Nicole's interview
by Kristiina
Kristiina: Tell
us something about yourself.
Nicole: I'm 34,
although in my mind I'll be 32 forever. Married, with one kid. I am
a software engineer by trade, and struck gold by working for Microsoft
for 4 years. With that "gold", my husband and I decided it would be
best if I stayed home to raise the kid. We're hoping for a second
kid soon.
To keep my brain from going mushy, I do website development as a contractor.
I handle the technical aspects of websites, not the graphical aspect.
I was raised as a Catholic, but I think I have an open mind. I also
think I should be wiccan but I have never taken any step towards that.
It appeals to me in a way Christianity never did.
Another noteworthy thing, English is not my first language. French
is. I live in Montreal, Quebec, a province of Canada where French
is the official language, not English. The internet is about the only
place where I use English, and I do have a French accent when I speak
English ;-)
K: Why did you choose
to write a Sith Academy story?
N: I saw the birth
of Sith Academy, and I really loved those early stories, where
we would simply take Phantom Menace characters and use them
to vent our frustrations. At the time, I was struggling with a beta
OS, and a service provider that wasn't very cooperative, so I wrote
Darth Maul gets Internet Access. I wrote that using a pencil
and paper, in less than three hours. It was fun to write, and it just
felt good. I had all those frustrations inside me about technical
glitches left and right, and laughing at them was good therapy ;-)
SA has moved on since those early stories to become a full blown soap
opera. It took me a while to appreciate the newer SA, but I realise
it had to evolve to keep it interesting.
K: So, 'Darth
Maul's Smell..' It's written rather poetic form. And you leave
'the outcome' of that fight for readers imagination. Do you prefer
that kind of style rather than graphic style which leaves very little
room for readers imagination?
N: That was poetic?
;-) That was written extremely fast, almost stream of consciousness.
Someone had asked on the mailing list about what Maul would
smell like, and that was my answer. It's all a first draft and wasn't
edited. I had some ideas as to where I wanted to take the story, but
at the time I wrote Darth Maul's Smell, I didn't have the free
time to write it all. I think I had enough in my mind to write a whole
novel ;-) So what you have in Darth Maul's Smell is really
just a first draft, and a teaser for something I never wrote, and
never will either. Years ago, I used to write quite a few erotic stories,
and I don't shy away from graphical details. For some reason, I no
longer have the necessary drive to write them anymore. Maybe cause
I got married ? ;-)
K: You are also
the creator of DMEB. Where did the idea for DMEB came
from?
N: A group of women
on Rec.Arts.SciFi.Starwars.Misc (also known as RASSM)
were discussing how sexy and appealing Maul was. Someone by
the name of AmidalaEp1 (yeah, the list aunt) mentionned she
was looking for help in starting an Estrogen Brigade. I knew what
Estrogen Brigades were, but I had never been interested in them till
I saw those four words together: Darth Maul Estrogen Brigade.
I told her I'd help, and I put together a few pages, based on her
comments and the other founding members. There were six of us at the
beginning. I've pretty much implemented everything they asked for
except for one, which I regret not having done. They wanted a place
so they could talk about themselves, presenting the members of the
Brigade. Eventually I delegated this to ECircles. So the idea
is not mine by far, I just helped in making it a reality.
K: When did you
start it?
N: The first webpage
was online May 25th, not quite a week after the movie opened in North
America.
K: How time consuming
is it to keep it going? Do you have time for anything else nowdays?
N: LOL! It was *very*
time consuming over the summer. On average I was spending 8 hours
a day on the site and mailing list, and email feedback. The site used
to run on my private server, where I have lots of work related items,
and I didn't feel comfortable sharing that password, so I was doing
it all alone. Once the site moved to its own domain, I could share
more easily. For a while I had someone help with the Fan Art
section, and that allowed me to breathe a little. Right now, the site
does not take much of my time anymore, apart from participating in
chats and on the message board, so yes, I have time for more stuff.
(contracts, paid jobs ;-)
K: Did the popularity
of DMEB suprise you?
N: Did it ever!
At first, I thought we would attract about 10 women, and we'd have
fun together for a couple of weeks then move apart after that. I guess
that's why my initial design for the site didn't allow for growth.
I had to discard it real fast. ;-) But what surprised me the most
was the interest in the press, which started with the San Francisco
article, but kept going for a couple of months. I even received a
paper from Australia, and there was a mention in Empire
magasine, a huge publication from the UK. It was the first time one
of my sites was mentionned in print .. No, that's not quite true,
my Due South site was mentionned in a book, but by the time
the book got printed, the site no longer existed.
If you want a few numbers about the DMEB's popularity: