Me immediately getting emotionally invested by the mouse 😭😭😭
@MistaManlyGuy
3 жыл бұрын
You can use that mouse example for a future video on sad stories 😂
@JoeWebb-TheStoryteller
3 жыл бұрын
Actually I think I might 😂
@sarahsander785
4 ай бұрын
The mouse example reminde me heavily of "Watership Down". One of my favourite parts of both the movie and the book is the one where the rabbits meet the other, bigger, almoste hare-like rabbits near the farm. The ones that tell them that they live in paradise. There are no dogs or cats or humans hunting them. Quite contrary, the humans even offer them vegetables and other food and keep them safe from predators. And all the other rabbits are happy they found this place, this haven on their journey. All but Fiver, who immediatly thinks this is to good to be true. While especially the movie has a lot of visually distressing scenes, it was this one particular part that scared me as a child and even creeps me out as an adult, because to me - a human - it was so clear what was going on. That they were in immediate danger, sitting in a trap and just not realizing it until it was almost to late. A trap not only set up by humans but by fellow rabbits alike. Also what you told here is a great explanation why most horror movies don't work the same with kids as they do with teens or adults. They don't feel the same suspense, the same creepiness as adults. Mostly because they lack the experience of these things.
@Sahilsharma-ce4ow
3 жыл бұрын
Is the series "Psychology of fear" completed? If yes, it was great! Congratulations for this. The next thing I would like to have is(Suggestions):- 1) Psychology of Mastermind characters. 2) Psychology of Love. 3) Psychology of Mind games(Between two master mind characters.) 4) The way to make readers crave for the backstory and the right way to give the backstory. 5) *How to maintain a flow in writing.(Like how every scene, every line, every plot is connected smoothly, there is a smooth transition.)* 6) The way to involve the mind of reader into the story(Like they forget everything outside the story.) 7) Maintaining philosophy without making the fiction philosophical. 8) Creating good parables. 9) Building story around that one secret. 10) Explaining the same setting in different ways like one setting sun in both romantic way and tragic way. 11) Revealing the dark truths of a noble character. 12) Narration. The way to make even telling intriguing. 13) Psychology of some Lord Buddha or some sage like character; I mean psychology of compassion, empathy. Thanks.
@JoeWebb-TheStoryteller
3 жыл бұрын
Not quite finished yet, but when it is, these are some wonderful ideas!! I'll be saving these for sure.
@Sahilsharma-ce4ow
3 жыл бұрын
@@JoeWebb-TheStoryteller Ah! Waiting eagerly for the next one to come.
@samaelkrieg
Ай бұрын
Do you have plans to create a video of how to write an Unreliable Narrator? I am watching the "Hannibal" Netflix series right now, and I am at a point where I CANNOT tell what is real, what is a dream, who's dream it is, or if it's merely Will's madness. It may be an even more amazing example of an Unreliable Narrator than the "Joker" movie. And it is exactly what I wish to use in my novel. If only I could figure out how to write it.... How DO you create a story where even the reader cannot tell what is real from what is a dream, or delusion? I can see the result, but I cannot pick apart the pieces and make it work in my own story.
@JoeWebb-TheStoryteller
Ай бұрын
I’d like to do a full artistic video to explain it, but in short, look up the term phenomenalism. Everything, whether dreams, real life, hallucinations, memories, and imaginations are all real TO YOU, so depictions or descriptions of them are real too. This means, false memories, fantasies, dreams, can all be mistaken for reality as it’s depicted as such. And there’s no context for every experience, meaning, if it’s a dream, the context to confirm that (going to bed) is not remembered and therefore not told. Every experience, from memories to real life to fantasies flow into each other making it difficult to know where real life ends and where the memory or fantasy starts. The the best part is, you never have to clarify what was real if you don’t want to.
@cristinarociu5443
3 жыл бұрын
You were so wonderfully creepy when telling the stories that it made my skin crawl. Now I really want to know what happened to the mouse. 😅
@Ami-dk9pl
2 жыл бұрын
I had to go get a Brie from my fridge thanks to you.... Very inspiring in many ways, thank you!!
@nacjr147
2 жыл бұрын
Very useful stuff
@oyuncanavar2579
3 жыл бұрын
😱 Oh crap!
@Sahilsharma-ce4ow
3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this
@Jennifer-ip1fn
2 жыл бұрын
Thank you ❤️ for this video
@zandercraft8795
2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much!
@Sahilsharma-ce4ow
3 жыл бұрын
I hope the next video comes soon.
@JoeWebb-TheStoryteller
3 жыл бұрын
Thursday 🤫😉
@Sahilsharma-ce4ow
3 жыл бұрын
@@JoeWebb-TheStoryteller Ah! I will keep that a secret 🤓
Пікірлер: 19