AnasAbdin

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Game of Thrones Daily
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

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oozey mess
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Kiana Khansmith
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ojovivo
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
One Nice Bug Per Day
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
d e v o n
Misplaced Lens Cap

Love Begins
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@beardandbedroomeyes
How to Fix Underwriting
1. Slow down at emotionally important moments.
Big emotions need space to land. If a scene feels rushed, pause the plot briefly to show how the moment affects the character.
2. Add reactions, not explanations.
Instead of explaining what a character feels, show it through physical responses, hesitation, or small actions that reveal emotion naturally.
3. Ground every scene in the senses.
If a scene feels thin, add one or two sensory detailsâsound, texture, smell, or temperatureâto make the moment feel lived-in.
4. Let thoughts interrupt action.
A line of internal thought can deepen a scene without slowing it too much. Thoughts show stakes, fear, longing, or conflict beneath the action.
5. Expand consequences, not events.
You donât need more things to happenâyou need to show what matters. Focus on how events change relationships, decisions, or self-perception.
6. Strengthen setting where emotion peaks.
The environment should echo or contrast the emotion of the scene. Setting is not decorationâitâs emotional reinforcement.
7. Add specific details instead of general ones.
Underwriting often relies on vague language. Swap âthey arguedâ for one sharp line of dialogue or a specific breaking point.
8. Let dialogue breathe.
Short dialogue exchanges without pauses can feel flat. Add beatsâsilence, gestures, interruptionsâto give the conversation weight.
9. Show transitions between scenes.
If scenes jump too quickly, readers feel disoriented. A brief transition helps establish time, mood, and emotional continuity.
10. Clarify stakes early in the scene.
If readers donât know what can be lost, scenes feel empty. Make sure the character wants something specific and fears losing it.
11. Use the âwhat are they feeling right now?â check.
After each major beat, ask what emotion is dominant in that moment. If itâs missing on the page, the scene is likely underwritten.
12. Expand scenes that feel âtoo clean.â
If a scene resolves too neatly or quickly, it probably needs more tension. Messy emotions and unresolved feelings add depth.
Mean Girls (2004) dir. Mark Waters
Jurassic Park | 1993 Jurassic World | 2015
making films with @belmontcameli at home | Mehki Turner
little offshoot post of this. ALL THE TIMES LUCY HAS GONE UC: - 3.06, 'Revelations': NOVA LIN - 3.13+3.14, 'Triple Duty' + 'Threshold': NOVA LIN - 5.01, 'Double Down': SAVA WU - 5.07, 'Crossfire': UNNAMED - 5.16, 'Exposed': UNNAMED - 5.18, 'Double Trouble': SAVA WU - 5.20, 'S.T.R': AMBER - 5.21, 'Going Under': LISA THOMPSON/JAMIE HALL - 6.09+6.10, 'The Squeeze' + 'Escape Plan': THE NANNY - 8.07, 'Baja': XIA SUN
Meanwhile, Jensen:
FRIENDS 4.07 "The One Where Chandler Crosses The Line"
OFF CAMPUS 1.08 "The Line Change"
"One's my max the night before a game."
THE ROOKIE
â 08x12, Spy Games
The rookie "His name was Martin"
#I Had Instant Flashbacks To That Hospital Room Talk
Chenford in Tim's their bed.
Iâm sick of people telling writers not to use an idea because itâs âoverusedâ or ânot original.â
A huge part of writing is making the idea your own.
Do you want to write about vampires?! THEN FOR GODâS SAKE, WRITE ABOUT VAMPIRES!
Oh, dystopian futures are overused? PUT YOUR OWN SPIN ON IT!
Guys, donât let people stomp on your ideas. A story is a bunch of puzzle pieces that everyone has access to - but itâs your choice how you put them together. How you put it together and how you present it makes that idea uniquely yours, even if itâs a familiar concept.
Your idea isnât lame.
Own it.
Make it yours.
Someone sent me a screenshot of this post going viral on Facebook last night out of the blue. So happy to see people encouraged by it!
I mean, youâve got it, so flaunt it.Â
OFF CAMPUS 01.05 'The Cold Turkey'/01.07 'The Faceoff'