they meme all the time in commercials and sitcoms and movies.
Insightful. It hadn't really occurred to me until now, thanks. Seems like something thats obvious, but it's one of those things thats so obvious that for some of us it can be hard to see without someone pointing it out.
Have you thought about writing a book and presenting your projected timeline of events in a fictional setting,
Plenty of times but not enough people read anyway. Maybe I'm wrong. Maybe the people that do read are exactly the ones that need to be reached.
As you can see I'm not that great for commas and apostrophes but I understand the fundamentals of story. Poals got a few writers. I think the best we have though is Theo. The guy is crazy good. Our side would probably be better served making films and miniseries anyway. Scales much better to the public. Books don't really compete for getting a message out anymore.
Thought of starting a sub for analysis but opinion is close enough. Subs are hard to get off the ground anyway and existing subs need more users.
Thank you but I can't take credit the idea that the left promote their ideas through the popular media. I think it was a Devon Stack podcast I listened to where he explained it in great detail that opened my eyes to it (he used to work in the studio system and often breaks down movies to explain how they are attempting to meme certain progressive ideologies under the radar).
If you would like to maybe commit some of your ideas to paper but don't know where to start I would recommend the book World War Z as a good example of how anyone can write a book. It's written by Mel Brooks son who has autism and attention deficit disorder and struggles to maintain a consistent narrative. What he did in that book (which is very little like the movie that was based on it) was to structure it episodically, so each chapter is in a different place with different characters, showing how different countries dealt with the disaster. It's a short and simple book but actually very readable and obviously massively successful for him.
Another template could be the Forever Wars books where each section spans a large portion of time which exaggerates the rate of progress. I think the author was a Vietnam war vet who left one kind of America to go and fight and found a very different America upon his return.
Sometimes it can be quite impactful to structure the book as a series of spotlights on different places, times and people and let the reader make the connections. Probably a lot less constricting than writing a continuous stream of narrative.
Sometimes it can be quite impactful to structure the book as a series of spotlights on different places, times and people and let the reader make the connections. Probably a lot less constricting than writing a continuous stream of narrative.
You know you really are smarter than you let on.
(post is archived)