Ya we had seen how important carrot is to the story that she got sidelined in a 4 years long arc and then didn't even get a good bye panel let alone become a SH.
And it does not make you raise questions ?
And, let me remind you - the basis on which the arguments you gave for carrot was exactly what you are saying rn - "you know art of story telling".
Completely yes. And I stand by everything that I said all those years.
The storytelling doesn't lie, Carrot is an alien in the current storyline. The ONLY things that I got wrong are the predictions I made based on those storytelling facts.
You need to realize that analysis and theorizing are two very different domain. Let me give you an example:
- If I say that Zoro's characterization is revolving around the notions of honor, death and grief and inferiority complex, that statement is a storytelling fact. I can say that because of multiple elements spreaded all over his storyline.
- Now if I say that because of that, Zoro might have to face his final opponent as a woman to overcomes ALL of that, then this would be the realm of theorization. I have no way to be sure that it will happen, but that's highly probable.
This is why you need to prevent the confusion when I say that Carrot was build like a strawhat (storytelling fact) and when I say that Carrot will join the crew (theorization).
I can be completely wrong on the second but be completely right on the first. Simply because I'm not the one in command of the story, Oda is.
You are the same person who said oda got it wrong when carrot didn't join...
Not yet. He COULD be wrong and make a storytelling mistake, but for now, he is not. I will have to wait the end of the story to be sure about that.
Yes you are arrogant...so no need to play "people don't understand card" with us.
The problem is that people REALLY don't understand what I'm talking about. I sound arrogant because I'm stating stuff and I'm trying to explain my reasonning, but if you understood what I say, you would find that completely normal.
When I say that I'm not the average poster on storytelling, its because I noticed that usually, people don't understand the basic storytelling rules and stuff. Things that are normal to me because I've spent years trying to understand the craft.
Like... take for example this thread.
If I say that it is useless and unproductive, I would sound arrogant, but the reality is that it REALLY is unproductive. In fact its even damaging for the narrative comprehension of everyone.
People took a ancient storytelling term "deuteragonism", and are trying to sound clever by pushing it on modern day characters like Zoro or Sasuke.
The problem is that they don't realize that the term literally means "second actor" because in ancient greek plays, there were only three actors playing. Its not the second most important character because of the story but because of the support the actors are playing on.
Stories have evolved since then and the role of the deuteragonist will be found in other characters that can acts as allies or as important for the development of the character.
BUT
This doesn't mean that those character are - in present stories - the most important characters after the protagonists. It just mean that they are important FOR the development and relationships of the character.
In present stories, the most important character for the narration - after the protagonist - is the antagonist. Simply because the story is build around the challenge between the antagonist and protagonist's battle for a common goal.
Using the term deuteragonist in our current modern storytelling age is therefore not adapted. The concept has evolved. And it can misslead people to think that character like Zoro are most important narratively than a character like Blackbeard or Imu when its not the case.
If that's sound arrogant to you... i can't do much about that sadly..