Talk:Seddie/@comment-24015721-20140614184049/@comment-14284535-20140615070911

As someone with an official script rejection under his belt, I can tell you that writing stories that are not wish-fulfillment or biased shipping is much, much harder than you think. For instance:

You can't write just stories designed to make on ship happen at the expense of the other characters (Dan Schneider, are you reading this?); you have to make the characters consistent over multiple episodes and have them evolve plausibly; your single episodes had better have a 20 minute run time; you need strong plots with honest starting points, proper motivations, good development, and resolutions that don't do stupid things like have Sam ruining Freddie's NERD camp application because of something trivial (the best one I saw in a FF had it because she realised her feelings and was afraid she wouldn't get at least a chance once he met a girl there); Carly, Sam, and Freddie should get relatively equal screen time; and make sure that their friendship is the most important overall feature of the episodes in total.

It's a LOT harder thn you think.