This is my most favorite thing in the world. (x)
There are four things I love about this video
1. Dan’s hair
2. “Hello peasant”
3. Phil’s scream as they go over the bump
4. Dan’s face as they go over the bump
I love this
Noah Kahan

@theartofmadeline
Misplaced Lens Cap
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

Discoholic 🪩

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Claire Keane
tumblr dot com

Kaledo Art
official daine visual archive

Love Begins
todays bird
Sweet Seals For You, Always

⁂
hello vonnie

titsay
🩵 avery cochrane 🩵

if i look back, i am lost
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
EXPECTATIONS

seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Türkiye
seen from Argentina

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia

seen from T1
seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Australia
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
@2boredproductions
This is my most favorite thing in the world. (x)
There are four things I love about this video
1. Dan’s hair
2. “Hello peasant”
3. Phil’s scream as they go over the bump
4. Dan’s face as they go over the bump
I love this
Temporarily Getting Rid of Characters
Do you ever have scenes with 6+ people and you can’t seem to juggle them all? Or do you ever want to get 2-3 characters in a scene together for some quality relationship development, but that means sending the other characters elsewhere?
I’ve compiled a list of “off-screen” things your character can be doing, for any time you need them to be temporarily somewhere else. With this list comes with a few caveats:
If you find yourself always sending the same character somewhere else to a point where that character never actually gets much page time, are you sure you actually need that character in your novel? Don’t use this an excuse to keep deadweight characters that are 100% unnecessary to your plot, but your heart can’t bear to cut. Either draw them back into the plot as a necessary element, or get rid of them.
This is only for temporarily getting rid of someone—meaning for a short amount of time, and infrequently. It starts to feel weird if your character always happens to be taking their nap when something happens, and if you’re not careful, it’ll come off as lazy writing. Use this kind of thing sparingly.
Sometimes, you’ll need to have a result to their temporary absence. For example, if you say they’re off spying on the bad guy, occasionally they need to come back with a tidbit of info. Not all of their missions will be a success, but again, it’ll start to feel fake if there’s no point to the spying.
And now to the list! There are two sections to it, depending on if your character to be doing something actively plot-related and useful while they’re away, or if you want them to stay uninvolved. Both have their uses depending on the situation.
Active:
Captured by the enemy
Fighting in a different area
Guarding a captured enemy
Protecting someone in potential danger
Researching the problem
Spying/recon
Training to fight
Watching someone suspicious
With another character (off-screen relationship building)
Passive:
At school/work
Doing a hobby
Hunting for food
Injured/sick/in the hospital
On vacation
Out of the loop (no one told them about the meeting, etc)
Sleeping
The passive list could be incredibly longer, but I tried to list enough for you to get the idea. Whatever you pick, make sure it makes sense in your plot and setting, and like I warned before, don’t use this as an excuse to hold onto deadweight characters.
Working this kind of downtime into your novel isn’t bad, since it can take up the necessary but boring actions that your story needs. Someone learning how to fight, for example, won’t learn everything in a week. By occasionally putting them “off-screen” to train, you’re further convincing us that he or she has trained enough to pull off a future scene where they hold their own in battle. It’ll also give a sense that other characters are working in the background and getting things done, even if your protagonist or narrator isn’t always there to see it, which is realistic, of course. It’s not like everyone else freezes in place the moment your protag isn’t around.
–E
I try to remind myself of these things almost every day. 1. There are no rules in fiction. (You can do whatever you can get away with.) 2. Writing a book is hard. That’s just the nature of it. 3. Sometimes, the difference between a published writer and an unpublished writer is 17 drafts. 4. Play your own game — not someone else’s. 5. Every sentence should do more than one thing. 6. Try to think of your writing career and your publishing career as two separate things. You have some control over one of them, and almost no control over the other. (This is equally useful in good times and bad.) 7. Don’t be afraid to make a mess in front of yourself. 8. Try to do a little good work every day. (For me, that sometimes means writing just one good sentence.) 9. Don’t take your reader’s attention for granted. The reader is busy. The reader has a lot of other things to do. And lastly, I try to think of this one every day: 10. Be patient.
Karen Thompson Walker, Ten Pieces of Advice I’ve Never Forgotten (via powells)
12 Questions to Ask Yourself About Your Magic System
How is it learned and executed?
How is it accessed?
Does it have a will of its own?
Is it restricted in space and time?
What does available magic do?
How does it relate to the character, plot and theme of the book?
What is the cost of magic?
What can it not do?
How long does it last?
Who can use it?
How do others react to it?
Why haven’t people with this power taken over the world?
i cannot stress how important i find the last question.
I got to #6 and then realized that these questions were about a theoretical magic system for a fictional universe.
Being Pagan is weird like that sometimes.
And the answer to number 12, for my system, anyway, is that Magic takes a lot of very hard work (i.e. the mental/emotional/psychic energy needed to achieve an effect through magic is roughly equal to the amount of physical work it would take to do the same/similar thing without magic) and most pagans can’t be bothered to put in that much effort. And the ones that can be bothered have mostly figured out that the primary purpose of magic is to make yourself a better person and the world a better place… Actually just go read A Hat Full of Sky. pTerry pretty much nailed it.
yeah so i got my hair done today
Holy shit
@upelkuchens
@keelahsomethigh
Deviantart | Art Tumblr | Personal Tumblr | More info on my situation
What day is it tomorrow!
This is the only moment you can reblog this. after today, it will be impossible forever.
holy shit it’s actually the real one this time
What if Mars has water on it because we used to live there and fucked up the climate so badly that we had to send an escape pod to earth with only Adam and Eve in it?
You stop that
does anyone have more pictures of dogs making this face? i need to start a collection
i would literally rather have darth vader be our next president than donald trump. if darth vader ran in the 2016 elections, and it came down to him and donald trump, i would vote for darth vader without even thinking
this post is interesting because it implies a future in which darth vader won the democratic primary
No but this could totally be a thing.
Like he’d look at gay marriage and be like “I too have known what it’s like to not be able to get married simply because of who you are.” Marriage for everybody.
He’s pro gun-control. Light sabers are much more elegant weapons, anyway.
He’d probably be for raising the minimum wage. He grew up a slave, living in the worse kind of poverty. He knows how important it is for single mothers to be able to support their children.
Darth Vader: a Force We Can Count On.
can this be real?
Darth Vader was a better human being than Donald Trump and that is truly amazing
Problem with drawing your OC?
There is a 3D program where you can set everything.. i mean EVERYTHING on your character! And it’s free!
It’s called FUSE
http://store.steampowered.com/app/257400
you can pick between realistic and anime style… But most important: you can ANIMATE THEM!
Why
This is demonstrating why you absolutely do not pour water on a grease fire.
holy shit
Okaaaay. If any of you actually have a grease fire in the kitchen put the lid on the pan. It will suffocate the flames. Don’t pour water on it, and don’t freak out. Cook safely!
Or throw flour on it to smother it.
/quick safety announcement
NO, DO NOT USE FLOUR, DO NOT USE FLOUR TO SMOTHER A FIRE.
YOU HAVE TO USE BAKING SODA.
Throwing flour into a fire can cause it to combust and make the fire worse because FLOUR/SUGAR IS FLAMMABLE. One cup of flour into a grease fire can have the explosive force of dynamite.
The reason you use baking soda is that it releases carbon dioxide when heated, and CO2 is a fire suppressant.
REBLOGGING FOR LAST COMMENT TO SAVE LIVES
The glory years of the Doctor and Clara are coming. Steven Moffat explains how and why.
IF YOU EVER NEED SOMETHING TO READ READ THIS
OK ARE YOU EVER IN NEED OF BOOK RECOMMENDATIONS BUT DON’T KNOW WHAT TO READ NEXT?
I present to you, straight from the internet, whichbook:
Here’s how it works: You click the link, and choose four categories and the extent to which these categories matter:
Then click “go” and it’ll come up with a number of books you might like.
DON’T LIKE THE CATEGORIES? NO PROBLEM - see this little thing:
THIS LITTLE THING WILL TAKE YOU TO THIS SLIGHTLY LARGER THING WHERE YOU CAN CHOOSE A BOOK BASED ON THE FOLLOWING:
YOU NOW HAVE NO EXCUSE TO NOT BE READING SOMETHING BECAUSE WHATEVER YOU WANT THIS SITE WILL COME UP WITH IT.
… Apart from bisexual retired alien dudes. No books on that. Yet.
HOLY FUCK