
WorldCon 76 Report: Hugo Awards, Lodestars, and MAGA Hats
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The World Science Fiction Convention (76th of its name) this year ran August 16–20, culminating with the Hugo Awards Ceremony on the evening of August 19. (A little unusual—most of the time the Hugos are presented on the Saturday of the convention.)
After the problems with programming that reared up in late July—extremely late for a convention to be trying to fix its programming—and the heroic efforts of Mary Robinette Kowal (author of The Calculating Stars) and her team to fix things up, to my knowledge programming went off well, with full rooms and no major day-of issues. Big thanks to the convention staff (and Mary and her team) on course correcting.
The biggest thing I’m interested at WorldCon is the World Science Fiction Society Business Meeting, which is normally a technocratic exercise in Roberts Rules of Order fandom that determines, among other things, how the Hugo Awards are actually going to work and even what awards are going to exist. After many years of extremely contentious business meetings thanks to an attack from the political right of fandom (see here for a longer explanation) and the Herculean efforts to get a YA Award off the ground, this year’s meeting was downright peaceful! And actually finished early, which is the first time I’ve seen that happening in my short career of WSFS Business Meeting attendance.
Hugo-related highlights:
WSFS Business Meeting
- Proposed changes this year for Best Fancast and the mechanics of the Graphic Story categories were postponed indefinitely, to allow the Hugo Study Committee to work on the amendment further.
- An amendment to rename the category “Best Graphic Story” to “Best Graphic Story or Comic” to better honor how professionals in that field refer to their own work passed and will be sent to WorldCon in Dublin next year for ratification.
- Changes to the Professional Artist and Fan Artist Hugo categories were proposed, but turned out to be the most hotly debated part of the agenda—and were ultimately referred to a new committee, one that will hopefully have some artists on it to help hash out how “professional” versus “fan” art should be categorized for the award.
- An amendment that makes a slight change as to how the longlist of nominees is reported after the Hugo Award ceremony was passed and will be sent to WorldCon in Dublin next year for ratification. If you’re curious about this amendment, you can read about it in the business meeting agenda—just keep in mind we changed it from 5% to 4%.
- Some technical fixes were passed on to next year’s business meeting for ratification. And we ratified all of the technical fixes passed on from Helsinki’s business meeting with no debate.
- The WSFS YA Award (which is not a Hugo) officially has a name now! That names it “The Lodestar.” (And while technically without a name this year, the first YA Award was given too!)