Here is a really interesting post about writing that reads like a camera or TV show, and how this is increasingly prevalent among writers who don't read...
Very aguably. I don't think movies would be very popular if they lacked 'interiority and perspective.'
His argument seems to be that because the camera shows us everything, 'TV-brain' has led this writer to describe everything. But just because...
I watch far less TV now than I used to, and I read far more than I used to.
My writing is improving.
It's not the reason, but it might be a small, contributory factor.
The converse is also true: the more I write, the less I want to watch TV and...
Interesting, indeed! Reminds me of Ursula Le Guin saying that screenplays are written in present imperative, which just adds weight to the dangers of writing novels using the TV brain -- you end up asking the reader (now standing in for both...
Very aguably. I don't think movies would be very popular if they lacked 'interiority and perspective.'
His argument seems to be that because the camera shows us everything, 'TV-brain' has led this writer to describe everything. But just because...
Very aguably. I don't think movies would be very popular if they lacked 'interiority and perspective.'
His argument seems to be that because the camera shows us everything, 'TV-brain' has led this writer to describe everything. But just because...
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