I'm trying to teach myself how to write creatively. Actual stories. Thing is, even stories I find I often want to give a slightly journalistic bent, write in the first person, as if I were the character or the character was his own author/narrator. I like writing fake news, and yes, that includes fake furry news, because furries are often fake and because I really fucking miss Colbert and Stewart. And a lot of furries will never read the kind of shit I read, but they sure like to read about themselves. And I mean I like to sometimes go as far as to write in a newspaper format, telling a fictional story. It's all for a purpose though, I actually need to be able to do all these things because pretty much all the kinds of shit I really want to do down the road, mostly comics, makes heavy use of these devices. Some books even have books within books and the fictional books usually have a way different style or are presented as actual books, visually, to make them stand out (Nineteen Eighty-Four has one and it's actually the scariest and most believable part of that book).
But do furries generally give a shit about these departures from the more straight forward, fan-fic style of writing I seem to mostly come across? I mean I get that that's how most fiction is written, especially furry/fantasy stuff, but it's not the only way to tell a story and especially with yiffy stuff it seems like there could be some untapped potential because, for example, some furries like pretty risque shit that chances are pretty good would sound even more pornographic if it were told by one or more of the characters, or by another character recounting what happened.
I dunno, it's just, I know writing is kind of a small pond in furry anyway but a lot of that is probably because people who could write and kinda want to don't really have too many ideas for how to do anything different than the next guy, or how to easily pick a style and stick to it when their influences come from some pretty different/conflicting styles. But if no one cares about that stuff I guess it'd be just one more reason to dive head-first into trying specifically to write a comic because that already has no one set-way of doing it and I'd never want to post that until I was actually a finished work.
Actually I'd post a thread asking advice on writing for comics but again, there doesn't seem to be one approach universally accepted/adopted by all the way there is with everything else. Movie scripts I know don't all have the exact same approach but if you're writing one you know it's shit if even you yourself can't act it and recite it. Writing for video games is probably more standardized. You don't really get to rehearse a comic. But certain types of writing along with just drawing in general seems to come pretty close.