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Behind The Scenes Of ‘Lady Bird‘ 
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This is an ultimate masterlist of many resources that could be helpful for writers. I apologize in advance for any not working links. Check out the ultimate writing resource masterlist here (x) and my “novel” tag here (x).
✑ PLANNING
Outlining & Organizing
For the Architects: The Planning Process
Rough Drafts
How do you plan a novel?
Plot Development: Climax, Resolution, and Your Main Character
Plotting and Planing
I Have An Idea for a Novel! Now What?
Choosing the Best Outline Method
How to Write a Novel: The Snowflake Method
Effectively Outlining Your Plot
Conflict and Character within Story Structure
Outlining Your Plot
Ideas, Plots & Using the Premise Sheets
✑ INSPIRATION
Finding story ideas
Choosing ideas and endings
When a plot isn’t strong enough to make a whole story
Writing a story that’s doomed to suck
How to Finish What You Start: A Five-Step Plan for Writers
Finishing Your Novel
Finish Your Novel
How to Finish Your Novel when You Want to Quit
How To Push Past The Bullshit And Write That Goddamn Novel: A Very Simple No-Fuckery Writing Plan
✑ PLOT
In General
25 Turns, Pivots and Twists to Complicate Your Story
The ABCs (and Ds and Es) of Plot Development
Originality Is Overrated
How to Create a Plot Outline in Eight Easy Steps
Finding Plot: Idea Nets
The Story Goal: Your Key to Creating a Solid Plot Structure
Make your reader root for your main character
Creating Conflict and Sustaining Suspense
Tips for Creating a Compelling Plot
The Thirty-six (plus one) Dramatic Situations
Adding Subplots to a Novel
Weaving Subplots into a Novel
7 Ways to Add Subplots to Your Novel
Crafting a Successful Romance Subplot
How to Improve your Writing: Subplots and Subtext
Understanding the Role of Subplots
How to Use Subtext in your Writing
The Secret Life of Subtext
How to Use Subtext
Beginning
Creating a Process: Getting Your Ideas onto Paper (And into a Story)
Why First Chapters?
Starting with a Bang
In the Beginning
The Beginning of your Novel that isn’t the Beginning of your Novel
A Beginning from the Middle
Starting with a Bang
First Chapters: What To Include @ The Beginning Writer
23 Clichés to Avoid When Beginning Your Story
Start Writing Now
Done Planning. What Now?
Continuing Your Long-Format Story
How to Start a Novel 
100 best first lines from novels
The First Sentence of a Book Report
How To Write A Killer First Sentence To Open Your Book
How to Write the First Sentence of a Book
The Most Important Sentence: How to Write a Killer Opening
Hook Your Reader from the First Sentence: How to Write Great Beginnings
Foreshadowing
Foreshadowing and the Red Hering
Narrative Elements: Foreshadowing
Foreshadowing and Suspense
Foreshadowing Key Details
Writing Fiction: Foreshadowing
The Literary Device of Foreshadowing
All About Foreshadowing in Fiction
Foreshadowing
Flashbacks and Foreshadowing
Foreshadowing — How and Why to Use It In Your Writing
Setting
Four Ways to Bring Settings to Life
Write a Setting for a Book
Writing Dynamic Settings
How To Make Your Setting a Character
Guide for Setting
5 Tips for Writing Better Settings
Building a Novel’s Setting
Ending
A Novel Ending
How to End Your Novel
How to End Your Novel 2
How to End a Novel With a Punch
How to End a Novel
How to Finish a Novel
How to Write The Ending of Your Novel
Keys to Great Endings
3 Things That End A Story Well
Ending a Novel: Five Things to Avoid
Endings that Ruin Your Novel
Closing Time: The Ending
✑ CHARACTER
Names
Behind the Name
Surname Meanings and Origins
Surname Meanings and Origins - A Free Dictionary of Surnames
Common US Surnames & Their Meanings
Last Name Meanings & Origins
Name Generators
Name Playground
Different Types of Characters
Ways To Describe a Personality
Character Traits Meme
Types of Characters
Types of Characters in Fiction
Seven Common Character Types
Six Types of Courageous Characters
Creating Fictional Characters (Masterlist)
Building Fictional Characters
Fiction Writer’s Character Chart
Character Building Workshop
Tips for Characterization
Fiction Writer’s Character Chart
Advantages, Disadvantages and Skills 
Males
Strong Male Characters
The History and Nature of Man Friendships
Friendship for Guys (No Tears!)
‘I Love You, Man’ and the rules of male friendship
Male Friendship
Understanding Male Friendship
Straight male friendship, now with more cuddling
Character Development
P.O.V. And Background
Writing a Character: Questionnaire
10 Days of Character Building
Getting to Know Your Characters
Character Development Exercises
✑ STYLE
Chapters
How Many Chapters is the Right Amount of Chapters?
The Arbitrary Nature of the Chapter
How Long is a Chapter?
How Long Should Novel Chapters Be?
Chapter & Novel Lengths 
Section vs. Scene Breaks
Dialogue 
The Passion of Dialogue
25 Things You Should Know About Dialogue
Dialogue Writing Tips
Punctuation Dialogue
How to Write Believable Dialogue
Writing Dialogue: The Music of Speech
Writing Scenes with Many Characters
It’s Not What They Say …
Top 10 Tips for Writing Dialogue
Speaking of Dialogue
Dialogue Tips
Interrupted Dialogue
Two Tips for Interrupted Dialogue
Show, Don’t Tell (Description)
“Tell” Makes a Great Placeholder
The Literary Merit of the Grilled Cheese Sandwich
Bad Creative Writing Advice
The Ultimate Guide to Writing Better Than You Normally Do
DailyWritingTips: Show, Don’t Tell
GrammarGirl: Show, Don’t Tell
Writing Style: What Is It?
Detail Enhances Your Fiction
Using Sensory Details
Description in Fiction
Using Concrete Detail
Depth Through Perception
Showing Emotions & Feelings
Character Description
Describing Your Characters (by inkfish7 on DeviantArt)
Help with Character Development
Creating Characters that Jump Off the Page
Omitting Character Description
Introducing Your Character(s): DON’T
Character Crafting
Writer’s Relief Blog: “Character Development In Stories And Novels”
Article: How Do You Think Up Your Characters?
5 Character Points You May Be Ignoring
List of colors, hair types and hairstyles
List of words to use in a character’s description 
200 words to describe hair
How to describe hair
Words used to describe the state of people’s hair
How to describe your haircut
Hair color sharts
Four Ways to Reveal Backstory
Words Used to Describe Clothes
Flashbacks
Using Flashbacks in Writing
Flashbacks by All Write
Using Flashback in Fiction
Fatal Backstory
Flashbacks as opening gambit
Don’t Begin at the Beginning
Flashbacks in Books
TVTropes: Flashback
Objects in the Mirror Are Closer Than They Appear: Flashback Techniques in Fiction
3 Tips for Writing Successful Flashbacks
The 5 Rules of Writing Effective Flashbacks
How to Handle Flashbacks In Writing
Flashbacks and Foreshadowing
Reddit Forum: Is a flashback in the first chapter a good idea?
Forum Discussing Flackbacks
P.O.V
You, Me, and XE - Points of View
What’s Your Point of View?
Establishing the Right Point of View: How to Avoid “Stepping Out of Character”
How to Start Writing in the Third Person
The Opposite Gender P.O.V.
LANGUAGE
 How To Say Said
200 Words Instead of Said
Words to Use Instead of Said
A List of Words to Use Instead of Said
Alternatives to “Walk”
60 Synonyms for “Walk”
✑ USEFUL WEBSITES/LINKS
Grammar Monster
Google Scholar
GodChecker
Tip Of My Tounge
Speech Tags
Pixar Story Rules
Written? Kitten!
TED Talks
DarkCopy
Family Echo
Some Words About Word Count
How Long Should My Novel Be?
The Universal Mary Sue Litmus Test
Writer’s “Cheat Sheets”
Last but not least, the most helpful tool for any writer out there is Google!
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I've written about 10 different ways to start a story I'm working on. Other stories, I've only had to write maybe two, three starting options before finding The One. The problem with this current story is I'm not sure if it's good as 1st or 3rd, or when I should start the story in the timeline of events. And now as I think about it I'm considering writing yet another opener option (or two) starting further along the timeline. I've NEVER been so indecisive and I don't know what's going on! grar.
You have to calm down and make a rational choice about that beginning.
These are the criteria that a beginning should generally have:
Your beginning needs to have a reason to be the beginning. Based on your plot, what is the logical start of your story? Does your protagonist gain something? Lose something? What’s the first domino to tip?
You need to establish things like point of view, setting, introduce the protagonist and their goal, etc. Beginnings of stories shouldn’t be a random moments that the writer feels like could work, they are an introduction that has to convey information in an interesting way. Beginnings are a “teaser” in themselves, since that’s how readers judge if they want to stick with your work or not. (This is the rationale behind avoiding the “wake up, go to school” story start. It’s just not interesting and doesn’t tell the reader what’s going to be unique about your story.)
Your beginning needs to be related to the overall mood of the story. Sure, it can be enticing to start something with an awesome action scene or a dramatic death, but the tone/mood needs to fit the rest of the work. Otherwise, you’re potentially misleading your readers.
Your plot does not have to start in the very first scene, but the beginning should be related to the plot. This is where you differentiate between protagonist goals and plot (though they should be related). The opening scene should introduce your protagonist and give an idea of what they want out of life/their goals, but the actually journey to realize that goal doesn’t necessarily have to start at that moment. (This is especially true for non-realistic stories that need a slightly slower start to world-build.)
Pick a moment unique to your protagonist. This doesn’t mean wracking your brain for something that your protagonist would literally be the only person to experience, but rather choose a point that lets them show what’s special about them and their story. Why are they your protagonist? They have to have something that puts them at the center of the plot.
And once you have a more solid idea of where things could go, you can take a look at Three Ways to Start a Story, and its part 2,Three More Ways to Start a Story. 
For anyone to truly help you sort through what you’ve already written, they need to understand the context of the story, which is far beyond what I can do from my position. It could help to find some beta readers or look at the rest of your outline as whole to see which one fits best with the entire plan.
Good luck with everything!
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Link
Finding the information you need as a writer shouldn’t be a chore. Luckily, there are plenty of search engines out there that are designed to help you at any stage of the process, from coming up with great ideas to finding a publisher to get your work into print. Both writers still in college and those on their way to professional success will appreciate this list of useful search applications that are great from making writing a little easier and more efficient.
Professional
Find other writers, publishers and ways to market your work through these searchable databases and search engines.
Litscene: Use this search engine to search through thousands of writers and literary projects, and add your own as well.
Thinkers.net: Get a boost in your creativity with some assistance from this site.
PoeWar: Whether you need help with your career or your writing, this site is full of great searchable articles.
Publisher’s Catalogues: Try out this site to search through the catalogs and names of thousands of publishers.
Edit Red: Through this site you can showcase your own work and search through work by others, as well as find helpful FAQ’s on writing.
Writersdock: Search through this site for help with your writing, find jobs and join other writers in discussions.
PoetrySoup: If you want to find some inspirational poetry, this site is a great resource.
Booksie.com: Here, you can search through a wide range of self-published books.
One Stop Write Shop: Use this tool to search through the writings of hundreds of other amateur writers.
Writer’s Cafe: Check out this online writer’s forum to find and share creative works.
Literary Marketplace: Need to know something about the publishing industry? Use this search tool to find the information you need now.
Writing
These helpful tools will help you along in the writing process.
WriteSearch: This search engine focuses exclusively on sites devoted to reading and writing to deliver its results.
The Burry Man Writers Center: Find a wealth of writing resources on this searchable site.
Writing.com: This fully-featured site makes it possible to find information both fun and serious about the craft of writing.
Purdue OWL: Need a little instruction on your writing? This tool from Purdue University can help.
Writing Forums: Search through these writing forums to find answers to your writing issues.
Research
Try out these tools to get your writing research done in a snap.
Google Scholar: With this specialized search engine from Google, you’ll only get reliable, academic results for your searches.
WorldCat: If you need a book from the library, try out this tool. It’ll search and find the closest location.
Scirus: Find great scientific articles and publications through this search engine.
OpenLibrary: If you don’t have time to run to a brick-and-mortar library, this online tool can still help you find books you can use.
Online Journals Search Engine: Try out this search engine to find free online journal articles.
All Academic: This search engine focuses on returning highly academic, reliable resources.
LOC Ask a Librarian: Search through the questions on this site to find helpful answers about the holdings at the Library of Congress.
Encylcopedia.com: This search engine can help you find basic encyclopedia articles.
Clusty: If you’re searching for a topic to write on, this search engine with clustered results can help get your creative juices flowing.
Intute: Here you’ll find a British search engine that delivers carefully chosen results from academia.
AllExperts: Have a question? Ask the experts on this site or search through the existing answers.
Reference
Need to look up a quote or a fact? These search tools make it simple.
Writer’s Web Search Engine: This search engine is a great place to find reference information on how to write well.
Bloomsbury Magazine Research Centre: You’ll find numerous resources on publications, authors and more through this search engine.
Merriam-Webster Dictionary and Thesaurus: Make sure you’re using words correctly and can come up with alternatives with the help of this tool.
References.net: Find all the reference material you could ever need through this search engine.
Quotes.net: If you need a quote, try searching for one by topic or by author on this site.
Literary Encyclopedia: Look up any famous book or author in this search tool.
Acronym Finder: Not sure what a particular acronym means? Look it up here.
Bartleby: Through Bartleby, you can find a wide range of quotes from famous thinkers, writers and celebrities.
Wikipedia.com: Just about anything and everything you could want to look up is found on this site.
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy: Find all the great philosophers you could want to reference in this online tool.
Niche Writers
If you’re focusing on writing in a particular niche, these tools can be a big help.
PubGene: Those working in sci-fi or medical writing will appreciate this database of genes, biological terms and organisms.
GoPubMd: You’ll find all kinds of science and medical search results here.
Jayde: Looking for a business? Try out this search tool.
Zibb: No matter what kind of business you need to find out more about, this tool will find the information.
TechWeb: Do a little tech research using this news site and search engine.
Google Trends: Try out this tool to find out what people are talking about.
Godchecker: Doing a little work on ancient gods and goddesses? This tool can help you make sure you have your information straight.
Healia: Find a wide range of health topics and information by using this site.
Sci-Fi Search: Those working on sci-fi can search through relevant sites to make sure their ideas are original.
Books
Find your own work and inspirational tomes from others by using these search engines.
Literature Classics: This search tool makes it easy to find the free and famous books you want to look through.
InLibris: This search engine provides one of the largest directories of literary resources on the web.
SHARP Web: Using this tool, you can search through the information on the history of reading and publishing.
AllReaders: See what kind of reviews books you admire got with this search engine.
BookFinder: No matter what book you’re looking for you’re bound to find it here.
ReadPrint: Search through this site for access to thousands of free books.
Google Book Search: Search through the content of thousands upon thousands of books here, some of which is free to use.
Indie Store Finder: If you want to support the little guy, this tool makes it simple to find an independent bookseller in your neck of the woods.
Blogging
For web writing, these tools can be a big help.
Technorati: This site makes it possible to search through millions of blogs for both larger topics and individual posts.
Google Blog Search: Using this specialized Google search engine, you can search through the content of blogs all over the web.
Domain Search: Looking for a place to start your own blog? This search tool will let you know what’s out there.
OpinMind: Try out this blog search tool to find opinion focused blogs.
IceRocket: Here you’ll find a real-time blog search engine so you’ll get the latest news and posts out there.
PubSub: This search tool scours sites like Twitter and Friendfeed to find the topics people are talking about most every day.
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I made these as a way to compile all the geographical vocabulary that I thought was useful and interesting for writers. Some descriptors share categories, and some are simplified, but for the most part everything is in its proper place. Not all the words are as useable as others, and some might take tricky wording to pull off, but I hope these prove useful to all you writers out there!
(save the images to zoom in on the pics)
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The importance of consent
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…Many things interested her, and nothing satisfied her entirely.
Ivan Turgenev, Fathers and Sons (via deanwinchesters)
ENFP problems
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Dan and Phil :)
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I’ll Be There
WARNINGS: Graphic content, violence, crime, physical abuse
SUMMARY: During Dan’s liveshow, a robber breaks in and threatens to assault  Dan. Watching this take place live, the viewers desperately try to get a hold of Phil, who’s out grocery shopping.
*I recognize DNP are real people and I don't wish them harm, I just thought this would make an interesting story. Don't mean to offend or trigger anyone*
In the frame of a thousands screens, viewers are given a slither of Dan's life. The left side of a bed, the edge of a piano, the top slither of a desk. He grins up at the camera, his smile blinding against the grainy darkness of his room.
"Top Dan Memes of 2017?" Dan reads off the chat, snickering through his words. "That's-That'll be a-uh-a thing! I'm sure I've given you all a lot of meme worthy behavior!"
He laughs again, covering his lips with limp fingers, before sitting up, winding up for a rant. "It's funny cuz-I think the Dan Meme videos are great and I love acknowledging all the work and creativity you all bring to the channel and I appreciate your sense of humor-but someone commented that the Top Dan Memes of 2016 was the video they showed their friends who didn't know who we were. That's not what I want people's first impressions to be! I mean it's a fun video but it is literally the accumulation of all my shame and mistakes throughout the year!"
His eyes drop to the chat as he reads, "It lets people know the real you-Really?" he asks the camera sarcastically, squinting his eyes. "Is dabbing and vaping the real me? Is that-" his voice vibrates with laughter. "Is that the image I've created? 2018 rebrand on the horizon-No, no. Let's leave those mistakes where they belong, far in the past and in a dark corner of the internet…Where's Phil?-Phil is out grocery shopping cuz our fridge is currently made up of ketchup and yoghurt so-"
The sound of a door opening comes from down the hall. Dan pauses and looks over his shoulder, consciously smothering a subconscious smile. "Speak of the devil, back already, Phil?"
He's met with vague rustling in the kitchen and deep footsteps. Is Phil wearing boots? Phil never wears boots, especially not ones that could be heard from two rooms over.
Another noise accompanies the footsteps, the shattering of something glass.
Phil wouldn't be wearing boots, Phil would've called out if he broke something. Dan calls again for his friend, his voice dipping with doubt. "Phil?" Dan frowns as the footsteps grow louder and stands, leaving the livestream behind. Phil would've responded. "Hello?"
In Dan's room, it's silent. Around the world, fingers type frantically, computer's are asked questions that can't be heard. Dan stands near the doorway, listening, hesitating, not knowing which came first, the paranoid thoughts or his racing heart. He takes a ginger step forward, lifting a hand to open the door. It's probably just—
There's a crack of thunder as a figure rams through, the door missing Dan by an inch. Dan stumbles backwards, failing an arm out to catch himself on the bed.
In stalks a man as tall as Dan with a chest twice as wide, a arm extending outwards, a gun at its end. A knitted mask covers his face. His shadow falls over Dan, who slowly attempts to gain back his footing and raises a trembling hand, opening his mouth to speak. The man delivers a blow with the butt of his gun to Dan's left shoulder, crippling him back to the floor.
Dan writhes there a moment, whimpering, before settling onto his knees and putting his hands behind his head.
The computer screen flickers into the room, the chat erupting in panic, and Dan is reminded that his subscribers are watching. Part of him aches with dismay. They shouldn't be seeing this. Another part of him, a stronger part, is eager in their gaze, begging for their help. Dan's head turns slightly, a brown eye sliding the viewers' way. His eyes cry out to them.
"Whatcha you looking at, huh?" The man asks. There's an eerie jingle of casualness to his tone, like he's done this before, like he's enjoying it, like he'd grin in the face of danger, giggle in the face of pain.
The hard metal of the gun presses into Dan's temple, sending a wave of heat down his legs. "Nothing!" he barks, his voice sharp and protective, feeling as if his subscribers were in the room with him, as if eavesdropping in his closet, no more safe than he is. The chat slows as viewers lift their hands from their keyboards. When the man swivels his head towards the camera, they too feel that they are there. The chat slows as fingers leave keyboards, as tabs close, as viewers cry for their parents or reach for the phone to call the police.
"Yo, is that a fucking camera? Is this being recorded?"
"I-I was recording a video for my channel-my youtube channel."
Keeping the gun aimed at Dan, the man leans towards the computer, a white knitted mask consuming the frame. Through small cut holes, dead eyes dart about. Collectively the remaining viewers lean back, as if his eyes were searching for them and there would be no stopping his hand from reaching through their screens and grabbing their throats. The eyes drop to where Dan's usually fall, to the chat. He steps back, grabs Dan by the back of his shirt, and drags him up to the desk. Dan's knee bangs into the chair, his elbow into the drawer. His cry of pain gets caught in his throat, stunted by shock and replaced by a grunt of discomfort as the man shoves Dan's head parallel against the desk. His leather-bound fingers drape across half of Dan's face. When the man speaks, his words are serrated with aggression yet steady. "So tell me," the man whispers close to Dan's ear. "Is this live?" The man presses down and the loose skin of Dan's cheek slips over his eye.
"Yeah," Dan says through the man's fingers. Drool drips onto the desk. "It's live."
"Do they know where we are?" The man waves the gun lazily in the screen's direction.
"I don't know."
"Don't know? You don't know whether or not these people know where you live? How could you not know something like that, huh? Not sure if I believe that. No, I definitely don't believe that. So I'm gonna ask you again. Do they know where you live? Do they know the address? And things won't turn out well for you either way, so no point in lying."
"No, they wouldn't know." Dan's eyes slide up to the chat again. He's never seen it like this, without a constant stream of messages. There's only two now. In the whole of his career, he's never felt more watched.
The man reads one aloud. "I've called the police. Well, MiaHowls," he says, looking directly into the camera. "If you don't know where we are, then that doesn't do much good now, does it? Says a lot of people are watching. Wow," the man coos, squatting down so his head is level with Dan's. "You must be a famous fucker. How come I've never heard of you?"
Dan responds by closing his eyes, feeling the heat of the man's breath on his brow.
"Well, what a thrill for you all," the man says to the camera. The man turns Dan's head so that he breaths a shaky and wet breath into the wood of the desk. "Seeing your celebrity idol humiliated, live!"
Not longer silenced by shock, Dan lets out a muffled scream.
The sound of a door opening comes from down the hall followed by a single pair of footsteps. The man straightens as he looks over his shoulder to the doorway, loosing his grip. Dan opens his eyes wide, not sure how to feel about his best friend returning home. Thankful for the interruption? Horrified for his friend? His brain flicks between them so fast he ends up feeling nothing.
"Dan?" There casualness to Phil's tone, but its thin. He sounds scared. Could he know something is wrong? Did he see the liveshow? Did a viewer get a hold of him?
"Who's that?" the man asks calmly.
"My flatmate."
"Oh, well, don't be rude. Say hi."
"Hi!" The one syllable breaks in two.
"Tell him you're in your room. Go on."
No. Phil should run. Phil should be safe. But the gun finds Dan's forehead and he barks, "I'm in here!"
"Don't you move, now," the man whispers as he stands. He pauses halfway between the desk and the doorway, waiting, his gun by his side. Dan watches too, waiting to see the person who least deserving of this horror walk in. Please, don't, he begs. Please, no. The doorway becomes a vacuum, taking away his breath. His lungs ache, he hears his heart throb. Seconds go by. He's reminded of the times he would reassure himself, whether subconsciously or not, that these things wouldn't happen to him, not to him, not to Phil, that they were safe in the flat, he would be okay if he was with Phil and Phil would be okay if he was with him. When he met Phil, Dan finally felt safe and thought that feeling would last. How stupid he's been, he realizes, as he stares into the doorway, waiting for the live they built to fall apart.
He stares into the doorway.
Not Phil but two policeman emerge from the navy blue shadow of the hallway. "POLICE GET DOWN! GET ON YOUR FUCKING KNEES!"
In the gaze of two new guns, the man slowly lowers to his knees, placing the gun out in front of him. As the police begin to restrain him, Dan collapses to his knees as well, his breath returning in lavish sips.
Phil ducks into the room and swerves around the arrest. His eyes don't drop down to the police or the man, instead they stay locked ahead. They stay locked on Dan.
Dan doesn't fully stand, but merely lifts onto the balls of his feet and throws his weight into Phil's arms.
"Oh my god," Phil whispers into Dan's shoulder. "Are you okay?"
Dan melts into Phil, relishing in his warmth, drowning in an overwhelming sense of relief and bitter-sweet happiness. "Yeah, I'm okay."
When they pull apart, Dan blinks, refocusing his blurred vision, and croaks, "T-the liveshow."
Phil, despite not understanding, follows Dan's gesture to the screen. "What?" When his looks upon the screen, it's not long before Phil's mouth drops open and his eyes flicker with dread. He puts his hand over the camera. Seconds later, thousands of screens go black.
To be continued…
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😍🙌🏻👏🏻
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#filmmakingquotes #filmmaking #quotes #spielberg
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