Ines Johnson is Having a Breakdown

The Breakdown is a podcast hosted by television producer turned romance author Ines Johnson. In each episode, join Ines as she breaks television episodes, movies, and/or an aspect of the indie publishing market. Mainly for her own edification, but maybe other authors could find some use in her nerding out over story structure and market analysis.

Listen on:

  • Apple Podcasts
  • Podbean App
  • Spotify
  • Amazon Music
  • iHeartRadio
  • PlayerFM
  • Samsung
  • Podchaser
  • BoomPlay

Episodes

Episode 16: Mystery Beats

Tuesday May 16, 2023

Tuesday May 16, 2023

Mysteries and Thrillers are similar in beats with a few differences. Check out this episode to get clued into the mystery beats.
THE CRIME
ADHESION TO THE CASE
INITIAL THEORY
THREE SUSPECTS AND A KILLER
REMINDER OF DANGER
HERO IN PERIL (ALL IS LOST)
SPEECH IN PRAISE OF THE VILLAIN/WHO DUNNIT
RESOLUTION

Episode 15 Thriller Beats

Tuesday May 09, 2023

Tuesday May 09, 2023

I believe there are 7 Beats -obligatory scenes that readers or viewers expect- in a thriller; particularly romantic suspense. Come learn all about 
The Crime or Threat
Adhesion to the Case
The Initial Theory
Three Bangs and an Explosion
Reminder of Danger
Speech in Praise of the Villain (Why/How Dunnit)
Resolution

Episode 14: PNR Beats

Tuesday May 02, 2023

Tuesday May 02, 2023

Want a breakdown of the beats of Paranormal Romance? This episode lists the nine beats I believe are common in all romances that feature werewolves, vampires, fae and other kinds of supernatural beings.

Episode13 AIDA

Tuesday Apr 25, 2023

Tuesday Apr 25, 2023

You just finished writing thousands and thousands of words in your manuscript and told an emotional love story with kissing. But wait, you're not done. Now you have to write a couple hundred words to sell that story.

Episode 12 Adaptations

Tuesday Apr 18, 2023

Tuesday Apr 18, 2023

Faith is a tricky subject when it comes to taking someone else's work and making it your own. Following Krevolin's rules of originality, seeking without destroying, keeping the key things, while maintaining the character arc can get you through adapting a work as short as a newspaper headline or as long as a 500-plus page novel.

Episode 11 The Obstacle Course

Tuesday Apr 11, 2023

Tuesday Apr 11, 2023

Did you know there's only four types of obstacles that your protagonist can face? They are an Antagonist, Physical Obstruction, Inner/Psychology Problems, or a Mystic Force. Let's break these four down with a trip to Disneyland!
 
Want to learn more about pacing, try my courses
Page Turner Pacing Course https://ineswrites.com/PTP
Writing Sweet at ineswrites.com/writingsweet
Writing Dirty at ineswrites.com/writingdirty

Tuesday Apr 04, 2023

There aren't three bases in the game of love. There are twelve. Find out the twelve levels of intimacy in this episode.
 
Want to learn more about pacing, try my courses
Page Turner Pacing Course https://ineswrites.com/PTP
Writing Sweet at ineswrites.com/writingswee

Episode 9 Steamy Emotional Arc

Tuesday Mar 28, 2023

Tuesday Mar 28, 2023

In a romance novel, the love scenes should be integral to the plot. Otherwise it's just description that readers will gloss over to get back to the important action. Best beats or pacing points for a love scene are scenes of Growth, Setbacks or Regroups because those are scenes where characters tend to grow, learn, and evolve emotionally.
 
Want to learn more about pacing, try my courses
Page Turner Pacing Course https://ineswrites.com/PTP
Writing Sweet at ineswrites.com/writingsweet
Writing Dirty at ineswrites.com/writingdirty

Episode 8 Romance Beats

Tuesday Mar 21, 2023

Tuesday Mar 21, 2023

In addition to the twelve pacing points that we talked about previously, each genre of popular fiction has beats that readers are expecting see or hear. If you don't hit these beats in your story its like a record scratch. Wanna know the beats I hear every time I read, write, or listen to a love story? 

Episode 7 Buttons

Tuesday Mar 14, 2023

Tuesday Mar 14, 2023

Buttons are like punctuation marks. Like a period, exclamation point, or question mark, a button is a punctuation mark at the end of an act in a show or a scene (or chapter) in a book. To use these in writing treat the end of your chapters like commercial breaks and turn that last sentence into a question mark, or send in the ellipses in that last bit of dialogue, or add a dash that forces the reader to turn the page. 

Copyright 2023 All rights reserved.

Podcast Powered By Podbean

Version: 20240320