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To make this next section easier, I will point out some of my more egotistical moments with an e factor of, say, 1 to 5. ![]() |
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kind of traps you. Perhaps
the most significant, albeit recent, discovery I have made (e=3)about creative
writing is you don't really
ever know how you do it. If you are writing news articles or interviews, then how you will
write can be determined by a simple formula using what the focus of the magazine is about(and
therefore the interests of the reader) and the subject matter you are dealing with: If you are writing for the Wall Street Journal, and you want to talk about the high Dow Jones average, you are going to answer simple questions like: How high is it? How high was |
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it before? Is it gonna
get higher, or go lower? The same questions you asked last year when you wrote about
how low the Dow Jones average was.
![]() It's what your reader wants to know.(e=2) ![]() |
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don't know who was surprised,
though. I mean, top dog hollywood writers got 4 million to come up with 'Showgirls', so in
a relative sense, it doesn't seem like that much of a challenge: (beep, oop ork- Cannonball Run III, replace Burt Reynold with George Clooney. Make Don Deluises' character a drag queen.) Hopefully they will release a patch for the program that will remove the "...and a meteor hit the earth" variable.... | ![]() |
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This chapter has wandered so far off topic the only way I can save it is to start again. |