someone would invent an alternate set of "People's Choice Awards" for the genre that would be based on a free popular vote (monitored to prevent vote stuffing, of course).

[identity profile] purplecthulhu.livejournal.com 2012-04-15 01:53 pm (UTC)(link)
I think voting on the Locus awards is free and open - at least online. Would that make them the 'people's choice' awards?

[identity profile] kevin-standlee.livejournal.com 2012-04-15 07:03 pm (UTC)(link)
I was about to say the same thing. Aside from the fact that Locus subscribers count double, the Locus Awards are open to everyone. I keep sending people who insist that "voting should never cost anything, anyhow, no way, just like I don't have to pay to vote in my national elections," (which misunderstands the difference between public and private organizations) to the Locus Awards.

I have reduced my volume on the creation of classes of membership cheaper than a Supporting membership that include voting rights (which, BTW, any Worldcon could create right now; they could even create a free voting-only class if they chose to do so, as it's not prohibited). That's because the changes to the multiplier on conversion of supporting-to-attending memberships during the initial 90-day post-election period mean that Worldcons have no excuse for keeping the advance supporting membership fee so high. You can sell a supporting membership for $30-40 and make money on it (which means it helps support the Worldcon) now.