EPISODE · Dec 16, 2025 · 22 MIN
Void Moth
from First Person Present · host Hewes House
When brilliant ideas feel perfect in your head but turn "stale and ugly" on the page, is the problem your execution—or your expectations? Josh and Dasha tackle a writer's confession about motivation, world events, and the seductive comfort of ideation over actual writing. The conversation spirals into Ira Glass's famous gap between taste and execution, the dangerous pleasure of keeping ideas pristine in your mind, and why furniture acquisition has become an unexpected recurring theme on the podcast.Then, addressing another Reddit user’s litany of writing struggles—from romance without relationship experience to repetitive battle scenes—the hosts explore how fight choreography reveals character, why description works in layers like painting, and what Lord of the Rings' Battle of Helm's Deep can teach us about sustaining tension across long action sequences. Plus: the Gmail-to-self era of note-taking, WikiHow illustrations, and why you shouldn't trust the magic of unwritten ideas.LinksWhen Loving an Idea Keeps Your from Writing ItWhy Action Scenes Get Boring (and What They’re Really About)Ira Glass on The GapThe Battle of Helms DeepTheme music: "1982" by See Jazz
What this episode covers
When brilliant ideas feel perfect in your head but turn "stale and ugly" on the page, is the problem your execution—or your expectations? Josh and Dasha tackle a writer's confession about motivation, world events, and the seductive comfort of ideation over actual writing. The conversation spirals into Ira Glass's famous gap between taste and execution, the dangerous pleasure of keeping ideas pristine in your mind, and why furniture acquisition has become an unexpected recurring theme on the podcast.Then, addressing another Reddit user’s litany of writing struggles—from romance without relationship experience to repetitive battle scenes—the hosts explore how fight choreography reveals character, why description works in layers like painting, and what Lord of the Rings' Battle of Helm's Deep can teach us about sustaining tension across long action sequences. Plus: the Gmail-to-self era of note-taking, WikiHow illustrations, and why you shouldn't trust the magic of unwritten ideas.LinksWhen Loving an Idea Keeps Your from Writing ItWhy Action Scenes Get Boring (and What They’re Really About)Ira Glass on The GapThe Battle of Helms DeepTheme music: "1982" by See Jazz
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Void Moth
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