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San Diego Comic Con: SP-N7
Dates: Jul 22 - 26
Location: San Diego Convention Center, 111 Harbor Dr, San Diego, CA 92101, USA ( MAP)Details:Clint & Dawn Wolf will be at San Diego Comic Con, as Lab Reject Studios. We will be at booth N7 in Small Press.








3 thoughts on “555 – Concepts Of A Plan”
Dr. Norman (not a real doctor)
Oh for crissake …
Crazyman
I hope she’s got more than 12% of a plan… 😅
Mattexian
Hopefully she’s not pulling a “Leroy Jenkins!”
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#57. 54 – You Break It, You Buy It
46 Dec 01, 2010
#56. 53 – Smile When You Say That
48 Nov 24, 2010
#55. 52 – A Moment With Uncle Chuck
48 Nov 17, 2010
#54. 51 – Law Of Inertia
49 Nov 10, 2010
#53. 50 – If He’s Bit…
59 Nov 03, 2010
#52. 49 – Serious Accusations
49 Oct 27, 2010
#51. 48 – Not Complete Savages
61 Oct 20, 2010
#50. EPISODE THREE
49 Oct 19, 2010
#49. 47 – Critical Reaction (END OF EPISODE 2)
51 Sep 29, 2010
#48. 46 – Special Delivery
48 Sep 22, 2010
#47. 45 – By Any Other Name
56 Sep 15, 2010
#46. 44 – Disarming Personality
52 Sep 08, 2010
#45. 43 – Captive Audience
49 Sep 01, 2010
#44. 42 -Taking Care Of Business
57 Aug 25, 2010
#43. 41 – Meet and Greet
50 Aug 18, 2010
#42. 40 – Here Comes the Cavalry
48 Aug 11, 2010
#41. 39 – Spurred to Action
48 Aug 04, 2010
#40. 38 – Here Comes Trouble
61 Jul 28, 2010
#39. 37 – Different Views
58 Jul 14, 2010
#38. 36 – Horse With A Name
52 Jul 07, 2010
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555 – Concepts Of A Plan
I’d like to have an argument, please…
“This isn’t an argument!”
“Yes it is!”
“No, it isn’t, it’s just contradiction!”
“…No it isn’t.”
One wonders if he might have been better off seeing if they had a “Debate” category. In any case, it’s a good consideration for fiction writing where characters are going to have an argument. People just shouting yes, no, yes, no at one another gets old fast even in real life, much less in the realm of fiction where conservation of detail (and dialogue!) comes into play. On the other hand, if you get too fancy they’re going to sound less like people and more like talking points. This is where it becomes vital to remember who’s involved and why they’re arguing, not just what they’re arguing about. Also important are the skills and “weapons” they bring into play. What’s an argument, after all, but another kind of fight scene? An uneducated character usually isn’t going to start eruditely quoting Aristotle in support of their views — that’s not a weapon in their arsenal. If there is, it’s usually a case of someone outside the fight “handing it to them” — say, some TV pundit they were watching — and even though they’re using it they won’t be particularly skilled and will be in danger of a swift parry and riposte by someone better trained. On the other hand, they may be stubborn enough not to care, or to possibly change the fight into something more actually physical. Which brings up another point: if someone’s physically superior, then you as the author have to figure out why they wouldn’t take advantage of that to get their way and instead are fighting a possibly losing battle in the realm of emotions and words. As the author, it’s good to set the scene towards the outcome you need, but then I’d say “let them fight”. Let those debate points and insults and wheedlings fly from their lips according to the individual(s) in question, so that the conflict itself feels natural to the audience. If that leads down an unexpected path, then perhaps a reset (rewrite) is in order, or maybe your plot itself is what needs to give a little if the characters keep veering off script. And yes, that’s a weird concept considering you’re in process of writing the script. But you shouldn’t ever have to feel like your hammering your characters back into the shapes you demand, like they were so many nail heads sticking up from the otherwise smooth board of your story. It’s conflict, after all, and conflict by its very nature isn’t smooth. It might be better to work with the bumps.Calendar
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