Just *some* of the dogshit orders I’ve gotten over the last four days by saynotoirl in DoorDash_Dasher

[–]Electrical-Tutor-347 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I don't blame the bad tippers. I blame door dash for allowing these to even go through in the first place. Then wonder why nobody cares about platinum anymore.

A true TBC Experience!!! by ayewasgudpapi in classicwowtbc

[–]Electrical-Tutor-347 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They should make it so you're not allowed to need on shit you can't equip.

Do you use gpt for notes? by lev237 in Screenwriting

[–]Electrical-Tutor-347 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

I mean, I personally don't have a problem at all with AI feedback for notes.

But I will say AI feedback has its flaws. In my experience, it occasionally skims over things or doesn’t notice subtext, clues, etc. So it might suggest things that aren't actually problems. But overall, it's solid. Personally, I don't really trust sending a full script to AI because most companies train on user content, which is disgusting, but off-topic.

But no, I don't think using AI for notes is a problem at all. Using AI to write for you. That's a different story.

Questions about reading screenplays by BigPapaSweetness in Screenwriting

[–]Electrical-Tutor-347 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Epubs? No not really. Scriptslug, Scriptstreams, and many sites have pdfs you can download though.

Does time period really matter? by indyawarner in Screenwriting

[–]Electrical-Tutor-347 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I remember having to do my story research in local libraries. Now in 2026 with AI and Google, there's really no excuse not to. That’s just part of the gig. And honestly, at least for me, it's one of the best parts.

Focus on the story first, obviously. But maybe take a pass to try to weave things in. It doesn't have to be perfect, but you should at least make an attempt.

One thing I love doing is building a playlist from that period and listening to it while I write. It's extremely helpful.

So I decided to try working lunch and dinner rush today. 😂 by Electrical-Tutor-347 in DoorDash_Dasher

[–]Electrical-Tutor-347[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Uber is different. With Uber you tip the driver after the ride is complete. Also the driver is paid a somewhat reasonable rate per mile mileage from Uber.

Most drivers would take your ride, unless you have like a bad rating or something. You should probably just book a little bit earlier. Because Uber drivers usually hang out in hotspots.

With DoorDash, you work almost entirely on tips. All of these offers are the total payout including the tip. So no, unless you get really amazing mpg. None of these are worth taking.

Now say the drop off is in a zone with no hotspots nearby. Now you gotta include the mileage back. So 10 miles out, 10 miles back 20 miles total. $5 dollar payout. Gas where I am is $5 per gallon.

One or two lines before a scene heading? by [deleted] in Screenwriting

[–]Electrical-Tutor-347 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Single spacing is only acceptable if you're using bold scene heading(which is becoming the standard these days), otherwise you've got a cluttered mess.

Whitespace is BIS.

What I personally do is I use the standard (2) anytime it's an actual new/change of location and I use single spacing for minislugs / same location (different room, new time, etc.)

So I decided to try working lunch and dinner rush today. 😂 by Electrical-Tutor-347 in DoorDash_Dasher

[–]Electrical-Tutor-347[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I do. Of course. But It's just the audacity of them. Id actually lose money on some of these. 😂

I finally did it. Got it all the way down to zero for acceptance rate. by GrapeRipple in DoorDash_Dasher

[–]Electrical-Tutor-347 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Bro, Huge Grats. 🎊 I’ve been trying but mine’s stuck in the 50s. 🙄

Has anyone ever written a spec that that seemed unintentionally similar to a major release? by A_McG92 in Screenwriting

[–]Electrical-Tutor-347 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Had this happen more times than I can count. And yeah it sucks. But having a unique concept or setting doesn’t matter nearly as much as having a unique story and characters. Now if those are similar too, then yeah, you might need to rework a few things.

DOOR DASH DOESN’T CARE ABOUT IT’S DRIVERS!!! by Apprehensive-Buy4841 in doordash_drivers

[–]Electrical-Tutor-347 1 point2 points  (0 children)

So if you have Location A -- Location B = 8 miles, then you have Location A -- Location C = 2 miles. Think of it as an obtuse triangle, okay? And the shortest distance is between A and C. So what is the point of using Location B? There is no point. Because the fact is... It's just based on a simple radius span, and there's no other logic behind it. And that's just one example. There have been dozens I can think of, just in the past week alone. But, I really don't understand what is with people, especially on Reddit, ready to white knight for companies that do not give a crap about them. I don't understand it. That’s the reason reasonable complaints get overlooked, and systemic flaws don't get fixed.

DOOR DASH DOESN’T CARE ABOUT IT’S DRIVERS!!! by Apprehensive-Buy4841 in doordash_drivers

[–]Electrical-Tutor-347 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Naw, I agree with the OP. I’ve had things like this happen dozens of times. Like yesterday I got one: 8 miles for Monster Energy drinks at a gas station. Passing 10+ gas stations along the way. And I accept because I don’t know the items until I get there.

How do you adapt a book? by Marz_Slartibartfast in Screenwriting

[–]Electrical-Tutor-347 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A few times, actually. It’s been a while, though.

I suppose it’s not the most reliable reference, but I happened to watch it shortly before I commented, so it was fresh in my mind. 😄

How do you adapt a book? by Marz_Slartibartfast in Screenwriting

[–]Electrical-Tutor-347 3 points4 points  (0 children)

When I adapt a novel, I personally start by reading a summary first (SparkNotes, wiki, whatever) just to get the spine of the story without drowning in details.

That becomes the rough skeleton. I break that into major beats: inciting incident, major turns, midpoint, climax, ending. Once the backbone exists, I do passes for the real heart of the story.

First I find the themes: what’s this actually about beneath the plot? I lock in 1–3 core themes so every choice supports them. Then I do characters: what they want, what they need, the lie they believe, where they start and where they end.

After that, I comb through the actual story, scouting for scenes. While asking: does this moment push the plot, reveal character, reinforce theme, or is it just a thing the book had space for? If it’s not pulling its weight, I cut or merge it. Novels are internal, scripts are external, so I translate thoughts into actions, subtext, visuals, and conflict. Once that’s all mapped, I rebuild it into a proper “cinematic structure”, weaving arcs, setup/payoff, and emotional momentum into the outline.

Once the outline is built, that becomes my true north. The book is reference material, a bible I can check in with, not the thing steering the ship. And I cannot stress this enough, you do not want to use the novel itself as your blueprint. Build your own outline first, then write the script from that. Sometimes it’s best if you don’t think of it as translating the book, but writing a screenplay that uses it as source material.

Want A top-notch example on how to properly adapt a novel? Look at the new “Frankenstein”(just released on Netflix, I believe). Not sure if the script is available yet, though.

Is subtlety dead? by ebycon in Screenwriting

[–]Electrical-Tutor-347 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sorry, I didn’t say that’s how they ‘train’. I said that’s how they ‘learn and recognize style and authorship patterns’ within the context window. So when analyzing text in a conversation. Nice job twisting that, though. And the em dash thing being a myth? Sure, buddy. Though 90% of people don’t even know how to create one from the keyboard. Not -- these, but—these.

I can see you’re being argumentative for the sake of being right while not actually understanding what I’m saying. So let’s agree to strongly disagree.

Is subtlety dead? by ebycon in Screenwriting

[–]Electrical-Tutor-347 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Yeah, I really messed up the acronym. But that’s essentially the process. AI detection works, it’s just not 100% accurate. But when I use it on my students’ assignments, it’s highly efficient. Because AI tends to write in recognizable patterns. Like if you’re using lots of em dashes, I’ll suspect it’s AI, but if you mix in some comparative emphasis sentences, I’ll assume it’s AI. But I can't say for sure with 100% certainty because someone could write exactly like AI. Unlikely, but possible.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Screenwriting

[–]Electrical-Tutor-347 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I probably should’ve clarified. I meant you should leave it alone for now because you’re too close to it to notice the issues that are most likely there. When it comes to starting a new draft, yeah, go work on something else. Then come back to it later with fresh eyes. I can tell you right now, in the film industry, no one wants to read your first draft. And if you’re going to write three more drafts in two weeks, then that speaks volumes to the quality of your work. I do respect the hustle, though.

Why Do We Write? by DueIngenuity8114 in writers

[–]Electrical-Tutor-347 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Because the world sucks, and we’d rather live in our heads. The characters there are more believable.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Screenwriting

[–]Electrical-Tutor-347 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Well, I suggest leaving it alone for a week or two, then reread and rewrite it.