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- Archive-name: folklore/afs-faq
- Alt-folklore-suburban-archive-name: faq
- Last-modified: 1994/09/18
- Version: 1.0
-
- Welcome to alt.folklore.suburban!
-
- 1) What is the charter of alt.folklore.suburban?
-
- Alt.folklore.suburban is a moderated newsgroup in the alt.* hierarchy
- dedicated to serious discussion of urban legends. It is intended as a low-
- volume, high-signal repository for discussion of urban legends. While many
- urban legends are collected, in detail, in the works of Professor Jan
- Harold Brunvand (see below), there are those who wish to discuss variants,
- local "spins", people who refuse to accept them as urban legends, and other
- aspects of the urban legend phenomenon. Jokes, test postings, insults,
- attacks, ads, and other non-urban-legend-related material is off-charter.
-
- 2) Who is the moderator of alt.folklore.suburban?
-
- The moderator of alt.folklore.suburban is Joel Furr (jfurr@acpub.duke.edu).
- You can submit articles to the group either by mailing them directly or by
- posting to the group and letting your site's news software forward the
- articles on to the moderator. The latter is preferred as it preserves
- important header information.
-
- 3) Why is the group named alt.folklore.suburban?
-
- Alt.folklore.suburban was originally proposed as 'alt.folklore.urban.-
- moderated'... a moderated counterpart to alt.folklore.urban.
-
- Alt.folklore.urban itself is often a very, very noisy group where actual
- discussion of urban legends sometimes seems to take a back seat to silly
- jokes, long posts about alt.folklore.urban common stock being floated on
- the New York Stock Exchange, taunts and attacks, and in general, noise.
-
- However, the name alt.folklore.urban.moderated got a lot of flames from
- clueless people who confusedly thought that the proposal was for
- alt.folklore.urban itself to be _removed_ and replaced by the new alt.-
- folklore.urban.moderated newsgroup. Since every iteration of proposals for
- a.f.u.m got more flames from people who didn't take the time to read the
- proposal in detail, the proposal was dropped for a while until a better
- name could be found.
-
- On April Fool's Day, 1994, someone jokingly proposed that a newsgroup
- called 'alt.folklore.suburban' be created to discuss lawns, swimming pools,
- and so forth. Joke though it was, a.f.s's creator, Joel Furr, thought the
- name had some charm and appropriated it in place of alt.folklore.urban.
-
- If you want a rationale for the name, think of alt.folklore.-suburban as
- alt.folklore.SUB-urban, a subset of the scope and thrust of
- alt.folklore.urban. Just the facts, ma'am, and none of that loud noise.
-
- 4) Why was a moderated counterpart to alt.folklore.urban necessary?
-
- Nothing is _necessary_. But in actual point of fact, there are now two
- moderated counterparts to alt.folklore.urban: alt.folklore.info, moderated
- by Terry Wood, and alt.folklore.suburban, moderated by Joel Furr. Both
- were created by individuals who found that no matter how hard they tried,
- they could no longer keep up with more than a fraction of the traffic in
- alt.folklore.urban. The volume of messages per day was simply too great.
- By creating moderated counterparts, it was hoped that those people who had
- actual urban legends to post would go there or spend some time there.
- Alt.folklore.info doesn't get many posts -- this is partly because its
- moderator, didn't do much to encourage subscribers to post, and partly
- because alt.folklore.suburban, which came along later, gets most of the
- submissions that go to a moderated urban legends group these days.
-
- 5) What's the moderation policy for alt.folklore.suburban?
-
- The moderator reserves the right to reject posts which contain no urban
- legend related content. Insults, test postings, ads, attacks, and posts
- that are mainly jokes, among others, qualify for rejection. In actual
- practice, however, very few posts are rejected, and for the most part,
- these are rejected because they are providing the same answer as an
- approved post. Example: some guy asks a question, ten people follow up
- with the answer. Only one of the replies is approved, since the other 9
- said the same answer.
-
- STUFF THAT WILL BE EDITED OUT BY THE MODERATOR (PLEASE READ):
-
- The moderator reserves the right to trim or eliminate .signatures, exces-
- sive quoting, and crossposted newsgroups. Since the inhabitants of alt.-
- folklore.urban usually respond with incredible rage any time an article is
- crossposted to alt.folklore.suburban AND alt.folklore.urban (they see it as
- deliberate 'pollution' by the moderator of alt.folklore.suburban), from
- this point forward, all crossposting to groups other than alt.folklore.-
- suburban will be eliminated prior to posting. If you do not like this
- policy, please submit your articles elsewhere or submit an article to
- alt.folklore.suburban without crossposting and submit another copy, with
- all the other newsgroups, to those newsgroups.
-
- Repeat: Articles submitted to alt.folklore.suburban with crossposting to
- other newsgroups will have the other newsgroups removed by the moderator
- prior to posting.
-
- 6) Where should I go for a canonical list of urban legends?
-
- As you'll have noted, this 'FAQ' does not list common urban legends. This
- is partly because there are many excellent books on the subject (see below)
- and partly because the alt.folklore.urban FAQ, maintained by Terry Chan,
- lists almost all of the well-known legends and many of the not-so-well-
- known legends.
-
- For books on the subject, see Professor Jan Harold Brunvand's popular
- books, _The Vanishing Hitchhiker_, _The Choking Doberman_, _The Mexican
- Pet_, _Curses, Broiled Again_, and _The Baby Train_, which are available at
- most public libraries and at many bookstores.
-