Mr. Robot vs. Gossip Girl: Why You NEED To Know Your Ending

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 13 июл 2024
  • (SPOILERS: MR. ROBOT, GOSSIP GIRL)
    Question for you writers out there: do you consider yourself a “Gardener” or “Architect”? Simply put, an Architect is a writer who meticulously plans out their story whereas a Gardener allows it to unfold more organically; they may begin with some general ideas but then have them naturally develop as opposed to following a pre-planned story map.
    I’m not here to tell you which way is best; for you, that is whatever allows you to get the words on the page. However right now I need you to shut up and listen because I AM going to lay something down that is not up for discussion: YOU NEED TO KNOW YOUR ENDING. Or at least I really think you should.
    To illustrate my point, I am going to juxtapose two shows: one in which the ending was planned out from the very beginning, which in turn led to the series concluding its run as a thematically harmonious masterpiece and one in which the answer to the most pressing mystery of the series was NOT decided upon in advance which in turn led to a cascading avalanche of confusion, plot holes, and audience frustration.
    Main Channel: / macabrestorytelling
    Live Stream/Gaming Channel: / @macabrelive8266
    Podcast Channel: / @nocritic
    Patreon: / macabrestorytelling
    Twitter: / macabstory
    Twitch: / elpapamac
    Reddit: / el_macab
    [00:00] - Intro/Shoutouts
    [00:30] - The Gardner vs. The Architect
    [01:46] - Why You NEED To Know Your Ending
    [05:09] - What Can Happen If You DO
    [10:06] - What Can Happen If You DON'T
    [14:43] - Conclusion
    [15:20] - Outro/Patrons
    VIDEO
    Brandon's vid: • Dan Humphrey (who is G...
    MUSIC
    "Danse Macabre" by Kevin MacLeod
    "2.0_4-control-1s-an-illusion" by Mac Quayle
    "Monkeys Spinning Monkeys" by Kevin Macleod
  • КиноКино

Комментарии • 284

  • @benjohnson9224
    @benjohnson9224 2 года назад +117

    The reveal of Elliot’s true relationship with his father was one of the biggest gut punches I’ve experienced in TV. And the brilliant thing is, all the clues were there the whole time, I just chose to ignore them.

    • @luluna5228
      @luluna5228 Год назад +4

      The “clues” didn’t give you any information to actually predict it , then they use a random plot device they threw out lmaoo

    • @skyman246vids4
      @skyman246vids4 Год назад +12

      @@luluna5228what?

    • @alfredgarcia6844
      @alfredgarcia6844 7 месяцев назад

      @@luluna5228Wdym?

    • @fictionnerd78
      @fictionnerd78 4 месяца назад

      @@luluna5228Wdym?

  • @ajiththomas2465
    @ajiththomas2465 2 года назад +259

    Honestly, one of the most interesting and best pieces of writing advice in regards to endings that I heard was said by James Patterson. He said that when he was writing a novel, he would try to come up with like a few dozen to 50 endings for the story, ranging from the completely predictable to the unpredictable. Once he had all those options, he would choose an ending somewhere in the middle, which wasn't predictable but wasn't too unpredictable and out of nowhere and he would basically sort of rewrite the story to fit the chosen ending. I always liked it because how it recommended both the hard work ethic required for the craft of writing along with the idea of avoiding being predictable. I think it's a pretty dope piece of writing advice.

    • @ESALTEREGO
      @ESALTEREGO 2 года назад

      Thats a basic technique but ok

    • @_laurenolo_
      @_laurenolo_ 2 года назад +25

      @@ESALTEREGO man you must be fun at parties, huh

    • @ESALTEREGO
      @ESALTEREGO 2 года назад +1

      @@_laurenolo_ yep, any objections?

    • @infinitiyash3440
      @infinitiyash3440 2 года назад +7

      @@ESALTEREGO Yes.

    • @jasonblundelldobebussing
      @jasonblundelldobebussing 2 года назад

      @@ESALTEREGO , разъебал, брат. А на 'меликанцев не смотри ауф ☝😔

  • @RodrickMarsMoon
    @RodrickMarsMoon 2 года назад +163

    Published author here. My method, that I think writers could try, is planning the beginning and the end as a architect and the middle as a gardener, and changing details of the ending considering what happened in the middle without compromising the overall story.

    • @marcuswalters8093
      @marcuswalters8093 2 года назад +10

      YES.
      I'm working on a story myself at the moment and while I've always known how it ends, the details have changed and expanded as I've gone on.
      Knowing how it ends has allowed me to adjust and develop the themes and tone of my story as I write. Not having a clue where it was going would have turned it into a sprawling mess.

  • @JimboSlyc3
    @JimboSlyc3 2 года назад +251

    So glad to see you tackling Mr Robot. One of my personal favorite shows, but I’ve always felt that it never got the recognition it deserved alongside the other great shows of the past decade.

    • @karabokhanyile
      @karabokhanyile 2 года назад +2

      I recently watched a RUclips video that mentioned it when tackling shows/movies that have unreliable narrators,check it out if you haven't I think it's called unreliable narrators (I think I might have seen a similar comment to yours in that video so my bad if it was you lol)

    • @BitesTheDusto
      @BitesTheDusto 2 года назад +4

      @zetta _ barry and mr robot top tier

    • @navarone4031
      @navarone4031 2 года назад

      the dialogue in mr robot is kinda cringy :(

    • @luluna5228
      @luluna5228 Год назад

      Mr robot is utter garbage

    • @izak5356
      @izak5356 Год назад +2

      @@navarone4031 care to provide an example?

  • @barbiezinha5633
    @barbiezinha5633 2 года назад +43

    the gossip girl problem is the same with pretty little liars- these shows are so obviously written on the spot that it ruins the whole mystery in the first place, especially in later seasons

  • @JulianBabad
    @JulianBabad 2 года назад +121

    You mention a few times how knowing the ending makes your story more thematically resonant, and I cannot overstate how much I agree - cohesive theme is the most important part of your story, twist or no twist. It is, to me, what makes the difference between a series of plot points and a *story*.
    Knowing your ending draws a conceptual line in the sand-constantly reminding you that: “hey, this is what you’re trying to say. These are the thoughts and feelings you want to leave your audience with”.
    It’s like bowling with the bumpers up.

    • @fatuousinnovatorofsadness4640
      @fatuousinnovatorofsadness4640 2 года назад +2

      This is true, but you can also not know the ending with certain stories. As a theoretical (and one that has played out in many great films), you can not focus on themes at all, and simply focus on character. Robert Eggers does this to great success in all of his films. In that case, the only thing you might have for an ending might be a moment where the characters themselves are pushed down into a life altering, theme-enlightening decision. And then, only after you've written it out, will you know what decision they make - and only then can your ending be decided upon.
      The most popular version of this is Breaking Bad. Vince didn't even think about how to end the show seriously until around season 3, and only put together a plan around season 4. They wouldn't have even been able to go down the path they went down, which was itself a legendary, for the ages story, had they planned the ending. That would have completely undermined and destroyed the spontaneity that guided the show down it's winding paths and made it feel so human, so real. They NEEDED to go in without a plan, because the ending was crafted through the process of writing. They were going to kill Jesse off in the first couple seasons. A pre-planned ending from there would completely eliminate the ending we got, which is arguably one of the best finales ever written.
      You can just not write an ending IF IT'S YOUR STYLE. Some people are so much better at connecting what has come before that the ending is crafted through the process of writing. Some need an ending to keep the process of writing on track. It's up to the individual, mostly. Sam is a wildly creative writer with an incredible talent for honing in on and exploring tones and moods and then building an amazing story around them - which is a skill that NEEDS to be guided by a planned route, otherwise you get lost.

    • @SuperBrosHQ
      @SuperBrosHQ 2 года назад

      @@fatuousinnovatorofsadness4640 same with Better Call Saul, but these are the best writers in the game so idk if anyone can do what they did hahhaha. They always write themselves in a corner but manage to handle it masterfully. One of the best examples is when Walter bought a machine gun in s5e1 but Vince himself didn't even know yet, why Walt would do that.

  • @brimward122
    @brimward122 2 года назад +76

    Love mr robot. The therapy episode with Vera was one of the best tv episodes I've ever seen.

  • @mariana-ni9wl
    @mariana-ni9wl 2 года назад +59

    I love this. Not only Mr. Robot’s finale made perfect sense but it was also beautiful and I still think about the last 5 minutes all the time. As for Gossip Girl… even the actors hated it

  • @lightbluechucks
    @lightbluechucks Год назад +10

    Mr Robot is one of the best shows ever made. I’m usually dead inside and that fourth season made me feel so many things

  • @grahamcrawford4773
    @grahamcrawford4773 2 года назад +158

    Stephen King is an advocate of the gardening approach to writing. A number of his works and a lot of his endings illustrate how this approach can go horribly wrong.

    • @twisted-t
      @twisted-t 2 года назад +17

      F***ing totally! I used to be a HUGE fan of him in my teens but in my mid twenties after reading some better books I came to LOATHE most of his works. I find it especially funny that in The Stand which is the fan favorite he confessed he didn't know what to do with the ending and then he had a "genius" realization to kill half of main characters and do this totally random thing with travelling on their feet to confront the main villain. But Needful Things takes the cake IMO - just totally f***ng silly and anticlimactic. (Sorry for my bad English btw - not a native and quite a bit tipsy when writing this lol)

    • @bulbafett5001
      @bulbafett5001 2 года назад +2

      @@twisted-t The Movie for Needful things. Just Max Von Sydow strolling out of the flaming building, brushing off debris and flames. "Oh well, guess this towns a bust, later losers" Is just hilarious. Anticlimatic as hell, but I feel fitting for the Devil/Flagg to just rob them of any form of catharsis.

    • @weslleyfj
      @weslleyfj 2 года назад +6

      Reading Under the Dome made me lose any interest of ever reading any of his other work again. It simply made me feel like the almost 1000 pages I'd been reading just didn't matter in the end. It was the first and last for me.

    • @twisted-t
      @twisted-t 2 года назад +2

      @@bulbafett5001 my "favorite" part was the main characters simply gaining magic powers cause "just believe, baby".

    • @twisted-t
      @twisted-t 2 года назад +1

      @@weslleyfj the first book of his I just gave up on after reading about 100 pages.

  • @lorrainecasey749
    @lorrainecasey749 2 года назад +28

    In the pilot episode Elliot says”scratches the part of my mind that won’t allow good to exist without condition” then said to Mr Robot how he loved his trips to the city with his dad but hated going home(a payment required?)all the clues were there from the start 👍🏼

  • @idabrandt9831
    @idabrandt9831 2 года назад +31

    Wait, Dan is actually Gossip Girl? I only watched the first four seasons before losing interest in the show. I honestly thought Dan being Gossip girl was just a meme someone made up because the identity was never revealed! And Dan was like, the most funny, unbelievable choice they could think about! Thanks for the video, great one as always! 😂

    • @radhiadeedou8286
      @radhiadeedou8286 Год назад +5

      From what I've heard, Eric was supposed to be GG but fans figured it out way too early so the writers had to figure out something, and they went with the most ridiculous option

  • @scarlett-iy8yh
    @scarlett-iy8yh 2 года назад +23

    mr robot is my favorite show of all time, and im so happy that someone is talking about it! it honestly doesn’t get the recognition it deserves

    • @quantummidget
      @quantummidget 2 года назад +6

      It really doesn't, I'm always amazed by how few people have watched it.

    • @dustinherk8124
      @dustinherk8124 2 года назад +4

      I'd suggest giving The Expanse a chance. That is another awesome show if you are looking to fill the void of Mr Robot, being finished.

    • @quantummidget
      @quantummidget 2 года назад +1

      @@dustinherk8124 cheers, I'll add it to my list

    • @dustinherk8124
      @dustinherk8124 2 года назад +2

      @@quantummidget its on amazon prime. just get past the first 3 episdoes, its a slower burn because of all the early world building, but after ep 4 your are running full speed, because they establish most everything early on, and can focus on story, and character development from that point. based off the book series too.

  • @belowaveragejoh
    @belowaveragejoh 2 года назад +13

    I’m so glad Mr Robot is getting its posthumous flowers for its incredibly cohesive execution and restraint

  • @rini6
    @rini6 2 года назад +15

    I may have to watch the entire Mr Robot series for a third time now. You reminded me how and why the show was so amazing.
    Regarding Gossip Girl, it is stunning that with the amount of money and number of people involved they were still flailing in the dark.
    Perhaps art is best created by one or only a few close people who have a vision in mind. But we knew that. This video is a great encapsulation of that. Thanks

  • @_greenrunner_
    @_greenrunner_ 2 года назад +19

    Yoko Taro writes the Nier series backwards. He starts with the ending of the story and then works his way backwards constantly adding little details and he makes it work everytime

  • @bendovskey2209
    @bendovskey2209 2 года назад +17

    Mr. Robot will always be the best show ever made (imo)... We need More Showrunners and Producers like Sam Esmail and Vince Gilligan. And more shows should have a memorable score and utilize fantastic cinematography as in Mr. Robot, BCS, BB etc.

  • @aneirys
    @aneirys 2 года назад +6

    I feel that most dystopian YA book writers have the gardening approach. Books like the Maze Runner, Divergent, the chaos walking series, etc, they occasionally have a good first book, with an engaging story and an interesting world to discover. But once you reach to that last book, where is all pure chaos and nothing makes any sense, you realize that the writers have a cool concept but didn’t plan a cohesive ending for their story.
    Also another series that had an amazing ending, because every season was planned before filming, was Dark, that show was top tier for me, along side Mr. Robot.
    Btw, Sorry for any misspellings or grammar error, english is not my first language.

  • @warlordofbritannia
    @warlordofbritannia 2 года назад +13

    Not a fiction writer, but as a historian I’ve always planned out my papers beforehand
    However! That plan tends to be fairly thin and flexible. As you get more information and even as you write, you’re going to want to change things as you actualize. Typically, my thesis when I originally plot things out is going to be sharpened and more specific as part of the process, to the point that my starting point almost seems stupidly simplistic by the time I’m done.
    So, overall I lean towards the planning side of things while being aware enough to keep my options open ig 😂

  • @sifatshams1113
    @sifatshams1113 2 года назад +16

    While I totally agree with the points you made in this video, it must be stated that Vince Gilligan makes a pretty good case for being a Gardener.

    • @alexforce9
      @alexforce9 2 года назад +6

      I think he probably did have an ending in mind tho. There was some tiny voice in his head saying "There is no way in hell this will end up in a happy place for Walter. "

    • @abdulazizmerdad4093
      @abdulazizmerdad4093 2 года назад

      Nah Gilligan was definitely an architect you could tell since the first scene of the 5th season that he had his ending planned now I believe in the beginning he was a gardener but he definitely became an architect when making season 3-5

  • @pseudodidact3956
    @pseudodidact3956 2 года назад +13

    Great analysis. It’s interesting how Mr. iRobot was intended to be a movie. The writers did a good job stretching the story for a full series. I, on the other hand, can barely connect point A to point B when I’m writing, so I’m beyond impressed. 💀

  • @EddyTheMartian
    @EddyTheMartian 2 года назад +37

    Great use of Mr. Robot, one of the best TV endings ever, and one of the best shows ever in general. Love the insane twists and recontextualizatoins. I wonder which shows and endings you think are the best. For me The Shield, Mr. Robot, The Americans and The Sopranos have the best ending, though that may change cause I've gone back on finales before, like Breaking Bad's which is still great but felt too neat and tidy.

    • @tenzinmutuzaki8228
      @tenzinmutuzaki8228 2 года назад +3

      The Shield’s ending was fucking crazy. A lot of stories fail in that they’re consequence-averse. That episode, however, was a gut punch.

  • @tom-tom2905
    @tom-tom2905 2 года назад +5

    Thank you for treating Mr. Robot with the respect it deserves

  • @usmansubhani7482
    @usmansubhani7482 2 года назад +4

    I straddle the line. I first make the world and characters like an architect, then change into a gardener that lets those characters bleed into the story. Changing the plan to suit the character arcs and themes I’m ‘gardening’.

  • @699Kyle699
    @699Kyle699 2 года назад +3

    Mr.Robot is peak television

  • @e443productions9
    @e443productions9 2 года назад +3

    I feel like I’m more of a gardner/pantser, but I often start the story knowing how it’s supposed to end more or less

  • @luizafantin109
    @luizafantin109 2 года назад +7

    Knowing your ending applies to comedy as well. The first three seasons of Arrested Development have some amazing foreshadowing and, in my opinion, a great ending.

  • @SebLeCaribou
    @SebLeCaribou 2 года назад +6

    I don't know how much I agree with your video for once...
    I agree that, most of the time, if there is a mystery you are working towards, knowing the solution to that mystery is better. But I think that there are exceptions to that rule, especially when it comes to TV shows. Because TV shows are rarely written for the exact number of seasons they will last, which complicates the problem greatly. Something that make sense for one or two seasons, may not make sense after 8 more renewal because the show is popular. You might have to "fill" the seasons and make the character evolve in ways you hadn't planned just so that it stays entertaining. And these characters may end up being very different that the ones you were planning the ending for. And I think that GoT is an example of how to plan wrong and how not to plan wrong at the same time. The other example that I think contradicts this idea of planning in advance is How I Met Your Mother's ending. SPOILERS for both shows:
    So Game Of Thrones:
    -Didn't plan and it sucks: in s8e3 Arya kills the Nigh Kings. Makes no sense thematically, or narratively, even if she has the skills to do it. It should have been either John or Bran maybe (or Jaime? If you want a fun pun on "The King Slayer" title). The point is, they tried to be surprising, but it just came out of nowhere and was not satisfying because the character had no prior business or particular reason to make that move. They should have thought of that way earlier in the series and "prepare" a character for it (like John ffs)
    -Planned it and it sucked: in s8e5, Daenerys burns a city full of innocent people and then gets murdered for her crasyness. Though I'm not 100% sure about it, I'm pretty certain it's where they wanted the show to go from the start, and even where Martins is going to end the book series. Except the way they portrayed the character doesn't work at all with that ending. She never did something that insane; she can be ruthless, but she has a sense of justice and a constant need of saving innocents. This ending contradicts what has been presented to us throughout the show. They should have changed that ending. Either have her killed in battle, or make her take the throne.
    HIMYM:
    -This still pisses me off to this day XD They planned on having the mother die and Ted ending up with Robin. Except that was when the series was not 8 seasons in. They kept the ending they had planned, except the characters where NOT AT ALL where they needed to be for that ending to make sense. Ted had moved on, they actually managed to stick the landing with the mother reveal (after 8 seasons of anticipation she was a suprisingly good character), Robin was married to Barney who had progressively evolved from his bachelor life to engaging with someone he loves. And then they reversed litterally 5 seasons of character growth in 15minutes of the last episode to fullfil a stupid ass ending that didn't only created problems, not only narratively but also ethically.
    I think that planning an ending should be mandatory. BUT especially in the case of a TV show, re-evaluating that ending in the light of how much the show evolved is WAY more important than having an ending in the first place.
    Ultimately, I think it's not a dichotomy between being a planner or a gardener. In TV writing, you need to do both.

  • @JoshuaS-ur7jm
    @JoshuaS-ur7jm 2 года назад +12

    Thank god I thought you might say something bad about mr robot (cus it has quite a bit of flaws despite it being one of my favorite shows) but then I saw it was up against Gossip Girl and I had a sigh of relief lmao

  • @karabokhanyile
    @karabokhanyile 2 года назад +13

    I've never seen the original gossip girl (I watched 8 episodes of the reboot and I hated it)
    I watched all of Mr Robot last month and it's stayed with me to this day. Rami Malek was superb and it had the best ending of a show I loved since Nikita (CW)

  • @kombuchas4684
    @kombuchas4684 2 года назад +4

    I'm so worried that Severance might go the Gossip Girl route. The first season is honestly one of the best shows I have ever seen, but I really hope the showrunners have an idea of where the show is going.

  • @SLAP1FACE
    @SLAP1FACE 2 года назад +6

    MR. Robot is a masterpiece and the greatest show of my lifetime.

  • @StormRiderDJS
    @StormRiderDJS 2 года назад +4

    Yes! You finally covered my favorite TV show. I've watched it through 3 times by now, and it's one of the only shows I own on disc. I can only hope one day you’ll do a deeper analysis of this masterpiece, even if you crap on it a little lol

  • @UriTrash
    @UriTrash 2 года назад +1

    You can have a crappy begining, a crappy middle but always make a big ending or everything will be waste. Something like this said irving in season 3 of mr robot

  • @Ellestra
    @Ellestra 2 года назад +3

    I really loved how it all came together in the final episodes of Mr Robot. All the things that were there since beginning - from Eliot jumping from his window was really him trying to save Darlene from their father to the very fact that Mastermind didn't remember who Darlene was - the clues were there from the start. There were some things along the way were I thought the show was losing it's way but they stuck the ending and so many shows fail at that.

  • @asifnewazmohammad9603
    @asifnewazmohammad9603 2 года назад +1

    Man, I wish I had at least a 6-hour video or several more of these to watch. Keep it up Mac!

  • @osmanyousif7849
    @osmanyousif7849 2 года назад +7

    You know shows that didn’t learn this with their endings? Lost, Dexter, and the most recent shows Killing Eve and Ozark. Man, did Ozark piss me off more. It was like the creators stopped giving a damn.
    Would be interesting to see you tackle these shows in your Finale Face-Off series (Which I’m surprised that this video isn’t part of your series).

    • @Bugga-Ray-Dudley
      @Bugga-Ray-Dudley 2 года назад

      What happened to ozark? I remember enjoying it a lot and then just got bored

    • @DLites151
      @DLites151 2 года назад +1

      @@Bugga-Ray-Dudley Ozark final season was an absolute shitshow

    • @osmanyousif7849
      @osmanyousif7849 2 года назад +1

      @@Bugga-Ray-Dudley , it had the most stupid final episode and ending. Character arcs went downhill, the story became so inconsistent, and so many moments felt contrived and not smart. It even left so many questions unanswered.

    • @Bugga-Ray-Dudley
      @Bugga-Ray-Dudley 2 года назад

      @@osmanyousif7849 that’s disappointing the show seemed really smart and patient in the beginning

  • @nerdienew911
    @nerdienew911 2 года назад +1

    One of the biggest example of architect is definitely Attack On Titan. It foreshadows so much but it is always so subtle.

  • @robertbeattie2274
    @robertbeattie2274 Год назад +1

    It seems to me that we writers tend to anchor on some advice. In the late 1960s I read Asimov’s advice that for writing fiction, he never put fingers to typewriter keys until he had his story's ending completely thought out. About that same time, I read Slaughterhouse Five. In it, author Vonnegut explained that he wrote his novel’s outline on the back of a long roll of wallpaper. I anchored on that. Thus, always in fiction, and where possible when writing nonfiction, I think out the end of my story, then create some version of an outline (some much more detailed than others) to reference, before putting fingers to keyboard. Now an old man, I’ve written about twenty-million words for others following those notions. Robert Beattie, New York Times bestselling author

  • @SnakeWasRight
    @SnakeWasRight 7 месяцев назад +1

    As far as archirect vs gardener, I architect the plot, but I garden the characters, which means they can and do often change the plot.
    Sometimes they need to be steered in a certain direction, but most often, the chaos of making their own decisions makes things better on every level. But a structure in the setting and antagonist are needed to have them react to.

  • @NASkeywest
    @NASkeywest 2 года назад +1

    The ending of Mr. Robot left me feeling existential.

  • @GeorgesSegundo
    @GeorgesSegundo 6 месяцев назад

    Great wisdom in your words brother, so helpful for an aspiring writer like me.

  • @MadeInHeavxn
    @MadeInHeavxn 2 года назад +2

    i truly believe that mr robot is a show you need to watch more than once to fully understand its beauty. it was very well executed and truly attention catching. its something that you cant put on as background noise. it took me multiple watches of each episode to appreciate it.

  • @wiiink
    @wiiink Год назад +2

    I feel like your point is made really well comparing Avatar the Last Airbender to The Legend of Korra. With ATLA everyone knew it would end in a showdown with the firelord and everything else was just how they would prepare for it and get to that point. When they made Korra they didn't know they would get another season so they just had a villain per season which made everything feel disjointed in comparison to its predecessor.

  • @SamSepiolTheHeretic
    @SamSepiolTheHeretic 2 года назад +2

    Re watching Mr Robot after season 4 is mind-blowing

  • @thewhitewolf58
    @thewhitewolf58 2 года назад +1

    I would say garden the first few drafts to find cool directions then architect a final story.

  • @mytime991
    @mytime991 2 года назад +4

    Season 3 of Mr. Robot is essentially perfect. Not a single flaw.

  • @AndaraBledin
    @AndaraBledin 9 дней назад

    There are three types of writer:
    Planner - has an outline from start to finish, planning out their story framework before starting
    Pantser - has an idea and just sits down to start writing, using a 'by the seat of their pants' method
    Plantser - a hybrid with an general idea of the direction for their story but who lets the story go where it takes them as they write and adjusts as they go

  • @Sharpe1502
    @Sharpe1502 2 года назад +2

    I’m not a huge fan of Penn Badgely’s shows, but I very much enjoy his criticism of the shows his own characters. Poor guy deserves better writing.

  • @edatthegovernance
    @edatthegovernance 2 года назад +1

    A garden has a shape. That is what differs it from wild growth. You may need to plot out patches of land, decide where tomatoes grow, and try to figure out if marigolds really trick rabbits off the scent of vegetables.
    Those that profess to be gardeners but play no mind to structure at all miss this bit of the metaphor.
    Excellent piece, as always.

  • @myboatforacar
    @myboatforacar 2 года назад

    1:11 Seeking the truth in good faith is never a copout.
    Great video! Thanks!

  • @profviral
    @profviral Год назад +1

    Knowing your ending is everything; the basic ideas he left in notes and ideas he shared with his friend is the reason why the Berserk series will be able to finish despite the death of Miura. Compared to CLAMP, who said it was unlikely they'd pick pick up X/1999 again (despite it being on a something like a +15 year hiatus). One of their greatest manga, and we'll never learn how it ends 😢

  • @AlexisBii
    @AlexisBii 2 года назад +2

    BREAK GOSSIP GIRL DOWN FOR US KING
    I NEEDED THIS!!!

  • @whensomethingcriesagain
    @whensomethingcriesagain Год назад +1

    I think this one needs a follow up tbh, because it covers the importance of knowing your twists beforehand, but the importance of knowing your ending is not any less so when you aren't planning a twist and just want to do a straightforward ending, which is a different enough situation that I think it deserves a corollary discussion

  • @Maerahn
    @Maerahn 2 года назад +1

    Yes, 100% agree. I'm mostly a gardener writer, but the only stories I finish are the ones where I know how it's going to end, even if I have no idea how I'm going to get there. That doesn't mean I never tweak HOW that ending plays out, to better fit with new things I discover along the way, but it does mean that I, at the very least, have the definitive 'yes or no' answer to original question my story arose from.

  • @justincruz5720
    @justincruz5720 2 года назад +1

    I’m so hyped. I loved your videos covering _The Last of Us: Part 2_ . Now you’re covering one of my favorite shows. I love it.

  • @u3u_o3o
    @u3u_o3o 2 года назад

    king dropped another banger!!!!!!

  • @robchuk4136
    @robchuk4136 2 года назад +3

    Mr Robot was pretty dope. I think Season 1 is amazing, S2 dips a little, S3 gets back on track, and S4 is masterful. I never watched Gossip Girl, so I can't speak to it (and I'm skipping that section because who knows? Maybe I'll check it out someday), but I do have some thoughts about other finales based on "Knowing your Ending"...
    I find the ending of *Game of Thrones* complicated because how can they know their ending when the books never got finished! I'm giving them some leeway here, lol. I can do no such thing for *Killing Eve* who's finale was an unmitigated disaster, predicated by the push and pull between pandering to shippers or being true to the story logic.
    *Avatar The Last Airbender* and *The Legend of Korra* are two ends of an interesting spectrum. The most satisfying finale I may have ever watched is actually from the Avatar cartoon. This is a textbook example of what having a roadmap looks like, and executing it to a T. Animation, by nature has to plan things out in advance, which is why it's so baffling the sequel series, Korra, had an ending that was much more rushed.
    With *L O S T* there's much debate about if the creators knew their ending or not, and if so, how long they knew it. Going into that controversial finale, I was ready for anything. A lot of viewers felt questions weren't answered (they were, they were just unsatisfying), but I'm of the mind their finale 'got away with it,' because it did connect with me emotionally, and I'd argue that's important too. On that token, I also think *The Leftovers* has a similarly strong, emotional finale, and it's from one of the same guys.
    *Endings coming soon* Strangers Things has announced and an date, and imo, this is a series that probably should have been an anthology after Season 1. They have their work cut out for them... Better Call Saul is also wrapping up, and them knowing their ending is unique in that as a prequel, it has to dovetail into an established series. I can't think of any other TV examples they can follow for inspiration.... I've been watching the Attack on Titan anime, and having not read the manga, I have no idea how it will conclude. Seemingly, adaptations shouldn't have this 'know your ending' problem, right? The source material is basically storytelling insurance.

    • @raphaelzakhm7310
      @raphaelzakhm7310 2 года назад

      Journeys tend to, by the nature of their own structure, have very satisfying endings because every journey has a destination, a culmination of all the previous events. You just need to not make a boring middle (easier said than done) and make the end of the journey valuable (saving the kingdom, reclaiming a birthright, getting treasure, that kind of stuff.). They also allow for some "filler" and episodic instances that people generally like to see (like characters taking a break to relax, visiting different countries, varied biomes etc.), as long as they are not too damaging to the overall pace.

    • @raphaelzakhm7310
      @raphaelzakhm7310 2 года назад

      So, addressing the point of Avatar (which was the reason why I wrote all of that above). The first series had a very clear ending: stop the Fire Nation and save the world. We had three seasons for the characters to grow in that journey, experiencing a lot of different situations and exploring the world they would like to save, building towards the final moment they would defeat Ozai.
      On the other hand, Korra did not go on a journey like the Aang, and did not have a "Final Big Bad" to beat. In this case, Korra had villains PER SEASON, with which one of them representing an ideology, not necessarily building up from each other and, again, only one season to flesh out the antagonists - some of them were more compelling than others, and the quality and pace of the seasons varied; the same with escalation of the tension.
      I actually like Korra series, but Avatar had a more "reliable" structure for the writers to work with it.

  • @ZendikarMage42750
    @ZendikarMage42750 2 года назад +1

    I do not envy the writers of long form television. My own writing process usually involves coming up with a bunch of different, yet slightly similar ideas, writing plot point outlines for each, picking my favorite parts of each, combining that into a Frankenstein's monster version of an outline, then letting the characters drive the smaller details of the story as I actually write it. Needless to say, it requires several rewrites to be at all consistent and the whole process is far from efficient, heh heh

  • @rabbitguy
    @rabbitguy 2 года назад

    Great video. Never seen Gossip Girl but those plot holes you pointed out made me laugh out loud.

  • @benediktmathes2528
    @benediktmathes2528 2 года назад +8

    What happens when you plan out your story from the beginning: Dark
    I don't think you could ever create such an interesting and cohesive show with gardening...
    Going for a mix, so planning the most important plot points and try making up the rest, is definitely way harder. The more gardening you do, the more you have to be a real genius and let's be honest... not everyone is Oda. 😉

    • @farfaraway4285
      @farfaraway4285 Год назад

      Dark is so forgotten, as much as I love Mr. Robot, Dark I love more.

  • @LightningNC
    @LightningNC 2 года назад +1

    10:01 -- Using "cultured" ironically, heh, that's kinda funny.
    14:43 -- Oh wow, he really is a man of culture.

  • @BitesTheDusto
    @BitesTheDusto 2 года назад +1

    Lets go I left a comment real long ago pleading for a mr robot video, I cant believe my eyes

  • @bambamhakkai
    @bambamhakkai 2 года назад

    You deserve my Sub because of how you love Mr.Robot Like me!

  • @houseonjupiter
    @houseonjupiter 2 года назад

    When I write, I always make several drafts. But the first thing I do is make a note of the most important situations of the plot. A beginning, middle, and end. I always think of the ending in advance, but not so strictly that I cannot make any changes to the flow or creativity of the story if I so wish. It really works out well for me. Because my first book I ever wrote (at age 15, so bear with me) was something that I wrote when I woke up in the middle of the night and just came up with an idea. I hadn't planned out a proper ending in advance, and as a result, the ending felt a little random. Now I use this formula where I think of major points and the ending in advance, but leave enough room for creative changes and things I can add along the way. It really makes me enjoy writing more, because I feel like I am actually going somewhere when I write as opposed to just winging it.

  • @thatRyzzle
    @thatRyzzle Год назад

    The STFU a few minutes in really got me! 😂

  • @DrtyALGreen
    @DrtyALGreen 6 месяцев назад

    As someone who watched Mr. Robot when it first aired every week(I even won a hoodie from their viral marketing strategy).....the ending for me was perfect and tied every up nicely. The second watch through is definitely amazing.

  • @ThatOneGuy7550
    @ThatOneGuy7550 Год назад

    Hope we get an hour long video essay on Mr Robot sometime🙏

  • @reallauradee
    @reallauradee 6 месяцев назад

    I wish I could forget Mr. Robot so I could experience it as if it were the first time. But I have marathon the series 4 times and the ending still makes me cry.

  • @Linny95
    @Linny95 2 года назад +10

    AoT is another exampple of amazing storytelling from having the writer know the ending but also flexible enough to re-write based on the journey to the finish line.

    • @heisenberg3206
      @heisenberg3206 2 года назад +1

      aot has amazing storytelling? dont make me laugh

    • @Linny95
      @Linny95 2 года назад +1

      @@heisenberg3206 dont worry im laughing at you

    • @heisenberg3206
      @heisenberg3206 2 года назад

      @@Linny95 yea any normie who says aot has great storytelling would laugh for no reason

    • @Linny95
      @Linny95 2 года назад

      @@heisenberg3206 I'm not laughing for no reason

    • @heisenberg3206
      @heisenberg3206 2 года назад

      @@Linny95 that's what normies says

  • @raphaelzakhm7310
    @raphaelzakhm7310 2 года назад

    Journeys tend to, by the nature of their own structure, have very satisfying endings because every journey has a destination, a culmination of all the previous events. You just need to not make a boring middle (easier said than done) and make the end of the journey valuable (saving the kingdom, reclaiming a birthright, getting treasure, that kind of stuff.). They also allow for some "filler" and episodic instances that people generally like to see (like characters taking a break to relax, visiting different countries, varied biomes etc.), as long as they are not too damaging to the overall pace.

  • @BrunaCubbins
    @BrunaCubbins 2 года назад +2

    Mr. Robot will be forever my favorite tv show. I love it so much.

  • @farfaraway4285
    @farfaraway4285 Год назад

    Dark is also a very good example of show written from start to finish beforehand.

  • @chungusmaximus526
    @chungusmaximus526 2 года назад +6

    The Mr. Robot and Fight Club endings both leave us with this sort of idealistic anarchist ambiguous conclusion without a visible aftermath of what a world without the villain looks like. Both never show the power vacuum and vice that will continue to plague man even after the fall of the evil predecessor.
    In short, it's human nature to do and undo.

  • @conradtrueit7882
    @conradtrueit7882 2 года назад +1

    Given all story comes from character, I cannot agree more regarding the necessity of (generally) knowing your ending from the start - but also being open to your characters leading you to a new/better one.
    That being said, I’m not sold on Mr. Robot as an example of a show sticking the landing.
    Having finished the series without knowledge of Esmail’s claim to have known its ending from the start - if you believe that to begin with - the ending, to me, felt very jump-the-shark. A sort of left-field subversion of Fight Club, which is where, in my mind, the series was leading me. So, to each his is own, but “one of the greatest television series of all time,” a masterpiece? In the words of Tony Soprano, “Get the fuck outta here.”
    Great work as always, Mac.

  • @chimedemon
    @chimedemon 2 года назад +1

    Here’s a better way of thinking it… you NEED TO KNOW YOUR ENDING IF… you’ve got a twist or if there’s a running prevailing mystery going within the series. If it’s a story that’s not exactly supposed to reveal anything that recontextualized the entire story then it’s not as important. But if you absolutely want a story that has any grand reveal you NEED to know it. It’s the difference between Sherlock the tv show vs Sherlock Holmes, the better one. The show basically just made Sherlock know everything all the time all at once, sometimes figuring stuff out off screen like some bullshit anime character we’ve seen too much of. They didn’t really have an ending in mind (if they did they didn’t really do the lead up or pay off very well whatsoever) while the old stories you and Holmes discovering the actual mystery unfold WITH a decisive person known in the end.
    If you wanna be like Tarantino, welll that’s harder but not necessarily impossible, just DO NOT make a grand reveal, and instead end it off in a way that feels more in line with the story’s through line. He’s stated in multiple interviews that he doesn’t know the ending nor wants to until he gets there, mainly because his characters at that point are completely different people. Sooooo just know what kind of story you want and go from there :D

  • @seen921
    @seen921 2 года назад +1

    100%
    Have the courage to end it and not to play to fan service or ego

  • @chaseguap
    @chaseguap 2 года назад +2

    You gotta be both gardener and architect, breaking bad had Jessie dying but they like Aaron Paul so much they made him a main character and changed the story

  • @Barbies_Angel
    @Barbies_Angel 2 года назад +1

    Or alternatively: be a Mulholland Drive/Audition and not a Green Inferno

    • @Maxwell03
      @Maxwell03 2 года назад

      I've never heard Mulholland Drive and Green Inferno mentioned in the same sentence before.

  • @HeatherHolt
    @HeatherHolt 2 года назад +1

    I wasn’t a fan of season 2 of mr robot. But season 1 was a masterpiece. As cliche as it is IDC but fight club is my favorite movie of all time so it really resonated with me bc I didn’t catch it until the reveal. And all that yummy serotonin flowed thru my brain.

  • @grahamurwin-toll5323
    @grahamurwin-toll5323 2 года назад +7

    I own the entire series of Mr Robot and I rewatch it often. Such a good series. Didn't waste my time with gossip girl. Never sounded like my cup of tea.

  • @john80944
    @john80944 2 года назад

    Make plans, or at least one coherent plan. It's a good habit you can have even if you don't need to write a multiple-seasons-show.
    You can abandon you plan if you got a better one. But zero plans will be the worst scenario you can get yourself in to.

  • @heftbullard8273
    @heftbullard8273 2 года назад

    I make sense of the revelation that Dan was GG by imagining the character a far left or anarchist agent, planted by his comrades among "Manhattan's elite" to instill distrust and burnt bridges in the latest crop to soften up the whole foundation for a swifter revolution. Of course he ultimately failed and settled squarely in the wasp's nest himself, but that's ok, maybe he just sucked at what he did and fell to a "can't beat 'em join 'em" mentality. But that about explains everything.

  • @skyteus
    @skyteus 2 года назад +2

    Mr. Robot KreyGasm

  • @ryanfritts1574
    @ryanfritts1574 2 года назад

    Blows my mind when you actually start making sense

    • @ryanfritts1574
      @ryanfritts1574 2 года назад

      Were does fisting come into play in my next masterpiece

  • @MatthewCobalt
    @MatthewCobalt 2 года назад +1

    Hey, thanks for pointing out that My story might not ever have an ending.
    Now I might actually drop my passion project, as it went through over 1000 years of in-story development and an ending wasn’t even on the cards, though the themes were explored in great depth.
    Now I will never complete it.

    • @MacabreStorytelling
      @MacabreStorytelling  2 года назад +1

      Maybe try thinking of one

    • @MatthewCobalt
      @MatthewCobalt 2 года назад

      @@MacabreStorytelling Considering that the founding premise was a guy stumbling into the infinite multiverse at 18 and falling ass backwards from death to a version of immortality at 38/58, I’d say that it’s like trying to fit tungsten cube into a steel peg hole.

  • @sardonically-inclined7645
    @sardonically-inclined7645 Год назад

    RUclips needs to stop effing about, because, how did I miss this one?

  • @nofail
    @nofail 2 года назад +1

    Dude... i skipped the mr robot portion thinking you'd keep the spoilers to that part then got big spoiled in the 2nd part

  • @upd0g1
    @upd0g1 2 года назад

    I went and watched the entirety of Mr. Robot just so I could watch this video. MAKE MORE VIDS BRO 😎
    we knead it…..pls

  • @kat8559
    @kat8559 2 года назад

    May I recommend julia cudney?
    I think she's talked about how the identity of gossip girl became much less of a focus as the show went on, to the point where actually "solving" gossip girl's identity was completely out of place.
    Not to mention that apparently they started the show intending gg to be Eric, but fans guessed it, so they changed gg's identity? I don't remember if it was ever solved in the books, i stopped reading them at some point
    the show wrote this insane plot about gossip girl just being a laptop anyone could write on, and the laptop changes hands multiple times, so it's like, who knows and who cares. The drama became about the character relationships imo, mainly chuck and blair. Did you make a gossip girl video? I feel like you did but I'll have to check and rewatch.

  • @matriaxpunk
    @matriaxpunk 2 года назад

    Do a video on Severance, please.

  • @thebobbrom7176
    @thebobbrom7176 3 месяца назад +1

    "You can't go back an edit shit to make it all fit together"
    George Lucas... Watch me...

  • @ronitdesai6988
    @ronitdesai6988 2 года назад +2

    I completely agree with 95% of what you said in the video. Stuff like an ending is the most important part of the story. Mr. Robot had arguably the greatest ending of any piece of media out there. I read about 1000 theories for how the show would end before the finale aired and none of them were true, the actual ending was completely different and still completely satisfying and so on point for the characters and it's just absolutely drop-dead beautiful. I am just thankful to everyone involved with Mr. Robot for creating this GOAT masterpiece.
    However, I do disagree with one point in your video that HIMYM and GOT comparison. HIMYM's ending did make sense and it does stay true to its characters. The only thing is that the creators had kept both the endings till the last possible second and planted seeds for both cases so that whatever they choose would make sense. I've seen that show 17 times and I will defend its ending as much as I can. GOT's ending on the other hand was not only rushed but was also extremely poorly executed and is just plain bad. I don't think comparing these two in the same manner as having bad endings is fair.
    Great video though brother, I hope more people watch Mr. Robot and make videos about it.

  • @CharlieSoze
    @CharlieSoze 2 года назад +1

    I suspect a lot of the "writing without an ending in mind" comes from the old network model, where if a show suddenly becomes a hit, the network will want seven more seasons, requiring the creators to either tread water getting to their destination, or else to keep coming up with new destinations.
    You would hope that needing to tell one coherent story with a planned ending would mean the creators would say "we need four seasons to get there and that's all we're making", yet I think we all know that this doesn't fly if a show suddenly blows up and everyone starts seeing $$$.
    Mr. Robot was perfect.

  • @jimmiddleton2206
    @jimmiddleton2206 2 года назад

    If you freeze frame at just the right moment, you can see the spectre of JJ Abrams haunting this video...

  • @marcuswalters8093
    @marcuswalters8093 2 года назад +3

    I only watched this to hear what I've always thought. Have an ending from the start.
    I was shocked to discover US writers don't tend to do this. Especially when it comes to mysteries. I can reel off cases where making it up as you go along leads to deeply unsatisfying resolutions.
    The Final Five
    The nature of The Island
    Bran The Broken
    The Wolf of God
    Endings made up on the spot to conclude long running stories are nearly always obvious and nearly always disappointing.

  • @camille5937
    @camille5937 2 года назад

    Did I watch all 4 seasons of Mr Robot in order to watch this video ? Well...

  • @music_YT2023
    @music_YT2023 2 года назад

    But who is Oliver and why must he be so hated? I always struggle when writing out series - do I plan for a through line for the entirety of the series and flesh out the works in between to suit, or do I focus on the individual works and hope to make it all cohesive by the end. It's difficult for those that have many individual story beats and details that build up to the point of absurdity that you lose the forest for the trees (GRR MARTIN... where is my zombie Caitlyn?!).

  • @GodMothaKyle
    @GodMothaKyle 2 года назад +1

    If you want to talk about a show not knowing it's own ending, look no further than Pretty Little Liars. Holy hell talk about a out of nowhere reveal and a lackluster ending that seemed like a last minute add in.

  • @clydefrog6961
    @clydefrog6961 2 года назад

    Lmao "Mr. Robot vs. Gossip Girl" comedy gold already