Difference between revisions of "Ploy"

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== (1) [[Fansmanship]]: A Guileful Maneuver==
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(Did you mean a [[Ploy (Bennett)|Ron Bennett fanzine]]?)
In [[Fansmanship]] (which see), a ruse or other clever means by which one appears to be doing one thing while actually accomplishing some hidden agenda self-serving purpose. A cited ploy in early Conventionsmanship, e.g., involved charting out in advance all the squeaky boards in the room where a convention program was to be held, showing up 15 minutes after it was scheduled (since program items in those days never started on time), stepping on the boards to draw attention to your arrival, leading those awaiting, as the program finally gets under way, to the inescapable conclusion that you are so important to the proceedings that it could not possibly start until you arrived.
 
  
== (2) A Fanzine by [[Ron Bennett]] ==
 
''Ploy'' was also the name of a [[Ron Bennett]] [[fanzine]], the first issue of which was to [[fanzines]] what the [[Invention]] (which see) was to [[conventions]] – an amusing [[hoax]] that came off well despite the fact that its name alone should have alerted [[fans]] to what it was. [[ron bennett|Bennett]] started publishing ''Ploy'' with the second issue, and filled its [[lettercolumn]] with paeans of praise (supposedly written by well-known [[fans]]) to the brilliant material written by [[pros]] and [[BNFs]] that had appeared in the (nonexistent) first issue. [[Fans]] who fell for the hoax were quick to rush letters to [[ron bennett|Bennett]], begging for a copy of the first issue.
 
  
<tab head=top>
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In [[Fansmanship]], a '''''ploy''''' is a ruse or other clever means by which one appears to be doing one thing while actually accomplishing some hidden agenda self-serving purpose.  
Issue || Date || Pages || Notes
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1 ||colspan="3"| There was no issue #1
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A cited ploy in early Conventionsmanship, e.g., involved charting out in advance all the squeaky boards in the room where a [[convention]] [[program]] was to be held, showing up 15 minutes after it was scheduled (since [[program items]] in those days rarely started on time), stepping on the boards to draw attention to your arrival, leading those awaiting, as the program finally gets under way, to the inescapable conclusion that you are so important to the proceedings that it could not possibly start until you arrived.
2 ||Autumn 1954 ||32 ||This was actually the first issue. It was deliberately mis-numbered.  
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3 ||August 1955 ||36 ||
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[[Mundane]] dictionaries date ''ploy'' in the sense of “a calculated plan” to the 1950s, which is why [[Fancyclopedia 2]] had to explain it.  
4 ||September 1955 ||34 ||[[Bill Harry]] joined as art editor
 
5 ||March 1956 ||34 ||
 
6 ||June 1956 ||32 ||
 
7 ||November 1956 ||36 ||
 
8 ||March 1957 ||36 ||
 
9 ||July 1957 ||34 ||
 
10 ||September 1957 ||36 ||The 3rd [[Annish]]  
 
11 ||March 1958 ||36 ||
 
12 ||April 1958 ||32 ||
 
13 ||July 1959 ||22 ||
 
14 ||June 1959 ||44 ||The [[Bob Tucker]] Appreciation issue. Last issue
 
</tab>
 
  
 
{{fancy2|text=
 
{{fancy2|text=
A guileful maneuver. Its present popularity stems from Stephen Potter's ''Gamesmanship'', but the word is legitimate Scots dialect for employ, from Latin ''in plico''.  
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A guileful maneuver. Its present popularity stems from Stephen Potter's ''Gamesmanship'', but the word is legitimate Scots dialect for employ, from Latin ''in plico''.
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}}
 
   
 
   
Also, the name of a [[fanzine]] published by [[TAFF]] delegate [[Ron Bennett]]; the ploy here was that the first issue was ''[[PLOY]]'' #2.
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{{fanspeak}}
}}
 
 
 
{{publication | files=http://fanac.org/fanzines/Ploy/}}
 
{{multiple}}
 
 
[[Category:fancy2]]
 
[[Category:fancy2]]
[[Category:fanzine]]
 
[[Category:hoax]]
 
[[Category:US]]
 

Latest revision as of 23:24, 12 September 2020

(Did you mean a Ron Bennett fanzine?)


In Fansmanship, a ploy is a ruse or other clever means by which one appears to be doing one thing while actually accomplishing some hidden agenda self-serving purpose.

A cited ploy in early Conventionsmanship, e.g., involved charting out in advance all the squeaky boards in the room where a convention program was to be held, showing up 15 minutes after it was scheduled (since program items in those days rarely started on time), stepping on the boards to draw attention to your arrival, leading those awaiting, as the program finally gets under way, to the inescapable conclusion that you are so important to the proceedings that it could not possibly start until you arrived.

Mundane dictionaries date ploy in the sense of “a calculated plan” to the 1950s, which is why Fancyclopedia 2 had to explain it.

From Fancyclopedia 2, ca. 1959
A guileful maneuver. Its present popularity stems from Stephen Potter's Gamesmanship, but the word is legitimate Scots dialect for employ, from Latin in plico.

Fanspeak
This is a fanspeak page. Please extend it by adding information about when and by whom it was coined, whether it’s still in use, etc.