Difference between revisions of "CFG Rules"

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Taking the chair under such circumstances, a new possessor may triumphantly announce, "CFG rules!" The custom, complete with announcement, applies at many [[room parties]] and [[fannish]] social events far beyond [[Cincinnati]] and often when no member of the [[CFG]] is actually present.
 
Taking the chair under such circumstances, a new possessor may triumphantly announce, "CFG rules!" The custom, complete with announcement, applies at many [[room parties]] and [[fannish]] social events far beyond [[Cincinnati]] and often when no member of the [[CFG]] is actually present.
  
(Probably post-1950s. No present-day [[CFG]] member can date the custom definitively, but it seems to go back to the 1960s.) 
+
No present-day [[CFG]] member can date the custom definitively, but it seems to go back to the 1960s, according to [[Leah Zeldes Smith]] in ''[[STET]]'' 9.
 
 
Contributor:  [[Leah Zeldes Smith]], from [[STET]] 9.
 
  
 
{{fanspeak}}
 
{{fanspeak}}
 
[[Category:Catchphrase]]
 
[[Category:Catchphrase]]

Revision as of 06:43, 22 July 2020

CFG rules denote a prohibition against the saving of seats at fan gatherings, as practiced for decades by the Cincinnati Fantasy Group, a fan club. CFG rules state that any vacant chair is fair game, even if the previous occupant got up only to get another drink.

Taking the chair under such circumstances, a new possessor may triumphantly announce, "CFG rules!" The custom, complete with announcement, applies at many room parties and fannish social events far beyond Cincinnati and often when no member of the CFG is actually present.

No present-day CFG member can date the custom definitively, but it seems to go back to the 1960s, according to Leah Zeldes Smith in STET 9.


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.