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[Kizaru3d] Taming the Beast

well, he's right! It's HIS stories. Getting people's input is fine but he shouldn't take it!
If people are paying you for what your writing, yes it would be smart to listen because if you piss everyone off you'll just be writing for your health. I don't think he should change his vision by no means but to not listen his subscriber's concerns and blow them off is not smart business.
 
If people are paying you for what your writing, yes it would be smart to listen because if you piss everyone off you'll just be writing for your health. I don't think he should change his vision by no means but to not listen his subscriber's concerns and blow them off is not smart business.
if we modifies stories just for every paid user wish you will not see end of story and you have 931 ways it has to be modifed. ( you pay for a movie do you control the story in it)
 
if we modifies stories just for every paid user wish you will not see end of story and you have 931 ways it has to be modifed. ( you pay for a movie do you control the story in it)
If you'll read my post I said not to change the story from the vision you have. But to not listen to the people that pay you so they can read your stories is a little arrogant and egotistical. If enough of your readers start to fill a certain could hurt your bottom line. In the end if they're wanting to get to the same end but by route or a little different dialogue, does it really hurt. I know nobody can please everybody but to simply come out and say I don't read comments in my comment section, is not how you get more subscribers. But what do I know, I drive just around for a living.
 
if we modifies stories just for every paid user wish you will not see end of story and you have 931 ways it has to be modifed. ( you pay for a movie do you control the story in it)
I'm not saying he should change anything, but your movie example is a bit off.
Producers and studios make a movie. If the film is reasonably successful and they want to make a sequel, they WILL take into account the audience's opinions on the first movie. They will know what works and what doesn’t for the people who watched the first movie, who are, in fact, the very same people most likely to watch the sequel.
 
I'm not saying he should change anything, but your movie example is a bit off.
Producers and studios make a movie. If the film is reasonably successful and they want to make a sequel, they WILL take into account the audience's opinions on the first movie. They will know what works and what doesn’t for the people who watched the first movie, who are, in fact, the very same people most likely to watch the sequel.
your example does not work for successful sequels like jkk tolken , rings or star wars 1 to 6 - not later star wars
where audience input made un watchable.
 
If people are paying you for what your writing, yes it would be smart to listen because if you piss everyone off you'll just be writing for your health. I don't think he should change his vision by no means but to not listen his subscriber's concerns and blow them off is not smart business.
they are listening BUT they don't have to take your or my opinion! How do you not get this? LOL
 
You know, I've come to expect and accept a lot of wild takes on a topic here, and I usually roll with it. But I really feel I need to disagree with the very notion of praising the commercialization of Hollywood.

The stuff above looks to me to describe the exact process by which producers and studio executives frequently cheapen, degrade, and dilute the work of the writer, director, and other creative artists involved in the production of the film, right down to the lighting director and the choreographer. In other words, how artists in that industry famously suffer by being pushed by bean counters and suits to change their art to suit the whims of the paying public.

I could expand on this, but I think there may have been a few thousand books, movies, TV shows, and trade articles on that subject that do it a lot better than I can. If we're talking movies, you might start with THE PLAYER or SUNSET BOULEVARD. It doesn't seem, at least to me, to be to be a practice worthy of lauding or replicating.

Or, as one of the greatest creative artists of the last century, Alan Moore, said:
It's not the job of the artist to give the audience what the audience wants. If the audience knew what they needed, then they wouldn't be the audience. They would be the artists. It is the job of artists to give the audience what they need.

Plus, we are dealing with Kizaru, who is only good at starting comics, has no earthly idea what to do with them after that, and never even bothers to finish them. They are an artist who has never produced a hint of denouement.

Kizaru doesn't need audience feedback. Kizaru needs to learn basic plotting and three act structure.
 

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