How to Expand an Idea into a Story (Writing Advice)

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  • Опубліковано 13 гру 2023
  • Learn how to build a novel, screenplay, etc. from a simple idea.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 392

  • @7LeagueShoes
    @7LeagueShoes 5 місяців тому +341

    Less than 500 words away from 90k for my first book. Almost done. Just wanted to say, your videos have really helped me figure things out.

    • @WellWisdom.
      @WellWisdom. 5 місяців тому +28

      Congrats and share the title so we can give it a read when release.

    • @kevinmurphy65
      @kevinmurphy65 4 місяці тому +5

      Awesome and good luck!

    • @RealMatthewWalker
      @RealMatthewWalker 4 місяці тому +10

      What’s the title? I’ll buy it when it comes out.

    • @kurukshetrawar6680
      @kurukshetrawar6680 3 місяці тому +4

      Good luck!

    • @MasterGriffin_
      @MasterGriffin_ 3 місяці тому +2

      Nice I already published a book it's a cool feeling once it's done

  • @DevTheRay
    @DevTheRay 5 місяців тому +411

    It's crazy how good your videos are

    • @WriterBrandonMcNulty
      @WriterBrandonMcNulty  5 місяців тому +58

      Thank you!

    • @liz5754
      @liz5754 5 місяців тому +33

      Right? Straight to the point, and you even get quick bullet points for notes.

    • @venalleader2909
      @venalleader2909 5 місяців тому +14

      without a doubt the best channel for writing advice

    • @Army_Dog
      @Army_Dog 5 місяців тому +8

      Fr, him and Closer Look made a video with the similar lesson and his was much easier to understand, well done Brandon

    • @Lizard1582
      @Lizard1582 5 місяців тому +7

      other channels are long-winded and repetitive. Brandon does very short videos and gets right to the point.

  • @tannergarner8529
    @tannergarner8529 5 місяців тому +165

    6 Tips
    1. Combine Two Unrelated Ideas (Romeo and Juliet + Titanic disaster)
    2. Connect your idea to other story elements like character, plot, theme, and worldbuilding. (Jurassic Park = dinosaur theme park + park founder + scientists + conflict)
    3. Create goals and conflict.
    4. Add meaningful subplots in line with your theme. (Rocky, self-respect, + romantic subplot)
    5. Active and Passive Research.
    6. Shelve under-developed ideas until a new idea comes along to make it more interesting.

    • @omegaminoseer4539
      @omegaminoseer4539 3 місяці тому +2

      I think that the greatest takeaway for my stories is going to be #3. I keep reaching unfulfilled ends to the story, since my conflicts are too easy for the characters to overcome. The idea of having progressively more intense situations, solves most of those issues with my story. I plan on making the script have more complications within the narrative, since they would help the story lengthen.

    • @andreiasimov33
      @andreiasimov33 Місяць тому

      @@omegaminoseer4539 Could you provide and example of some of the conflicts that you wrote to see if they are too easy for your character to overcome?

    • @howto302
      @howto302 Місяць тому +2

      Uranium is a good alternative to Cereal

  • @fransbuijs808
    @fransbuijs808 5 місяців тому +35

    Another indication that an idea is good is: if it doesn't let you go, if you keep coming back to it.

    • @WriterBrandonMcNulty
      @WriterBrandonMcNulty  5 місяців тому +10

      Great point. Wish I had included this at the start of the video

  • @jalahjava_
    @jalahjava_ 5 місяців тому +116

    I really appreciate these tips, especially for me as a just beginning author. Your advice has really pushed me forward on my journey and I don't have the words for quite how much it's helped.
    Thanks, Brandon!

    • @WriterBrandonMcNulty
      @WriterBrandonMcNulty  5 місяців тому +8

      Thrilled to hear that these videos are making a difference. Keep it up!

  • @errantwinds-up8uu
    @errantwinds-up8uu 5 місяців тому +74

    I've only ever written short stories. When I've tried anything longer I fizzle out, and I think it's because I go in with only half baked ideas, so thank you for this list! It should help next time I have an idea!

    • @roscojenkins7451
      @roscojenkins7451 5 місяців тому +2

      I have the same problem. How long do you make your short stories? I think I should try that but if I don't set a page limit I'll keep writing and expanding and writing and expanding until the eventual fizzle

    • @tonyorobsky
      @tonyorobsky 5 місяців тому +4

      I probably should try short stories. My creative engine always stall when trying to write long ones.

    • @b1bbscraz3y
      @b1bbscraz3y 5 місяців тому +6

      I think GRRM started with short stories, then wrote several related short stories, then wrote novels

    • @Spongebrain97
      @Spongebrain97 5 місяців тому +2

      ​ @b1bbscraz3y ironically now it seems like he would rather return to writing short stories than continue the novels

    • @ssssssstssssssss
      @ssssssstssssssss 4 місяці тому +2

      Have you tried not giving up quickly? Most ideas start out half-baked. They seem good until you try to realize them. Then you notice all sorts of problems . It helps to agonize over them once you hit a wall. You will probably overcome it if you try enough

  • @bignapolean3068
    @bignapolean3068 5 місяців тому +23

    My longest story, to date is around 62,000 words.

  • @ajdndbdjbdj
    @ajdndbdjbdj 5 місяців тому +63

    Bro I feel like you are sitting inside my head you always say things I think of, great content

    • @WriterBrandonMcNulty
      @WriterBrandonMcNulty  5 місяців тому +11

      Hahah thanks!

    • @BarusuX220
      @BarusuX220 2 місяці тому +1

      @@caitlyncarvalho7637 I don't know man I always preferred bonnie and clyde love story

  • @silverstarlightproductions1292
    @silverstarlightproductions1292 5 місяців тому +24

    I once wrote a short story for my creative writing class about a Vestal Virgin who falls in love with a Christian gladiator in Ancient Rome. I started to develop it into a screenplay, but I've been hung up on the middle act for about 3 years. I know I'll finish this story one day though because as you mentioned in your video it's an idea that refuses to leave my mind.

    • @spiderlegs157
      @spiderlegs157 5 місяців тому +3

      I'd pay money to watch that.

    • @silverstarlightproductions1292
      @silverstarlightproductions1292 5 місяців тому +4

      @@spiderlegs157 Thanks! That's really encouraging to hear. 🙂

    • @spiderlegs157
      @spiderlegs157 5 місяців тому +1

      @@silverstarlightproductions1292 of course! Keep on going!

    • @RevengeOfIjapa
      @RevengeOfIjapa 5 місяців тому +3

      ​@@silverstarlightproductions1292 I'd also pay good money to read/watch that. Please make it happen!

    • @SyoDraws
      @SyoDraws 4 місяці тому +2

      That sounds quite interesting 😊

  • @lukemauerman3734
    @lukemauerman3734 5 місяців тому +5

    My 2nd book was 738 pages; a quarter of a million words. At the finishing touches I could not believe I had a quarter of a million words in my head; I pictured them as a great silo in front of me and I could shift things around, pluck an idea from later and insert it in near the beginning.... It was an almost out of body experience. Now, 2 years later, I don't remember much of it, I have to go back and look at what I did. As a self-published author I didn't move nearly as many copies as I wanted to, but my reviews were AWESOME. It was amazing!

  • @lordfabulous6198
    @lordfabulous6198 5 місяців тому +8

    I've established 18 chapters in my book, a project that I've written on and off since I was 14. I'm 23 now.
    It is my only book, and unfortunately I made it way more complicated than an amateur author can normally handle.
    It started with one main character, and now has five, all with individual subplots after splitting up in chapter 9.
    While I believe it's necessary in order to make the story the most compelling, it also left me stumped in how I can develop those subplots.
    Currently, my characters are in the following scenario:
    1. Zoran: recovering from torture after getting caught by the enemy in chapter 7. His story will be focused on learning who their true enemy is, and how to kill them, as well as challenging his nihilistic perception of mortality and human nature. He will eventually take the place of an immortal being, and save the villain who was corrupted by the true villain - in death.
    2. Theodren: after losing his brother, Zoran, he struggles to see purpose outside one day finding him. He ends up kidnapped by a group of rebels, is by circumstance given the chance to lead the group despite opposition, and now is on a mission to expand their army and find a way to weaken the villain (who now controls their kingdom). He is also meant to learn to respect his previous rival (Armand Malrick) whom he battled with words on many occassions when the previous king permitted him to lead armies (a prior part of the story). Lastly, he gains perspective about the rebels, and the nobility. The rebels were once his enemy in the prior war, but not the greedy nobles that fought for their own selfish interests. They were peasants that sought opportunity to improve their lives (think French revolution), a group which he wasn't aware he was fighting against back then. He lost his parents to the rebels from the past, so this helps him explore that trauma and learn to grow from it. He also learns the perspective of the nobles that refuse the villain's reign, having to find a way to make the two groups work together despite opposing interests.
    3. Valora: suffering from a condition that was believed cured in a prior chapter, she was sent to her father to address it (who she left due to his controlling nature, and that she wanted to fulfill the goals of her dead mother - to help humans and elves not hate each other). She eventually escapes with the help of a servant girl who displays what she would've been had she stayed: without purpose, isolated from others. They return to the mainland to find her friends, but is caught by the enemy, now leaving her to find a way both to find her friends, but also to ensure the servant girl doesn't die because of her. She also serves to add perspective to the enemy, to their true nature. She also is meant to learn to love her father again, and he to her, much as he remains a source of trauma for much of her story.
    4. Carrion: trying to make amends for sending Valora away, and now stopping her from preventing Theodren from leaving them in pursuit of his brother, he sought for them, gaining perspective of how life is after the villain conquered the kingdom, and ends up fighting a shapeshifter (human/dragon), loses, and is now living in a cave with an immortal being who was cursed by (essentially) the devil. His past is also to unravel, showing how he felt he abandoned his mother (she died from an illness and was buried in an unmarked grave at his return). He is a member of Drakon, a group like witchers (but without supernatural enhancements) trained to fight all beasts and man in every circumstance, and adapt to survival regardless of the place and time. The same is true for all three above. Anyways, he is meant to befriend the shapeshifter, learn the true nature of the beasts he once fought. This brings an added layer to the climax that involves dragons working with the villain to take revenge on the humans and return the territory that humans took from them centuries before. He is also meant to develop a romance with a mother surviving in this new kingdom along with her little daughter, learning to accept what happened to his mother and to make up for it through helping this mother survive in this new world, giving a reason to live beyond the needs of his friends. He also is meant to provide perspective to the tortured cursed immortal man, and the true villain.
    5. Sven: a basic courier accidentally went on a journey with the group of characters above, leaves them after Drakonstead falls (their home) going north to escape the villain's reign, only to find out that the northern nation is welcoming the villain, seeking alliance in their pursuit of conquest. His story is fairly cliche: the son of the previous king, exiled and never learned of his past, and is weak but must find a way to become a leader to prevent the northern kingdom from falling to the villain's influence, a fall which would ensure the villain couldn't be stopped, but could if he rallies them to HIS side. He is joined by an x secret service-type character that was both a spy, assassin, and diplomat, and must find a way to convince his nation to fight with him. This ultimately leads to a battle involving the opposing sides, with another mentor figure in his story secretly playing both sides and wanting to make Sven his pawn, and if not, to manipulate the villain into serving his needs instead. The mentor betrays him, not convinced his side will win, and thus Sven must find a way to prove them wrong. He wins, though at great cost, and uses his remaining forces to join the rebel cause south against the villain (a nation that was once at war with them, making the two nations find a semblance of peace with each other). Finding a way to develop his story has been the greatest challenge of the five.
    Any tips for all five would be amazing.

    • @johnnyrico707
      @johnnyrico707 2 місяці тому

      Yes, a great tip for Sven is to make him a big ol' goofy reindeer that loves carrots. And has a pal named Kristof

  • @benjaminhelton4597
    @benjaminhelton4597 Місяць тому +2

    Loving these videos. I'm more of an academic writer, but I use a lot of metaphors when I think about how to create a meaningful research paper. For example, I teach students to never forget their "main character" (i.e. core topic/concept) and to make sure all "supporting characters" (i.e. sub topics) interact with and have a clear relationship with the main character.
    It's funny how well certain "creative" writing tips transfer to dry, academic writing.

  • @electamike
    @electamike 5 місяців тому +38

    Longest story I've ever written was 249 pages long, around 47000 words, for a game I've been developing for the past 2.5 years. I do have another story idea that I hope to turn into a full TV series someday. Thanks for the advice!

    • @cvampaul
      @cvampaul 5 місяців тому +5

      Best of luck!

    • @pioussutherland
      @pioussutherland 5 місяців тому +8

      Nice! If you don’t mind me asking, what’s the game about?
      How far along is the progress?
      Would you be releasing it publicly?

    • @ze_darku_magician5504
      @ze_darku_magician5504 3 місяці тому +3

      I'm also under way writing a story for a game but I haven't gotten very far as of yet. I've had about 15 pages of very rough ideas for what happens in which order but I partly scrapped that because it just didn't really work out for me. I feel like I have a bunch of interesting concepts/ideas that could work really well if executed correctly but it feels more of a thin and rather loosely connected web of ideas for plot points rather than a cohesive story. I need to find a way to fill in the gaps without making it sound like complete bs.

  • @kayyyyooo6946
    @kayyyyooo6946 5 місяців тому +25

    i hate writing but i freaking love watching your videos, i could never lol

    • @WriterBrandonMcNulty
      @WriterBrandonMcNulty  5 місяців тому +18

      Hahaha I think it was Hemingway who described the writing process as "just sit there and bleed"

  • @magmakaktus5867
    @magmakaktus5867 2 місяці тому +6

    I love this channel. I am 15 years old and I am into writing. I found this channel a while ago and it fills all the gaps I have about storytelling and gives me all the answers for my questions. Thank you, you are a big help!

    • @WriterBrandonMcNulty
      @WriterBrandonMcNulty  2 місяці тому +2

      Thanks for the kind words! Best of luck on your writing journey. Stay persistent and good things will happen.

  • @bannles
    @bannles 5 місяців тому +18

    I really love this type of content. I am still in high school and would like to become an author or storyteller of some kind one day, and your advice across all your videos has really given me a lot of motivation to pursue my goals. So thank you for inspiring me and helping me understand more about storytelling.

  • @WriterBrandonMcNulty
    @WriterBrandonMcNulty  5 місяців тому +19

    What's the longest story you've written (either by page count or word count)? Let us know!

    • @LordBaktor
      @LordBaktor 5 місяців тому +6

      I think the longest text I've written is an 8 page backstory for an RPG character because the GM had told me to justify via backstory some unusual elements about my character.

    • @agamemnonahb
      @agamemnonahb 5 місяців тому +1

      Mine? About 180k words.

    • @Cobalt004
      @Cobalt004 5 місяців тому +1

      My only book published right now is around 75K words.
      It’s a fantasy book taking place in center of Africa before colonization. (It’s the first of a seven book serie) 😊
      Thanks for your videos. They’re really helpful. ☺️

    • @stephenm.5121
      @stephenm.5121 5 місяців тому

      Love your content. Good stuff.
      My longest story has to be my first novel (SFF) at 225,000 words. I since whittled it down to 186k.

    • @ShinGallon
      @ShinGallon 5 місяців тому

      The longest story I've written has been my graphic novel (though I suppose you could call it a webcomic now rather than a graphic novel). It's not finished yet but I'm working on page 180 right now and it will easily hit 200 before this story/arc is finished.
      It's funny to me that it started as a short 8-10 page thing because I wanted to do a little something with a D&D character I'd just created for a game, and the more I drew the more story formed in my head. Then I decided to also have the main character meet another of my D&D characters and suddenly I couldn't stop, and the whole thing snowballed. So now it's a story about how these two (one of whom doesn't like the other at first and is actually afraid of her) become friends as well as save a city from being destroyed. I kept writing and drawing more because I fell in love with these characters and want to tell their stories. I now have plans for at least 3 sequels, and several little short stories with them that will bridge the major arcs.

  • @mattsager914
    @mattsager914 5 місяців тому +5

    I have learned way more about Civil War neurology than I ever expected to...

  • @GeneralPenguinIsCool
    @GeneralPenguinIsCool 5 місяців тому +8

    OK so... i had an idea today, for a story, and i needed this a lot. Thank you so much Brandon!

  • @mattt9278
    @mattt9278 5 місяців тому +2

    I just started writing the second season of my podcast/radio drama and right now I'm looking for the cast to get the first season underway! Eleven hour long episodes so far and still going strong. Many thanks to you and your channel as it has helped me a great deal in making a dream get much closer to being a reality!

  • @LightCyrus
    @LightCyrus 5 місяців тому +4

    Your Channel is like the Jeremy Jahns of writing channels. Every video is a quick, concise, quality presentation with no filler or fluff. It's easy to understand and easy to like.

  • @jaydenjewett3796
    @jaydenjewett3796 5 місяців тому +3

    Im considering making a story driven video game about death but I wasn't sure how to evolve my idea into a story. Thanks to you ive decided to take a step back and write a story about death before importing it to a video game form.

  • @kevinjordan2749
    @kevinjordan2749 5 місяців тому

    Thanks for all the great advice in this video and others! Glad to see that putting an idea on the back burner is something seasoned writers do as well. I had an idea for a short story a few years back and it took me revisiting it a couple of winters in a row to end up knowing what to do with it. May not be the most efficient route, but it still worked!

  • @jordanjenkins1671
    @jordanjenkins1671 Місяць тому

    I feel like this video held the answers I've always been looking for. Thank you!

  • @mystbunnygaming1449
    @mystbunnygaming1449 5 місяців тому +2

    I really only have experience writing short stories. The one that excited and inspired me the most was one I put aside for later due to a technical issue where I had lost my files, and everything I had written on it and had to start over. When I came back to it, I was even more inspired and excited and ended up with 10,000 words, which is about double what my short stories tend to be. It involved a large scale space battle and I had fun with one particular scene where the gravity control was hit and pilots were floating around the launch bay and trying to find a way to get to their fighters.

  • @VNightmoon
    @VNightmoon 5 місяців тому +4

    The longest story I've written was a fanfic that clocked in at over 235k words.
    It started as a way of coping with a death in the family and giving myself something to focus on. A major overarching theme was loss, grief, and acceptance, as all of the main characters lost someone important to them, and they never came back.
    Alive, anyway. XP
    For context, the fandom was Five Nights at Freddy's.
    My original plan was to have a relative short (read: under 20k words) story that showed Mike Schmidt going through the five nights, with the twist at the end being he was already dead and re-living his last week alive.
    Note that this was back when there only like four games, so a lot of the newer FNAF lore (like "Mike Schmidt" simply being an alias) didn't apply, and I had a lot more leeway to interpret the lore however I wanted.
    That changed when I came up with his best friend, Vanna. Her original concept was to be someone who noticed Mike was missing, and would be the *actual* security guard in the office looking for him, but as I wrote her, she basically took on a life of her own and birthed three more subplots.
    The original idea I had became a subplot for a completely different character, with the main plot shifting focus to Mike trying to solve the mystery of his brother's disappearance, with a subplot of Vanna still providing assistance, but also trying to get closure on losing her sister as a child, another subplot with a mysterious janitor who knew far more than he let on, another one about who the killer was and what his motives were, the animatronics and their roles over the years, and how a lot of this tied to the previous owners of the establishment.
    I am working on a new original project to top this. One of the core ideas for it is, "a carnival run by the bogeyman." I already had a lot of fun ideas in this ballpark of fun and spooky, with numerous monster characters and their stories, but this concept alone has added a ton of lore to my overall universe, as a lot of the ways this carnival works tie very deeply into other characters and concepts, adds explanations to things I didn't expect, and honestly, a lot of things about the carnival are so deeply entwined with the overall universe that the carnival story is a massive spoiler all on its own. I have a series planned out, and this one would chronologically be the third or fourth book, but a good chunk of it is just foreshadowing for things I have planned (and in some cases, written) for much later down the line, and provides more context for events prior to it.
    So far, this project alone is ~65k words, and that's not counting what I wrote for the rest of this universe. I know I've surpassed my FNAF fic in terms of word count overall, from short stories, to partially-done novels, to segments I don't know where to put yet.
    I jump around, but all I care about right now is getting ideas down and just having fun with it.

  • @raheem2845
    @raheem2845 4 місяці тому

    Had this question for years. THANK YOU!
    Haven't even watched it and I know it will be a banger , thanks again

  • @celambor
    @celambor 5 місяців тому +2

    Thank you for each and every video you make
    I sometimes get my creative juice drying, and most of the time your videos help me go back to writing

  • @ssseba.g
    @ssseba.g 4 місяці тому

    Can't thank you enough for all those tips, I can really tell you know what you are talking about just by the quality of each one of them. Great video.

  • @Maddolis
    @Maddolis 5 місяців тому +14

    Nearing 100k subs! Premature congratulations Brandon, every Thursday night (my time) I look forward to watching your videos, may you continue to have great ideas for videos and keep putting out this quality!

    • @WriterBrandonMcNulty
      @WriterBrandonMcNulty  5 місяців тому +5

      Thank you so much! Back in January I had hoped to hit 10k or maybe 15k by year’s end. What happened from May onward was/is ridiculous, and I’m grateful for the support I’ve gotten from you and many others. Best of luck with your writing!

    • @Maddolis
      @Maddolis 5 місяців тому

      @@WriterBrandonMcNulty Well earned! Thanks man!

  • @cheng296
    @cheng296 3 місяці тому

    Thank you so much Brandon. Your videos are simply amazing. Extremely helpful.
    This channel is a goldmine of writing advice.

  • @premium_chicken_nuggy
    @premium_chicken_nuggy 5 місяців тому +6

    Tip #5 is super slept on!
    I'm writing a dark fantasy comic, and one of my villains is inspired by the narrator from the They Will Kill You channel.
    I think that when you create a new character, you should think about which actors match their personality. This will help give your new character a voice, which can act as a reference point/template for their dialogue style.
    P.S. I just finished Entry Wounds and it blew me away, dude! I really liked how you described each scene (i.e. Soward's office; the jar of scissors (like sharks beneath the surface), so good!)
    I listened to it on Audible and every time the narrator did Soward's voice, I died laughing. Great book!

  • @qpfox
    @qpfox 5 місяців тому +2

    Longest stony I've ever completed was a single page short story based on a recurring nightmare I used to have about me and my 6 year old autistic son (now 14) drowning in the ocean together. Never had the nightmare again after I wrote the story.

  • @ellennewth6305
    @ellennewth6305 5 місяців тому +2

    Awesome job explaining this, Brandon! I believe that a great novel starts with a great story. Your characters, location, era, and circumstances are somewhat interchangeable, but you MUST have a riveting plot. You MUST have conflict, motivations and challenges. My first novel was a whopping 170,000 words. It should have been 2 separate projects but no one told me LESS IS MORE. My second book (which I am now submitting to publishers) is a mere 80,254.

  • @shikishinobi
    @shikishinobi 5 місяців тому +3

    These are indeed a help. Writing a series of short stories needs elements running through both the individual stories and some overarching and reoccurring as the stories unfold. I’ve found some good inspirations in things like the original Scooby Doo series, books I have read and other subjects I have studied.
    As for excellent writing, I am deep into Entry Wounds (chapter 28, book 46% complete) and I am seeing and understanding a lot of your writing tips as I continue reading. I’m seeing a few “Chekhov’s Gun” (pun not intended but works) plot points rolling along, and mentally made notes/bets. Am looking forward to seeing the climaxes and resolves of all this. Wondering if my ideas will be the end results. Have certainly mentally drafted a few outcomes.

  • @theaprentice6437
    @theaprentice6437 4 місяці тому

    This makes me feel so much relief. I’m trying to write my first book and I feel I hit every single point in the video.

  • @road_king_dude
    @road_king_dude 5 місяців тому +5

    Slow to mid-tempo music, often without lyrics also gets the ball rolling for me.

  • @Thathumanoverthere1701
    @Thathumanoverthere1701 5 місяців тому +1

    You may have noticed a bump up in views. I believe I've watched your entire video catalog twice. You shaved months off of my writing, and these videos are outstanding. Subscribed, shared and got myself Entry Wounds to enjoy.

  • @roundy331
    @roundy331 5 місяців тому +1

    Fantastic advice. Also CONGRATS ON 100k!

  • @yeahmagicmike5031
    @yeahmagicmike5031 5 місяців тому +2

    Very informative. Thank you, Brandon!

  • @DavidCaissy
    @DavidCaissy 5 місяців тому +2

    Almost 100K subscribers, congratulations!

  • @FawnTheCreator
    @FawnTheCreator 5 місяців тому +16

    I got a simple idea after watching a Film Theory video. I have decided to turn it into an eight trilogy series.

    • @WriterBrandonMcNulty
      @WriterBrandonMcNulty  5 місяців тому +7

      Eight trilogies is never too many

    • @tolula9927
      @tolula9927 5 місяців тому +2

      ​@@WriterBrandonMcNulty😆

    • @t3amtomahawk
      @t3amtomahawk 4 місяці тому

      ​@@tolula9927He really told them "COOK" 💀

  • @canaanarinda
    @canaanarinda 4 місяці тому +2

    This is LITERALLY the most helpful video on the entire UA-cam 😮

  • @CJ_1406
    @CJ_1406 5 місяців тому +6

    Thanks for the great videos as always.
    I really hope you cover the topic of alternate routes. Basically, what if this happened instead of that.
    I've recently discovered that manga is the only form of literature that contain alternate routes, where readers choose which route they prefer.
    Of course, it doesn't have to be a full-fledged branching narratives with endings. They can still have the same ending, just with a minor difference.

  • @TheTwo_Faces
    @TheTwo_Faces 5 місяців тому +1

    Ty for the tips. They have helped me with developing my novels.

  • @chris.awilliams7138
    @chris.awilliams7138 5 місяців тому +4

    At 27K into a draft I realised i had changed my mind about so much I had to restart. Longest thing I'd ever written and it did discourage me a bit. But the story still lives.

  • @gerardmijares2098
    @gerardmijares2098 5 місяців тому +2

    I always love how helpful and concise your vids are and this vid came to me at the right time, as I’m currently conceptualizing a fantasy novel I want to write. Also the longest story I’ve ever written is a screenplay with 203 pages and 45,000+ words and it’s still ongoing hahahaha (it’s meant to be the length of a TV series). I’m not ashamed to admit that it’s a Star Wars fanfic either but one that I’m very proud of and hoping to post online in the future, maybe send it to Disney and Lucasfilm if I’m feeling ballsy hehe.

  • @beyondthecamera333
    @beyondthecamera333 Місяць тому +1

    I love this channel so darn much. I don’t always agree, and I have a very different process and philosophy regarding storytelling, yet I still learn something and take in new perspectives everytime. Looking forward to checking out your novels

    • @WriterBrandonMcNulty
      @WriterBrandonMcNulty  Місяць тому +1

      Great to hear that the videos are helping! Hope you enjoy my books

  • @MaggieMiller1
    @MaggieMiller1 2 місяці тому

    100,000 words. Doing the rewrite now. Love these videos.

  • @chucksmash1
    @chucksmash1 5 місяців тому +1

    Thanks for this awesome video, Brandon! I love how you get right to the point, and you relay information with such clarity that it is a pleasure to hear your voice. I'm a new subscriber. Thanks again..!

  • @horrortopia
    @horrortopia 5 місяців тому +3

    Great as always Brandon. thank you for the tips.

  • @user-ph5pd3nh4w
    @user-ph5pd3nh4w 2 місяці тому

    I just finished the skeleton of my story thanks to this video, infinite gratitude for you!

  • @CaseFace981
    @CaseFace981 5 місяців тому +2

    Great video! I loved your comment in the end about reworking an existing story idea. I recently rewrote and self-published a short story idea I came up with years ago.
    As far as longest story goes, I started a story during NaNoWriMo in 2020 and after a few months (post-event) I ended up with over 100k words. To this date it's the longest thing I've ever written, and far longer than anything I've ever published.

  • @brownell.landrum
    @brownell.landrum 5 місяців тому

    Just wanted you to know I have shared your videos in two different groups! Thanks!

  • @MentoManto
    @MentoManto 5 місяців тому

    u have no idea how unique and valuable ur videos are. thanks sir.

  • @SuperRamtin
    @SuperRamtin 5 місяців тому +1

    Brandon, you are magical. You upload about the same question I have in my mind and at the right time when I'm free or when I wanna eat while watching UA-cam 😭 wow.

  • @Guitar994
    @Guitar994 5 місяців тому +1

    I wasn't even planing on writting a book (I still don't, at least for now who knows maybe in the future some day) but the thing is I love to imagine a lot. At first it was only short stories and scenarios but eventualy those stories turned into a biger plot that could fill a preatty complex novel with lot of subplots that fit the story perfectly. I wasn't even trying it just happened, ideas would come to my head while in the bus, wasing dishes or just simply before falling asleep. I love doing that, thinking about how could I expand my world, my story, all the characters to make them deeper and more diverse. It's fascinating how different ideas are connecting together especially if you're not stressed about it instead you just take your time.

  • @LucasPawlik
    @LucasPawlik 3 місяці тому

    As, always, a joy and insightful.

  • @asquirrelplays
    @asquirrelplays 5 місяців тому +1

    my mans how about to hit that big 100k subs! WOO! Well-deserved in my opinion. I'll be at your Silver Play Button award party.
    I think points 1 and 6 are super important (technically they all are). Always keep your ideas written down somewhere. I've pulled from my bucket multiple times years later and combined them into something. Sometimes they get lumped together and create a character, sometimes a whole plotline, sometimes a conflict, you just never know. But that also rolls into point 6. It it just isn't working at the moment, write down what you can and put it on the shelf. You never know when you'll dust it off and get to use it in something else, or you might have found that one thing from your idea bucket that it's missing.
    I had to shelf a story recently. Just couldn't fully "get it", so I wrote down everything I could and went to the next project. It'll wait for me, I promise you lol
    To answer the question:
    Longest thing I wrote was JUST under 130k words. I think it was like 129,600 something. Was super close.

  • @YuYuAkuRyo
    @YuYuAkuRyo Місяць тому +1

    So helpful. The way you teach makes things really easy to digest and understand, thank you!! :) ❤️

  • @gregsky01
    @gregsky01 5 місяців тому

    I can't stress enough how important tip 5 has been to me in my writing process. Had an idea to write a western after getting really into old spaghetti westerns during lockdown. So I watched as many movies in the genre as I could, found other books and stories in the same genre, really got an understanding of the tropes and archetypes but I also wanted to bring that sense of realism to the story that's often missing in a lot of these stories so I started reading about the time period. What the fashion was like, what the economy was like, what laws were in place, what were the socio-political issues at the time, what weapons would be used etc. As a result I have a story that I'm very happy with and can't wait to put the finishing touches on so I can get it out there. Good call putting that on here

  • @prehistorichero2755
    @prehistorichero2755 5 місяців тому +2

    Thanks for all of your advice of writing stories. The longest story I’ve written is over 500 pages, but I didn’t remember specifically because I deleted it due to bad storytelling and ludicrous plot.

  • @johnhughes2653
    @johnhughes2653 5 місяців тому +4

    93k for my first attempt at a novel. I've set it aside for a while as I know it still needs some work. I've found your videos very useful along the way, but was happy to find that I was already doing a lot of things you suggest.

  • @sarahsander785
    @sarahsander785 5 місяців тому +12

    The longest story so far is a 120k word first ddraft of a fantasy time travel mystery. Drafting was pretty fun, but making this monstrosity work is a whole other animal *laughs*. Plus, given I tend to underwrite severly in my first drafts (they are just a little bit meatier than stage dramas) the word count will probably double in the end.

    • @tonyorobsky
      @tonyorobsky 5 місяців тому

      I have fun drafting stories. 95% of them remain drafts.

  • @verifried
    @verifried 4 місяці тому

    My first book was just short of 700 pages, and is about a dream inducing device that has been invented, with which people can select and compose the content and nature of their dreams. Someone starts hacking this device, turning the users' dreams into personalised nightmares made out of their deepest fears. People start dying of unexplained heart attacks and busted aneurysm, police are trying to find the culprit, yadda yadda. Just starting the second chapter of my new novel now, and I have to say, Brandon, your tips are spot on. Even if they are about something I already know or do, your cohesive way of presenting them makes me be more aware of them and utilising them more selectively, like tools. And of course they are confidence - boosters. Thank you very much for your videos, keep up thee good work. Also I have to say that entry wounds is smashing it. Bad parts is next on my list

  • @liljoestudiosofficial
    @liljoestudiosofficial 5 місяців тому +1

    The longest story I have written has got to be the one I am working on now. It's at 157 pages (18 chapters) and there's still 2 more chapters to write!

  • @adamreynolds3863
    @adamreynolds3863 5 місяців тому +1

    i learn so much from your videos!

  • @themolechannel9082
    @themolechannel9082 5 місяців тому +3

    Thank you for these videos, they are quite helpful and succinct. I wondered if you might do one on old films and their remakes, esp. remakes that don't work and why they fall flat. Pink Panther with Steve Martin comes to mind.

  • @DLTyrus
    @DLTyrus 5 місяців тому +1

    I just want to say that "its okay to put your story aside and come back later" is very good advice. As someone who got into the idea of creative writing a little over a year ago, my initial idea excited me and I did a ton of learning and research and stuff, and began trying to expand the idea into a full plot. And then I hit a wall. I had a lot of ideas I liked, but I couldn't seem to bring them together into one cohesive narrative that felt satisfying. I kept changing my mind in a variety of ways, from fiddling with small details to considering scrapping entire broad concepts. And there didn't seem any real logical reason to go in one direction or another.
    I put the idea aside as I got frustrated with it, and didn't even look much at anything creative writing related for several months. Then recently I came across a video about Theme (not the one on this channel, but the one on this channel is good too!) and suddenly everything clicked. The video described exactly the situation I was in; having an interesting *topic* to write about, and lots of ideas for scenes, characters, plot points, but nothing to guide you on understanding which of those ideas are actually worth including.
    The answer turned out to be Theme. The Theme of the story helps you understand which ideas are actually relevant and which aren't. After watching the video and looking back at my story ideas, I realised I had absolutely no clue what my Theme was. And so I had no foundation on which to decide what ideas were relevant and what were fluff, or indeed what ideas my story was yet missing.
    Now that I (think) I have settled on a central theme for my story, I feel like I actually have a proper foundation to work from and suddenly my motivation for getting started on it is returning.

  • @omeysalvi
    @omeysalvi 5 місяців тому +3

    This was really helpful. Thank you. Biggest story I've written is a novella of 28k words

  • @thepredman9lol266
    @thepredman9lol266 29 днів тому +1

    The last tip was so good. Thank you!

  • @steffenballe4285
    @steffenballe4285 3 місяці тому

    Very good and informative video. Nice that it was to the point, but had some examples as well. Thanks!

  • @laurenallen2867
    @laurenallen2867 5 місяців тому +1

    I'm working on editing my longest book so far right now, coming up on 80k words! I had this idea: what would the classic sleeping beauty story be like without magic? No witch, no curse, still following the basic storyline, but adding unique subplots and themes to it. I 've been watching a lot of your videos throughout the writing and editing processes and have been using your advice to make my character, plot, dialogue, and writing in general better, so thank you so much for all your help! I'm hoping to self-publish on Amazon, and it'll be my first book that I actually put out there, which is terrifying. I'm nervous, but I guess we'll see what happens.

  • @publishing5884
    @publishing5884 4 місяці тому

    Brandon, thank you a lot! Brilliant!

  • @Hepheat75
    @Hepheat75 5 місяців тому

    A friend and I are working on a light novel series based off of Mushokou Tensei, GOT, RWBY, and Cyberpunk. We've got the first volume done and already starting on the first chapter of volume 2. My friend and I have so many ideas flowing in our heads.
    These videos have been helping me a lot, so thanks!

  • @hannahe5402
    @hannahe5402 5 місяців тому +1

    These videos help me so much

  • @timbuktu8069
    @timbuktu8069 20 днів тому

    Good straight forward information.

  • @siegfriedmordrake3229
    @siegfriedmordrake3229 5 місяців тому +7

    My longest story is a series in 6 books (initially 3 but I decided to cut each in half for editing purposes) called The Songs of Asgard, and it's something like 400 000 words.
    Funny part is that this whole saga initially started as a very short novel of about 50 pages that I felt I had to expand. Now that short novel is only the first plot of the whole thing

    • @foreverdjango5869
      @foreverdjango5869 4 місяці тому

      Damn man, I struggle with 3k stories 😅

    • @siegfriedmordrake3229
      @siegfriedmordrake3229 4 місяці тому +1

      @@foreverdjango5869 like I said, it started as a very short story - in fact too short for what I had to tell. As long as you have starting material you always have room to expand over time :) but longer doesn't necessarily mean better

  • @Army_Dog
    @Army_Dog 5 місяців тому +1

    I love Dexter, I gained so much respect for you after learning you do too

  • @seriliz00
    @seriliz00 Місяць тому +1

    I had a dream while napping and now I'm trying to turn it into a real story. Wish me luck!

  • @adam_belounis.
    @adam_belounis. 2 місяці тому

    The best writing advisor

  • @angelromero720
    @angelromero720 4 місяці тому

    great advice also entry wounds sounds sick i'll have to add it to my tbr list

  • @mickbrown7793
    @mickbrown7793 5 місяців тому +2

    My longest story was 348,000 words - and it was an idea I outlined only to come back to a few years later to write a story from the outline. My current story is 325,000 words and only around 3/4ths done... and it's a combination of two different ideas I'd been considering. All of which backs the advice given in this video.

  • @Dorar47
    @Dorar47 29 днів тому +1

    Thank you so much for this!!!

  • @sohrabroozbahani4700
    @sohrabroozbahani4700 5 місяців тому +3

    Sempai is right. Imagine yourself an empty jar with your idea sitting at the bottom, then just fill the jar, give it time until it fills up and overflows, the overflow is when you start writing. It will happen eventually, my own experience is, about ten years ago I formed the idea to write a power fantasy, but i was just not able, so i started absorbing, and here i am, ten years later, a world built around it, a timeline set, ten stories conceptualised, five of them have full character set, three have main plot ready, two are being developed in details, fueling the rest in the line as their story expands, now I'm just doing the same game on cyberpunk... no ready yet, but I absorb until i can... give it a try, and I believe you be sharper than me not needing a decade to figure it out 😅 good luck.
    PS. I have a trilogy collectively 1.5 million words in length... i would sell ot as space adventure military soft scifi... but it is kinda a first person shooter too...😉

  • @TrainerSpyro
    @TrainerSpyro 5 місяців тому

    Bro your videos and tips are so amazing and encouraging.
    I'm so glad to find out I'm not doing nearly as horribly as I thought I was. 😂 Thanks so much for sharing your expertise.
    My longest I've been working on for a while now is 400 pages of nothing but plot skeletons, concepts and small excerpts I write down whenever I get ideas I don't want to lose.
    I know the beginning middle and end but I'm taking a lot more time to figure out how I want the meat and potatoes to be. 😅
    I'm really hoping I'll be able to put it all together in an engaging manner cuz right now it's kind of a mess. LOL

  • @KAR4MB1T
    @KAR4MB1T 5 місяців тому +2

    I wrote a book during middle school that spanned over 300 pages long, I planned for it to go even further but my inexperience middle school self lead to poor structuring of the story overtime and I eventually dropped it. Some decent ideas came from it though, which is something I’ve learned throughout writing in my childhood, though there were of course bad story structuring, the ideas themselves were either decent to good

  • @Truth_chan_studio
    @Truth_chan_studio 5 місяців тому

    Congrats on 100k subs! 🎉🎉🎉

  • @stormwind7768
    @stormwind7768 5 місяців тому +2

    I'm still writing my science fiction novel and it's the longest story I ever created. Right now it's around 52000 words. But probably I'm going to change something, because I saw that my reaserch was lacking at some points. Just first I want to finish first draft and then check it all. It's my first novel and that's why I'm struggle with editing. I always change something during writing and that's my bad habit. Your advice helped me while writing it. Thanks.

  • @miniDrew4
    @miniDrew4 5 місяців тому

    This channel is amazing.

  • @ludovico6890
    @ludovico6890 5 місяців тому +2

    The longest story I've written is the novel I've been working on. I started writing a short story a while ago, something involving money laundering inspired by things I had read on the news and a conversation I had heard in a bar in Montreal between two drug users. I had combined the two to write a pretty solid story, which I found out had one serious flaw: once I finish it I found it was way too long for a short story. So I'm now working on it and developing it into a novel.

  • @davidaleshire4292
    @davidaleshire4292 4 місяці тому

    I’m currently working on the third draft of my first book. We’ll see if anything comes of it. Anyways, my second draft was over 100,000 words, a bit of that being unnecessary babble. If all goes well, this will go into a second book in the story, and these are preparing me for a story I really want to write, but is a little too big for my abilities just yet. Love your videos; helping me a lot.

  • @Alina-Butterfly753
    @Alina-Butterfly753 2 місяці тому +2

    This video helped me out a lot and I love how organized and detailed it was to understand, thank you so much for making this video and congrats cause you just earned yourself a knew sub💜❤💖

    • @WriterBrandonMcNulty
      @WriterBrandonMcNulty  2 місяці тому +1

      Thrilled to hear this! Thanks for watching

    • @Alina-Butterfly753
      @Alina-Butterfly753 2 місяці тому +1

      @@WriterBrandonMcNulty your welcome, thanks for helping me out🙂💜❤💖

  • @LearnComicsWithPancake
    @LearnComicsWithPancake 2 місяці тому

    This was very practical and helpful advice! 😁

  • @animatrix5945
    @animatrix5945 5 місяців тому

    Perfect video bro. I can relate to some of the stuff you said, and the others reallh enlightened me.
    I'm currently writing a Webnovel (a Light novel). While it has 1 million+ words, it is one of my first works and is subpar at best. I've learned from it thought

  • @gregorwalton
    @gregorwalton 5 місяців тому +4

    My first book was 80k, the second 120k and the current book is looking like it will be 140 to 150k. But I'm writing fantasy fanfic, so those are not such big numbers as they seem. I'm retired so I'm writing about 100k of finished words a year over the past three years - and making audiobook versions as well

  • @larryshepard6910
    @larryshepard6910 5 місяців тому

    Definitely earned a follow

  • @directorspence
    @directorspence 3 місяці тому +1

    Thanks!

  • @naatcollections7976
    @naatcollections7976 23 дні тому

    Nicely done

  • @mashafalkov
    @mashafalkov 3 місяці тому

    I wrote a graphic novel that was about 125 pages long. I’m writing the story to an indie video game right now. It’s a totally different experience. because the story has to be supported by game mechanics and vice versa. Your videos are really helping me recognize what the important sections are and how to create better flow!