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A writer is anyone who creates a written work, though the word usually designates those who write creatively or professionally, as well as those who have written in many different forms.

Profession

The word is almost synonymous with author, though somebody who writes, for example, a laundry list, could technically be called the writer of the list, but not an author. Skilled writers are able to use language to portray ideas and images, whether fiction or non-fiction.

A writer may compose in many different forms including (but certainly not limited to) poetry, prose, or music. Accordingly, a writer in specialist mode may rank as a poet, novelist, composer, lyricist, playwright, mythographer, journalist, screenwriter for film or television, etc. (See also: creative writing, technical writing and academic papers.)

Writers' output frequently contributes to the cultural content of a society, and that society may value its writerly corpus -- or literature -- as an art much like the visual arts (see: painting, sculpture, photography), music, craft and performance art (see: drama, theatre, opera, musical).

In the British Royal Navy, writer is the trade designation for an administrative clerk.

In several instances, writers are also referred as wordsmiths because of their ability to compose words.

 Internet Writers

The popularity of the Internet opened the door of opportunity to many established and aspiring writers alike. The new medium created concerns over writing quality in the Internet age. Writers’ advocates believe the Internet has led to a lower level of writing standards.[1] While new modes of communication through the Internet are constantly advancing and changing, the issue of writing quality questions the very definition of writing in the Internet age.

Whether writers are devoted to the craft or not, they are expected to be able to write well both offline as well as online, or at least recognize the difference between the two.[2] When writing for the Web, it is the content that matters. “Writing for the Web is very different from writing for print. Print today remains superior to the Web when it comes to visible space, image and type quality, and speed.”[3] Web visitors are quickly scrolling through sites seeking specific information and will not always take the time to read every word. Traditional writing techniques and standards are less of a priority, as multiple headings, bullets and lists are needed to aid scanning readers. Although reputable writers compose much of this writing, the quality can appear less than professional. Also, with the increase of tech people writing for the Web, the rules of grammar need to be put into effect.[4]

Writers not writing for a living often find enjoyment and small payouts from Web sites seeking material to raise their sites higher in the search engine rankings. Although this is a legitimate philosophy, the writing being published on the Web can often be less than professional. This lack of professionalism distorts the line between qualified and amateur writers. Writing standards are often not the highest priority as Web sites seek to drive traffic to gain advertising exposure. It seems as if readers are not as concerned about the writing quality, as long as they find a relevant account on a particular topic.[5]

 See also

 

Who said all Story possibilities have "all been Done'?
"I once read that all of the movies in Hollywood are based on 6 basic story lines, and have 128 different variations. This makes it very difficult to tell a story that is new (which the audience wants) because many viewers think "it's all been done".

I have pondered this and could never see a mathematical formula achieving every possibility. Time is also a factor that the math guys could never deal with in a finite continuum. It's funny that a Math guy Einstein gave us a rebirth of relativity taking us out of the stone age of the relation between space and time.
Another great science and Mathematician Nicolai Tesla said the following:

"Today's scientists have substituted mathematics for experiments, and they wander off through equation after equation, and eventually build a structure which has no relation to reality."

uring the period when Einstein and Tesla lived they knew the quantum world inside each atom mirrored the Universe in its invinite possibility. Most of this universe as our cells' are empty of form, yet are form. And they proved it with a big bomb. Soon that energy will be turned inside reversing the explosion and creating safer atoms to use as energy, not thermo at all.

So back to the formula. Eza Pound, a literary genius writing during the same time as the scientists I mentioned was credited with "Inventing" the Imagist school of Poetry. He mentored T.S. Eliot as well as heralding Bill Yeats as the greatest poet of his time.
He says this about literature:

"Language is made out of concrete things. General expressions in non- concrete terms are a laziness, they are talk, not art, not creation. They are the reaction of things on the writer, not a creative act by the writer."

That wisdom makes the "Inventor" at the highest level of creativity. New stories, videos, songs are not reactions to an existing moment. They are an invented next moment "Concrete" as expressed in work, frame, digital sequence, of a stone hitting another stone. One more quote by Pound that for me addresses the quote from the public "it's all been done":

"Properly, we should read for power. Man reading should be man intensely alive. The book should be a ball of light in one's hand."

I can't believe Ezra would stoop to using light bulbs as a metaphore so I'm inclined to say that "ball of light in one's hand" is that beacon that leads sailors and artists always searching for that new "Story" yet made.
It is there between the banter, the blind images. It is the constant changing of the true nature of reality



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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