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It's almost Easter! What are you fuzzy foxes, bouncing bunnies and other fancy furs gonna do for easter?
Minecraft anyone?
I have been trying to get a group of furries together to play with on a server called Civcraft. Its a no-rules (accept for the usual no cheating and whatnot) server in which players can make laws and enforce them using prison pearl. Using prison pearl, if a player is killed by another play and the killer is holding an ender pearl, the victim is then bound to that pearl and is sent to the end. Most of the time, people don't abuse this as large player controlled governments and factions will capture illegal pearls and players. I have been playing on this server for 3 years now and it is still fun. I have only been pearled once and the imprisonment period only lasted 2 days (this is out of 3-4 years of playing). The map doesn't reset and ores are more realistically placed so trade is a major part of the server. If you want to start a furry city, let me know by leaving your MC name in the comments, as well as your steam name so that I can add/ keep track of everyone who will be in the city. My steam name is Cosmondico, and my MC name is Cosmondico. If you don't feel comfortable leaving your names in the chat, PM it to me. Thanks!
submitted by Cosmondico[link] [9 comments]
I got a smoke ring badge for Shibo - by Teeny
Formalizing the Role of Charity Fundraising at Furry Conventions
Guest article by Laurence “GreenReaper” Parry. Greenreaper is the founder of WikiFur, lead administrator of Inkbunny, and editor-in-chief of Flayrah. This article first appeared on his personal Livejournal.
Many furries think raising money to support needy animals is a good thing. From a purely promotional point of view, it’s also nice to be able to say you “raised $$$$ for fuzzy critters”. As a result, many furry conventions do it.
Charity might seem like a win-win, but there are opportunity costs. Fundraising involves volunteer time, and sometimes money, which could otherwise be spent on awards, food, fans, guests, etc… – things which often relate more directly to the enjoyment of attendees, and the celebration and development of furry-related arts and crafts.
While charity events can be entertaining, particularly when live animals are involved, there are often trade-offs – for example, giving a table in a crowded dealer’s room leaves one fewer table for others, and perhaps a loss in funding; running an event takes volunteers and room slots. Likewise, while it’s not a zero-sum game, many attendees have limited funds, and encouraging them to donate may lower artists’ revenues.
This all needs to be be justified – and the way to do it is to include the organizers’ charitable goals as part of the event’s mission, as stated within its organizing document or bylaws. These statements don’t have to be super-specific, just ‘part of the purpose of this organization is to help raise funds for other non-profit organizations in the areas of X and Y’.
Documenting the nature of an event’s charitable commitment provides clarity to organizers, who are often faced with difficult decisions about resource allocation – e.g. do we save this surplus for future year’s events, or give it to charity? (I’ve seen this play out at a board meeting.)
Organizers may also determine that charitable activities are not going to be part of their core mission. This is good to know, as it can lead to a frank discussion of what is permitted, resulting in more-specific policies – e.g. “each staff member may spend up to 1/8th of their required work hours on charity-related events” or “1/10th of staff positions may be dedicated to charity”. (That doesn’t mean that staff can’t spend more time on charity as individuals; just that the convention’s members aren’t going to pay for it.)
The formal nature of an organization can hint at whether charity should be considered a key part of its operations. For example, Anthrocon is a non-profit social/recreational club (501(c)(7)), with the “sole purpose of [operating] a yearly convention in order to bring together devotees of anthropomorphics from near and far, in a relaxed social atmosphere where fans of all ages may feel welcome [… and is] dedicated to keeping its cost of attendance to a minimum.” You wouldn’t expect such an organization to be focused around fundraising.
In comparison, Midwest FurFest‘s Midwest Furry Fandom and Further Confusion‘s Anthropomorphic Arts and Education are charitable organizations (501(c)(3)); both have support of animal-related events written into their public mission statements (MFF, FC/AAE), albeit as secondary goals. When attending these events, you might reasonably expect a portion of your membership fee to go directly towards charitable goals – or at least to see significant fundraising activities.
Tax-exemption issues aside, neither approach is objectively “better” from a governance perspective; what matters is adherence to the mission. For example, Anthrocon does in fact raise significant amounts for charity—through a variety of entertaining social events—but if it started giving away large chunks of its own money, it’d be reasonable to ask why the membership fee was not reduced instead. Conversely, MFF regularly helps to raise large sums and donates directly to its sponsored charities; if it scaled back its support, there’d be questions to ask.
[There might, of course, be good answers in both cases, such as “large donations improve the guests we can attract” or “we bought art panels this year” – but there should be some reasoned justification based on the organization’s mission.]
In conclusion: if an organization you’re involved with is spending significant time and money on activities outside its documented mission, you should ask why… and if you’re running it, you should fix that, either by scaling back these activities, or including them within your organization’s formal mission.
This doesn’t just apply to charity, of course; but it’s particularly easy to get wrapped up in “doing good deeds” and forget that an event is meant to be serving the interests of furry fans, not our furry friends – or alternatively, to let your charitable activities languish, while claiming it’s still an important part of your mission.
With the proper mission wording in place, and a practice of evaluating ongoing activities against it, staff can make better decisions – and organizers can be more confident that, when they move on, their original goals will endure.
I wrote this post after a brief comment by tfbaxxter on NordicFuzzCon 2015 (a great con, by the way!), but I’ve been interested in charitable activities at conventions for years – this was just a good opportunity to write about it.
If you were a dragon, what would you hoard?
Doesn't have to be gold.
"Nobody be taking any male dragons. they are all mine! What am I going to do with them? That's a secret to everybody."
submitted by VentKazemaru[link] [89 comments]
Publishing for Furries; a Look at Mainstream Writing For and About Furries, by Fred Patten.
For all you Long-Tailed's out there. These are the struggles we endure on a daily basis.
Tail?
I am planning to buy a tail, probably a fuzzy one around 25 inches long, but I dont know much about them so what better place to ask than here.
First of all, where can I buy one (I live in Canada)? What makes a good tail? Are they only attached to the belt or is there any other way? Do they get dirty fast or break easily? And more or less how much do they cost?
Thanks
submitted by Lizardonfire[link] [4 comments]
Australian Animals on the Big Screen
Cartoon Brew has an article about the first teaser trailer for the new CGI (of course) feature film version of Blinky Bill. Wot, ye’ve not ‘eard o’ Blinky Bill? He’s one of Australia’s most famous animated animals: A young koala with an adventurous attitude and a strong environmental heart. “Blinky Bill first rose to fame in the 1930s in a series of lavishly illustrated and conservation-themed books by Dorothy Wall. A new generation of children… was introduced to Blinky through the classic 1990s animated series The Adventures of Blinky Bill.” The new CGI film features Ryan Kwanten (True Blood) as Blinky Bill himself, while other Australian voices include Toni Collette and Barry Humphries (“Dame Edna”). The film is directed by Deane Taylor, who previously was art director on The Nightmare Before Christmas. Interestingly, the same article makes mention of another upcoming film called Larrikins, in production over at Dreamworks Animation and featuring contributions by musician & comedian Tim Minchin. “Larrikins tells the story of an uptight bilby (a desert-dwelling marsupial), who has lived a sheltered life in the safety of his family burrow. When he ventures out and becomes privy to a dangerous secret, he finds himself launched on a musical adventure across the mystical and untamed Australian outback.” Larrikins was originally scheduled for a 2018 release, but there’s no word yet if all the recent shake-ups at Dreamworks will change that.
Emergency commissions
So Rent is due soon and I have absolutely no money, I need about 300 bucks or I will get kicked out. I could really use some help, so I am doing commissions at a lower price, Ref sheets are 10 bucks, emotions are 5, and icons are 2. Or if you want to donate that is fine too. Anything helps
You can find most of my stuff here: http://www.reddit.com/r/ArtworkStorage/ paypal is: Akirameruspera@yahoo.com
submitted by Rikku-Panthera[link] [2 comments]