I am so glad you finally had a good day at uni. This may sound irritatingly cliched, but I find that if I can push myself to stay on a particular course of action long enough, I DO get better at whatever it is I am doing, and I DO feel better and more hopeful. I wish I could be in class with you and work on your project. I have all these ideas and nowhere to put them...
I like Arial too by the way! :D I also like Tori Amos's song "A Sorta Fairy Tale," though something tells me it is not your kind of song. What can I say, I have more mainstream taste than you do. :) *hugs your neurons and receptors to keep the joy flowing* :D
I do not believe I am getting any better at what I am doing. I am just finding a comfortable slot where what I can do is applicable to a greater extent than what I cannot. And I would love to have you contributing ideas to something I am filming. Maybe one day when I resurrect the idea I had of having a large group of non-normies all living in their own little apartment block and generally being themselves in film-satire episodes, we could get you to write some episodes for it. Hehe.
I have always had a problem with Serif fonts and reading. I have just noticed it a lot more lately.
*My neurons and receptors all welcome you happily...*
Yes, I definitely have some ability with words, but rather than writing conventional, full-length pieces, I tend to craft sound bites, monologues, dialogues and interviews in my head. Hard to think of anyone who would need a writer like that...but maybe working on a film would suit me. :D
A lot of writers in Hollywood work on the principle of assembling sound bites or short segments before stitching them together as best they can. Which is understandable when you consider that some high-profile productions get worked on by so many writers that by the time the finished piece is shot, none of the poor writers can tell which of them worked on what.
Hmmm, so hypothetically I could be a Hollywood writer? :P I have to admit, I am not great at coming up with original concepts; I would be better at adding small details that would make a good story memorably funny (or so I like to delude myself!).
*gets to work with your neurons and receptors, writing something truly odd!* :D
I think you could write a better script than ninety percent of the writers presently employed in Hollywood. Or the BBC, for that matter (the shite they are trying to pass off as Doctor Who... egads...). Excellence is no longer a requisite to work in the entertainment industry, I am sad to say.
Hmmm... could you get my sense of balance and stability to work again?
I am so glad you finally had a good day at uni. This may sound irritatingly cliched, but I find that if I can push myself to stay on a particular course of action long enough, I DO get better at whatever it is I am doing, and I DO feel better and more hopeful. I wish I could be in class with you and work on your project. I have all these ideas and nowhere to put them...
I like Arial too by the way! :D I also like Tori Amos's song "A Sorta Fairy Tale," though something tells me it is not your kind of song. What can I say, I have more mainstream taste than you do. :) *hugs your neurons and receptors to keep the joy flowing* :D
Reply
I do not believe I am getting any better at what I am doing. I am just finding a comfortable slot where what I can do is applicable to a greater extent than what I cannot. And I would love to have you contributing ideas to something I am filming. Maybe one day when I resurrect the idea I had of having a large group of non-normies all living in their own little apartment block and generally being themselves in film-satire episodes, we could get you to write some episodes for it. Hehe.
I have always had a problem with Serif fonts and reading. I have just noticed it a lot more lately.
*My neurons and receptors all welcome you happily...*
Reply
Yes, I definitely have some ability with words, but rather than writing conventional, full-length pieces, I tend to craft sound bites, monologues, dialogues and interviews in my head. Hard to think of anyone who would need a writer like that...but maybe working on a film would suit me. :D
Reply
A lot of writers in Hollywood work on the principle of assembling sound bites or short segments before stitching them together as best they can. Which is understandable when you consider that some high-profile productions get worked on by so many writers that by the time the finished piece is shot, none of the poor writers can tell which of them worked on what.
Reply
*gets to work with your neurons and receptors, writing something truly odd!* :D
Reply
Hmmm... could you get my sense of balance and stability to work again?
Reply
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