Everyone bumbles nowadays. I loathe to be a perfect example of modern oafery, though I found a bunch of websites that are still popular to my surprise. For this article, Medium and Wattpad. Both are great for writing and sharing ideas, albeit shortform.
Black and white it may be, my memory is too unreliable to be a modern man. I like to imagine new ideas and I can't be traditional if absorbing new information. So ideas like going to a website to write a novel seems kitchy, though in respects living in a box reminds me of working in a bar with primarily old regulars - a very traditional archetype. In London you can find tradition vs modern in fashion and it's visible in website job lists and spoken of like the weather. It's media and lifestyle. NerdZone, for example, is my latest forum to where it's my registered homepage.
These days websites have been offering less than the Adobe Dreamweaver and web forums from the 2000s. So why do people write on websites, then? Ignoring forums as a example here.
The websites, listed above, have a reputable view though when I compare to the early days of Piczo, the medium (no pun) is not even a factor. I recently thought that whenever I'm in Central London, or my local area, I feel this perspective hearing small talk or phone conversations. Where does storytelling redevelop in modern life? Stories are the form games, music and movies are told through. Rotten Tomatoes have been showing decline of those for a long time. I hope to one day see the white in the black and white on this topic. Nonetheless, I enjoy the small indie stories we have recently, and even for penny comics, old pennies eventually become pounds at least to collectors.
Regardless, to me devaluation of idea and individual is the biggest current daily issue. In an era of paid reviews, quality is sparse and when looking at whats available, I would like my writing to have a tiered reader, and not any old shmoe on Patreon who pays a certain amount. And that doesn't exist, to be frank. To put it in perspective, the news isn't worth more than 20p, a book is worth £14, and the internet is worthless (barring forums). Until a article reader donates me 12 grand I'm considering this as fact
So in short, 'free's good', but 'worth my time' is better, for everyone as a group.
Thanks for reading
Black and white it may be, my memory is too unreliable to be a modern man. I like to imagine new ideas and I can't be traditional if absorbing new information. So ideas like going to a website to write a novel seems kitchy, though in respects living in a box reminds me of working in a bar with primarily old regulars - a very traditional archetype. In London you can find tradition vs modern in fashion and it's visible in website job lists and spoken of like the weather. It's media and lifestyle. NerdZone, for example, is my latest forum to where it's my registered homepage.
These days websites have been offering less than the Adobe Dreamweaver and web forums from the 2000s. So why do people write on websites, then? Ignoring forums as a example here.
The websites, listed above, have a reputable view though when I compare to the early days of Piczo, the medium (no pun) is not even a factor. I recently thought that whenever I'm in Central London, or my local area, I feel this perspective hearing small talk or phone conversations. Where does storytelling redevelop in modern life? Stories are the form games, music and movies are told through. Rotten Tomatoes have been showing decline of those for a long time. I hope to one day see the white in the black and white on this topic. Nonetheless, I enjoy the small indie stories we have recently, and even for penny comics, old pennies eventually become pounds at least to collectors.
Regardless, to me devaluation of idea and individual is the biggest current daily issue. In an era of paid reviews, quality is sparse and when looking at whats available, I would like my writing to have a tiered reader, and not any old shmoe on Patreon who pays a certain amount. And that doesn't exist, to be frank. To put it in perspective, the news isn't worth more than 20p, a book is worth £14, and the internet is worthless (barring forums). Until a article reader donates me 12 grand I'm considering this as fact
So in short, 'free's good', but 'worth my time' is better, for everyone as a group.
Thanks for reading
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