alohadave
Doing better
- Joined
- Dec 6, 2019
- Posts
- 3,347
These threads are regularly recurring. If there is one thing AH'rs like to talk about it's scores and stats.There was a whole thread earlier about the ratios with views as the denominator
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These threads are regularly recurring. If there is one thing AH'rs like to talk about it's scores and stats.There was a whole thread earlier about the ratios with views as the denominator
I seem to remember that. The point you made was a line or two that the cheated upon husband weakly and verbally protested her activities. Then he let it pass. I might go back and re-read it now.I merely find it irritating when you missed a point which I take pains to put into the story.
And you learned it is how enjoyable the reader finds it instead. Personally, I like developed plots that create a visceral reaction. Then I like a logical resolution. (and I skip many of the categories) Others may feel differently.When I first started writing here, I honestly thought scores represented the quality of writing. I almost chuckle when I think about it now, but it's probably not a stretch to say that many readers believe it is so.
I think that this is an important point, particularly for LW. We may see a story as a playful fantasy, wheras the reader might see it as a retelling of their life, hoping for a better or more savage ending.
Poor stories don't do near as well in LW.
The question is why don't they like it? Until you understand that, they won't. Those other categories give away those participation awards. You rarely see a score below 4 and when you do, it is not only a dog, but a diseased mongrel.A highly rated story and/or contest winner in Mature, E/V, EC or most others will get trashed in LW if 'they' don't like it.
Focus on the future, and try to read new stories more carefully. There's a lot of info in the small details you miss when skimming.I seem to remember that. The point you made was a line or two that the cheated upon husband weakly and verbally protested her activities. Then he let it pass. I might go back and re-read it now.
There is no single "LW Brigade."Stories don't do near as well in LW unless they fit the pre-determined narrative of the LW Brigade.
A highly rated story and/or contest winner in Mature, E/V, EC or most others will get trashed in LW if 'they' don't like it.
I think you meant Under the Bridge.There is no single "LW Brigade."
Unfortunately, some (just under half)
Yeah, they're trolls. I even recognized them in my story "A Gathering of Trolls."I think you meant Under the Bridge.
Measuring a door, like testing the temperature is not a comparison. It may have a practical reason. Nobody says, "I prefer 32 inch doors to 30 inch ones". They may need a wider door for a wheelchair though.
I recognize the measurement aspect.No, you don't understand my point. I'll say it again.
When you measure your own height, you are comparing the point is space where your feet are to the relative point in space where the top of your head is. You compare these two points to find the difference and make the measurement. It is impossible to not do this. You do not say that your head is at 6 feet. You say that your head is 6 feet higher in relation to your feet. One is a reference point for the other to compare the positions in space. You cannot make any measurement without such reference point to make the comparison.
Now, determining who is taller, Joe or Dave or Mike, is also a comparison. That we understand quite easily, but it is a separate measurement from the actual measurements themmselves.
Yeah, I understood. You are are talking about making arbitrary measurements. Just assigning a number to that door with no purpose, in a void. Scoring a story is not the same. It is not exactly arbitrary and probably there is no comparison to another story. That second story is not even needed. It can serve as a tool its own.You cannot make any measurement without such reference point to make the comparison.
Yeah, I understood. You are are talking about making arbitrary measurements. Just assigning a number to that door with no purpose, in a void. Scoring a story is not the same. It is not exactly arbitrary and probably there is no comparison to another story. That second story is not even needed. It can serve as a tool its own.
That is exactly what I am talking about as well. And how I score others' work. If I see a 4, I think of the story as being good enough to resonate with the readership. It does not mean that this 4.1 rated story is better than that 4.0 rated one though. It means the readers for whatever reason liked it.The rest of us have been talking about judging your own story by its score.
I think you're seeing this as readers rating stories based on their enjoyment of the stories, all other things being equal.You are talking about a person casting a vote on one story. The rest of us have been talking about judging your own story by its score. These are very different.
However, even one person casting a vote on one story is still a comparison. He is comparing his reading experience to his previous reading experiences and basing that on his own criteria.
Reader Joe: He enjoyed the story but considered it not as good as his favorites, yet much better than most of the junk that he clicks on, compared to the faves and the junk, he rates this one a 4.
Reader Lisa: She thought that it was boring and thoroughly unsexy and nowhere near as good as most of the stuff that she reads so she gave it a 1.
Reader Jack: It was enough to get him to jerk off and as far as he's concerned it's just as good as all the other cool stuff that gets him to jerk off, so he rates it a 5.
These are all measurements of reader enjoyment and they are all comparisons.
That is exactly what I am talking about as well. And how I score others' work. If I see a 4, I think of the story as being good enough to resonate with the readership. It does not mean that this 4.1 rated story is better than that 4.0 rated one though. It means the readers for whatever reason liked it.
The opposite is true. If I give a story a 2 or a 3, it means I did not enjoy reading the story and I would not recommend it.
Scoring stands by itself. I use it like I would a product review before I order something online.
One problem I see with your reading selection criteria and ratings is that if you read Loving Wives stories, selecting ONLY those rated 4.0 or above, most of those you read will be BTB stories. The "extra-marital fun and sharing" stories are 1-bombed by the monogamy-only faction there.That is exactly what I am talking about as well. And how I score others' work. If I see a 4, I think of the story as being good enough to resonate with the readership. It does not mean that this 4.1 rated story is better than that 4.0 rated one though. It means the readers for whatever reason liked it.
The opposite is true. If I give a story a 2 or a 3, it means I did not enjoy reading the story and I would not recommend it.
Scoring stands by itself. I use it like I would a product review before I order something online.
Nope. I think the great majority are fair at best. At least to my preferences. Most lack too much to be enjoyable reads. Many I've read I would not read again much less recommend them.So then you agree that 95% of all stories on lit are generally enjoyable enough to recommend?
I think you're seeing this as readers rating stories based on their enjoyment of the stories, all other things being equal.
But other things are NOT equal.
Based on the timing of rating on my stories and the comments I've received, I see that in some cases there are readers clicking on a story merely to 1-bomb it. When I post a new story to LW, I know at least the first two votes within the first 30 minutes will be 1-star. (I have some dedicated haters.) Then throughout the first two days after publication, there are LW readers who will watch the lists and after someone else gives a 5, they will add another 1.
You might write three almost identical romance stories. In one, make them a hetero couple. In the second, make it inter-racial. And in the third make them a lesbian couple. Those will NOT receive the same ratings due to the opinions of the individuals among the audience.
Nope. I think the great majority are fair at best. At least to my preferences. Most lack too much to be enjoyable reads. Many I've read I would not read again much less recommend them.
I used to read dozen a day at least.
In SOME categories, 4 is good. Loving Wives is one. In a few others a 4 barely rates readability. Those stats you quoted are accurate perhaps but crap when applied across the board. Like giving every kid in a little league a trophy and then claiming how great they are compared to all the other baseball playing kids in the world, because they had a 100% of their athletes awarded a trophy.But you just said that a 4 is good enough to recommend, and statistics prove that roughly 80% of lit stories are 4 or better and 95% are 3.75 or better.
You have no argument here if you don't even understand your own numbers and your own voting process or your own definition/value of good.
Again, I disagree.I know that they are not equal. If you go back to my three examples, each voter has a different criteria for voting. If I would have listed 10 or more example voters, I would have included the one who used the criteria of whether or not the bitch was burned, 5 for yes and 1 for no. And it is perfectly accurate to state that the reader enjoyed the story because she was burnt, or did not enjoy it simply because she wasn't.
I also might have included the voter whose criteria is simply I hate that cunt psg, so therefore I hate all of her stories and she's getting 1s. Although this guy is likely not comparing anything since he's not measuring anything, he's just being a douchebag.
Again, it is merely the voters' criteria is different. Other than that, the process is about the same. They are comparing the story to others and grading accordingly.
The BtB guy rates the story where the bitch ends up burnt as perfectly awesome as compared to all of the other stories where the butch gets burnt. He also rates the story where the bitch isn't burnt as terrible in comparison to all the ones where she is burnt.
See, the process is generally identical except for the criteria of each reader/voter. The process is still a comparison.
If you are arguing that comparisons across categories is an inaccurate measurement, I agree and have been on record saying so for a couple of years. However, advice on how to score highly is usually "write in incest and put mom in son's lap," or "write in romance and give two perfectly deserving people an HEA," because your story is very likely to be well received. On the other hand advice is also, "stay out of LW if you want to score highly," because it is the hardest category to score highly in. No matter how well you write it, you have the least chance of being well received there.
So if you want to compare scores of stories just simply for how well they score (hey, I'm good at scoring 4.9s because I have perfected pandering to the Mom/Son crowd, say), actually yes you can compare across categories accurately. Of course we are usually looking for something more related to the content when we do try to make these comparisons, so that is why it is inaccurate/misleading to compare across categories for that purpose. However, if we calculate percentiles independently in each category, we then can compare those percentiles across categories with some semblance of accuracy or meaning.
In SOME categories, 4 is good. Loving Wives is one. In a few others a 4 barely rates readability. Those stats you quoted are accurate perhaps but crap when applied across the board. Like giving every kid in a little league a trophy and then claiming how great they are compared to all the other baseball playing kids in the world, because they had a 100% of their athletes awarded a trophy.
Again, I disagree.
I deal with Loving Wives, where your whole category scheme falls apart. That audience is broken into at least two major factions: those BTB/ monogamgy-only and the other "let's have extra-marital fun!"
They are polar opposites within the same category. It would be like have an audience in Lesbian with 40% of the readers HATING and 1-bombing every story there which involves lesbians.
Soo, you can't compare stories within LW with each other, because a good sharing story will rate much lower than a poorly written BURN.