My point was clear. You just didn't understand anything that was written. You sarcastically responded to the user above saying "for you it is so easy", the undertone of the comment was designed in a way to be snippy, and implies that the user would not do a better job had they started to create stories themselves. You then continue to talk about how professionals get their timing wrong all the time. The member you were replying to had already mentioned his dislike of having to wait. Professionals do not mess up on their timing. That is the whole point of being a professional. They do this for their job, and they do not mess up. Novelchef is not a professional, they are a hobbyist, so them not meeting deadlines is not in the same boat as the former.
Now your point is clear to me, but it doesn't make much more sense.
And forgive me, but I'll continue to be sarcastic about this:
It's probably the Mandela effect, but welcome to this version of reality. And in this version, I wrote: "Professionals get their timing wrong all the time... the episode plan regularly falls apart because the scenes in your mind end up looking completely different from what actually happens." I didn't just write "Timing" instead of "Deadline"; I also contextualized it, so even if you don't understand the term, you can figure it out.
But I'll also respond to your fantasies about deadlines:
You immediately admit that you have nothing whatsoever to do with work, creativity, or creative work. Missed deadlines are the be-all and end-all of creative work. Manga artists are constantly taking hiatus, reducing the frequency of their chapters, or churning out short filler installments. Writers take YEARS off to finish book series (hello, Martin). To ensure TV series don't slip and are released on schedule, studios employ teams of writers. Look up the episode list of your favorite series on Wikipedia and you'll find that every two episodes are written by different writers, and a single writer might only have two episodes per season.
Honestly, the entire field of memes that professionals create about themselves consists entirely of jokes about missed deadlines.
See the world as it really is, not as you'd like it to be. Then you'll experience less disappointment in life.
P.S. None of this absolves NovelChef of responsibility for the incorrectly chosen strategy, and for the fact that he is doing some incomprehensible nonsense with OP, which is why I am most likely about to completely drop this author.